John Flavel, The Method of Grace in the Gospel Redemption




THE BANNER OF TRUTH TRUST
3 Murrayfield Road, Edinburgh EH12 6EL
PO Box 621, Carlisle, Pennsylvania 17013, U.S.A.


First published by
W. BARNES AND SON, 1820

Reprinted by
THE BANNER OF TRUTH TRUST
1968

Second reprint
1982

ISBN 0 85151 060 4

Printed and Bound in Great Britain by
Fakenham Press Limited, Fakenham, Norfolk




The Method Of Grace In The Gospel Redemption





The Epistle Dedicatory


    To the Worshipful John Upton of Lupton, Esq. and the most
accomplished and virtuous Lady, his dear Consort, the Author wishes
Grace, Mercy, and Peace.
    
Honoured and worthy Friends.
    
    It was a comfortable expression, which Ambrose used in his
funeral orations at the death of Theodosius; "what though he were
gone, yet he was not wholly gone; for he had left Honorius, with
others of his children, behind him, in whom Theodosius still lived."
Your renowned and worthy ancestors are gone, yet (blessed be God)
they are not wholly gone; whilst the prudence, piety, and publicness
of their spirits, still live and flourish in you, the top branch of
a renowned and religious Family. It is a great truth, which Philo
Jude us recommends to the observation of all posterity, "That it is
not a natural descent from the most honourable and illustrious
progenitors, nor the greatest affluence of riches and pleasures that
makes a man either honourable or happy; but the habitation of God in
his soul, as in his temple, tho' (saith he) those that never tasted
religion, nor have seen its glory, will not credit this assertion."
"The soul which is filled with God, (saith Plotinus) and brings
forth the beautiful fruits of righteousness, this is the truly noble
soul:" Our new birth makes us more honourable than our natural
birth, let our birth-right dignities be what they will. The children
of nobles are, by nature, the children of wrath, even as others:
Omnis Sanguis concolor, all blood is of one colour: it is all
tainted in Adam, and mingled together in his posterity. "There is no
king, saith Seneca, which rose not from a servant; there is no
servant which rose not from a king: these things have been blended,
and jumbled to and fro in a long issue of changes, ever directed by
an all wise Providence.
    But though the privileges of natural birth signify nothing as
to eternal salvation, yet in civil and political respects and
considerations, those that by birth, education, or estate, possess
an higher station in the world, differ from the vulgar, as stars of
greater magnitude and lustre: their interest and influence are great
in these things, and the welfare of kingdoms greatly depends upon
them.
    It is therefore a great design of the enemy of mankind, to
corrupt persons of eminent rank and quality both in religion and
morality; and by their influence and example, to infect and poison
the whole body politic; and his success herein deserves to be
greatly lamented and bewailed. Persons of eminency are more
especially obliged to shun base and sordid actions. Hierom professed
he saw nothing desirable in nobility, except this, that such persons
are bound by a certain kind of necessity, not to degenerate from the
probity, or stain the glory of their ancestors. But alas! how many
in our times have not only exposed Christianity to contempt, but
obscured the glory of their own families, and the kingdom in which
they had their birth and breeding; so that if you will take right
marks of your way to heaven you will have little direction from
those of your own rank. As mariners take their direction at sea, by
looking up to the heavens, so must you. In this general corruption
it is very hard to escape infection; many (as Salvian complained)
are compelled to be evil, lest they should be accounted vile, and
incur the offence of God, to avoid the slights and censures of men.
Although there is no more reason why they should be offended at the
rational and religious pleasures you and other pious gentlemen take
in the ways of godliness, than there is, that you should envy the
sinful pleasures they take in the ways of wickedness. It was an
excellent apology that Tertullian made for the Christians of his
time, against the Gentiles "Wherein (saith he) do we offend you, if
we believe there are other pleasures? if we will not partake with
you in your delights, it is only for our own injury: we reject your
pleasures, and you are not delighted with ours."
    But by how much the infection spreads and prevails among those
of your order, by so much the more we have reason to value you, and
all those that remain sound and untainted, both in religion and
morality, as persons worthy of singular respect and honour: and
blessed be God there is yet a number of such left.
    Sir, It was a special happiness, which Chrysostom earnestly
recommended to persons of quality, that they would so order their
conversations, that their parents might rather glory in them, than
they in their parents; "Otherwise (saith he) it is better to rise to
honour from a contemptible parent, than to be contemptible from an
honourable parent; but blessed be God, you and your worthy ancestors
reflect honour upon each other.
    Had God suffered you to degenerate, as many do, it would have
been but a poor consolation to have said, My progenitors were men of
honour, the love and delight of their country. This, as one
excellently expresseth it, would be the same thing, as if one that
is blind himself, should boast what a sharp and piercing sight his
father had or one that is lame himself, should glory in those feats
of activity his grandfather performed; but God (to whose bounty
therefore you are doubly obliged) has made you the inheritor of
their virtues, as well as of their lands, and therein fulfilled many
thousand prayers, which have been poured out to God upon your
account. But I must forbear, lest I provoke others to envy, and draw
upon myself the suspicion of flattery. What has been already said
may serve far a sufficient reason of this dedication. I know the
agreeableness of such discourses to the pious dispositions of your
souls, is of itself sufficient to make it welcome to you. It is a
treatise of Christ, yea, of the Method of Grace, in the application
of Christ; than which no subject can be more necessary to study, or
sweet to experience. All goodness is attractive, how powerfully
attractive then must Jesus Christ be, who is the ocean of all
goodness, from whom all streams of goodness are derived, and into
whom they all empty themselves? If Pindarus could say of the lovely
Theoxenus, that whosoever saw that august and comely face of his,
and was not surprised with amazement, and inflamed with love, must
have an heart of adamant or brass; what then shall we resemble that
man's heart unto, that has no ferverous affections kindled in it by
the incomparable beauty of Christ! a beauty, which excels in lustre
and brightness, that visible light which so dazzles our eyes, as
that light does darkness itself; as Plato speaks of the divine light
Christ is "huperkallontos kalos", inexpressible beauty, and all
other beauties are but "eikon, kai skia", an image, nay, a shadow of
his beauty. How was holy Ignatius ravished with desires after
Christ, when he cried out, O how I long to be thrown into the jaws
of those lions, which I hear roaring for me! and if they will not
dispatch me the sooner, "kai orostiasomai" I will enforce them to it
by violence, that I may enjoy the sight of my blessed Jesus. O my
heart, (saith another, how is it thou art not drawn up by the very
root, by thy desires after Christ? The necessity, and the trial of
our union with, and interest in, this lovely LORD JESUS, the main
subject of this discourse. Without the personal application of
Christ by faith, our hopes of heaven are but deluding dreams, Heb.
3: 11. "I sware in my wrath, "ei eiseleusontai", if they shall enter
into my rest:" What then? Nay, there is all: but it is a dreadful
Aposiopesis (as one calls it) such a pause as may justly shake every
vein of the unbeliever's heart: If they shall enter: as if he had
said, If ever they come into my glory, then say, I am no God, for I
have sworn the contrary.
    I will not be tiresome, but conclude all in a few requests to
you and to God for you both. That which I request of you is,
    (1.) That you will search and try your own hearts by these
truths, especially now, when so great trials are like to be made of
every man's root and foundation in religion. Account that your first
work, which Bellarmine calls "the first error of Protestants", to
make sure your interest in Christ; every thing is as its foundation
is: a true diamond will endure the smartest stroke of the hammer,
but a false one will fly.
    (2.) That you be humble under all that dignity and honour,
which God has put upon you; be ye clothed with humility. It was the
glory of the primitive Christians, that they did not speak but live
great things: humility will be the lustre of your other
excellencies: estates and honours are but appendants and fine
trappings, which add not any real worth, yet how are some vain minds
puffed up with these things! But ye have not so learned Christ.
    (3.) That you steadily persevere in those good ways of God, in
which you have walked, and beware of heart, or life-apostasy. You
expect happiness whilst God is in heaven, and God expects holiness
from you whilst you are on earth. It was an excellent truth which
Tossanus recommended to his posterity in his last will and
testament, from his own experience: "I beseech you, (smith he) my
dear children and kindred, that you never be ashamed of the truths
of the gospel, either by reason of scandals in the church, or
persecutions upon it: truth may labour for a time, but cannot be
conquered, and I have often found God to be wonderfully present with
them that walk before him in truth, though for a time they may be
oppressed with troubles and calumnies."
    (4.) Lastly, that you keep a strict and constant watch over
your own hearts, lest they be ensnared by the tempting, charming,
and dangerous snares attending a full and easy condition in the
world. There are temptations suited to all conditions. Those that
are poor and low in estate and reputation, are tempted to cozen,
cheat, lie, and flatter, and all to get up to the mount of riches
and honours; but those that were born upon that mount, though they
be more free from those temptations, yet lie exposed to others no
less dangerous, and therefore we find, "Not many mighty, not many
noble are called," 1 Cor. 1: 26. Many great and stately ships, which
spread much sail, and draw much water, perish in the storms, when
small barks creep along the shore under the wind, and get safe into
their port. Never aim at an higher station in this world than that
you are in: Some have wished in their dying hour, they had been
lower, but no wise man ever wished himself at the top at honour, at
the brink of eternity.
    I will conclude all with this hearty wish for you, that as God
has set you in a capacity of much service for him in your
generation, so your hearts may be enlarged for God accordingly, and
that you may be very instrumental for his glory on earth, and may go
safe, but late to heaven. That the blessings of heaven may be
multiplied upon you both, and your hopeful springing branches: and
that you may live to see your children's children, and peace upon
Israel. In a word, that God will follow these truths in your hands
with the blessing of his Spirit; and that the manifold infirmities
of him that ministers them, may be no prejudice or bar to their
success with you, or any into whose hands they shall come; which is
the hearty desire of
    
              Your Most Faithful Friend,
              
                   and Servant in Christ,
                   
                        JOHN FLAVEL.
    
    
    
    
The Epistle To The Reader
    
    Every creature, by the instinct of nature, or by the light of
reason, strives to avoid danger, and get out of harm's way. The
cattle in the fields presaging a storm at hand, fly to the hedges
and thickets for shelter. The fowls of heaven, by the same natural
instinct, perceiving the approach of winter, take their timely
flight to a warmer climate. This naturalists have observed of them,
and their observation is confirmed by scripture testimony. Of the
cattle it is said, Job 37: 6, 7, 8. "He saith to the snow, Be thou
on the earth, likewise the small rain, and the great rain of his
strength; then the beasts go into dens, and remain in their places."
And of the fowls of the air it is said, Jer. 8: 7. "The stork in the
heavens knoweth her appointed times, and the turtle, and the crane,
and the swallow, observe the time of their coming."
    But man being a prudent and prospecting creature has the
advantage of all other creatures in his foreseeing faculty: "For God
has taught him more than the beasts of the earth, and made him wiser
than the fowls of heaven," Job 35: 11. "And a wise man's heart
discerneth both time and judgement," Eccl. 8: 5. For as there are
natural signs of the change of the weather, Matt. 16: 3, so there
are moral signs of the changes of times and providence, yet such is
the supineness and inexcusable regardlessness of most men, that they
will not fear till they feel, nor think any danger very
considerable, till it become inevitable.
    We of this nation have long enjoyed the light of the glorious
gospel among us; it has shone in much clearness upon this sinful
island, for more than a whole century of happy years: but the
longest day has an end, and we have cause to fear our bright sun is
going down upon us; for the shadows in England are grown greater
than the substance, which is one sign of approaching night, Jer. 6:
4. "The beasts of prey creep out of their dens and coverts," which
is another sign of night at hand, Psal. 104: 20. "And the workmen
come home apace from their labours, and go to rest," which is as sad
a sign as any of the rest, Job 7: 1, 2. Isa. 57: 1, 2. Happy were
it, if, in such a juncture as this, every man would make it his work
and business to secure himself in Christ from the storm of God's
indignation, which is ready to fall upon these sinful nations. It is
said of the Egyptians, when the storm of hail was coming upon the
land, Exod. 9: 20. "He that feared the word of the Lord made his
servants and cattle flee into the houses." It is but an odd sight to
see the prudence of an Egyptian out-vying the wisdom and
circumspection of a Christian.
    God, who provides natural shelter and refuge for all creatures,
has not left his people unprovided with, and destitute of defence
and security, in the most tempestuous times of national judgements.
It is said, Mic. 5: 5. "This man (meaning the man Christ Jesus)
shall be the peace when the Assyrian shall come into our land, and
when he shall tread in our palaces." And Isa. 26: 20. "Come, my
people, enter thou into thy chambers, and shut thy doors about thee;
hide thyself as it were for a little moment, until the indignation
be overpast."
    My friends, let me speak as freely, as I am sure I speak
seasonably. A sound of judgement is in our ears; "The Lord's voice
crieth unto the city, and the man of wisdom shall see thy name: hear
ye the rod, and who has appointed it," Mic. 6: 9. All things round
about us seem to posture themselves for trouble and distress. Where
is the man of wisdom that does not foresee a shower of wrath and
indignation coming? "We have heard a voice of trembling, of fear,
and not of peace. Ask ye now, and see whether a man does travail
with child? Wherefore do I see every man with his hands on his
loins, as a woman in travail, and all faces are turned into
paleness? Alas, for that day is great, so that none is like it; it
is even the day of Jacob's trouble, but he shall be delivered out of
it," Jer. 30: 5, 6, 7.
    Many eyes are now opened to see the common danger, but some
foresaw it long ago; when they saw the general decay of godliness
every where, the notorious profanity and atheism that overspread the
nations; the spirit of enmity and bitterness against the power of
godliness wherever it appeared: and though there seemed to be a
present calm, and general quietness, yet those that were wise in
heart could not but discern the distress of nations, with great
perplexity, in these seeds of judgement and calamity: but as the
ephah fills more and more, so the determined wrath grows more and
more visible to every eye; and it is a fond thing to dream of
tranquillity in the midst of so much iniquity. Indeed, if these
nations were once swept with the besom of reformation, we might hope
God would not sweep them with the besom of destruction; but what
peace can be expected, whilst the highest provocations are
continued?
    It is therefore the great and present concernment of all to
provide themselves of a refuge before the storm overtakes them; for,
as Augustin well observes, None facile inveniuntur praefidia in
adversitate, quae non fuerint in pace quaesita. O take up your
lodgings in the attributes and promises of God before the night
overtake you; view them often by faith, and clear up your interest
in them, that you may be able to go to them in the dark, when the
ministers and ordinances of Christ have taken their leave of you,
and bid you good night.
    Whilst many are hastening on the wrath of God by profaneness,
and many by smiting their fellow servants; and multitudes resolve,
if trouble come, to fish in the troubled waters for safety and
preferment, not doubting, (whensoever the overflowing flood comes)
but they shall stand dry. O that you would be mourning for their
sins, and providing better for your own safety.
    Reader, it is thy one thing necessary to get a cleared interest
in Jesus Christ; which being once obtained, thou mayest face the
storm with boldness, and say, come troubles and distresses, losses
and trials, prisons and death, I am provided for you; do your worst,
you can do me no harm: let the winds roar, the lightnings flash, the
rains and hail fall never so furiously, I have a good roof over my
head, a comfortable lodging provided for me; "My place of defence is
the munition of rocks, where bread shall be given me, and my waters
shall be sure," Isa. 33: 16.
    The design of the ensuing treatise is to assist thee in this
great work; and though it was promised to the world many years past,
yet providence has reserved it for the fittest season, and brought
it to thy hand in a time of need.
    It contains the method of grace in the application of the great
redemption to the souls of men, as the former part contains the
method of grace in the interpretation thereof by Jesus Christ. The
acceptation God has given the former part, signified by the desires
of many, for the publication of this, has at last prevailed with me
(notwithstanding the secret consciousness of my inequality to so
great an undertaking) to adventure this second part also upon the
ingenuity and candour of the reader.
    And I consent the more willingly to the publication of this,
because the design I first aimed at, could not be entire and
complete without it; but especially, the quality of the subject
matter, which (through the blessing and concurrence of the Spirit)
may be useful both to rouse the drowsy consciences of this sleepy
generation, and to assist the upright in clearing the work of the
Spirit upon their own souls. These considerations have prevailed
with me against all discouragements.
    And now, reader, it is impossible for me to speak particularly
and distinctly to the case of thy soul, which I am ignorant of,
except the Lord shall direct my discourse to it in some of the
following suppositions.
    If thou be one that hast sincerely applied, and received Jesus
Christ by faith, this discourse (through the blessing of the Spirit)
may be useful to thee, to clear and confirm thy evidences, to melt
thy heart in the sense of thy mercies, and to engage and quicken
thee in the way of thy duties. Here thou wilt see what great things
the Lord has done for thy soul, and how these dignities, as thou art
his son or daughter, by the double title of regeneration and
adoption, do oblige thee to yield up thyself to God entirely, and to
say from thy heart, Lord, whatever I am, I am for thee, whatever I
can do, I will do for thee; and whatever I can suffer, I will suffer
for thee; and all that I am, or have, all that I can do or suffer,
is nothing to what thou hast done for my soul.
    If thou be a stranger to regeneration and faith; a person that
makes a powerless profession of Christ; that has a name to live, but
are dead; here it is possible thou mayest meet with something that
will convince thee how dangerous a thing it is to be an old creature
in the new creature's dress and habit; and what is it that blinds
thy judgement, and is likeliest to prove thy ruin; a seasonable and
full conviction whereof will be the greatest mercy that can befall
thee in this world, if thereby at last God may help thee to put on
Christ, as well as the name of Christ.
    If thou be in darkness about the state of thy own soul, and
willing to have it faithfully and impartially tried by the rule of
the word, which will not warp to any man's humour or interest, here
thou wilt find some weak assistance offered thee, to clear and
disentangle thy doubting thoughts, which, through thy prayer, and
the supply of the Spirit of Jesus Christ, may lead thee to a
comfortable settlement and inward peace.
    If thou be a proud, conceited, presumptuous soul, who has too
little knowledge, and too much pride and self-love, to admit any
doubts or scruples of thy state towards God, there are many things
in this treatise proper for thy conviction and better information;
for woe to thee, if thou shouldst not fear, till thou begin to feel
thy misery, if thy troubles do not come on till all thy hopes are
one off.
    I know all these things are performed by me with much
infirmity; and that the whole management is quite below the dignity
of the subject. But when I consider that the success of sermons and
books in the world has but little relation to the elegancy of
language, and accuracy at method, and that many may be useful, who
cannot be excellent, I am willing, in all humility and sincerity to
commit it to the direction of Providence, and the blessing of the
Spirit.
    One thing I shall earnestly request of all the people of God,
into whose hands this shall fall, that now at last they will be
persuaded to end all their unbrotherly quarrels and strifes among
themselves, which have wasted so much precious time, and decayed the
vital spirits of religion, hindered the conversion of multitudes,
and increased and confirmed the atheism of the times, and now at
last opened a breach, at which the common enemy is ready to enter
and end the quarrel to our cost. O put on, as the elect of God,
bowels of mercy, and a spirit of charity and forbearance, if not for
your own sakes, yet for the church's sake: Si non vis tibi parcere,
parce Carthagini.
    I remember it is noted in our English history as a very
remarkable thing, that when the Severn overflowed part of
Somersetshire, it was observed that dogs and hares, cats and rats,
to avoid the common destruction, would swim to the next rising
ground, and abide quietly together in that common danger, without
the least discovery of their natural antipathy.
    The story applies itself, and O that Christians would
everywhere depose their animosities, that the hearts of the fathers
might be turned to the children, and the children to the fathers,
lest God come and smite the earth with a curse.
    O that you would dwell more in your closets, and be more
frequently and fervently upon your knees. O that you would search
your hearts more narrowly, and sift them more thoroughly than ever,
before the day pass as the chaff; and the Lord's fierce anger come
upon you: look into your Bibles, then into your hearts, and then to
heavens for a true discovery of your conditions; and if this poor
mite may contribute any thing to that end, it will be a great reward
of the unworthy labours of
    
                   Thy Servant in Christ,
    
                                  John Flavel







Sermon 1.

The general Nature of effectual Application stated

1 Cor. 1: 30

But of him are ye in Christ Jesus, who of God is made unto us
wisdom, and righteousness, and sanctification, and redemption:


    He that enquires what is the just value and worth of Christ,
asks a question which puts all the men on earth, and angels in
heaven, to an everlasting non-plus.
    The highest attainment of our knowledge in this life, is to
know, that himself and his love do pass knowledge, Eph. 3: 19.
    But how excellent soever Christ is in himself, what treasures
of righteousness soever lie in his blood, and whatever joy, peace,
and ravishing comforts, spring up to men out of his incarnation,
humiliation, and exaltation, they all give down their distinct
benefits and comforts to them, in the way of effectual application.
    For never was any wound healed by a prepared, but unapplied
plaister. Never any body warmed by the most costly garment made, but
not put on: Never any heart refreshed and comforted by the richest
cordial compounded, but not received: Nor from the beginning of the
world was it ever known, that a poor deceived, condemned, polluted,
miserable sinner, was actually delivered out of that woeful state,
until of God, Christ was made unto him, wisdom and righteousness,
sanctification and redemption.
    For look as the condemnation of the first Adam passeth not to
us, except (as by generation) we are his; so grace and remission
pass not from the second Adam to us, except (as by regeneration) we
are his. Adam's sin hurts none but those that are in him: and
Christ's blood profits none but those that are in him: How great a
weight therefore does there hang upon the effectual application of
Christ to the souls of men! And what is there in the whole world so
awfully solemn, so greatly important, as this is! Such is the strong
consolation resulting from it, that the apostle, in this context,
offers it to the believing Corinthians, as a superabundant
recompence for the despicable meanness, and baseness of their
outward condition in this world, of which he had just before spoken
in ver. 27, 28. telling them, though the world condemned them as
vile, foolish, and weak, yet "of God Christ is made unto them wisdom
and righteousness, sanctification and redemption."
    In which words we have an enumeration of the chief privileges
of believers, and an account of the method whereby they come to be
invested with them.
    First, Their privileges are enumerated, namely, wisdom,
righteousness, sanctification, and redemption, mercies of
inestimable value in themselves, and such as respect a fourfold
misery lying upon sinful man, viz. ignorance, guilt, pollution, and
the whole train of miserable consequences and effects, let in upon
the nature of men, yea, the best and holiest of men, by sin.
    Lapsed man is not only deep in misery, but grossly ignorant,
both that he is so, and how to recover himself from it: Sin has left
him at once senseless of his state, and at a perfect loss about the
true remedy.
    To cure this, Christ is made to him wisdom, not only by
improvement of those treasures of wisdom that are in himself; for
the benefit of such souls as are united to him, as an head,
consulting the good of his own members; but also, by imparting his
wisdom to them by the Spirit of illumination, whereby they come to
discern both their sin and danger; as also the true way of their
recovery from both, through the application of Christ to their souls
by faith.
    But alas! simple illumination does but increase our burden, and
exasperate our misery as long as sin in the guilt of it is either
imputed to our persons unto condemnation, or reflected by our
consciences in a way of accusation.
    With design therefore to remedy and heal this sore evil, Christ
is made of God unto us righteousness, complete and perfect
righteousness, whereby our obligation to punishment is dissolved,
and thereby a solid foundation for a well-settled peace of
conscience firmly established.
    Yea, but although the removing of guilt from our persons and
consciences be an inestimable mercy, yet alone it cannot make us
completely happy: For though a man should never be damned for sin,
yet what is it less than hell upon earth, to be under the dominion
and pollution of every base lust? It is misery enough to be daily
defiled by sin, though a man should never be damned for it.
    To complete therefore the happiness of the redeemed; Christ is
not only made of God unto them wisdom and righteousness, the one
curing our ignorance, the other our guilt; but he is made
sanctification also, to relieve us against the dominion and
pollutions of our corruptions: "He comes both by water and by blood,
not by blood only, but by water also," 1 John 5: 6. purging as well
as pardoning: How complete and perfect a cure is Christ!
    But yet something is required beyond all this to make our
happiness perfect and entire wanting nothing; and that is the
removal of those doleful effects and consequences of sin, which (not
withstanding all the fore-mentioned privileges and mercies) still
lie upon the souls and bodies of illuminated, justified, and
sanctified persons. For even with the best and holiest of men, what
swarms of vanity, loads of deadness, and fits of unbelief, do daily
appear in, and oppress their souls! to the embittering of all the
comforts of life to them? And how many diseases, deformities, and
pains oppress their bodies, which daily boulder away by them, till
they fall into the grave by death, even as the bodies of other men
do, who never received such privileges from Christ as they do? For
if "Christ be in us (as the apostle speaks, Rom. 8: 10.) the body is
dead, because of sin:" Sanctification exempts us not from mortality.
    But from all these, and whatsoever else, the fruits and
consequences of sin, Christ is redemption to his people also: This
seals up the sum of mercies: This so completes the happiness of the
saints, that it leaves nothing to desire.
    These four, wisdom, righteousness, sanctification and
redemption, take in all that is necessary or desirable, to make a
soul truly and perfectly blessed.
    Secondly, We have here the method and way, by which the elect
come to be invested with these excellent privileges: the account
whereof the apostle gives us in these words, "Who of God is made
unto us," in which expression, four things are remarkable.
    First, That Christ and his benefits go inseparably and
undividedly together: it is Christ himself who is made all this unto
us: we can have no saving benefit separate and apart from the person
of Christ: many would willingly receive his privileges, who will not
receive his person; but it cannot be; if we will have one, we must
take the other too: Yea, we must accept his person first, and then
his benefits: as it is in the marriage covenant, so it is here.
    Secondly, that Christ with his benefits must be personally and
particularly applied to us, before we can receive any actual, saving
privilege by him; he must be [made unto us] i.e. particularly ap
lied to us: as a sum of money becomes, or is made the ransom and
liberty of a captive, when it is not only promised, but paid down in
his name, and legally applied for that use and end. When Christ
died, the ransom was prepared, the sum laid down; but yet the elect
continue still in sin and misery, notwithstanding, till by effectual
calling it be actually applied to their persons, and then they are
made free, Rom. 5: 10-11. reconciled by Christ's death, by whom "we
have now received the atonement".
    Thirdly, That this application of Christ is the work of God,
and not of man: "Of God he is made unto us:" The same hand that
prepared it, must also apply it, or else we perish, notwithstanding
all that the Father has done in contriving, and appointing, and all
that the Son has done in executing, and accomplishing the design
thus far. And this actual application is the work of the Spirit, by
a singular appropriation.
    Fourthly and lastly, This expression imports the suitableness
of Christ, to the necessities of sinners; what they want, he is made
to them; and indeed, as money answers all things, and is convertible
into meat, drink, raiment, physic, or what else our bodily
necessities do require; so Christ is virtually, and eminently all
that the necessities of our souls require; bread to the hungry, and
clothing to the naked soul. In a word, God prepared and furnished
him on purpose to answer all our wants, which fully suits the
apostle's sense, when he saith, "Who of God is made unto us wisdom
and righteousness, sanctification and redemption." The sum of all
is,
    
    Doct. That the lord Jesus Christ, with all his precious
    benefits, becomes ours, by God's special and effectual
    application.
    
    There is a twofold application of our redemption, one primary.
the other secondary: The former is the act of God the Father,
applying it to Christ our surety, and virtually to us in him: the
latter is the act of the Holy Spirit, personally and actually
applying it to us in the world of conversion: The former has the
respect and relation of an example, model, or pattern to this; and
this is produced and wrought by the virtue of that. What was done
upon the person of Christ, was not only virtually done upon us,
considered in him as a common public representative person, in which
sense, we are said to die with him, and live with him, to be
crucified with him, and buried with him, but it was also intended
for a platform, or idea, of what is to be done by the Spirit,
actually upon our souls and bodies, in our single persons. As he
died for sin, so the Spirit applying his death to us in the work of
mortification, causes us to die to sin, by the virtue of his death:
And as he was quickened by the Spirit, and raised unto life, so the
Spirit applying unto us the life of Christ, causeth us to live, by
spiritual vivification. Now this personal, secondary, and actual
application of redemption to us by the Spirit, in his sanctifying
work, is that which I am engaged here to discuss and open; which I
shall do in these following propositions.
    Prop. 1. The application of Christ to us, is not only
comprehensive of our justification, but of all these works of the
Spirit which are known to us in scripture by the names of
regeneration, vocation, sanctification, and conversion.
    Though all these terms have some small respective differences
among themselves, yet they are all included in this general, the
applying and putting on of Christ, Rom. 13: 14. "Put ye on the Lord
Jesus Christ."
    Regeneration expresses those supernatural, divine, new
qualities, infused by the Spirit into the soul, which are the
principles of all holy actions.
    Vocation expresses the terms from which, and to which, the soul
moves, when the Spirit works savingly upon it, under the gospel
call.
    Sanctification notes an holy dedication of heart and life to
God: our becoming the temples of the living, God, separate from all
profane sinful practices, to the Lord's only use and service.
    Conversions denotes the great change itself, which the Spirit
causeth upon the soul, turning it by a sweet irresistible efficacy
from the power of sin and Satan, to God in Christ.
    Now all these are imported in, and done by the application of
Christ to our souls: for when once the efficacy of Christ's death,
and the virtue of his resurrection, come to take place upon the
heart of any man, he cannot but turn from sin to God, and become a
new creature, living and acting by new principles and rules. So the
apostle observes, 1 Thess. 1: 5, 6. speaking of the effect of this
work of the Spirit upon that people, "Our gospel (saith he) came not
to you in word only, but in power; and in the Holy Ghost:" There was
the effectual application of Christ to them. "And you became
followers of us, and of the Lord," ver. 6. there was their effectual
call. "And ye turned from dumb idols to serve the living and true
God, ver. 9. there was their conversion. "So that ye were ensamples
to all that believe," ver. 9. there was their life of sanctification
or dedication to God. So that all these are comprehended in
effectual application.
    Prop. 2. The application of Christ to the souls of men is that
great project and design of God in this world, for the
accomplishment whereof all the ordinances and all the officers of
the gospel are appointed and continued in the world.
    this the gospel expressly declared to be its direct end, and
the great business of all its officers, Eph. 4: 11, 12. "And he gave
some apostles, and some prophets, and some evangelists, and some
pastors and teachers; till we all come in the unity of the faith,
and the knowledge of the Son of God; to a perfect man, unto the
measure of the stature of the fulness of Christ," i.e. the great aim
and scope at all Christ's ordinances and officers, are to bring men
into union with Christ, and so build them up to perfection in him;
or to unite them to, and confirm them in Christ: and when it shall
have finished this design, then shall the whole frame of
gospel-ordinances be taken down, and all its officers disbanded.
"The kingdom (i.e. this present oeconomy, manner, and form of
government) shall be delivered up," 1 Cor. 15: 24. What are
ministers, but the bridegroom's friends, ambassadors for God, to
beseech men to be reconciled? When therefore all the elect are
brought home in a reconciled state in Christ, when the marriage of
the Lamb is come, our work and office expire together.
    Prop. 3. Such is the importance and great concernment of the
personal application of Christ to us by the Spirit, that whatsoever
the Father has done in the contrivance, or the Son has done in the
accomplishment of our redemption, is all unavailable and ineffectual
to our salvation without this.
    It is confessedly true, that God's good pleasure appointing us
from eternity to salvation, is, in its kind, a most full and
sufficient impulsive cause of our salvation, and every way able (for
so much as it is concerned) to produce its effect. And Christ's
humiliation and sufferings are a most complete and sufficient
meritorious cause of our salvation, to which nothing can be addled
to make it more apt, and able to procure our salvation, than it
already is: yet neither the one nor the other can actually save any
soul, without the Spirit's application of Christ to it; for where
there are divers social causes, or concauses, necessary to produce
one effect, there the effect cannot be produced until the last cause
has wrought. Thus it is here, the Father has elected, and the Son
has redeemed; but until the Spirit (who is the last cause) has
wrought his part also, we cannot be saved. For he comes in the
Father's and n the Son's name and authority, to put the last hand to
the work of our salvation, by bringing all the fruits of election
and redemption home to our souls in this work at effectual vocation.
Hence the apostle, 1 Pet. 1: 2. noting the order of causes in their
operations, for the bringing about of our salvation, thus states it,
"elect, according to the foreknowledge of God the Father, through
sanctification of the Spirit unto obedience, and sprinkling of the
blood of Jesus Christ." Here you find God's election and Christ's
blood, the two great causes of salvation, and yet neither of these
alone, nor both together can save us: there must be added the
sanctification of the Spirit, by which God's decree is executed; and
the sprinkling (i. e. the personal application of Christ's blood) as
well as the shedding of it, before we can have the saving benefit of
either of the former causes.
    Prop. 4. The application of Christ, with his saving benefits,
is exactly of the same extent and latitude with the Father's
election, and the Son's intention in dying, and cannot possibly be
extended to one soul farther.
    "Whom he did predestinate, them he also called," Rom. 8: 30.
and Acts 13: 48. "As many as were ordained to eternal life,
believed;" 2 Tim. 1: 9. "Who has saved and called us with an holy
calling, not according to our works, but according to his own
purpose and grace, which was given us in Jesus Christ, before the
foundation of the world."
    The Father, Son, and Spirit, (betwixt whom was the council of
peace) work out their design in a perfect harmony and consent: as
there was no jar in their council, so there can be none in the
execution of it: those whom the Father, before all time, did chose;
they, and they only, are the persons, whom the Son, when the fulness
of time for the execution of that decree was come, died for, John
17: 6. "I have manifested thy name unto the men, which thou gavest
me out of the world; thine they were, and thou gavest them me;" and
ver. 19. "For their sakes I sanctify myself;" i.e. consecrate,
devote, or set myself apart for a sacrifice for them. And those for
whom Christ died, are the persons to whom the Spirit effectually
applies the benefits and purchases of his blood: he comes in the
name of the Father and Son. "But the world cannot receive him, for
it neither sees, nor knows him," John 14: 17. "They that are not of
Christ's sheep, believe not," John 10: 26.
    Christ has indeed a fulness of saving power, but the
dispensation thereof is limited by the Father's will; therefore he
tells us, Mat. 20: 23. " It is not mine to give, but it shall be
given to them for whom it is prepared of my Father." In which words
he no ways denies his authority, to give glory as well as grace; he
only shows that in the dispensation proper to him, as Mediator, he
was limited by his Father's will and counsel.
    And thus also are the dispensations of grace by the Spirit, in
like manner, limited, both by the counsel and will of the Father and
Son. For as he proceeds from them, so he acts in the administration
proper to him, by commission from both. John 14: 26. "The Holy Ghost
whom the Father will send in my name:" and as he comes forth into
the world by this joint commission, so his dispensations are limited
in his commission; for it is said, Johns 16: 13. "He shall not speak
of himself, but whatsoever he shall hear, that shall he speak?" i.e.
He shall in all things act according to his commission, which the
Father and I have given him.
    The Son can do nothing of himself, but what he sees the Father
do, John 5: 19. And the Spirit can do nothing of himself; but what
he hears from the Father and Son; and it is impossible it should be
otherwise, considering not only the unity of their nature, but also
of their will and design. So that you see the application of Christ,
and benefits by the Spirit, are commensurable with the Father's
secret counsel, and the Son's design in dying, which are the rule,
model, and pattern of the Spirit's working.
    Prop. 5. The application of Christ to souls, by the
regenerating work of the Spirit, is that which makes the first
internal difference and distinction among men.
    It is very true, that in respect of God's fore-knowledge and
purpose, there was a distinction betwixt one man and another, before
any man had a being, one was taken, another left: and with respect
to the death of Christ, there is a great difference betwixt one and
another; he laid down his life for the sheep, he prayed for them,
and not for the world; but all this while, as to any relative change
of state, or real change of temper, they are upon a level with the
rest of the miserable world. The elect themselves are "by nature the
children of wrath, even as others," Eph. 2: 3. And to the same
purpose the apostle tells the Corinthians, 1 Cor. 6: 11. (when he
had given in that black bill, describing the most lewd, profligate,
abominable wretches in the world, men whose practices did stink in
the very nostrils of nature, and were able to make the more sober
Heathens blush; after this he tells the Corinthians) "And such were
some of you, but ye are washed," &c. q. d. look, these were your
companions once: as they are, you lately were.
    The work of the Spirit does not only evidence and manifest that
difference which God's election has made between man and man, as the
apostle speaks, 1 Thes. 1: 4, 5. But it also makes a twofold
difference itself; namely in state and temper? whereby they visibly
differ, not only from other men, but also from themselves; after
this work, though a man be the "who", yet not the "what" he was.
This work of the spirit makes us new creatures, namely; for quality
and temper, 2 Cor. 5: 17. "If any man be in Christ, he is a new
creature; old things are past away, behold, all things are become
new."
    Prop. 6. The application of Christ, by the work of
regeneration, is that which yield unto men all the sensible
sweetness and refreshing comforts that they have in Christ, and in
all that he has done, suffered, or purchased for sinners.
    An unsanctified person may relish the natural sweetness of the
creature, as well as he that is sanctified; he may also seem to
relish and taste some sweetness in the delicious promises and
discoveries of the gospel, by a misapplication of them to himself.
But this is like the joy of a beggar, dreaming he is a king; but he
awakes and finds himself a beggar still: but for the rational,
solid, and genuine delights and comforts of religion, no man tastes
them, till this work of the Spirit has first passed upon his soul:
it is an enclosed pleasure, a stranger intermeddles not with it.
"The white stone, and the new name," (denoting the pleasant results
and fruits of justification and adoption) "no man knows but he that
receives it," Rev. 2: 7. There are all those things wanton, in the
unsanctified (though elect) soul, that should capacitate and enable
it to relish the sweetness of Christ and religion, namely,
propriety, evidence, and suitableness of spirit.
    Propriety is the sweetest part of any excellency; therefore
Luther was wont to say, that the sweetness of the gospel lay mostly
in pronouns, as me, any, thy, &c. who loved [me] and gave himself
for me, Gal. 2: 20. Christ Jesus [my] Lord, Phil. 3: 18. So Matt. 9:
2. Son, be of good cheer, [thy] sins are forgiven. Take away
propriety, and you deflower the very gospel of its beauty and
deliciousness: and as propriety, so
    Evidence is requisite to joy and comfort; yea, so necessary,
that even interest and propriety afford no sensible sweetness
without it. For as to comfort, it is all one not to appear, and not
to be. If I am registered in the book of life, and know it not, what
comfort can my name there afford me? Besides, to capacitate a soul
for the sweetness and comfort of Christ there is also an agreeable
temper of spirit required; for how can Christ be sweet to that man's
soul, whose thoughts reluctate, decline, or nauseate so holy and
pure an object? Now, all these requisites being the proper effects
and fruits of the Spirit's sanctifying operations upon us, it is
beyond controversy, that the consolations of Christ cannot be
tasted, until the application of Christ be first made.
    Prop. 7. The application of Christ to the soul effectually,
though it be so far wrought in the first saving work of the Spirit,
as truly to unite the soul to Christ, and save it from the danger of
perishing; yet it is a work gradually advancing in the believer's
soul, whilst it abides on this side heaven and glory.
    It is true, indeed, that Christ is perfectly and completely
applied to the soul in the first act for righteousness.
"Justification being a relative change, properly admits no degrees,
but is perfected together, and at once, in one only act; though as
to its manifestation, sense, and effects, it has various degrees."
But the application of Christ to us, for wisdom and sanctification,
is not perfected in one single act, but rises by many, and slow
degrees to its just perfection.
    And thought we are truly said to be come to Christ when we
first believe, John 6: 35. yet the soul after that is still coming
to him by farther acts of faith, 1 Pet. 2: 4. "To whom [coming] as
unto a living stone;" the participle notes a continued motion, by
which the soul gains ground, and still gets nearer and nearer to
Christ; growing still more inwardly acquainted with him. The
knowledge of Christ grows upon the soul as the morning light, from
its first spring to the perfect day, Prov. 4: 18. Every grace of the
Spirit grows, if not sensibly, yet really: for it is in discerning
the growth of sanctification, as it is in discerning the growth of
plants, which we perceive rather crevisse, quam crescere; to have
grown, rather than grow. And as it thrives in the soul, by deeper
radications of the habits, and more promptitude and spirituality in
the acting; so Christ, and the soul proportionally, close more and
more inwardly and efficaciously, till at last it is wholly swallowed
up in Christ's full and perfect enjoyment.
    Prop. 8. Lastly, Although the several privileges and benefits
before mentioned are all true and really bestowed with Christ upon
believers, yet they are not communicated to them in one and the same
day and manner; but differently and divers, as their respective
natures do require.
    These four illustrious benefits are conveyed from Christ to us
in three different ways and methods; his righteousness is made ours
by imputation: his wisdom and sanctification by renovation: his
redemption by our glorification.
    I know the communication of Christ's righteousness to us by
imputations is not only denied, but scoffed at by Papists; who own
no righteousness, but what is (at least) confounded with that which
is inherent in us; and for imputative (blasphemously stiled by them
putative righteousness, they flatly deny it, and look upon it as a
most absurd doctrine, every where endeavouring to load it with these
and such like absurdities, That if God imputes Christ's
righteousness to the believer, and accepts what Christ has performed
for him, as if he had performed it himself; then we may be accounted
as righteous as Christ. Then we may be the redeemers of the world.
False and groundless consequences; as if a man should say, my debt
is paid by my surety, therefore I am as rich as he. "When we say the
righteousness of Christ is made ours by imputation, we think not
that it is made ours according in its universal value, but according
to our particular necessity: not to make others righteous, but to
make us so: not that we have the formal intrinsical righteousness of
Christ in us, as it is in him, but a relative righteousness, which
makes us righteous, even as he is righteous; not as to the quantity,
but as to the truth of it: nor is it imputed to us, as though Christ
designed to make us the causes of salvation to others, but the
subjects of salvation, ourselves," it is inhesively in him,
communicatively it becomes ours, by imputation, the sin of the first
Adam becomes ours, and the same way the righteousness of the second
Adam becomes ours, Rom. 5: 17. This way the Redeemer became sin for
us, and this way we are made the righteousness of God in him, 2 Cor.
5: 21. This way Abraham the father of believers was justified,
therefore this way all believers, the children of Abraham, must be
justified also, Rom. 4: 22, 23. And thus is Christ's righteousness
made ours.
    But in conveying, and communicating his wisdom and
sanctification, he takes another method, for this is not imputed,
but really imparted to us by the illuminating and regenerating work
of the Spirit: these are graces really inherent in us: our
righteousness comes from Christ as a surety but our holiness comes
from him as a quickening head, sending vital influences unto all his
members.
    Now these gracious habits being subjected and seated in the
souls of poor imperfect creatures, whose corruptions abide and work
in the very same faculties where grace has its residence; it cannot
be, that our sanctification should be so perfect and complete, as
our justification is, which inheres only in Christ. See Gal. 5: 17.
Thus are righteousness and sanctification communicated and made
ours: but then,
    For redemption, that is to say, absolute and plenary
deliverance from all the sad remains, effects, and consequences of
sin, both upon soul and body; this is made ours, (or, to keep to the
terms) Christ is made redemption to us by glorification; then, and
not before, are these miserable effects removed; we put off these
together with the body. So that look, as justification cures the
guilt of sin, and sanctification the dominion of sin, so
glorification removes, together with its existence and being, all
those miseries which it let in (as at a flood-gate) upon our whole
man, Eph. 5: 26, 27.
    And thus of God, Christ is made unto us wisdom and
righteousness, sanctification and redemption; namely, by imputation,
regeneration, and glorification.
    I shall next improve the point in some useful inferences.
    Inference 1. Learn from hence, what a naked, destitute, and
empty thing, a poor sinner is, in his natural unregenerate state.
    He is one that naturally and inherently has neither wisdom, nor
righteousness, sanctification nor redemption; all these must come
from without himself, even from Christ, who is made all this to a
sinner, or else he must eternally perish.
    As no creature (in respect of external abilities) comes under
more natural weakness into the world than man, naked, empty, and
more shiftless and helpless than any other creature; so it is with
his soul, yea, much more than so: all our excellencies are borrowed
excellencies, no reason therefore to be proud of any of them, 1 Cor.
4: 7. "What hast thou that thou hast not received? Now, if thou
didst receive it, why dost thou glory, as if thou hadst not received
it?" q. d. that intolerable insolence and vanity would it be for a
man that wears the rich and costly robe of Christ's righteousness,
in which there is not one thread of his own spinning, but all made
by free-grace, and not by free-will, to jet proudly up and down the
world in it, as if himself had made it, and he were beholden to none
for it? O man! thine excellencies, whatever they are, are borrowed
from Christ, they oblige thee to him, but he can be no more obliged
to thee, who wearest them, than the sun is obliged to him that
borrows its light, or the fountain to him that draws its water for
his use and benefit.
    And it has ever been the care of holy men, when they have
viewed their own gracious principles, or best performances, still to
disclaim themselves, and own free-grace as the sole author of all.
Thus holy Paul, viewing the principles of divine life in himself,
(the richest gift bestowed upon man in this world by Jesus Christ)
how does he renounce himself, and deny the least part of the praise
and glory as belonging to him, Gal. 2: 20. "Now I live, yet not I;
but Christ liveth in me": and so for the best duties that ever he
performed for God: (and what mere man ever did more for God?) Yet
when, in a just and necessary defence, he was constrained to mention
them, 1 Cor. 15: 10. how carefully is the like [Yet not I] presently
added? "I laboured more abundantly than they all; yet not I, but the
grace of God which was with me."
    Well then, let the sense of your own emptiness by nature humble
and oblige you the more to Christ, from whom you receive all you
have.
    Infer. 2. Hence we are informed, that none can claim benefit by
imputed righteousness, but those only that live in the power of
inherent holiness; to whomsoever Christ was made righteousness, to
him he also was made sanctification.
    The gospel has not the least favour for licentiousness. It is
every way as careful to press men to their duties as to instruct
them in their privileges, Tit. 3: 8. "This is a faithful saying; and
these things I will that ye affirm constantly; that they which have
believed in God, might be careful to maintain good works." It is a
loose principle, divulged by libertines, to the reproach of Christ
and his gospel, that sanctification is not the evidence of our
justification. And Christ is as much wronged by them who separate
holiness from righteousness (as if a sensual vile life were
consistent with a justified state) as he is in the contrary extreme,
by those who confound Christ's righteousness with man's holiness, in
the point of justification; or that own no other righteousness, but
what is inherent in themselves. The former opinion makes him a cloak
for sin, the latter a needless sacrifice for sin.
    It is true, our sanctification cannot justify us before God;
but what then, can it not evidence our justification before men? Is
there no necessity, or use for holiness, because it has no hand in
our justification? Is the preparation of the soul for heaven, by
altering its frame and temper, nothing? Is the glorifying of our
Redeemer, by the exercises of grace in the world, nothing? Does the
work of Christ render the work of the Spirit needless? God forbid:
"He came not by blood only, but by water also," 1 John 5: 6. And
when the apostle saith, in Rom. 4: 5. "But unto him that worketh
not, but believeth on him that justifieth the ungodly, his faith is
counted for righteousness", the scope of it is neither to
characterise and describe the justified person, as one that is lazy
and slothful, and has no mind to work, nor the rebellious and
refractory, refusing obedience to the commands of God; but to
represent him as an humbled sinner, who is convinced of his
inability to work out his own righteousness by the law, and sees all
his endeavours to obey the law fall short of righteousness, and
therefore is said, in a law-sense, not to work, because he does not
work so as to answer the purpose and end of the law, which accepts
of nothing beneath perfect obedience.
    And when (in the same text) the ungodly are said to be
justified, that character describes not the temper and frame of
their hearts and lives, after their justification, but what it was
before; not as it leaves, but as it found them.
    Infer. 3. How unreasonable, and worse than brutish, is the sin
of infidelity, by which the sinner rejects Christ, and with him all
those mercies, and benefits, which alone can relieve and cure his
misery!
    He is by nature blind and ignorant, and yet refuses Christ, who
comes to him with heavenly light and wisdom, he is condemned by the
terrible sentence of the law to eternal wrath, and yet rejects
Christ, who renders to him complete and perfect righteousness: he is
wholly polluted and plunged into original and actual pollution of
nature and practice, yet will have none of Christ, who would become
sanctification to him. He is oppressed in soul and body, with the
deplorable effects and miseries sin has brought upon him, and yet is
so in love with his bondage, that he will neither accept Christ, nor
the redemption he brings with him to sinners.
    O! what monsters, what beasts has sin turned its subjects into!
"You will not come to me that ye may have life," John 5: 40. Sin has
stabbed the sinner to the heart, the wounds are all mortal, eternal
death is in his face; Christ has prepared the only plaister that can
cure his wounds, but he will not suffer him to apply it. He acts
like one in love with death, and that judges it sweet to perish. So
Christ tells us, Prov. 8: 36 "All they that hate me, love death:"
not in itself but in its causes, with which it is inseparably
connected. They are loth to burn, yet willing to sin; though sin
kindle those everlasting flames. So that in two things the
unbeliever shows himself worse than brutish, he cannot think of
damnation, the effect of sin, without horror; and cannot yet think
of sin, the cause of damnation, without pleasure; he is loth to
perish to all eternity without a remedy, and yet refuses and
declines Christ as if he were an enemy, who only can and would
deliver him from that eternal perdition.
    How do men act therefore, as if they were in love with their
own ruin! Many poor wretches now in the way to hell, what an hard
shift do they make to cast themselves away! Christ meets them many
times in the ordinances, where they studiously shun him: many times
checks them in their way by convictions, which they make an hard
shift to overcome and conquer. Oh how willing are they to accept a
cure, a benefit, a remedy, for any thing but their souls! You see
then that sinners cannot, (should they study all their days to do
themselves a mischief), take a readier course to undo themselves,
than by rejecting Christ in his gracious offers.
    Surely the sin of Sodom and Gomorrah is less shall this sin.
    Mercy itself is exasperated by it, and the damnation of such as
reject Christ, (so prepared for them, with whatever they need, and
so seriously and frequently offered to them upon the knee of gospel
entreaty), is just, inevitable, and will be more intolerable the to
any in the world beside them. It is just, for the sinner has but his
own option, or choice: he is but come to the end which he was often
told his way would bring him to. It is inevitable, for there is no
other way to salvation, but that which is rejected. And it will be
more intolerable than the damnation of others, because neither
heathens nor devils ever aggravated their sins by such an horrid
circumstance, as the wilful refusing of such an apt, offered, and
only remedy.
    Infer. 4. What a tremendous symptom of wrath, and sad character
of death, appears upon that mans' soul, to which no effectual
application of Christ can be made by the gospel.
    Christ, with his benefits, is frequently tendered to them in
the gospel; they have been beseeched once and again, upon the knee
of importunity, to accept him; those entreaties and persuasions have
been urged by the greatest arguments, the command of God, the love
of Christ, the inconceivable happiness or misery which unavoidably
follow the accepting or rejecting of those offers, and yet nothing
will affect them: all their pleas for infidelity have been over and
over confuted, their reasons and consciences have stood convinced,
they have been speechless, as well as Christless: not one sound
argument is found with them to defend their infidelity: they confess
in general, that such courses as theirs are, lead to destruction.
They will yield them to be happy souls that are in Christ; and yet,
when it comes to the point, their own closing with him, nothing will
do; all arguments, all entreaties, return to us without success.
    Lord! what is the reason of this unaccountable obstinacy? In
other things it is not so: If they be sick, they are so far from
rejecting a physician that offers himself, that they will send, and
pray, and pay him too. If they be arrested for debt, and anyone will
be a surety, and pay their debts for them, words can hardly express
the sense they have of such a kindness: but though Christ would be
both a physician and surety, and whatever else their needs require,
they will rather perish to eternity, than accept him. What may we
fear to be the reason of this, but because they are not of Christ's
sheep, John 10: 26. The Lord open the eyes of poor sinners, to
apprehend not only how great a sin, but how dreadful a sign this is.
    Infer. 5 If Christ, with all his benefits, be made ours, by
God's special application, what a day of mercies then is the day of
conversion! What multitudes of choice blessings visit the converted
soul in that day!
    "This day (saith Christ to Zaccheus, Luke 19: 9) is salvation
come to this house." In this day, Christ comes into the soul, and he
comes not empty, but brings with him all his treasures of wisdom and
righteousness, sanctification and redemption. Troops of mercies,
yea, of the best of mercies, come with him. It is a day of singular
gladness and joy to the heart of Christ, when he is espoused to, and
received by the believing soul: it is a coronation day to a king. So
you read, Cant. 3: 11. "Go forth, O ye daughters of Sion, and behold
king Solomon with the crown wherewith his mother crowned him in the
day of his espousals, and in the day of the gladness of his heart."
    Where, under the type of Solomon in his greatest magnificence
and glory, when the royal diadem was set upon his head, and the
people shouted for joy, so that the earth did ring again, is
shadowed out the joy of Christ's heart, when poor souls, by their
high estimation of him, and consent to his government, do, as it
were, crown him with glory and honour, and make his heart glad.
    Now, if the day of our espousals to Christ be the day of the
gladness of his heart, and he reckons himself thus honoured and
glorified by us, what a day of joy and gladness should it be to our
hearts, and how should we be transported with joy, to see a King
from heaven, with all his treasures of grace and glory, bestowing
himself freely, and everlastingly upon us, as our portion! No wonder
Zaccheus came down joyfully, Luke 19: 6; that the eunuch went home
rejoicing, Acts 8: 39. that the gaoler rejoiced, believing in God
with all his household, Acts 16: 34. that they that were converted,
did eat their meat with gladness, praising God, Acts 2: 41, 46. that
there was great joy among them at Samaria, when Christ came among
them in the preaching of the gospel, Acts 8: 5, 8. I say, it is no
wonder we read of such joy accompanying Christ into the soul, when
we consider, that in one day, so many blessings meet together in it,
the least of which is not to be exchanged for all the kingdoms of
this world, and the glory of them. Eternity itself will but suffice
to bless God for the mercies of this one day.
    Infer. 6. If Christ be made all this to every soul, unto whom
he is effectually applied, what cause then have those souls, that
are under the preparatory work of the Spirit, and are come nigh to
Christ and all his benefits, to stretch out their hands, with
vehement desire to Christ, and give him the most important
invitation into their souls!
    The whole world is distinguishable into three classes, or sorts
of persons; such as are far from Christ; such as are not far from
Christ; and such as are in Christ. They that are in Christ have
heartily received him. Such as are far from Christ, will not open to
him; their hearts are fast barred by ignorance, prejudice, and
unbelief against him: But those that are come under the preparatory
workings of the Spirit, nigh to Christ, who see their own
indispensable necessity of him, and his suitableness to their
necessities, in whom also encouraging hopes begins to dawn, and
their souls are waiting at the foot of God for power to receive him,
for an heart to close sincerely and universally with him; O what
vehement desires! what strong pleas! what moving arguments should
such persons urge, and plead to win Christ, and get possession of
him! they are in sight of their only remedy; Christ and salvation
are come to their very doors; there wants but a few things to make
them blessed for ever. This is the day in which their souls are
exercised between hopes and fears: Now they are much alone, and deep
in thoughtfulness, they weep and make supplication for a heart to
believe, and that against the great discouragements with which they
encounter.
    Reader, if this be the case of thy soul, it will not be the
least piece of service I can do for thee, to suggest such pleas as
in this case are proper to be urged for the attainment of thy
desires, and the closing of the match between Christ and thee.
    First, Plead the absolute necessity which now drives thee to
Christ: Tell him thy hope is utterly perished in all other refuges.
Thou art come like a starving beggar to the last door of hope. Tell
him thou now beginnest to see the absolute necessity of Christ. Thy
body has not so much need of bread, water, or air, as thy soul has
of Christ, and that wisdom and righteousness, sanctification and
redemption, that are in him.
    Secondly, Plead the Father's gracious design in furnishing and
sending him into the world, and his own design in accepting the
Father's call. Lord Jesus, was thou not "anointed to preach good
tidings to the meek, to bind up the broken-hearted, and to proclaim
liberty to the captives, and the opening of the prison to them that
are bound?" Isa. 61: 1, 3. Behold an object suitable to thine
office: whilst I was ignorant of my condition, I have a proud
rebellious heart, but conviction and self-acquaintance have now
melted it: my heart was harder than the nether millstone, and it was
as easy to dissolve the obdurate rocks, as to thaw and melt my heart
for sin; but now God has made my heart soft, I sensibly feel the
misery of my condition. I once thought myself at perfect liberty,
but now I see what I conceited to be perfect liberty, is perfect
bondage; and never did a poor prisoner sigh for deliverance more
than I. Since then thou hast given me a soul thus qualified, though
still unworthy, for the exercise of thine office, and execution of
thy commission; Lord Jesus, be, according to thy name, a Jesus unto
me.
    Thirdly, Plead the unlimited and general invitation made to
such souls as you are, to come to Christ freely. Lord, thou hast
made open proclamations; "Ho, every one that thirsteth, come ye to
the waters, Is. 55: 1. And Rev. 22: 17. "Him that is a-thirst come".
In obedience to thy call, lo, I come; had I not been invited, my
coming to thee, dear Lord Jesus, had been an act of presumption, but
this makes it an act of duty and obedience.
    Fourthly, Plea the unprofitableness of thy blood to God; Lord,
there is no profit in my blood, it will turn to no more advantage to
thee to destroy, than it will to save me: if thou send me to hell,
(as the merit of my sin calls upon thy justice ot do,) I shall be
there dishonouring thee to all eternity, and the debt I owe thee
never paid. But, if thou apply thy Christ to me for righteousness,
satisfaction for all that I have done will be laid down in one full,
complete sum; indeed, if the honour of thy justice lay as a bar to
my pardon, it would stop my mouth: but when thy justice, as well as
thy mercy, shall both rejoice together, and be glorified and pleased
in the same act, what hinders but that Christ be applied to my soul,
since, in so doing, God can be no loser by it?
    Fifthly, and lastly, Plead thy compliance with the terms of the
gospel: tell him, Lord, my will complies fully and heartily to all
thy gracious terms, I can now subscribe a blank: let God offer his
Christ on what terms he will, my heart is ready to comply; I have no
exception against any article of the gospel. And now, Lord, I wholly
refer myself to thy pleasure; do with me what seems good in thine
eyes, only give me an interest in Jesus Christ; as to all other
concerns I lie at thy feet, in full resignation of all to thy
pleasure. Never did any perish in that posture and frame; and I hope
I shall not be made the first instance and example.
    Inf. 7. Lastly, If Christ, with all his benefits, be made ours,
by a special application; how contented, thankful, comfortable, and
hopeful, should believers be, in every condition which God casts
them into in this world!
    After such a mercy as this, let them never open their mouths
any more to repine and grudge at the outward inconveniences of their
condition in this world. What are the things you want, compared with
the things you enjoy? What is a little money, health, or liberty, to
wisdom, righteousness, sanctification, and redemption? All the
crowns and sceptres in the world, sold to their full value, are no
price for the least of these mercies. But I will not insist here,
your duty lies much higher than contentment.
    Be thankful, as well as content, in every state. "Blessed be
God, (saith the apostle) the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, who
has blessed us with all [spiritual blessings] in heavenly places in
Christ:" O think what are men to angels, that Christ should pass by
them to become a Saviour to men? And what art thou among men, that
thou shouldst be taken, and others left! And among all the mercies
of God, what mercies are comparable to these conferred upon thee? O
bless God in the lowest ebb of outward comforts, for such privileges
as these.
    And yet you will not come up to your duty in all this, except
you be joyful in the Lord, and rejoice evermore after the receipt of
such mercies as these, Phil. 4: 4. "Rejoice in the Lord ye
righteous, and again I say rejoice." For has not the poor captive
reason to rejoice, when he has recovered his liberty? The debtor to
rejoice when all scores are cleared, and he owes nothing? The weary
traveller to rejoice, though he be not owner of a shilling, when he
is come almost home, where all his wants shall be supplied? Why this
is our case, when Christ once becomes yours: you are the Lord's
freemen, your debts to justice are all satisfied by Christ; and you
are within a little of complete redemption from all the troubles and
inconveniences of your present state.
                                  
                 Thanks be to God for Jesus Christ.
    



Sermon 2.


Wherein the Union of the Believer with Christ, as a principal Part
of effectual Application, is stated and practically improved.

    
John 17: 23.

I in them, and thou in me, that they may be made perfect in one.


    The design and end of the application of Christ to sinners is
the communication of his benefits to them; but seeing all
communications of benefits necessarily imply communion, and all
communion as necessarily presupposes union with his person: I shall
therefore, in this place, and from this scripture, treat of the
mystical union betwixt Christ and believers; this union being the
principal act, wherein the Spirit's application of Christ consists,
of which I spake (as to its general nature) in the former sermon.
    In this verse (omitting the context) we find a threefold union,
one betwixt the Father and Christ, a second betwixt Christ and
believers, a third betwixt believers themselves.
    First, Thou in me: This is a glorious ineffable union, and is
fundamental to the other two. The Father is not only in Christ, in
respect of dear affections, as one dear friend is in another, who is
as his own soul; nor only essentially, in respect of the identity
and sameness of nature and attributes, in which respect Christ is
the express image of his person, Heb. 1: 8. But he is in Christ also
as Mediator, by communicating the fulness of the Godhead, which
dwells in him as God-man, in a transcendent and singular manner, so
as it never dwelt, nor call dwell in any other, Col. 2:9.
    Secondly, I in them. There is the mystical union betwixt Christ
and the saints, q. d. Thou and I are one essentially, they and I are
one mystically: and thou and I are one by communication at the
Godhead, and singular fulness of the Spirit to me as Mediator; and
they and I are one, by my communication of the Spirit to them in
measure.
    Thirdly, From hence results a third union betwixt believers
themselves; that they may be made perfect in one; the same Spirit
dwelling in them all, and equally uniting them all to me, as living
members to their Head of influence, there must needs be a dear and
intimate union betwixt themselves, as fellow-members of the same
body.
    Now my business, at this time, lying in the second branch,
namely the union betwixt Christ and believers, I shall gather up the
substance of it into this doctrinal proposition, to which I shall
apply this discourse.
    
    Doct. That there is a strict and dear union betwixt Christ and
    all true believers.
    
    The scriptures have borrowed from the book at nature four
elegant and lively metaphors, to help the nature of this mystical
union with Christ into our understandings; namely, that of pieces of
timber united by glue, that of a graff taking hold of its stock, and
making one tree; that of the husband and wife, by the
marriage-covenant, becoming one flesh; and that of the members and
head animated by one soul, and so becoming one natural body. Every
one of these is more lively and full than the other: and what is
defective in one, is supplied in the other; but yet neither any of
these singly, or all at them jointly, can give us a full and
complete account of this mystery.
    Not that of two pieces united by glue, 1 Cor 5: 17 "He that is
joined to the Lord is one spirit," "kollamenos", glued to the Lord
For though this cements, and strongly joins them in one, yet this is
but a faint and imperfect shadow of our union with Christ; for
though this union by glue be intimate, yet not vital, but so is that
of the soul with Christ.
    Nor that of the graft and stock, mentioned Rom. 6: 5. for
though it be there said, that believers are "sumfutoi", implanted,
or ingrafted by way of incision, and this union betwixt it and the
stock be vital, for it partakes of the vital sap and juice of it;
yet here also is a remarkable defect, for the graft is of a more
excellent kind and nature them the stock, and, upon that account,
the tree receives its denomination from it, as from the more noble
and excellent part, but Christ, into whom believers are ingrafted,
is infinitely more excellent than they, and they are denominated
from him.
    Nor yet that conjugal union, by marriage-covenant, betwixt a
man and his wife; for though this be exceeding dear and intimate, so
that a man leaves father and mother, and cleaves to his wife, and
they two become one flesh; yet this union is not indissolvable, but
may and must be broken by death; and then the relict lives alone
without any communion with, or relation to, the person that was once
so dear; but this betwixt Christ and the soul can never be dissolved
by death, it abides to eternity.
    Nor, lastly, that of the head and members united by one vital
spirit, and so making one physical body, mentioned Eph. 4: 15, 16.
for though one soul actuates every member, yet it does not knit
every member alike near to the head, but some are nearer, and others
removed farther from it; but here every member is alike nearly
united with Christ the Head; the weak are as near to him as the
strong.
    Two things are necessary to be opened in the doctrinal part of
this point. 1. The reality. 2. The quality of this union.
    First, For the reality of it, I shall make it appear, that
there is such a union betwixt Christ and believers; it is no Ens
rationis, empty notion, or cunningly devised fable, but a most
certain demonstrable truth, which appears,
    First, From the communion which is betwixt Christ and
believers, in this the apostle is express, 1 John 1: 3 "Truly our
fellowship is with the Father, and with his Son Jesus Christ;"
"koinonia". It signifies such fellowship or copartnership, as
persons have by a joint interest in one and the same enjoyment,
which is in common betwixt them. So Heb. 3: 14. we are "metochoi",
partakers of Christ. And Psal. 45: 7, "mechaverecha", here the
saints are called the companions, consorts or fellows of Christ;
"and that not only in respect of his assumption of our mortality,
and investing us with his immortality, but it has a special
reference and respect to the unction of the Holy Ghost, or graces of
the Spirit, of which believers are partakers with him and through
him." Now this communion of the saints with Christ is entirely and
necessarily dependent upon their union with him, even as much as the
branch's participation of the sap and juice depends upon its union
and coalition with the stock: take away union, and there can be no
communion, or communications, which is clear from 1 Cor. 3: 22, 23.
"All is yours, and ye are Christ's, and Christ is God's." When you
see how all our participation of Christ's benefits is built upon our
union with Christ's person.
    Secondly, The reality of the believer's union with Christ, is
evident from the imputation of Christ's righteousness to him for his
justification. That a believer is justified before God by a
righteousness without himself; is undeniable from Rom. 3: 24. "Being
justified freely by his grace, through the redemption that is in
Christ Jesus." And that Christ's righteousness becomes ours by
imputation is as clear from Rom. 4: 23, 24. but it can never be
imputed to us, except we be united to him, and become one with him:
which is also plainly asserted in 1 Cor. 1: 30. "But of him are ye
(in Christ Jesus) who of God is made unto us wisdom and
righteousness, sanctification, and redemption." He communicates his
merits unto none but those that are in him. Hence all those vain
cavils of the Papists, disputing against our justification by the
righteousness of Christ, and asserting it to be by inherent
righteousness, are solidly answered.
    When they demand, How can we be justified by the righteousness
of another? Can I be rich with another man's money, or preferred by
another man's honours? Our answer is, yes, if that other be my
surety or husband. Indeed Peter can not be justified by the
righteousness of Paul; but both may be justified by the
righteousness of Christ imputed to them; they being members, jointly
knit to one common Head. Principal and surety are one in obligations
and constructions of law. Head and members are one body, branch and
stock are one tree; and it is no strange things to see a graff live
by the sap of another stock, when once it is ingrafted into it.
    Thirdly, The sympathy that is betwixt Christ and believers,
proves a union betwixt them; Christ and the saints smile and sigh
together. St. Paul in Col. 1: 24. tells us, that he did "fill up
that which was behind, 'ta ustermata' - the remainders of the
sufferings of Christ in his flesh:" or not as if Christ's sufferings
were imperfect, ("for by one offering he has perfected for ever them
that are sanctified," Heb. 10: 14.) but in these two scriptures,
Christ is considered in a twofold capacity; he suffered once in
corpore proprio, in his own person, as Mediator; these sufferings
are complete and full, and in that sense he suffers no more: he
suffers also in corpore mystico, in his church and members, thus he
still suffers in the sufferings of every saint for his sake, and
though these sufferings in his mystical body are not equal to the
other, either pondere et mensuria, in their weight and value, not
yet designed ex officio, for the same use and purpose, to satisfy by
their proper merit, offended justice; nevertheless they are truly
reckoned the sufferings of Christ, because the head suffers when the
members do; and without this supposition, that place, Acts 9:. 5. is
never to be understood, when Christ, the Head in heaven, cries out,
"Saul, Saul, why persecutest thou me?" when the foot was trod upon
earth: How does Christ sensibly feel our sufferings, or we his, if
there be not a mystical union betwixt him and us?
    Fourthly, and lastly, The way and manner in which the saints
shall be raised at the last day, proves this mystical union betwixt
Christ and them; for they are not to be raised as others, by the
naked power of God without them, but by the virtue of Christ's
resurrection as their Head, sending forth vital, quickening
influences into their dead bodies, which are united to him as well
as their souls. For so we find it, Rom. 8: 11. "But if the Spirit of
him that raised up Jesus from the dead dwell in you, he that raised
up Christ from the dead, shall also quicken your mortal bodies, by
his Spirit that dwelleth in you;" even as it is in our awaking, out
of natural sleep, first the animal-spirits in the head begin to
rouse and play there, and then the senses and members are loosed
throughout the whole body.
    Now it is impossible the saints should be raised in the last
resurrection, by the Spirit of Christ dwelling in them, if that
Spirit did not knit and unite them to him, as members to their head.
So then by all this, it is proved, that there is a real union of the
saints with Christ.
    Next, I shall endeavour to open the quality and nature of this
union, and show you what it is, according to the weak apprehensions
we have of so sublime a mystery; and this I shall do in a general
and particular account of it.
    First, More generally, it is an intimate conjunction of
believers to Christ, by the imparting of his Spirit to them, whereby
they are enabled to believe and live in him.
    All divine and spiritual life is originally in the Father, and
comes not to us, but by and through the Son, John 5: 26. to him has
the Father given to have an "autodzoe", - a quickening enlivening
power in himself; but the Son communicates this life which is in him
to none but by and through the Spirit, Rom. 8:2. So. "The Spirit of
life which is in Christ Jesus, has made me free from the law of sin
and death."
    The Spirit must therefore first take hold of us, before we can
live in Christ; and when he does so, then we are enabled to exert
that vital act of faith, whereby we receive Christ; all this lies
plain in that one scripture, John 6: 57. "As the living Father has
sent me, and I live by the Father, so he that eateth me, (that is by
faith applies me) even he shall live by me." So that these two,
namely, the Spirit on Christ's part, and faith, his work on our
part, are the two ligaments by which we are knit to Christ.
    So that the Spirit's work in uniting or ingrafting a soul in
Christ, is like the cutting off the graff from its native stock
(which he does by his illuminations and convictions) and closing it
with the living, when it is thus prepared, and so enabling it (by
the infusion of faith) to such and draw the vital sap, and thus it
becomes one with him. Or as the many members in the natural body,
being all quickened and animated by the same vital spirit, become
one body with the head, which is the principal member, Eph. 4: 4.
"There is one body and one spirit."
    More particularly, we shall consider the properties of this
union, that so we may the better understand the nature of it. And
here I shall open the nature of it both negatively and
affirmatively.
    First, Negatively, by removing all false notions and
misapprehensions of it. And we say,
    First, The saints union with Christ is not a mere mental union
only in conceit or notion, but really exists extra mentem, whether
we conceit it or not. I know the atheistical world censures all
these things as fancies and idle imaginations, but believers know
the reality of them, Johns 14: 20. "At that day you shall know that
I am in my Father, and you in me, and I in you." This doctrine is
not fantastical, but scientifical.
    Secondly, The saints union with Christ is not a physical union,
such as is between the members of a natural body and the head; our
nature indeed is assumed into union with the person of Christ, but
it is the singular honour of that blessed and holy flesh of Christ,
to be so united as to make one person with him; that union is
hypostatical, this only mystical.
    Thirdly, Nor is it an essential union, or unions with the
divine nature, so as our beings are thereby swallowed up and lost in
the Divine being.
    Some there be indeed that talk at that wild rate, of being
godded into God, and christed into Christ; and those unwary
expressions of Greg. Naz. "Theopoiein", and "Chrisopoiein". but do
much countenance those daring spirits; but oh, there is an infinite
distance betwixt us and Christ, in respect of nature and excellency,
notwithstanding this union.
    Fourthly, The union I here speak of, is not a foederal union,
or an union by covenant only: such an union indeed there is betwixt
Christ and believers, but that is consequential to and wholly
dependant upon this.
    Fifthly, and lastly, It is not a mere moral union by love and
affection; thus we say, one soul is in two bodies, a friend is
another self; the lover is in the person beloved; such an union of
hearts and affections there is also betwixt Christ and the saints,
but this is of another nature; that we call a moral, this is a
mystical union; that only knits our affections, but this our persons
to Christ.
    Secondly, Positively. And, First, Though this union neither
makes us one person nor essence with Christ, yet it knits our
persons most intimately and nearly to the person of Christ. The
church is Christ's body, Col. 1: 24. not his natural, but his
mystical body; that is to say, his body is a mystery, because it is
to him as his natural body. The saints stand to Christ in the same
relation that the natural members of the body stand to the head, and
he stands in the same relation to them, that the head stands in to
the natural members; and consequently they stand related to one
another, as the members of a natural body do to each other.
    Christ and the saints are not one, as the oak and the ivy that
clasps it are one, but as the graff and stock are one; it is not an
union by adhesion, but incorporation. Husband and wife are not so
dear, soul and body are not so near, as Christ and the believing
soul are near to each other.
    Secondly, The mystical union is wholly supernatural, wrought
the alone power of God. So it is said, 1 Cor. 1: 30. But of him are
ye in Christ Jesus." We can no more unite ourselves to Christ, than
a branch can incorporate itself into another stock; it is of him,
i.e. of God, his proper and alone work.
    There are only two ligaments, or bands of union betwixt Christ
and the soul, viz. the Spirit on his part, and faith on ours. But
when we say faith is the band of union on our part, the meaning is
not, that it is so our own act, as that it springs naturally from
us, or is educed from the power of our own wills; no, for the
apostle expressly contradicts it, Eph. 2: 8. "It is not of
yourselves, it is the gift of God." But we are the subjects of it,
and though the act on that account be ours, yet the power enabling
us to believe is God's, Eph. 1: 19, 20.
    Thirdly, The mystical union is an immediate union; immediate I
say, not as excluding means and instruments, for several means and
many instruments are employed for the effecting of it; but
immediate, as excluding degrees of nearness among the members of
Christ's mystical body.
    Every member in the natural body stands not as near to the head
as another, but so do all the mystical members of Christ's body to
him: every member, the smallest as well as the greatest, has an
immediate coalition with Christ, 1 Cor. 1: 2. "To the church of God,
which is at Corinth, to them that are sanctified in Christ Jesus,
called to be saints, with all that in every place call upon the name
of Jesus Christ our Lord, both theirs and ours."
    Among the factions in this church at Corinth, those that said,
I am of Christ, as arrogating Christ to themselves, were as much a
faction, as those that said I am of Paul, 1 Cor. 1: 30. To cure this
he tells them, he is both theirs and ours. Such enclosures are
against law.
    Fourthly, The saints mystical union with Christ is a
fundamental union; it is fundamental by way of sustentation; all our
fruits of obedience depend upon it, John 15: 4. "As the branch
cannot bear fruit except it abide in the vine, no more can ye,
except ye abide in me." It is fundamental to all our privileges and
comfortable claims, 1 Cor. 3: 23. All is yours, for ye are
Christ's." And it is fundamental to all our hopes and expectations
of glory; for it is "Christ in you the hope of glory," Col. 1: 27.
So then, destroy this union, and with it you destroy all our fruits,
privileges, and eternal hopes, at one stroke.
    Fifthly, The mystical union is a most efficacious union, for
through this union the divine power flows into our outs, both to
quicken us with the life of Christ, and to conserve and secure that
life in us after it is so infused.
    Without the union of the soul to Christ, which is to be
conceived efficiently as the Spirit's act, there can be no union
formally considered; and, without these, no communications of life
from Christ to us, Eph. 4: 16. And as there is that "energeia", or
effectual working of the spirit of life in every part, which he
there speaks of, (as though you should say, the first appearances of
a new life, a spiritual vitality diffused through the soul, which
ere while was dead in sin) yet still this union with Christ is as
necessary to the maintaining, as before it was to the producing of
it.
    For why is it that this life is not again extinguished, and
wholly suffocated in us, by so many deadly wounds as are given it by
temptations and corruptions? Surely no reason can be assigned more
satisfying than that which Christ himself gives us, in John 14: 19.
"because I live, ye shall live also:" q d. whilst there is vital sap
in me the root, you that are branches in me cannot wither and die.
    Sixthly, The mystical union is an indissoluble union: there is
an everlasting tye betwixt Christ and the believer; and herein also
it is beyond all other unions in the world; death dissolves the dear
union betwixt the husband and wife, friend and friend, yea, betwixt
soul and body, but not betwixt Christ and the soul, the bands of
this union rot not in the grave. "What shall separate us from the
love of Christ?" saith the apostle, Rom. 8: 35, 38, 39. He bids
defiance to all his enemies, and triumphs in the firmness of his
union over all hazards that seem to threaten it. It is with Christ
and us, in respect of the mystical union, as it is with Christ
himself, in respect of the hypostatical union; that was not
dissolved by his death, when the natural union betwixt his soul and
body was, nor can this mystical union of our souls and bodies with
Christ be dissolved, when the union betwixt us and our dearest
relations, yea, betwixt the soul and body, is dissolved by death.
God calls himself the God of Abraham, long after his body was turned
into dust.
    Seventhly, It is an honourable union, yea, the highest honour
that can be done unto men; the greatest honour that was ever done to
our common nature, was by its assumption into union with the second
person hypostatically, and the highest honour that was ever done to
our single persons, was their union with Christ hypostatically. To
be a servant of Christ is a dignity transcendent to the highest
advancement among men; but to be a member of Christ, how matchless
and singular is the glory thereof! And yet, such honour have all the
saints, Eph. 5: 30. "We are members of his body, of his flesh, and
of his bones."
    Eighthly, It is a most comfortable union: yea, the ground of
all solid comfort, both in life and death. Whatever troubles, wants,
or distresses befal such, in this is abundant relief and support,
Christ is mine, and I am his; what may not a good soul make out of
that! If I am Christ's, then let him take care for me, and, indeed,
in so doing, he does but take care for his own. He is my head, and
to him it belongs to consult the safety and welfare of his own
members, Eph 1: 22, 23. He is not only an head to his owns by way of
influence, but to all things else, by way of dominion, for their
good. How comfortably may we repose ourselves, under that cheering
consideration, upon him at all times and in all difficult cases!
    Ninthly, It is a fruitful union; the immediate end of it is
fruit, Rom. 7: 4. "We are married to Christ, that we should bring
forth fruit to God." All the fruit we bear before our ingrafture
into Christ is worse than none; till the person be in Christ, the
work cannot be evangelically good and acceptable to God: "We are
made accepted in the beloved," Eph. 1: 6. Christ is a fruitful root,
and makes all the branches that live in him so too, John 15: 8.
    Tenth1y, and lastly, It is an enriching union; for, by our
union with his person, we are immediately interested in all his
riches, 1 Cor. 1: 30. How rich and great a person do the little arms
of faith clasp and embrace! "All is yours," 1 Cor; 3: 22. All that
Christ has becomes ours, either by communication to us, or
improvement for us: His Father, John 20: 17. His promises, ,2 Cor.
1: 20. His providence, Rom. 8: 28. His glory, John 17: 24. It is all
ours by virtue of our union with him.
    Thus you see briefly what the mystical union is. Next we shall
improve it.
    Inference 1. If there be such, a union betwixt Christ and
believers, Oh then what transcendent dignity has God put upon
believers.
    Well might Constantine prefer the honour of being a member of
the church, before that of being head of the empire; for it is not
only above all earthly dignities and honours, but, in some respect,
above that honour which God has put upon the angels of glory.
    Great is the dignity of the angelical nature: the angels are
the highest and most honourable species of creatures; they also have
the honour continually to behold the face of God in heaven, and yet,
in this one respect the saints are preferred to them, they have a
mystical union with Christ, as their head of influence, by whom they
are quickened with spiritual life, which the angels have not.
    It is true, there is an "anakefalaiosis", or gathering together
of all in heaven and earth under Christ as a common head, Eph. 1:
10. He is the Head of angels as well as saints, but in different
respects. To angels he is an head of dominion and government, but to
saints he is both an head of dominion, and of vital influence too;
they are his chief and most honourable subjects, but not his
mystical members: they are as the Barons and Nobles in his kingdom,
but the saints as the dear Spouse and Wife of his bosom. This
dignifies the believer above the greatest angel. And as the nobles
of the kingdom think it a preferment and honour to serve the Queen,
so the glorious angels think it no degradation or dishonour to them
to serve the saints; for to this honourable office they are
appointed, Heb. 1: 14. to be ministering or serviceable spirits, for
the good of them that shall be heirs of salvation. The chiefest
servant disdains not to honour and serve the heir.
    Some imperious grandees would frown, should some of these
persons but presume to approach their presence; but God sets them
before his face with delight, and angels delight to serve them.
    Infer. 2. If there be such a strict and inseparable union
betwixt Christ and believers, then the grace of believers can never
totally fail; Immortality is the privilege of grace, because
sanctified persons are inseparably united to Christ the Fountain of
life: "Your life is hid with Christ in God," Col. 3: 3. Whilst the
sap of life is in the root, the branches live by it. Thus it is
betwixt Christ and believers, John 14: 19. "Because I live, ye shall
live also." See how Christ binds up their life in one bundle with
his own, plainly intimating, that it is as impossible for them to
die, as it is for himself; he cannot live without them.
    True it is, the spiritual life of believers is encountered by
many strong and fierce oppositions: It is also brought to a low ebb
in some, but we are always to remember, that there are some things
which pertain to the essence of that life, in which the very being
of it lies, and some things that pertain only to its well-being. All
those things which belong to the well being of the new-creature, as
manifestations, joys, spiritual comforts, &c. may, for a time, fail,
yea, and grace itself may suffer great losses and remissions in its
degrees, notwithstanding our union with Christ; but still the
essence of it is immortal, which is no small relief to gracious
souls. When the means of grace fail, as it is threatened, Amos 8:
11. when temporary formal professors drop away from Christ like
withered leaves from the trees in a windy day, 2 Tim. 2: 18. and
when the natural union of their souls and bodies is suffering, a
dissolution from each other by death, when that silver cord is
loosed, this golden chain holds firm, 1 Cor. 3: 23.
    Inf. 3. Is the union so intimate betwixt Christ and believers?
How great and powerful a motive then is this, to make us open-handed
and liberal in relieving the necessities and wants of every gracious
person! For in relieving them, we relieve Christ himself:
    Christ personal is not the object of our pity and charity, he
is as the fountain-head of all the riches in glory, Eph. 4: 10. but
Christ mystical is exposed to necessities and wants, he feels hunger
and thirst, cold and pains, in his body the church; and he is
refreshed, relieved, and comforted, in their refreshments and
comforts. Christ the Lord of heaven and earth, in this consideration
is sometimes in need of a penny; he tells us his wants and poverty,
and how he is relieved, Matt. 25: 35, 40. A text believed and
understood by very few, "I was an hungered, and ye gave me meat: I
was thirsty, and ye gave me drink: I was a stranger, and ye took me
in. Then shall the righteous answer, Lord, when saw we thee an
hungered, &c. And the King shall answer, and say unto them, verily I
say unto you, in as much as ye have done it unto one of the least of
these my brethren, ye have done it unto me."
    It was the saying of a great divine, that he thought scarce any
man on earth did fully understand and believe this truth, and he
conceives so much hinted in the very text, where the righteous
themselves reply, "Lord, when saw we thee sick," &c. intimating in
the question, that they did not thoroughly understand the nearness,
yea, oneness of those persons with Christ, for whom they did these
things. And, indeed, it is incredible that a Christian can be
hard-hearted and close-handed to that necessitous Christian, in
refreshing and relieving of whom, he verily believes, that he
ministers refreshment to Christ himself.
    O think again and again upon this scripture; consider what
forcible and mighty arguments are here laid together, to engage
relief to the wants of Christians.
    Here you see their near relation to Christ; they are mystically
one person; what you did to them, you did to me. Here you see also
how kindly Christ takes it at our hands, acknowledging all those
kindnesses that were bestowed upon him, even to a bit of bread: He
is, you see, content to take it as a courtesy, who might demand it
by authority, and bereave you of all immediately upon refusal.
    Yea, here you see one single branch or act of obedience, (our
charity to the saints) is singled out from among all the duties of
obedience, and made the test and evidence of our sincerity in that
great day, and men blessed or cursed according to the love they have
manifested this way to the saints.
    O then, let none that understand the relation the saints have
to Christ, as the members to the head, or the relation they have to
each other thereby, as fellow-members of the same body, from hence
forth suffer Christ to hunger, if they have bread to relieve him, or
Christ to be thirsty, if they have wherewith to refresh him: this
union betwixt Christ and the saints affords an argument beyond all
other arguments in the world to prevail with us. Methinks, a little
rhetoric might persuade a Christian to part with any thing he has
for Christ, who parted with the glory of heaven, yea, and his own
blood for his sake.
    Inf. 4. Do Christ and believers make but one mystical person?
How unnatural and absurd then are all those acts of unkindness,
whereby believers wound and grieve Jesus Christ! This is as if the
hand should wound its own head, from which it receives life, sense,
motion, and strength.
    When satan smites Christ by a wicked man, he then wounds him
with the hand of an enemy; but when his temptations prevail upon the
saints to sin, he wounds him as it were with his own hand: As the
eagle and tree in the fable complained, the one that he was wounded
by an arrow winged with his own feathers; the other, that it was
cleaved asunder by a wedge hewn out of its own limbs.
    Now the evil and disingenuity of such sins are to be measured
not only by the near relation Christ sustains to believers as their
Head, but more particularly from the several benefits they receive
from him as such; for in wounding Christ by their sins,
    First, They wound their Head of influence, through whom they
live, and without whom they had still remained in the state of sin
and death, Eph. 4: 16. Shall Christ send life to us, and we return
that which is death to him! O how absurd, how disingenuous is this!
    Secondly, They wound their Head of government. Christ is a
guiding, as well as a quickening Head, Col. 1: 18. He is your
wisdom, he guides you by his counsels to glory: but must he be thus
requited for all his faithful conduct! What do you, when you sin,
but rebel against his government, refusing to follow his counsels,
and obeying, in the mean time, a deceiver, rather than him.
    Thirdly, They wound their consulting Head, who cares, provides,
and projects, for the welfare and safety of the body. Christians,
you know your affairs below have not been steered and managed by
your own wisdom, but that orders have been given from heaven for
your security and supply from day to day. "I know, O Lord, (saith
the prophet) that the way of man is not in himself, neither is it in
him that walks to direct his own steps," Jer. 10: 23.
    It is true, Christ is out of your sight, and you see him not:
but he sees you, and orders every thing that concerns you. And is
this a due requital of all that care he has taken for you? Do you
thus requite the Lord for all his benefits? What recompense evil for
good! O let shame cover you.
    Fourthly, and lastly, They wound their Head of honour. Christ
your Head is the fountain of honour to you: This is your glory that
you are related to him as your head: You are, on this account, (as
before was noted) exalted above angels.
    Now then consider, how vile a thing it is to reflect the least
dishonour upon him, from whom you derive all your glory. O consider
and bewail it.
    Inf. 5. Is there so strict and intimate a relation and union
betwixt Christ and the saints? Then surely they can never want what
is good for their souls or bodies.
    Every one naturally cares and provides for his own, especially
for his own body: yet we can more easily violate the law of nature,
and be cruel to our own flesh, than Christ can be so to his mystical
body. I know it is hard to rest upon, and rejoice in a promise, when
necessities pinch, and we see not from whence relief should arise;
but O! what sweet satisfaction and comfort might a necessitous
believer find in these considerations, would he but keep them upon
his heart in such a day of straits.
    First, Whatever my distresses are for quality, number, or
degree, they are all known even to the least circumstance, by Christ
my Head: He looks down from heaven upon all my afflictions, and
understands them more fully than I that feel them, Psal. 38: 9.
"Lord all my desire is before thee, and my groaning is not hid from
thee."
    Secondly, He not only knows them, but feels them as well as
knows them; "We have not an High-priest that cannot be touched with
the feeling of our infirmities," Heb. 4: 15. In all your afflictions
he is afflicted; tender sympathy cannot but flow from such intimate
union; therefore in Matt. 25: 35. he saith, I was an hungered, and I
was athirst, and I was naked. For indeed his sympathy and tender
compassion gave him as quick a resentment, and as tender a sense of
their wants, as if they had been his own. Yea,
    Thirdly, He not only knows and feels my wants, but has enough
in his hand, and much more than enough to supply them all; for all
things are delivered to him by the Father, Luke 10: 22. All the
storehouses in heaven and earth are his, Phil. 4: 19.
    Fourthly, He bestows all earthly good things, even to
superfluity and redundance upon his very enemies, "They have more
than heart can wish," Psal. 73: 7. He is bountiful to strangers; he
loads very enemies with these things, and can it be supposed he will
in the mean time starve his own, and neglect those whom he loves as
his own flesh? It cannot be. Moreover,
    Fifthly, Hitherto he has not suffered me to perish in any
former straits; when, and where was it that he forsook me? This is
not the first plunge of trouble I have been in; have I not found him
a God at hand! How oft have I seen him in the mount of difficulties!
    Sixthly, and lastly, I have his promise and engagement that he
will never leave me nor forsake me, Heb. 13: 5. and John 14: 18. a
promise which has never failed since the hour it was first made. If
then the Lord Jesus knows and feels all my wants, has enough, and
more than enough to supply them, if he gives even to redundance unto
his enemies, has not hitherto forsaken me, and has promised he never
will? Why then is my soul thus disquieted in me! Surely there is no
cause it should be so.
    Inf. 6. If the saints be so nearly united to Christ, as the
members to the head: 0 then, how great a sin, and full of danger is
it for any to wrong and persecute the saints! For in so doing, they
must needs persecute Christ himself.
    "Saul, Saul, (saith Christ) why persecutes thou me?" Acts 9: 4.
The righteous God holds himself obliged to vindicate oppressed
innocency, though it be in the persons of wicked men; how much more
when it is in a member of Christ? "He that toucheth you toucheth the
apple of mine eye," Zech. 2: 8. And is it to be imagined that Christ
will sit still, and suffer his enemies to hurt or injure the very
apples of his eyes? No, "He has ordained his arrows against the
persecutors," Psalm 7: 13.
    O it were better thine hand should wither, and thine arm fall
from thy shoulder, than ever it should be lifted up against Christ,
in the poorest of his members. Believe it, sirs, not only your
violent actions, but your hard speeches are all set down upon your
doom's day book; and you shall be brought to an account for them in
the great day, Jude 15. Beware what arrows you shoot, and be sure of
your mark before you shoot them.
    Inf. 7. If there be such an union betwixt Christ and the
saints, as has been described, upon what comfortable terms then may
believers part with their bodies at death?
    Christ your Head is risen, therefore you cannot be lost: nay,
he is not only risen from the dead himself, but is also "become the
first-fruits of them that slept," 1 Cor. 15: 20. Believers are his
members, his fulness, he cannot therefore be complete without you: a
part of Christ cannot perish in the grave, much less burn in hell.
Remember, when you feel the natural union dissolving, that this
mystical union can never be dissolved: the pangs of death cannot
break this tye. And as there is a peculiar excellency in the
believer's life, so there is a singular support, and peculiar
comfort in his death; "To me to live is Christ, and to die is gain,"
Phil 1: 21.
    Inf. 8. If there be such an union betwixt Christ and believers,
how does it concern every man to try and examine his state, whether
he is really united with Christ or not, by the natural and proper
effects which always flow from this union?, As,
    First, The real communication of Christs holiness to the soul.
We cannot be united with this root, and not partake of the vital sap
of sanctification from him; all that are planted into him, are
planted into the likeness of his death, and of his resurrection,
Rom. 6: 5, 6. viz. by mortification and vivification.
    Secondly, They that are so neatly united to him, as members to
the head, cannot but love him and value him above their own lives;
as we see in nature, the hand and arm will interpose to save the
head. The nearer the union, the stronger always is the affection.
    Thirdly, The members are subject to the head. Dominion in the
head must needs infer subjection in the members, Eph. 5: 24. In vain
do we claim union with Christ as our head, whilst we are governed by
our own sins, and our lusts give us law.
    Fourthly, All that are united to Christ do bear fruit to God,
Rom. 7: 4. Fruitfulness is the next end of our union; there are no
barren branches growing upon this fruitful root.
    Inf. 9. Lastly, How much are believers engaged to walk as the
members of Christ, in the visible exercises of all those graces and
duties, which the consideration of their near relation to him exacts
from them. As,
    First, How contented and well pleased should we be with our
outward lot, however providence has cast it for us in this world? O
do not repine, God has dealt bountifully with you; upon others he
has bestowed the good things of this world; upon you, himself in
Christ.
    Secondly, How humble and lowly in spirit should you be under
your great advancement! It is true, God has magnified you greatly by
this union, but yet do not swell. "You bear not the root, but the
root you," Rom. 11: 18. You shine, but it is as the stars, with a
borrowed light.
    Thirdly, How zealous should you be to honour Christ, who has
put so much honour up you! Be willing to give glory to Christ,
though his glory should rise out of your shame. Never reckon that
glory that goes to Christ, to be lost to you: when you lie at his
feet, in the most particular heart breaking confessions of sin, yet
let this please you, that therein you have given him glory.
    Fourthly, How exact and circumspect should you be in all your
ways, remembering whose you are, and whom you represent! Shall it be
said, that a member of Christ was convicted of unrighteousness and
unholy actions! God forbid. "If we say, we have fellowship with him,
and walk in darkness, we lie", 1 John 1: 6. "And he that saith he
abideth in him, ought also himself to walk even as he also walked,"
1 John 2: 6.
    Fifthly, How studious should you be of peace among yourselves,
who are so nearly united to such a Head, and thereby are made
fellow-members of the same body! The Heathen world was never
acquainted with such an argument as the apostle urges for unity, in
Eph. 4: 3, 4.
    Sixthly, and lastly, How joyful and comfortable should you be,
to whom Christ, with all his treasures and benefits, is effectually
applied in this blessed union of your souls with him! This brings
him into your possession: O how great! how glorious a person do
these little weak arms of your faith embrace!
                                  
                  Thanks be to God for Jesus Christ





Sermon 3.

Of the Nature and Use of the Gospel-ministry, as an external Mean of
applying Christ.

2 Cor. 5: 20.

Now then we are ambassadors for Christ, as though God did beseech
you by us: we pray you in Christ's stead, be ye reconciled to God.

    
    The effectual application of Christ principally consists in our
union with him; but, ordinarily, there can be no union without a
gospel-tender, and an overture of him to our souls; for, "How shall
they believe in him, of whom they have not heard? and how shall they
hear without a preacher? and how shall they preach, except they be
sent?" Rom. 10: 14.
    If God be upon a design of espousing poor sinners to his Son,
there must be a treaty in order to it; that treaty requires
interlocution betwixt both the parties concerned in it; but such is
our frailty, that, should God speak immediately to us himself, it
would confound and overwhelm us: God therefore graciously
condescends and accommodates himself to our infirmity, in treating
with us in order to our union with Christ, by his ambassadors, and
these not angels, whose converses we cannot bear, but men like
ourselves, who are commissionated for the effecting of this great
business betwixt Christ and us. "Now then, we are ambassadors for
God" &c. In which words you have,
    First, Christ's ambassadors commissioned.
    Secondly, Their commission opened.
    First, Christ's ambassadors commissioned "Now then, we are
ambassadors for Christ." The Lord Jesus thought it not sufficient to
print the law of grace and the blessed terms of our union with him
in the scriptures, where men may read his willingness to receive
them, and see the just and gracious terms and conditions upon which
he offers to become theirs, but has also set up and established a
standing office in the church, to expound that law, inculcate the
precepts, and urge the promises thereof; to woo and espouse souls to
Christ, "I have espoused you to one Husband, that I may present you
as a chaste virgin to Christ," 2 Cor 11: 20. and this not simply
from their own actions and compassions to miserable sinners, but
also by virtue of their office and commissions, whereby they are
authorised and appointed to that work "We then are ambassadors for
Christ."
    Secondly, Their commission opened: Wherein use find,
    1. Their sock appointed,
    2. Their capacity described,
    3. And the manner of their acting in that capacity prescribed.
    First, The work whereunto the ministers of the gospel are
appointed, is to reconcile the world to God; to work these sinful,
vain, rebellious hearts, which have a strong aversion from God
naturally in them, to close with him according to the articles of
peace contained in the gospel, that thereby they may be capable to
receive the mercies and benefits purchased by the death of Christ,
which they cannot receive in the state of enmity and alienation.
    Secondly, Their capacity described: They act in Christ's stead,
as his vicegerents. He is no more in this world to treat personally
with sinners, as he once did in the days of his flesh; but yet he
still continues the treaty with this lower world, by his officers,
requiring men to look upon them, and obey them as they would
himself, it he were corporally present, Luke 10: 16 "He that heareth
you, heareth me; and he that despiseth you, despiseth me."
    Thirdly, The manner of their acting in that capacity
prescribed; and that is, by humble, sweet, and condescending
entreaties and beseechings. This best suits the meek and lamb-like
Saviour whom they represent: thus he dealt with poor sinners
himself; when he conversed among them; he "would not break a bruised
reed, nor quench the smoking flax," Isa. 42: 3. This is the way to
allure and win the souls of sinners to Christ.
    From hence the note is,
    
    Doct. That the preaching of the gospel by Christ's ambassadors,
    is the mean appointed for the reconciling and bringing home of
    sinners to Christ.
    
    This is clear from Rom. 10: 14. 1 Cor. 1: 21. and many other
scriptures.
    Here we shall take into consideration these three things.
    First, What is implied in Christ's treating with simmers by his
ambassadors or ministers.
    Secondly, What is the great concernment they are to treat with
sinners about.
    Thirdly, What, and when is the efficacy of preaching, to bring
sinners to Christ.
    First, We will open what is implied and imported in Christ's
treaty with sinners, by his ambassadors or ministers.
    And here we find these six things implied.
    1. It necessarily implies the defection and fall of man, from
his estate of favour and friendship with God: If no war with heaven,
what need of ambassadors of peace? The very office of the ministry
is an argument of the fall. Gospel ordinances and officers came in
upon the fall, and expire with the Mediator's dispensatory-kingdom,
1 Cor. 15: 24, 25. "Then shall he deliver up the kingdom to God,
even the Father:" Thenceforth no more ordinances, no more ministers;
What use can there be of them, when the treaty is ended? They have
done and accomplished all they were ever intended and designed for,
when they shall have reconciled to God all the number of his elect,
that are dispersed among the lost and miserable posterity of Adam,
and have brought them home to Christ in a perfect state, Eph. 4: 12,
&c.
    2. It implies the singular grace and admirable condescension of
God to sinful man. That God will admit any treaty with him at all,
is wonderful mercy, it is more than he would do for the angels that
fell, Jude, ver. 6. "They are reserved in everlasting chains, under
darkness, unto the judgement of the great day." Christ took not on
him their nature, but suffered myriads of them to perish, and fills
up their vacant places in glory, with a number of sinful men and
women, to whom the law awarded the same punishment.
    But that God will not only treat, but entreat and beseech
sinful men to be reconciled, is yet more wonderful. Barely to
propound the terms of peace had been an astonishing mercy; but to
woo and beseech stubborn enemies to be at peace, and accept their
pardon, oh, how unparalleled was this condescension.
    3. It implies the great dignity and honour of the gospel
ministry. We are ambassadors of Christ. Ambassadors represent and
personate the prince that sends them; and the honours or contempts
done to them, reflect upon, and are reckoned to the person of their
master, Luke 10: 16. "He that heareth you, heareth me; and he that
despiseth you, despiseth me".
    Neither their persons, nor parts, are the proper ground and
reason of our respects to them; but their office and commission from
Jesus Christ.
    We are fallen into the dregs of time, wherein a vile contempt
is poured, not only upon the persons, but the very office of the
ministry; and I could heartily with that scripture, Mal. 2: 7, 8, 9.
were thoroughly considered by us; possibly it might inform us of the
true cause and reason of this sore judgement: but surely Christ's
faithful ministers deserve a better entertainment than they
ordinarily find in the world, and if we did but seriously rethink
ourselves, in whose name they come, and in whose stead they stand,
we should receive them as the Galatians did Paul, Gal. 4: 14. as
angels of God, even as Christ Jesus.
    4. Christ's treating with sinners by his ministers, who are his
ambassadors, implies the strict obligation they are under to be
faithful in their ministerial employment. Christ counts upon their
faithfulness whom he puts into the ministry, 1 Tim. 1: 12. They are
accountable to him for all acts of their office, Heb. 13: 17. If
they be silent, they cannot be innocent: "Necessity is laid upon
them, and woe to them, if they preach not the gospel," 1 Cor. 9: 16.
    Yea, necessity is not only laid upon them to preach, but to
keep close to their commission in preaching the gospel, 1 Thess. 2:
3, 4, "Our exhortation was not of deceit, nor of uncleanness, nor in
guile, but as we were allowed of God to be put in trust with the
gospel, even so we speak, not as pleasing men, but God who trieth
our hearts:" the word is not to be corrupted to please men, 2 Cor.
2: 17. their business is not to make them their disciples, but
Christ's; not to seek theirs, but them, 2 Cor. 12: 14. to keep close
to their instructions, both in the matter, manner, and end of their
ministry. So did Christ himself, the treasure of wisdom and
knowledge; yet, being sent by God, he saith, John 7: 16. "My
doctrine is not mine, but his that sent me." And so he expects and
requires that his ambassadors keep close to the commissions he has
given them, and be (according to their measure) faithful to their
trust, as he was to his. Paul is to deliver to the people, that
which he also received from the Lord, 1 Cor. 11. And Timothy must
keep that which was committed to him, 2 Tim. 1: 14.
    5. It implies the removal of the gospel-ministry to be a very
great judgement to the people. The remanding of ambassadors presages
an ensuing war. If the reconciling of souls to God be the greatest
work, then the removal of the means and instruments thereof, must be
the sorest judgement. Some account "the falling of the salt upon the
table," ominous; but surely the falling of them whom Christ calls
the salt of the earth, is so indeed.
    What now are those once famous and renowned places, from whence
Christ, (as he threatened has removed the candlestick, but magna
latrocinia, dens of robbers, and mountains of prey!
    6. And lastly, It implies both the wisdom and condescension of
God to sinful men, in carrying on a treaty of peace with them by
such ambassadors, negotiating betwixt him and them. Without a
treaty, there would be no reconciliation; and no method to carry on
such a treaty like this; for had the Lord treated with sinners
personally, and immediately, they had been overwhelmed with his
awful Majesty. The appearances of God confound the creature, "Let me
not hear again the voice of the Lord my God, (said Israel) neither
let me see this great fire any more, that I die not: Yea, so
terrible was that sight, that Moses said, I exceedingly fear and
quake," Deut. 18: 16. Heb. 12: 21.
    Or, had he commissioned angels for this employment, though they
stand not at such an infinite distance from us as God does, yet such
is the excellence of their glory (being the highest species and
order of creatures) that their appearances would be more apt to
astonish than persuade us; besides, they being creatures of another
rank and kind, and not partaking with us, either in the misery of
the fall, or benefit of the recovery by Christ, it is not to be
supposed they should speak to us so feelingly and experimentally, as
these his ministers do; they can open to you the mysteries of sin,
feeling the workings thereof daily in their own hearts; they can
discover to you the conflicts of the flesh and Spirit, as being
laity exercised in that warfare; and then, being men of the same
mould and temper, they can say to you as Elihu did to Job, chap. 33:
6, 7. "Behold, I am according to thy wish, in God's stead, I also am
formed out of the clay, behold, my terror shall not make thee
afraid, neither shall my hand be heavy upon thee."
    So that, in this appointment, much of the Divine wisdom and
condescension to sinners is manifested: "We have this treasure in
earthen vessels, that the excellency of the power may be of God, and
not of us," 2 Cor. 4: 7. God's glory and man's advantage are both
promoted by this dispensation.
    Secondly, Next we are to consider that great concernment about
which these ambassadors of Christ are to treat with sinners; and
that (as the text informs us) is their reconciliation to God.
    Now reconciliation with God, is the restoring of men to that
former friendship they had with God, which was broken by the fall,
and is still continued by our enmity and aversation whilst we
continue in our natural and unregenerate state. Now this is that
greatest and most blessed design that ever God had in the world; an
astonishing and invaluable mercy to men, as will clearly appear, by
considering these particulars following.
    First, That God should be reconciled after such a dreadful
breach as the fall of man made, is wonderful; no sin, all things
considered, was ever like to this sin: other sins, like a single
bullet, kill particular persons, but this, like a chain-shot, cuts
off multitudes as the sand upon the sea-shore, which no man can
number.
    If all the posterity of Adam in their several generations,
should do nothing else but bewail and lament this sin of his, whilst
this world continues, yet would it not be enough lamented; for a man
so newly created out of nothing, and admitted the first moment into
the highest order, crowned a king over the works of God's hands,
Psal. 8: 5. a man perfect and upright, without the least inordinate
motions, or sinful inclination: a man whose mind was most clear,
bright, and apprehensive of the will of God, whose will was free,
and able to have easily put by the strongest temptation: a man in a
paradise of delights, where nothing was left to desire for advancing
the happiness of soul or body: a man understanding himself to be a
public, complexive person, carrying not only his own, but the
happiness of the whole world in his hand: so soon, upon so slight a
temptation, to violate the law of his God, and involve himself and
all his posterity with him, in such a gulf of guilt and misery; all
which he might so easily have prevented! O wonderful amazing mercy,
that ever God should think of being reconciled, or have any purposes
of peace towards so vile an apostate creature as man.
    Secondly, That God should be reconciled to men, and not to
angels, a more high and excellent order of creatures, is yet more
astonishing; when the angels fell they were lost irrecoverably; no
hand of mercy was stretched out to save one of those myriads of
excellent beings, but chains of darkness were immediately clapped on
them, to reserve them to the judgement of the great day, Jude 6.
    That the milder attribute should be exercised to the inferior,
and the severer attribute to the more excellent creature, is just
matter for eternal admiration. Who would cast away vessels of gold,
and save earthen potsherds! Some indeed undertake to show us the
reasons, why the wisdom of God made no provisions for the recovery
of angels by a Mediator of reconciliation; partly from the high
degree of the malignity of their sin, who sinned in the light of
heaven; partly because it was decent, it at the first breach of the
Divine law should be punished, to secure obedience for the future.
And besides, the angelical nature was not entirely lost, myriads of
angels still continuing in their innocency and glory; when as all
mankind was lost in Adam.
    But we must remember still the law made no distinction, but
awarded the same punishment, and therefore it was mercy alone that
made the difference, and mercy for ever is to be admired by men; how
astonishing is the grace of God, that moves in a way of
reconciliation to us, out of design to fill up the vacant places in
heaven, from which angels fell, with such poor worms as we are!
Angels excluded, and men received. O stupendous mercy!
    Thirdly, That God should be wholly and thoroughly reconciled to
man, so that no fury remains in him against us; according to that
scripture, Isa. 27: 4. is still matter of further wonder.
    The design he sends his ambassadors to you about, is not the
allaying and mitigating of his wrath, (which yet would be matter of
great joy to the damned) but thoroughly to quench all his wrath, so
that no degree thereof shall ever be felt by you. O blessed embassy?
"Beautiful upon the mountains are the feet of them that bring such
tidings." God offers you a full reconciliation, a plenary remission.
    Fourthly, That God should be wholly reconciled to sinners, and
discharge them without any, the least satisfaction to his justice
from them is, and for ever will be, marvellous in their eyes.
    O what mercy would the damned account it, if after a thousand
years torment in hell, God would at last be reconciled to them, and
put an end to their misery! But believers are discharged without
bearing any part of the curse, not one earthing of that debt is
levied upon them.
    Object. If you say, how can this be, when God stands upon full
satisfaction to his justice before any soul be discharged and
restored to favour? freely reconciled, and yet fully satisfied, how
can this be?
    Solut. Very well, for this mercy comes freely to your hands,
how costly soever it proved to Christ; and that free remission, and
full satisfaction, are not contradictory and inconsistent things, is
plain enough from that scripture, Rom. 3: 24. Being justified freely
by his grace, through the redemption that is in Christ Jesus:
freely, and yet in the way of redemption.
    For though Christ, your Surety, has made satisfaction in your
name and stead, yet it was his life, his blood, and not yours, that
went for it, and this Surety was of Gods own appointment, and
providing, without your thoughts or contrivance. O blessed
reconciliation! happy is the people that hear the joyful sound of
it.
    Fifthly, and lastly, that God should be finally reconciled to
sinners, so that never any new breach shall happen betwixt him and
them any more, so as to dissolve the league of friendship, is a most
ravishing and transporting message.
    Two things give confirmation and full security to reconciled
ones, viz. the terms of the covenant, and the intercession of the
Mediator.
    The covenant of grace gives great security to believers,
against new breaches betwixt God and them. It is said, Jer. 32: 40.
"And I will snake an everlasting covenant with them, that I will not
turn away from them to do them good, but I will put my fear in their
hearts, that they shall not depart from me." The fear of the Lord is
a choice preservative against second revolts, and therefore taken
into the covenant. It is no hindrance, but a special guard to
assurance.
    There is no doubt of God's faithfulness: that part of the
promise is easily believed, that he will not turn away from us to do
us good: all the doubt is of the inconstancy of our hearts with God,
and against that danger, this promise makes provision.
    Moreover, the intercession of Christ in heaven secures the
saints in their reconciled state, 1 John 2: 1, 2. "If any man sin,
we have an Advocate with the Father, Jesus Christ the righteous, and
he is the Propitiation." He continually appears in heaven before the
Father, as a lamb that had been slain," Rev. 5: 6. And at the bow in
the clouds, Rev. 4: 3. So that as long as Christ thus appears in the
presence of God for us, it is not possible our state of
justification and reconciliation can be again dissolved.
    And this is that blessed embassy gospel-ministers are employed
about; he has committed to them the word of this reconciliation.
    In the last place, we are to enquire what, and whence is this
efficacy of preaching, to reconcile and bring home sinners to
Christ.
    That its efficacy is great in convincing, humbling, and
changing the hearts of men, is past all debate and question. "The
weapons of our warfare (saith the apostle) are not carnal, but
mighty through God, to the pulling down of strongholds, casting down
imaginations, and every high thing that exalteth itself against the
knowledge of God, and bringing into captivity every thought to the
obedience of Christ," 2 Cor. 10: 4, 5. No heart so hard, no
conscience so stupid, but this sword can pierce and wound; in an
instant it can cast down all those vain reasonings; and fond
imaginations, which the carnal heart has been building all its life
long, and open a fair passage for convictions of sin, and the fears
and terrors of wrath to come, into that heart that never was afraid
of these things before. So Acts 2: 37. "When they heard this, they
were pricked to the heart, and said unto Peter, and to the rest of
the apostles, Men and brethren, what shall we do?"
    What shall we do? is the doleful cry of men at their wits end;
the voice of one in deepest distress and such outcries have been no
rarities under the preaching of the word; its power has been felt by
persons of all orders and conditions; the great and honourable of
the earth, as well as the poor and despicable. The learned and the
ignorant, the civil and profane, the young and the old, all have
felt the heart-piercing efficacy of the gospel.
    If you ask, whence has the word preached this mighty power? The
answer must be, neither from itself nor him that preaches it, but
from the Spirit of God whose instrument it is, by whose blessing and
concurrence with it, it produceth its blessed effects upon the
hearts of men.
    First, This efficacy and wonderful power is not from the word
itself; take it in an abstract notion, separated from the Spirit, it
can do nothing: it is called "the foolishness of preaching," 1 Cor
1: 21. Foolishness, not only because the world so accounts it, but
because in itself it is a weak and unsuitable, and therefore a very
improbable way to reconcile the world to God; that the stony heart
of one man should be broken by the words of another man; that one
poor sinful creature should be used to breathe spiritual life into
another; this could never be, if this sword were not managed by an
omnipotent hand.
    And besides, we know what works naturally, works necessarily;
if this efficacy were inherent in the word, so that we should
suppose it to word as other natural objects do, then it must needs
convert all to whom it is at any time preached, except its effect
were miraculously hindered, as the fire which it could not burn the
three children; but alas, thousands hear it, that never feel the
saving power of it, Isa 53: 1 and 2 Cor 4: 3, 4
    Secondly, It derives not this efficacy from the instrument by
which it is ministered: let their gifts and abilities be what they
will, it is impossible that ever such effects should be produced
from the strength of their natural or gracious abilities, 2 Cor 4: 7
"We have this treasure (saith the apostle) in earthen vessels, that
the excellency of the power may be of God, and not of us."
    The treasure of the gospel-light is carried "en osrakinois
skeuesin", in earthen vessels, as Gideon and his men had their lamps
in earths pitchers, or in oyster-shells, for so the word also
signifies; the oyster-shell is a base and worthless thing in itself;
however, there lies the rich and precious pearl of so great value.
And why is this precious treasure lodged in such weak, worthless
vessels? Surely it is upon no other design but to convince us of the
truth I am here to prove, that the excellency of the power is of
God, and not of us, as it follows in the next words. To the same
purpose speaks the same apostle, 1 Cor. 3: 7 "So then, neither is he
that planteth any thing, neither he that watereth; but God that
giveth the increase."
    Not any thing! What can be more diminutively spoken of the
gospel-preachers? But we must not understand these words in a simple
and absolute, but in a comparative and relative sense not as if they
were not necessary and useful in their place, but that how necessary
soever they be, and what excellent gifts soever God has furnished
them with; yet it is neither in their power nor choice to make the
word they preach effectual to men; if it were, then the damnation of
all that hear us must needs lie at our door; then also, many
thousands would have been reconciled to God, which are yet in the
state of enmity, but the effect of the gospel is not in our power.
    Thirdly, But whatever efficacy it has to reconcile men to God,
it derives from the Spirit of God, whose co-operation and blessing
(which is arbitrarily dispensed) gives it all the fruit it has.
Ministers, saith one, are like trumpets which make no sound, if
breath is hot breathed into them. Or like Ezekiel's wheels, which
move not unless the Spirit move them; or Elisha's servant, whose
presence does no good except Elisha's spirit be there also. For want
of the Spirit of God how many thousands of souls do find the
ministry to be nothing to them? If it be something to the purpose to
any soul, it is the Lord that makes it so. This Spirit is not
limited by men's gifts or parts; he concurs not only with their
labours who have excellent gifts, but oftentimes blesses mean,
despicable gifts with far greater success.
    Suppose, saith Austin, there be two conduits in a town, one
very plain and homely, the other built of polished marble, and
adorned with excellent images, as eagles, lions, angels; the water
refreshes as its water, and not as it comes from such or such a
conduit. It is the Spirit that gives the word all that virtue it
has: he is the Lord of all saving influences: he has dominion over
the word, over our souls, over the times and seasons of conversion;
and if any poor creature attend the ministry without benefit, if he
go away as he came, without fruit, surely we may say in this case,
as Martha said to Christ, in reference to her brother Lazarus, Lord,
if thou hadst been here, my brother had not died; so, Lord, if thou
hadst been in this prayer, in this sermon, this poor soul had not
gone dead and carnal from under it. And what now remains, but that
we apply this truth in those uses that it gives us.
    
                      First use of information.
    
    Is the preaching of the gospel by Christ's ambassadors, the way
which God takes to reconcile sinners to himself? Then how
inexcusable are all those that continue in their state of enmity,
though the ambassadors of peace have been with them all their lives
long, wooing and beseeching them to be reconciled to God.
    O invincible, obstinate, incurable disease, which is aggravated
by the only proper remedy! Has God been wooing and beseeching you by
his ambassadors so many years to be reconciled to him, and will you
not yield to any entreaties? Must he be made to speak in vain, to
charm the deaf adder? Well, when the milder attribute has done with
you, the severer attribute will take you in hand.
    The Lord has kept an account of every year and day of his
patience towards you, Luke 13: 7. "These three years I came seeking
fruit on this fig-tree, and find none;" and Jer. 25: 3 "These three
and twenty years have I spoken unto your rising early and speaking,
but you have not hearkened."
    Well, be thou assured, that God has both the glass of your
time, and the vials of his wrath, by him? and so much of his abused
patience as runs out of one, so much of his incensed wrath runs into
the other. There is a time when this treaty of peace will end, when
the Master of the house will rise up, and the doors be shut, Luke
13: 25. Then will you be left without hope, and without apology.
    We read, indeed, of some poor and ineffectual pleas that will
be made by some at the last day; so Matt. 7: 22. "We have prophesied
in thy name," &c. These pleas will not avail; but as for you, what
will you plead? Possibly many thousand idiots, or poor weak-headed
persons, may perish; many young ones that had little or no thing in
the world to acquaint themselves with matters of religion, or
understand the way of salvation. Many millions of heathens that
never heard the name of Christ, nor came within the sound of
salvation, who will yet perish, and that justly.
    Now whatsoever apologies any of these will make for themselves
in the last day, to be sure you can make none. God has given you a
capacity and competent understanding; many of you are wise and
subtle in all your other concernments, and only show your folly in
the great concernments of your salvation. You cannot plead want of
time, some of you are grown grey headed under the gospel; you cannot
plead want of means and opportunities; the ordinances and ministers
of Christ have been with you all your life long to this day; sure if
you be Christless now, you must also be speechless then.
    Inf. 2 Hence it also follows, That the world owes better
entertainment than it gives to the ministers of Christ: Christ's
ambassadors deserve a better welcome than they find among men.
    Your respects to them is founded upon their office and
employment for you, Heb 13: 17 and 1 Thess 5: 12. They watch for
your souls, dare any of you watch for their ruin? They bring glad
tidings, shall they return with sad tidings to him that sent them?
They publish peace, shall they be rewarded with trouble? O
ungrateful world! We read in Eph 6: 20. of an ambassador in bonds,
and he no ordinary one neither. We read also of a strange challenge,
made by another at his own death, Acts 7: 52. "Which of all the
prophets have not your fathers persecuted? And they have slain them
which shewed before the coming of the just One." Some that brake the
bread of life to you, might want bread to eat, for any regard you
have to them. The office of the ministry speaks the abundant love of
God to you; your contempt and abuse of it, speaks the abundant
stupidity and malignity of your hearts towards God. What a sad
protestation does Jeremiah make against his ungrateful people, Jer.
28: 20 "Shall evil (saith he) be recompensed for good? for they have
digged a pit for my soul; remember that I stood before thee to speak
good for them, and to turn away thy wrath from them "
    God's mercy is eminently discovered in the institution of, and
Satan's malice is eminently discovered in the opposition to, the
ministerial office. Satan is a great and jealous prince, and it is
no wonder he should raise all the forces he can to oppose the
ambassadors of Christ; when, saith one, the gospel comes into his
dominions, it does, as it were, by sound of trumpet and beat of
drum, proclaim liberty to all his slaves and vassals, if they will
quit that tyrant that has so long held their souls in bondage, and
come under the sweet and easy government of Christ. And can the
devil endure this, think you? If Christ sends forth ambassadors, no
wonder if Satan sends forth opposers; he certainly owes them a
spite, that undermine his government in the world.
    Infer. 3. Hence it follows, That it nearly concerns all
Christ's ambassadors, to see that they be in a state of
reconciliation with God themselves.
    Shall we stand in Christ's stead by office, and yet not be in
Christ by union? Shall we entreat men to be reconciled to God, and
yet be at enmity with him ourselves? O let us take heed, "Lest after
we have preached to others, we ourselves should be cast-a-ways," 1
Cor. 9: 27. Of all men living we are the most miserable, if we be
Christless and graceless: our consciences will make more terrible
applications of our doctrine to us in hell, than ever we made to the
vilest of sinners on earth. O, it is far easier to study and press a
thousand truths upon others, than to feel the power of one truth
upon our own hearts; to teach others facienda quam faciendo: duties
to be done, than duties by doing them.
    They are sad dilemma's with which a learned writer poses such
graceless ministers, If sin be evil, why do you live in it? If it be
not, why do you dissuade men from it? If it be dangerous, how dare
you venture on it? If it be not, why do you tell men so? If God's
threatenings be true, why do you not fear them? If they be false,
why do you trouble men needless]y with them, and put them into such
frights without a cause?
    Take heed to yourselves, lest you should cry down sin and not
overcome it; lest while you seek to bring it down in others, you bow
to it, and become its slaves yourselves: it is easier to chide at
sin than to overcome it. That is a smart question, Rom. 2: 21. "Thou
that teachest another, teachest thou not thyself? A profane minister
was converted by reading that text once, but how many have read it
as well as he, who never trembled at the consideration of it as he
did!

                       2. Use for conviction.
    
    Is this the method God uses to reconcile men to himself; O,
then examine yourselves, whether yet the preaching of the gospel has
reconciled you to God. It is too manifest that many among us are in
a state of enmity unto this day. We may say with the prophet, Isa.
53: 1. "Who has believed our report? and to whom is the arm of the
Lord revealed?" We offer you peace upon gospel terms and articles,
but our peace returns to us again; enemies you were to God, and
enemies you still continue. The evidence is undeniable: for,
    1. Evidence. Many of you were never convinced to this day of
your state of enmity against God; and without conviction of this,
reconciliation is impossible; without repentance there can be no
reconciliation, and without conviction there can be no repentance.
When we repent, we lay down our weapons, Isa. 27: 4, 5. But how few
have been brought to this? Alas! if a few poor, cold, heartless,
ineffectual confessions of sin, may pass for a due conviction, and
serious repentance, then have we been convinced, then have we
repented; but you will find, if ever the Lord intend to reconcile
you to himself, your convictions and humiliations for sin, will be
other manner of things, and will cost you more than a few cheap
words against sin, 2 Cor. 7: 11. "In that ye sorrowed after a godly
sort, what carefulness it wrought in you, yea, what clearing of
yourselves, yea, what indignation, yea, what fear, yea, what
vehement desire, yea, what zeal, yea, what revenge?"
    2. Evidence. Many of us never treated seriously with the Lord
about peace, and how then are we reconciled to him? What, a peace
without a treaty? Reconciliation without any consideration about it?
It can never be. When was the time, and where was the place, that
you were found in secret upon your knees, mourning over the sin of
your nature, and the evils of your ways? Certainly you must be
brought to this; you must with a broken heart bewail your sin and
misery.
    Friend, that stony heart of thine must feel remorse and anguish
for sin, it will cost thee some sad days and sorrowful nights, or
ever thou canst have peace with God: it will cost thee many a groan,
many a tear, many a hearty cry to heaven. If ever peace be made
betwixt God and thee, thou must "take with thee words, and turn to
the Lord, saying, Take away all iniquity and receive me graciously."
O for one smile, one token of love, one hint of favour! The child of
peace is not born without pangs and agonies of soul.
    3. Evidence. Many of us are not reconciled to the duties of
religion, and ways of holiness, and how then is it possible we
should be reconciled to God? What, reconciled to God, and
unreconciled to the ways of God? By reconciliation we are made nigh:
in duties of communion we draw nigh; and can we be made nigh to God,
and have no heart to draw nigh to God? It can never be.
    Examine your hearts, and say, Is not the way of strictness a
bondage to you? Had you not rather be at liberty to fulfil the
desires of the flesh, and of the mind? Could you not wish that the
scriptures had not made some things else your sins, and other things
your duties: do you delight in the law of God after the inner man,
and esteem his judgements, concerning all things to be right? Do you
love secret prayer, and delight in duties of communion with God: or
rather, are they not an ungrateful burden, and irksome imposition?
Give conscience leave to speak plain.
    4. Evidence. Many of us are not enemies to sin, and how then
are we reconciled to God? What, friends with God, and our lusts too?
It cannot be. Psal. 97: 10. "Ye that love the Lord hate evil." The
same hour our reconciliation is made with God, there is an
everlasting breach made with sin: this is one of the articles or
conditions of our peace with God, Isa. 55: 7. "Let the wicked
forsake his ways, and the unrighteous man his thoughts, and let him
turn to the Lord, and he will have mercy on him; and to our God, and
he will abundantly pardon."
    But it is manifest in many of us, that we are no enemies to
sin; we secretly indulge it, what bad names soever we call it. We
will commit ten sins to cover one: we cannot endure the most
serious, faithful, seasonable, private tender, and necessary
reproofs for sin, but our hearts swell and rise at it; sure we are
not reconciled to God, whilst we embrace his enemy in our bosoms.
    5. Evidence. We love not the children of God, nor are we
reconciled to them that bear his image, and how then can we be
reconciled to God? 1 John 5: 1. "He that loveth him that begat,
loveth them also that are begotten." What, at peace with the Father,
and at war with the children? It cannot be. Do not some that hope
they have made their peace with God, hate, revile, and persecute the
children of God? Surely, in that day we are reconciled to the Lord,
we are reconciled to all his people: we all then love a Christian as
a Christian, and by this we may know that we are passed from death
to life.
    6. Evidence. Lastly, How can any man think himself to be
reconciled to God, who never closed heartily with Jesus Christ by
faith, who is the only days-man, and peace maker: the alone Mediator
of reconciliation betwixt God and man.
    This is a sure truth, that all whom God accepts into favour,
are "made accepted in the beloved," Eph. 1: 6. If any man will make
peace with God, he must take hold of his strength, accept and close
with Christ who is the power of God, or he can never make peace,
Isa. 27. He must be made "nigh by the blood of Christ," Eph. 2: 13.
But alas! both Christ and faith are strangers to many souls, who yet
persuade themselves they are at peace with God: O fatal mistake!
    
                      III. Use of Exhortation.
    
    Lastly, This point deserves a close, vigorous application in a
threefold exhortation.
    First, To Christ's ambassadors, who treat with souls in order
to their reconciliation with God.
    Secondly, To those that are yet in their empty and unreconciled
state.
    Thirdly, To those that have embraced the terms of peace, and
submitted to the gospel overtures.
    First, To the ambassadors of reconciliation. God has put a
great deal of honour upon you in this high and noble employment;
Great is the dignity of your office; to some you are "the savour of
death unto death, and to others a savour of life unto life; and who
is sufficient for these things?" 2 Cor. 2: 16. But yet the duty is
no less than the dignity. O what manner of men should we be for
judgement, seriousness, affections, patience, and exemplary
holiness, to whom the management of so great a concern betwixt God
and man is committed.
    First, For judgement and prudence, how necessary are these in
so weighty and difficult a business as this! He had need be a man of
wisdom that is to inform the ignorant of the nature and necessity of
this great work, and win over their hearts to consent to the
articles of peace propounded in the gospel; that has so many subtle
temptations to answer, and so many intricate causes of conscience to
resolve: there are many strongholds of Satan to be battered, and
many stout and obstinate resistances made by the hearts of sinners,
which must be overcome; and he has need be no novice in religion, to
whom so difficult a province is committed.
    Secondly, Let us be serious in our work as well as judicious.
Remember, O ye ambassadors of Christ, you bring a message from the
God of heaven, of everlasting consequence to the souls of men. The
eternal decrees are executed upon them in your ministry: to some you
are "the savour of life unto life, and to some the savour of death
unto death," 2 Cor. 2: 16. Heaven and hell are matters of most awful
and solemn consideration. O, what an account have we also shortly to
give unto him that sent us!
    These are matters of such deep concernment, as should swallow
up our very spirits; the least they can do, is to compose our hearts
unto seriousness in the management of them.
    Thirdly, Be filled with tender affections toward the souls of
men, with whom you treat for reconciliation: you had need be men of
bowels, as well as men of brains: you see a multitude of poor souls
upon the brink of eternal misery, and they know it not, but promise
themselves peace, and fill themselves with vain hopes of heaven: and
is there a more moving, melting spectacle in the world than this! O
think with what bowels of commiseration Moses and Paul were filled,
when the one desired rather to be blotted out of God's book, and the
other to be accursed from Christ, than that Israel should not be
saved, Exod. 32: 33. and Rom. 9: 3. Think how the bowels of Christ
yearned over Jerusalem, Mat. 23: 37. And over the multitude, Mat. 9:
36. "Let the same mind be in you, which also was in Christ Jesus."
    Fourthly, Be patient and longsuffering towards sinners: such is
the value of one soul, that it is worth waiting all our days to save
it at last: "The servant of the Lord must not strive, but be gentle
unto all men, apt to teach, patient, in meekness instructing them
that oppose themselves, if God per adventure will give then
repentance," 2 Tim. 2: 24, 25. The Lord waits with patience upon
sinners, and well may you. Consider yourselves, how long was God
treating with you, see you were won to him? Be not discouraged, if
your success presently answer not your expectations.
    Fifthly, and lastly, Be sure to back your exhortations with
drawing examples; else you may preach out your last breath before
you gain one soul to God. The devil, and the carnal hearts of your
hearers, will put hindrances enough in the way of your labours; do
not you put the greatest of all yourselves. O study not only to
preach exactly, but to live exactly; let the misplacing of one
action in your lives, trouble you more than the misplacing of words
in your discourses; this is the way to succeed in your embassy, and
give up your account with joy.
    Secondly, The exhortation speaks to all those that are yet in a
state of enmity and unreconciled to God unto this day. O that my
words might prevail, and that you would now be entreated to be
reconciled to God! The ambassadors of peace are yet with you, the
treaty is not yet ended, the Master of the house is not yet risen
up, nor the door of mercy and hope finally shut: hitherto God has
waited to be gracious; O that the long suffering of God might be
your salvation: a day is hasting when God will treat with you no
more, when a gulph shall be fixed betwixt him and you for ever, Luke
16: 26. O what will you do when the season of mercy, and all hopes
of mercy shall end together! When God shall be come inaccessible,
inexorable, and irreconcilable to you for evermore.
    O, what wilt thou do, when thou shalt find thyself shut up
under eternal wrath! when thou shalt feel that misery thou art
warned of! Is this the place where I must be! Are these the torments
I must endure! What, for ever! yea, for ever: Will not God be
satisfied with the sufferings of a thousand years? no, nor millions
of years? Ah, sinners, did you but clearly see the present and
future misery of unreconciled ones, and what that wrath of the great
and terrible God is, which is coming as fast as the wings of time
can bring it upon you, it would certainly drive you to Christ, or
drive you out of your wits. O it is a dreadful thing to have God for
your eternal enemy: to have the great and terrible God causing his
infinite power to avenge the abuse of his grace and mercy.
    Believe it, friends, it is a fearful thing to fall into the
hands of the living God: knowing the terrors of the Lord we persuade
men: an eternal weight hangs upon an inch of time. O that you did
but know the time of your visitation! that you would not dare to
adventure, and run the hazard of one day more in an unreconciled
state.
    Thirdly, and lastly, This point speaks to those who have
believed our report, who have taken hold of God's strength, and made
peace with him: who had not obtained mercy, but now have obtained
mercy: who once were afar off, but now are made nigh by the blood of
Christ: with you I would leave a few words of exhortation, and I
have done.
    First, Admire and stand amazed at this mercy. "I will praise
thee, O Lord, (saith the church, Isa. 12: 1.) Though thou wast angry
with me, thine anger is turned away, and thou comfortest me." O how
overwhelming a mercy is here before you! God is at peace, at peace
with you that were "enemies in your minds by wicked works," Col. 1:
21. At peace with you, and at enmity with millions as good by nature
as you; at peace with you that sought it not: at peace for ever; no
dissolving this friendship for evermore. O let this consideration
melt your hearts before the Lord, and make you cry, What am I, Lord,
that mercy should take in me, and shut out fallen angels, and
millions of men and women as capable of mercy as myself! O the
riches! O the depths of the mercy and goodness of God!
    Secondly, Beware of breaches with God: God will speak peace to
his people and to his saints, but let them not turn again to folly,
Psal. 85: 8. What though this state of friendship can never be
dissolved, yet it is a dreadful thing to have it clouded: You may
lose the sense of peace, and with it all the joy of your hearts, and
the comforts of your lives in this world.
    Thirdly, Labour to reconcile others to God: especially those
that are endeared to you by the bonds of natural religion: When Paul
was reconciled to God himself, his heart was full of heaviness for
others that were not reconciled; for his "brethren and kinsmen
according to the flesh," Rom. 9: 2, 3. When Abraham was become God's
friend himself, then, "O that Ishmael might live before thee!" Gen.
17: 18.
    Fourthly, and lastly, "Let your reconciliation with God relieve
you under all burdens of affliction you shall meet with in your way
to heaven:" Let them that are at enmity with God droop under crosses
and afflictions; but do not you do so. Tranquillus Deus tranquillat
omnia, Rom. 5: 1, 2, 3. Let the peace of God keep your hearts and
minds. As nothing can comfort a man that must go to hell at last; so
nothing should deject a man that shall, through many troubles, at
last reach heaven.






Sermon 4.


Concerning the Work of the Spirit, as the internal, and most
effectual Mean of the Application of Christ.


John 6: 44.

No man can come to me, except the Father which hath sent me draw
him.


    Our last discourse informed you of the usefulness and influence
of the preaching of the gospel, in order to the application of
Christ to the souls of men. There must be (in God's ordinary way)
the external ministerial offer of Christ, before men can have union
with him.
    But yet, all the preaching in the world can never effect this
union with Christ in itself, and in its oven virtue, except a
supernatural and mighty power go forth with it for that end and
purpose. Let Boanerges and Barnabas try their strength, let the
angels of heaven be the preachers; till God draw, the soul cannot
come to Christ.
    No saving benefit is to be had by Christ, without union with
his person, no union with his person without faith, no faith
ordinarily wrought without the preaching of the gospel by Christ's
ambassadors, their preaching has no saving efficacy without Gods
drawings, as will evidently appear by considering these words and
the occasion of them.
    The occasion of these words is found (as learned Cameron well
observes) in the 42d verse, "And they said, is not this Jesus the
son of Joseph, whose father and mother we know?" Christ had been
pressing upon them in his ministry, the great and necessary duty of
faith; but notwithstanding the authority of the preacher; the
holiness of his life; the miracles by which he confirmed his
doctrine; they still objected against him, "is not this the
carpenter's son?" From whence Christ takes occasion for these words;
"No man can come unto me, except my Father which has sent me, draw
him," q. d. In vain is the authority of my person urged; in vain are
all the miracles wrought in your sight, to confirm the doctrine
preached to you; till that secret, almighty power of the Spirit be
put forth upon your hearts, you will not, you cannot, come unto me.
    The words are a negative proposition,
    In which the author, and powerful manner of divine operation in
working faith, are contained: these must be drawing before
believing, and that drawing must be the drawing of God: every word
has its weight: we will consider them in the order they lie in the
text.
    "Oudeis", - No Man] not one, let his natural qualifications be
what they will, let his external advantages, in respect of means and
helps, be never so great: it is not in the power of any man; all
persons, in all ages, need the same power of God, one at well as
another; every man is alike dead, impotent, and averse to faith in
his natural capacity. No man, or - not one, among all the sons of
men.
    "Dunatai" - Can] or is able: he speaks of impotency to special
and saving actions, such as believing in Christ is: no act that is
saving can be done without the concurrence of special grace. Other
acts that have a remote tendency to it, are performed by a more
general concourse and common assistance; so men may come to the
word, and attend to what is spoken, remember and consider what the
word tells them; but as to believing or coming to Christ, that no
man can do of himself, or by a general and common assistance. No man
can.
    "Echtein pros me", - Cone unto me,] i.e. believe in me unto
salvation. Coming to Christ, and believing in him, are terms
aequipollent, and are indifferently used to express the nature of
saving faith, as is plain, ver. 35. "He that comes to me shall never
hunger, and he that believeth on me shall never thirst:" it notes
the terms from which and to which the soul moves, and the
voluntariness of the motion, notwithstanding that divine power by
which the will is drawn to Christ.
    "Ean me ho Pater", Except my Father] not excluding the other
two Persons; for every word of God relating to the creatures is
common to all the three Persons; nor only to note that the Father is
the first in order of working: but the reason is hinted in the next
words.
    "Ho pempsas me", - Who has sent me,] God has entered into
covenant with the Son, and sent him, stands obliged thereby, to
bring the promised seed to him, and that he does by drawing them to
Christ by faith: so the next words tell us the Father does,
    "Elkuse auton". - Draw him.] That is, powerfully and
effectually incline his will to come to Christ: "Not by a violent
co-action, but by a benevolent bending of the will which was
averse;" and as it is not in the way of force and compulsion, so
neither is it by a simple moral suasion, by the bare proposal of an
object to the will, and so leaving the sinner to his own election;
but it is such a persuasion, as has a mighty overcoming efficacy
accompanying which more anon.
    The words thus opened, the observation will be this:
    
    Doct. That it is utterly impossible for any man to come to
    Jesus Christ, unless he be drawn unto him by the special and
    mighty power of God.
    
    No man is compelled to come to Christ against his will, he that
comes, comes willingly, but even that will and desire to come is the
effect of grace, Phil. 2: 13. "It is God that worketh in you, both
to will and to do of his own good pleasure."
    "If we desire the help and assistance of grace, (saith
Fulgentius) even the desire is of grace; grace must first be shed
forth upon us, before we can begin to desire it." "By grace are we
saved through faith, and that not of yourselves, it is the gift of
God," Eph. 2: 8. Suppose the utmost degree of natural ability; let a
man be as much disposed and prepared as nature can dispose or
prepare him, and to all this, add the proposal of the greatest
arguments and motives to induce him to come; let all these have the
advantage of the fittest season to work upon his heart; yet no man
can come till God draw him: we move as we are moved: as Christ's
coming to us, so our coming to him are the pure effects of grace.
    Three things require explication in this point before us.
    First, What the drawing of the Father imports.
    Secondly, In what manner he draws men to Christ.
    Thirdly, How it appears that none can come till they be so
drawn.
    First, What the drawing of the Father imports.
    To open this, let it be considered, that drawing is usually
distinguished into physical and moral. The former is either by co-
action, force, and compulsion; or, by a sweet congruous efficacy
upon the will. As to violence and compulsion, it is none of God's
way and method, it being both against the nature of the will of man,
which cannot be forced, and against the will of Jesus Christ, who
loves to reign over a free and willing people, Psal. 110: 5. "Thy
people shall be willing in the day of thy power." Or, as that word
may be rendered, they shall be voluntarinesses, as willing as
willingness itself. It is not then by a forcible co-action, but in a
moral way of persuasion, that God the Father draws men to Jesus
Christ: He draws with the bands of a man, as they are called, Hos.
11: 14. i.e. in a way of rational conviction of the mind and
conscience, and effectual persuasion of the will.
    But yet by moral persuasion, we must not understand a simple
and bare proposal or tender of Christ and grace, leaving it still at
the sinners choice, whether he will comply with it or no. For though
God does not force the will contrary to its nature, yet there is a
real internal efficacy implied in this drawing, or an immediate
operation of the Spirit upon the heart and will, which, in a way
congruous and suitable to its nature, takes away the rebellion and
reluctance of it, and of unwilling, makes it willing to come to
Christ. And, in this respect, we own a physical, as well as a moral
influence of the Spirit in this work; and so scripture expresses its
Eph. 1: 19, 20. "That we may know what is the exceeding greatness of
his power towards us who believe, according to the working of his
mighty power, which he wrought in Christ, when he raised him from
the dead." Here is much more than a naked proposal made to the will;
there is a power as well as a tender; greatness of power; and yet
more, the exceeding greatness of his power; and this power has an
actual efficacy ascribed to it, he works upon our hearts and wills
according to the working of his mighty power which he wrought in
Christ, when he raised him from the dead. Thus he fulfils in us all
the good pleasure of his will, and the work of faith with power, 2
Thess. 1: 11.
    And this is that which the schools call gratia efficax,
effectual grace; and others victrix delectatio, an overcoming,
conquering delight: thus the work is carried on with a most
efficacious sweetness. So that the liberty of the will is not
infringed, whilst the obstinacy of the will is effectually subdued
and overruled. For want of this, there are so many almost Christians
in the world; hence are all those vanishing and imperfect works
which come to nothing, called in scripture, a morning cloud, an
early dew. Had this mighty power gone forth with the word, they had
never vanished or perished like embryos as they do. So then, God
draws not only in a moral way, by proposing a suitable object to the
will, but also in a physical way, or by immediate powerful influence
upon the will; not infringing the liberty of it, but yet infallibly
and effectually persuading it to come to Christ.
    Secondly, Next let us consider the marvellous way and manner in
which the Lord draws the souls of poor sinners to Jesus Christ, and
you will find he does it,
    1.  Gradually,
2.  Congruously,
3.  Powerfully,
4.  Effectually, and
5.  Finally.
    First, This blessed work is carried on by the Spirit gradually;
bringing the soul step by step in the due method and order of the
gospel to Christ; illumination, conviction, compunction, prepare the
way to Christ; and then faith unites the soul to him: without
humiliation there can be no faith, Matt. 21: 32. "Ye repented not,
that ye might believe." It is the burdensome sense of sin, that
brings the soul to Christ for rest, Matt. 11: 28. "Come unto me all
ye that are weary and heavy laden." But without conviction there can
be no compunction, no humiliation; he that is not convinced of his
sin and misery, never bewails it, nor mourns for it. Never was there
one tear of true repentance seen to drop from the eye of an
unconvinced sinner.
    And without illumination there can be no conviction; for what
is conviction, but the application of the light which is in the
understanding, or mind of a man, to his heart and conscience? Acts
2: 57. In this order, therefore, the Spirit (ordinarily) draws souls
to Christ, he shines into their minds by illumination; applies that
light to their consciences by effectual conviction; breaks and
wounds their hearts for sin in compunction; and then moves the will
to embrace and close with Christ in the way of faith for life and
salvation.
    These several steps are more distinctly discerned in some
Christians than in others; they are more clearly to be seen in the
adult convert, than in those that were drawn to Christ in their
youth; in such as were drawn to him out of a state of profaneness,
than in those that had the advantage of a pious education; but in
this order the work is carried on ordinarily in all, however it
differ in point of clearness in the one and in the other.
    Secondly, He draws sinners to Christ congruously, and very
agreeably to the nature and way of man, so he speaks, Hos. 11: 4. "I
drew them with the cords of a man, with bands of love," Not as
beasts are drawn; but as men are inclined and wrought to compliance,
by rational conviction of their judgements, and powerful persuasion
of their wills: the minds of sinners are naturally blinded by
ignorance, 2 Cor. 4: 3, 4. and their affections bewitched to their
lusts, Gal. 3: 4. and whilst it is thus, no arguments or entreaties
can possibly prevail to bring them off from the ways of sin to
Christ.
    The way therefore which the Lord takes to win and draw them to
Christ, is by rectifying their false apprehensions, and shewing them
infinitely more good in Christ than in the creature and in their
lusts; yea, by satisfying their understandings, that there is
goodness enough in Jesus Christ, to whom he is drawing them.
    First, Enough to out-bid all temporal good, which is to be
denied for his sake.
    Secondly, Enough to preponderate all temporal evils, which are
to be suffered for his sake.
    First, That there is more good in Christ than in all temporal
good things, which we are to deny or forsake upon his account. This
being once clearly and convincingly discovered to the understanding,
the will is thereby prepared to quit all that which entangles and
withholds it from coming to Christ. There is no man that loves money
so much, but he will willingly part with it, for that which is more
worth to him than the sum he parts with to purchase it, Matth. 13:
45, 46. "The kingdom of heaven is like to a merchant man, seeking
goodly pearls, who when he has found one pearl of great price, goes
and selleth all that he has buyeth it.
    Such an invaluable pearl is Jesus Christ; infinitely more worth
than all that a poor sinner has to part with for him; and is a more
real good than the creature. These are but vain shadows; Prov. 23:
5. Christ is a solid, substantial good: yea, he is, and by
conviction appears to be a more suitable good than the creature: The
world cannot justify and save, but Christ can. Christ is a more
necessary good than the creature, which is only for our temporal
convenience, but he is of eternal necessity. He is a more durable
good than any creature comfort is, or can be: "The fashion of this
world passeth away," 1 Cor. 7: 13. But durable riches and
righteousness are in him, Prov. 8: 17. Thus Christ appears in the
day of conviction, infinitely more excellent than the world; he
out-bids all the offers that the world can make; and this greatly
forwards the work of drawing a soul to Jesus Christ.
    Secondly, And (then to remove every thing out of the way to
Christ) God discovers to the soul enough in him to preponderate, and
much more than will recompense all the evils and sufferings it can
endure for his sake.
    It is true, they that close with Christ close with his cross
also: they must expect to save no more but their souls by him. He
tells us what we must trust to, Luke 14: 26, 27. "If any man come to
me, and hate not his father and mother, and wife and children, and
brethren and sisters; yea, and his own life also, he cannot be my
disciple." And whosoever does not bear his cross, and come after me,
cannot be my disciple.
    To read such a text as this, with such a comment upon it, as
Satan and our flesh can make, is enough to fright a man from Christ
for ever. Nor is it possible by all the arguments in the world to
draw any soul to Christ upon such terms as these, till the Lord
convince it, that there is enough, and much more than enough in
Jesus Christ to recompense all these sufferings and losses we endure
for him.
    But when the soul is satisfied that those sufferings are but
external upon the vile body, but that the benefit which comes by
Christ is internal in a man's own soul; these afflictions are but
temporal, Rom. 8: 18. But Christ and his benefits are eternal: This
must needs prevail with the will to come over to Christ,
notwithstanding all the evils of suffering that accompany him, when
the reality of this is discovered by the Lord, and the power of God
goes along with these discoveries. Thus the Lord draws us in our own
way, by rational convictions of the understanding, and allurements
of the will.
    And it is possible this may be the reason why some poor souls
misjudge the working of the Spirit of God upon themselves, thinking
they never had that wonderful and mighty power of God in conversion,
acting upon their hearts, because they find all that is done upon
their hearts that way is done in the ordinary course and method of
nature; They consider, compare, are convinced, and then resolved to
choose Christ and his ways; whereas they expect to feel some strange
operations, that shall have the visible characters of the immediate
power of God upon them, and such a power they might discern, if they
would consider it as working, in this way and method: but they
cannot distinguish God's acts from their own, and that puzzles them.
    Thirdly, The drawings of the Father are very powerful. "The arm
of the Lord is revealed in this work," Isa. 53: 1. It was a powerful
word indeed that made the light at first shine out of darkness, and
no less power is required to make it shine into our hearts, 2 Cor.
5: 14. That day in which the soul is made willing to come to Christ,
is called, "the day of his power," Psal. 110: 3. The scripture
expresseth the work of conversion by a threefold metaphor, viz.
    That of a resurrection from the dead, Rom. 4: 4.
    That of creation Eph. 2: 10. And
    That of victory or conquest, 2 Cor. 10: 4, 5. All these set
forth the infinite power of God in this work; for no less than
Almighty Power is required to each of them, and if you strictly
examine the distinct notions, you shall find the power of God more
and more illustriously displayed in each of them.
    To raise the dead, is the effect of Almighty Power; but then
the resurrection supposeth pre-existent matter. In the work of
creation, there is no pre-existent matter; but then there is no
opposition: That which is not, rebels not against the power which
gives it being. But victory and conquest suppose opposition, all the
power of corrupt nature arming itself, and fighting against God: but
yet not able to frustrate his design.
    Let the soul whom the Father draws, struggle and reluctate as
much as it can, it shall come, yea, and come willingly too, when the
drawing power of God is upon it. O the self-conflicts, the contrary
resolves, with which the soul finds itself distracted, and rent
asunder! The hopes and fears; the encouragements and
discouragements; they will, and they will not: but victorious grace
conquers all opposition at last. We find an excellent example of
this in blessed Augustin, who speaks of this very work;, the drawing
of his soul to Christ, and how he felt in that day two wills in
himself, "one old, the other new; one carnal, the other spiritual;
and how in these their contrary motions and conflicts, he was torn
asunder in his own thoughts and resolutions, suffering that
unwillingly which he did willingly." And certainly, if we consider
how deep the soul is rooted by natural inclination, and long
continued custom in sin, how extremely averse it is to the ways of
strict godliness and mortification; how Satan, that invidious enemy,
that strong man armed, fortifies the soul to defend his possession
against Christ, and entrenches himself in the understanding, will,
and affections, by deep-rooted prejudices against Christ and
holiness, it is a wonder of wonders to see a soul quitting all its
beloved lusts, and fleshly interests and endearments, and coming
willingly under Christ's yoke.
    Fourthly, the drawings of God are very effectual: There is
indeed a common and ineffectual work upon hypocrites and apostates,
called in scripture a "morning cloud and early dew", Hos. 6: 4.
These may believe for a time, and fall away at last, Luke 8: 13.
Their wills may be half won, they may be drawn half way to Christ,
and return again. So it was with Agrippa, Acts 26: 28. "en oligoi me
peiteis", within a very little thou persuades me to be a Christian:
But in God's elected ones it is effectual: Their wills are not only
almost, but altogether persuaded to embrace Christ, and quit the
ways of sin, how pleasant, gainful, and dear soever they have been
to them. The Lord not only draws, but draws home those souls to
Christ, John 6: 37. "All that the Father has given me, shall come to
me."
    It is confessed, that in drawing home of the very elect to
Christ, there may be, and frequently are, many pauses, stands, and
demurs; they have convictions, affections, and resolutions stirring
in them, which, like early blossoms, seem to be nipt and die away
again. There is frequently, (in young ones especially), an hopeful
appearance of grace; they make conscience of avoiding sins, and
performing duties: they have sometimes great awakenings under the
Word, they are observed to retire for meditation and prayer; and
delight to be in the company of Christians: and after all this,
youthful lusts and vanities are found to stifle and cheek these
hopeful beginnings, and the work seems to stand, (it may be some
years), at a pause; however, at last, the Lord makes it victorious
over all opposition, and sets it home with power upon their hearts.
    Fifthly, To conclude, those whom the Father draws to Christ, he
draws them finally and for ever. "The gifts and calling of God are
without repentance," Rom. 11: 29. they are so, as to God the giver;
he never repents, that he has called his people into the fellowship
of his Son Christ Jesus: and they are so on the believer's part; he
is never sorry, whatever he afterwards meets with, that he is come
to Christ.
    There is a time when Christians are drawn to Christ, but there
shall never be a time in which they shall be drawn away from Christ,
John 10: 29. There is no plucking them out of the Father's hand. It
was common to a proverb, in the primitive times, when they would
express an impossibility, to say, "You may as soon draw a Christian
from Christ, as do it." When Christ asked that question of the
disciples, "Will ye also go away? Lord, (said Peter, in the name of
them all), to whom shall we go? Thou hast the words of eternal
life," John 6: 68. They who are thus drawn, do with full purpose of
heart, cleave unto the Lord. And thus of the manner and quality of
effectual drawing.
    Thirdly, In the last place, I am to evince the impossibility of
coming to Christ without the Father's drawings; and this will
evidently appear upon the consideration of these two particulars.
    First, The difficulty of this work is above all the power of
nature to overcome.
    Secondly, That little power and ability that nature has, it
will never employ to such a purpose as this, till the drawing power
of God be upon the will of a sinner.
    First, If all the power of nature were employed in this design,
yet such are the difficulties of this work, that it surmounts all
the abilities of nature. This the scripture very plainly affirms,
Eph. 2: 8. "By grace are ye saved through faith, and that not of
yourselves, it is the gift of God." To think of Christ is easy, but
to come to Christ, is to nature impossible. To send forth cold and
ineffectual wishes to Christ we may, but to bring Christ and the
soul together, requires the Almighty power of God, Eph. 1: 19. The
grace of faith by which we come to Christ, is as much the free gift
of God, as Christ himself, who is the object of faith, Phil. 1: 29.
"To you it is freely given to believe." And this will easily appear
to your understandings, if you do but consider
     / Subject, \
The |  Act, and  | of this work of faith, or coming to Christ.
     \ Enemies  /
    First, Consider the subject of faith in which it is wrought; or
what it is that is drawn to Christ: It is the heart of a sinner
which is naturally as indisposed for this work, as the wood which
Elijah laid in order upon the altar was to catch fire, when he had
poured so much water upon it, as did not only wet the wood, but also
filled up the trench round about it, 1 Kings 18: 33. For it is
naturally a dark, blind, and ignorant heart, Job 11: 12. And such an
heart can never believe, till he that commanded the light to shine
out of darkness do shine into it, 2 Cor. 4: 6.
    Nor will it avail any thing to say, though man be born in
darkness and ignorance, yet afterwards he may acquire knowledge in
the use of means, as we see many natural men do to a very high
degree: For this is not that light that brings the soul to Christ,
yea, this natural unsanctified light blinds the soul, and prejudices
it more against Christ than ever it was before, 1 Cor. 1: 21, 26.
    As it is a blind, ignorant heart, so it is a selfish heart by
nature: All its designs and aims terminate in self; this is the
centre and weight of the soul, no righteousness but its own is
sought after, that, or none, Rom. 10: 3. Now, for a soul to renounce
and deny self, in all its forms, modes, and interests, as every one
does that comes to Christ; to disclaim and deny natural, moral, and
religious self, and come to Christ as a poor, miserable, wretched
empty creature; to live upon his righteousness for ever, is as
supernatural and wonderful, as to see the hills and mountains start
from their bases and centres, and fly like wandering atoms in the
air.
    Nay, this heart which is to come to Christ, is not only dark
and selfish, but full of pride. O, it is a desperate proud heart by
nature, it cannot submit to come to Christ, as Benhadad's servant
came to the king of Israel, with sackcloth on their loins, and ropes
upon their heads. To take guilt, shame, and confusion of face to
ourselves, and acknowledge the righteousness of God in our eternal
damnation; to come to Christ naked and empty, as one that justifies
the ungodly. I say, nature left to itself, would as soon be damned
as do this; the proud heart can never come to this, till the Lord
has humbled and broken it by his power.
    Secondly, Let us take the act of faith into consideration also,
as it is here described by the soul's coming to Jesus Christ; and
you will find a necessity of the Father's drawings; for this
evidently implies, that which is against the stream and current of
corrupt nature, and that which is above the sphere and capacity of
the most refined and accomplished nature.
    First, It is against the stream and current of our corrupt
nature to come to Christ. For let us but consider the term from
which the soul departs, when it comes to Christ. In that day it
leaves all its lusts, and ways of sin, how pleasant, sweet, and
profitable soever they have been unto it, Isa. 55: 7. "Let the
wicked forsake his way, and the unrighteous man his thoughts, and
let him return unto the Lord." Way and thoughts, i.e. both the
practice of, and delight he had in sin, must be forsaken, and the
outward and inward man must be cleansed from it. Now there are in
the bosoms of unregenerate men such darling lusts, that have given
them so much practical and speculative pleasure, which have brought
so much profit to them, which have been born and bred up with them;
and which, upon all these accounts, are endeared to their souls to
that degree, that it is easier for them to die, than to forsake
them, yea, nothing is more common among such men, than to venture
eternal damnation, rather than suffer a separation from their sins.
    And which is yet more difficult in coming to Christ, the soul
forsakes not only its sinful self; but its righteous self, i.e. not
only its worst sins, but its best performances, accomplishments, and
excellencies. Now this is one of the greatest straits that nature
can be put to. Righteousness by works was the first liquor that ever
was put into the vessel, and it still retains the tang and savour of
it, and will to the end of the world, Rom. 10: 3 "For they, being
ignorant of God's righteousness, and going about to establish their
own righteousness, have not submitted themselves unto the
righteousness of God." "ouk hupetagesan", they have not submitted.
To come naked and empty to Christ, and receive all from him as a
free gift, is, to proud corrupt nature, the greatest abasement and
submission in the world.
    Let the gospel furnish its table with the richest and costliest
dainties that ever the blood of Christ purchased, such is the pride
of nature, that it disdains to taste them, except it may also pay
for the same. If the old hive be removed from the place where it was
wont to stand, the bees will come home to the old place, yea, and
many of them you shall find will die there, rather than go to the
hive, though it stand in a far better place than it did before. Just
so stands the case with men. The hive is removed, i.e. we are not to
expect righteousness as Adam did, by obeying and working, but by
believing and coming to Christ; but nature had as soon be damned as
do it is: It still goes about to establish its own righteousness.
    Virtues, duties, and moral excellencies, these are the
ornaments of nature; here is nature set off in its sumptuous attire,
and rich embellishments, and now to renounce it, disclaim and
contemn it, as dross and dung, in comparison of Christ, as believers
do, Phil. 3: 8. this, I say, is against the grain of nature. We
reckon it the strange effect of self-denial in Mahomet the Great,
who being so enamoured with his beautiful Irene, would be persuaded,
upon reasons of state, with his own hand to strike off her head: and
that even when she appeared in all her rich ornaments before him,
rather like such a goddess, as the poets in their ecstasies use to
feign, than a mortal creature. And yet certainly this is nothing to
that self-denial which is exercised in our coming to Christ.
    Secondly, And if we look to the other term to which the soul
moves, we shall find it acting as much above the sphere and ability
of improved nature, as here it acts and moves against the stream and
current of corrupted nature: for how wonderful and supernatural an
adventure is that, which the soul makes in the day that it comes to
Jesus Christ.
    Surely, for any poor soul to venture itself for ever upon Jesus
Christ whom it never saw, nay, upon Christ, whose very existence its
own unbelief calls in question whether he be or no: and that when it
is even weighed down to the dust, with the burdensome sense of its
own vileness and total unworthiness, feeling nothing in itself but
sin and misery, the workings of death and fears of wrath: to go to
Christ, of whose pardoning grace and mercy it never had any the
least experience, nor can find any ground of hope in it self that it
shall be accepted; this is as much above the power of nature, as it
is for a stone to rise from the earth, and fix itself among the
stars. Well might the apostle ascribe it to that Almighty Power
which raised up Christ from the dead, Eph. 1: 19, 20. If the Lord
draw not the soul, and that omnipotently, it can never come from
itself to Christ. And yet farther,
    Thirdly, The natural impossibility of coming to Christ, will
more clearly appear, if we consider the enemies to faith, or what
blocks are rolled by Satan and his instruments into the way to
Christ: to mention, in this place, no more but our own carnal
reason, as it is armed and managed by the subtilty of Satan, what a
wonder is it that any soul should come to Christ?
    These are the strong holds, (mentioned 2 Cor. 10: 4.) out of
which those objections, fears, and discouragements sally, by which
the soul is fiercely assaulted in the way to Christ.
    Wilt thou forsake all thy pleasures, merry company, and
sensible comforts, to live a sad, retired, pensive life? Wilt thou
beggar and undo thyself, let go all thy comforts in hand, for an
hope of that which thine eyes never saw, nor hast thou any certainty
that it is any more than a fancy! Wilt thou that hast lived in
reputation and credit all thy life, now become the scorn and
contempt of the world? Thinkest thou thyself able to live such a
strict, severe, mortified, and self-denying, life, as the word of
God requires? And what if persecution should arise, (as thou mayest
expect it will,) canst thou forsake father and mother, wife and
children, yea, and give up thine own life too, to a cruel and bloody
death! be advised better, before thou resolve in so important a
matter. What thinkest thou of thy forefathers, that lived and died
in that way thou art now living? Art thou wiser than they? Do not
the generality of men walk in the same paths thou hast hitherto
walked in? If this way lead to hell, as thou fearest it may, think
then how many millions of men must perish as well as thyself; and is
such a supposition consistent with the gracious and merciful nature
of God? Besides, think what sort of people those are, unto whom thou
art about to join thyself in this new way? Are there not to be found
among them many things to discourage thee, and cool thy zeal? They
are generally of the lower and baser sort of men, poor and
despicable: Sees thou not, though their profession be holy, how
earthly, carnal, proud, factious, and hypocritical, many of them are
found to be! And doubtless, the rest are like them, though their
hypocrisy be not yet discovered.
    O what stands and demurs, what hesitations and doubts, is the
soul clogged with in its way to Christ! But yet none of these can
withhold and detain the soul when the Father draws: Greater then is
he that is in us, than he that is in the world. And thus you see the
nature, manner, and efficacy of divine drawings, and how impossible
it is for any soul to come to Christ without them.
    The inferences and improvements of the point follow.
    Inference 1. How deeply and thoroughly is the nature of man
corrupted, and what an enemy is every man to his own happiness, that
he must be drawn to it? John 5: 40 "You will not come unto me, that
ye might have life."
    Life is desirable in every man's eyes, and eternal life is the
most excellent: yet, in this, the world is rather agreed to die and
perish forever than come to Christ for life. Had Christ told us of
fields and vineyards, sheep and oxen, gold and silver, honours and
sensual pleasures, who would not have come to him for these? But to
tell of mortification, self denial, strictness of life, and
sufferings for his sake, and all this for an happiness to be enjoyed
in the world to come, nature will never like such a proposition as
this.
    You see where it sticks, not in a simple inability to believe,
but in an inability complicated with enmity; they neither call come,
nor will come to Christ. It is true, all that do come to Christ,
come willingly, but thanks be to the grace of God, that has freed
and persuaded the will, else they never had been willing to come.
Who ever found his own heart first stir and move towards Christ? How
long may we wait and expect before we shall feel our hearts
naturally burn with desires after, and love to Jesus Christ?
    This aversion of the will and affections from God is one of the
main roots of original sin. No argument can prevail to bring the
soul to Christ, till this be mastered and overpowered by the
Father's drawing. In our motions to sin we need restraining, but in
all our motions to Christ we as much need drawing. He that comes to
heaven may say, Lord, if I had had mine own way and will, I had
never come here: if thou hadst not drawn me, I should never have
come to thee. O the riches of the grace of God! Oh unparalleled
mercy and goodness! not only to prepare such a glory as this for an
unworthy soul, but to put forth the exceeding greatness of thy
power, afterwards to draw an unwilling soul to the enjoyment of it.
    Infer. 2 What enemies are they to God and the souls of men that
do all they can to discourage and hinder the conversion of men to
Christ? God draws forward, and these do all that in them lies to
draw backward, i.e. to prejudice and discourage them from coming to
Jesus Christ in the way of faith: this is a direct opposition to
God, and a plain confederacy with the devil.
    O how many have been thus discouraged in their way to Christ by
their carnal relations, I cannot say friends! Their greatest enemies
have been the men of their own house. These have pleaded (as if the
devil had hired and feed them) against the everlasting welfare of
their own flesh. O cruel parents, brethren, and sisters, that jeer,
frown, and threaten, where they should encourage, assist, and
rejoice! Such parents are the devil's children Satan chooses such
instruments as you are, above all others, for this work: he knows
what influence and authority you have upon them, and over them; and
what fear, love, and dependence they have for you, and upon you; so
that none in all the world are like to manage the design of their
damnation so effectually, as you are like to do.
    Will you neither come to Christ yourselves, nor suffer your
dear relations that would? Had you rather find them in the ale-house
than in the closet? Did you instrumentally give them their being,
and will you be the instruments of ruining for ever those beings
they had from you? Did you so earnestly desire children, so tenderly
nurse and provide for them; take such delight in them and, after all
this, do what in you lies to damn and destroy them? If these lines
shall fall into any such hands, O that God would set home the
conviction and sense of this horrid evil upon their hearts.
    And no less guilty of this sin are scandalous and loose
professors, who serve to furnish the devil with the greatest
arguments he has to dissuade men from coming to Christ; it is your
looseness and hypocrisy by which he hopes to scare others from
Christ. It is said, Cant. 2: 7. "I charge you by the roes and hinds
of the field, that ye stir not up, nor awake my beloved till he
please."
    Roes and hinds, like young converts and comers towards Christ,
are shy and timorous creatures, that start at the least sound, or
yelp of a dog, and fly away. Take heed what you do in this case,
lest you go down to hell under the guilt of damning more souls than
your own.
    Infer. 3. Learn hence the true ground and reason of those
strange, amazing, and supernatural effects, that you behold and so
admire in the world, as often as you see sinners forsaking their
pleasant, profitable corruptions and companions, and embracing the
ways of Christ, godliness, and mortification.
    It is said, 1 Pet. 4: 4. "They think it strange, that you run
not with them into the same excess of riot." The word is "en hoi
ksenidzontai", they stand at a gaze, as the hen that has hatched
partridge eggs does, when she sees them take the wing and fly away
from her.
    Beloved, it is the world's wonder to see their companions in
sin forsake them; those that were once as profane and vain as
themselves, it may be more, to forsake their society, retire into
their closets, mourn for sin, spend their time in meditation and
prayer, embrace the severest duties, and content to run the greatest
hazards in the world for Christ; but they see not that Almighty
Power that draws them, which is too strong for all the sinful ties
and engagements in the world to withhold and detain them.
    A man would have wondered to see Elisha leave the oxen, and run
after Elijah, saying, "Let me go, I pray thee, and kiss my father
and mother, and then I will follow thee; when Elijah had said
nothing to persuade him to follow him only as he passed by him, he
cast his mantle on him, 1 Kings 10: 19, 20. Surely that soul whom
God draws, must needs leave all and follow Christ, for the power of
God resteth on it. All carnal ties and engagements to sin break and
give way, when the Father draws the soul to Christ in the day of his
power.
    Infer. 4. Is this the first spring of spiritual motion after
Christ? Learn then from hence, how it comes to pass that so many
excellent sermons and powerful persuasions are ineffectual, and
cannot draw and win one soul to Christ. Surely it is because
ministers draw alone; and the special saving power of God goes not
forth at all times alike with their endeavours.
    Paul was a chosen vessel, filled with a greater measure of
gifts and graces by the Spirit, than any that went before him or
followed after him; and, as his talents, so his diligence in
improving them was beyond any recorded example we read of amongst
men; "He rather flew like a seraphim, than travelled upon his
Master's errand about the world." Apollos was an eloquent preacher,
and mighty in the scriptures, yet Paul is "nothing, and Apollos
nothing; but God that gives the increase," 1 Cor. 3: 7. We are too
apt to admire men, yea, and the best are but too apt to go forth in
the strength of their own parts and preparations; but God secures
his own glory, and magnifies his own power, frequently, in giving
success to weaker endeavours, and men of lower abilities, when he
withholds it from men of more raised, refined, and excellent gifts
and abilities.
    It is our great honour, who are the ministers of the gospel,
that we are "sunergoi", workers together with God, 1 Cor. 3: 9. in
his strength we can prevail; "the weapons of our warfare are mighty
through God," 2 Cor. 10: 4. But if his presence, blessing, and
assistance be not with us, we are nothing, we can do nothing.
    If we prepare diligently, pray heartily, preach zealously, and
our hearers go as they came, without any spiritual effects and
fruits of our labours, what shall we say, but as Martha said to
Christ, "Lord, if thou hadst been here my brother had not died:" Had
the Spirit of God gone forth with his especial efficacy and
blessing, with this prayer, or that sermon, these souls had not
departed dead and senseless from under it.
    Infer. 5. Does all success and efficacy depend upon the
Father's drawings? Let none then despair of their unregenerate and
carnal relations, over whose obstinacy they do, and have cause to
mourn.
    What, if they have been as many years under the preaching of
the gospel, as the poor man lay at the pool of Bethesda, and
hitherto to no purpose? A time may come at last, (as it did for him)
when the Spirit of God may move upon the waters; I mean put a
quickening and converting power into the means, and then the desire
of your souls for them shall be fulfilled.
    It may be you have poured out many prayers and tears to the
Lord for them; you have cried for them as Abraham for his son, "O
that Ishmael might live before thee!" O that this poor husband,
wife, child, brother, or sister, might live in thy sight; and still
you see them continue carnal, dead, and senseless: Well, but yet not
give up your hopes, nor cease your pious endeavours, the time may
come when the Father may draw as well as you, and them you shall see
them quit all, and come to Christ; and nothing shall hinder them.
They are now drawn away of their own lusts; they are easily drawn
away by their sinful companions; but when God draws, none of these
shall withdraw them from the Lord Jesus. What is their ignorance,
obstinacy, and hardness of heart, before that mighty power that
subdues all things to itself? Go therefore to the Lord by prayer for
them, and say, Lord, I have laboured for my poor relations in vain,
i have spent my exhortations to little purpose; the work is too
difficult for me, I can carry it no farther, but thou canst: O let
thy power go forth; they shall be willing in the day of thy power.
    Inf. 6. If none can come to Christ except the Father draw them,
then surely none can be drawn from Christ except the Father leave
them: That power which at first drew them to Christ can secure and
establish them in Christ to the end. John 10: 29. "My Father which
gave them me is greater then all, and non man is able to pluck them
out of my Father's hand."
    When the power of God at first draws us out of our natural
state to Christ, it finds us not only impotent but obstinate, not
only unable, but unwilling to come; and yet this power of God
prevails against all opposition;  how much more is it able to
preserve and secure us, when his fear is put into our inward parts,
so that we dare not depart, we have no will to depart from him? Well
then if the world say, I will ensnare thee; if the devil say, I will
destroy thee; if the flesh say, I will betray thee; yet thou art
secure and safe, as long as God has said, "I will never leave thee
nor forsake thee,", Heb. 13:5.
    Infer. 7. Let this engage you to a constant attendance upon the
ordinances of God, in which this drawing power of God is sometimes
put forth upon the hearts of men.
    Beloved, there are certain seasons in which the Lord comes nigh
to men in the ordinances and duties of his worship; and we know not
at what time the Lord cometh forth by his Spirit upon this design:
he many times comes in an hour when we think not of him! "I am found
of them that sought me not", Isa. 65:1. It is good therefore to be
found in the way of the Spirit. Had that poor man, that lay so long
at the pool of Bethesda, reasoned thus with himself, So long have I
lain here in vain expecting a cure, it is to no purpose to wait
longer, and so had been absent at that very time when the angel came
down, he had, in all likelihood, carried his disease to the grave
with him.
    How dost thou know but this very sabbath, this sermon, this
prayer, which thou hast no heart to attend, and are tempted to
neglect, may be the season and instrument wherein, and by which, the
Lord may do that for thy soul which was never done before?
    Infer. 8. To conclude, How are all the saints engaged to put
forth all the power and ability they have for God, who has put forth
his infinite Almighty Power to draw them to Christ?
    God has done great things for your souls; he has drawn you out
of the miserable state of sin and wrath; and that when he let others
go, by nature as good as you, he has drawn you into union with
Christ, and communion with his glorious privileges. O that you would
henceforth employ all the power you have for God in the duties of
obedience, and in drawing others to Christ, as much as in you lies,
and say continually with the Church, "Draw me, we will run after
thee," Cant. 1: 4.
    
                 Thanks be to God for Jesus Christ.





Sermon 5.


Of the Work of the Spirit more particularly, by which the
Soul is enabled to apply Christ.


Eph. 2: 1.

And you has he quickened who were dead in trespasses and sins.


    In the former sermons we have seen our union with Christ in the
general nature of it, and the means by which it is effected, both
external, by the preaching of the gospel, and internal, by the
drawing of the Father. We are now to bring our thoughts yet closer
to this great mystery, and consider the bands by which Christ and
believers are knit together in a blessed union.
    And if we heedfully observe the scripture expressions, and
ponder the nature of this union, we shall find there are two bands
which knit Christ and the soul together, viz.
    1. The Spirit on Christ's part.
    2. Faith on our part.
    The Spirit, on Christ's part, quickening us with spiritual
life, whereby Christ first takes hold of us, and faith on our part,
when thus quickened, whereby we take hold of Christ; accordingly,
this union with the Lord Jesus is expressed in scripture sometimes
by the one and sometimes by the other of the means or bands by which
it is effected. Christ is sometimes said to be in us; so Col. 1: 27.
"Christ is in you the hope of glory." And Rom. 8: 10. "And if Christ
be in you, the body is dead because of sin." At other times it is
expressed by the other band on our part, as 1 John 5: 20. "We are in
him that is true, even in his Son Christ Jesus." And 2 Cor. 5: 17.
"If any man be in Christ, he is a new creature."
    The difference betwixt both these is thus aptly expressed by a
late author. Christ is in believers by his Spirits 1 John 4: 13.
"The believer is in Christ by faith, John 1: 12. Christ is in the
believer by inhabitation, Rom. 3: 17. The believer is in Christ by
implantation, Rom. 6: 35. Christ is in the believer as the head is
in the body, Col. 1: 18. As the root in the branches, John 15: 5.
Believers are in Christ as the members are in the head, Eph. 1: 2,3.
or as the branches are in the root, John 15: 1, 7. Christ in the
believer implies life, and influence from Christ, Col. 3: 4. The
believer implies communion and fellowship with Christ, 1 Cor. 1: 30.
When Christ is said to be in the believer, we are to understand it
in reference to sanctification. When the believer is said to be in
Christ, it is in order to justification."
    Thus we apprehend, being ourselves first apprehended by Jesus
Christ, Phil. 3: 12. ate cannot take hold of Christ till first he
take hold of us; no vital act of faith can be exercised till a vital
principle be first inspired: of both these bands of union we must
speak distinctly, and first of "Christ quickening us by his Spirit,
in order to our union with him," of which we have an account in the
scripture before us, "You he has quickened, who were dead in
trespasses and sins". In which words we find these two things noted,
viz.
    1. The infusion of a vital principle of grace.
    2. The total indisposedness of the subject by nature.
    First, The infusion of a vital principle of grace, You has he
quickened. These words [has he quickened] are a supplement made to
clear the sense of the apostle, which else would have been more
obscure, by reason of that long parenthesis betwixt the first and
fifth verses, "for as the learned observe, this word "humas", you,
is governed by the verb "sunedzo-opoiese", has he quickened, ver. 5.
So that here the words are transposed from the plain grammatical
order, by reason at the interjections of a long sentence, therefore,
with good warrant our translators have put the verb into the first
verse, which is repeated, ver. 5. and so keeping faithfully to the
scope, have excellently cleared the syntax and order of the words."
Now this verb "sunedzo-opoiese", has he quickened, imports the first
vital act of the Spirit of God, or his first enlivening work upon
the soul, in order to its union with Jesus Christ: For look;, as the
blood of Christ is the fountain of all merit, so the Spirit of
Christ is the fountain of all spiritual life, and until he quicken
us, i.e. infuse the principle of the divine life into our souls, we
can put forth no hand, or vital act of faith, to lay hold upon Jesus
Christ.
    This his quickening, work is therefore the first in order of
nature to our union with Christ, and fundamental to all other acts
of grace done and performed by us, from our first closing with
Christ throughout the whole course of our obedience; and this
quickening act is said, ver. 5. to be together with Christ. Either
noting (as some expound it) that it is the effect of the same power
by which Christ was raised from the dead, according to Eph. 1. 19.
or rather, to be quickened together with Christ, notes that new
spiritual life which is infused into our dead souls in the time of
our union with Christ: "For it is Christ to whom we are conjoined
and united in our regeneration, out of whom, as a fountain, all
spiritual benefits flow to us, among which this vivification or
quickening is one, and a most sweet and precious one."
    Zanchy Bodius, and many others, will have this quickening to
comprise both our justification and regeneration, and to stand op
posed both to eternal and spiritual death, and it may well be
allowed; but it most properly imports our regeneration, wherein the
Spirit, in an ineffable and mysterious way, makes the soul to live
to God, yea, to live the life of God, which soul was before dead in
trespasses and sins. In which words we have,
    Secondly, In the next place, the total indisposedness of the
subjects by nature: Yet, as it is well noted by a learned man, "the
apostle does not say of these Ephesians that they were half dead, or
sick, and infirm, but dead wholly; altogether dead, destitute of any
faculty or ability, so much as to think one good thought, or perform
one good act." You were dead in respect of condemnation, being under
the damning sentence of the law, and you are dead in respect of the
privation of spiritual life; dead in opposition to justification,
and dead in opposition to regeneration and sanctification: And the
fatal instrument by which their souls died is here shewed them; you
were dead in, or by trespasses and sins, this was the sword that
killed your souls, and cut them off from God. Some do curiously
distinguish betwixt trespasses and sins, as if one pointed at
original, the other at actual sins; but I suppose they are
promiscuously used here, and serve to express the cause of their
ruin, or means of their spiritual death and destruction: this was
their case when Christ came to quicken them, dead in sin; and being
so, they could not move themselves towards union with Christ, but as
they were moved by the quickening Spirit of God. Hence the
observation will be this,
    
    Doct. That those souls which have union with Christ, are
    quickened with a supernatural principle of life by the Spirit
    of God in order thereunto.
    
    The Spirit of God is not only a living Spirit formally
considered; but he is also the Spirit of life, effectively or
casually considered; And without his breathing, or infusing life
into our souls, our union with Christ is impossible.
    It is the observation of learned Camero, "that there must be an
unction before there can be an union with Christ. Unction is to be
conceived efficiently as the work of God's Spirit, joining the
believer to Christ, and union is to be conceived formally, the
joining itself of the persons together:" We close with Christ by
faith, but that faith being a vital act, presupposes a principle of
life communicated to us by the Spirit; therefore it is said, John
11: 26. "Whosoever liveth and believeth in me, shall never die". The
vital act and operation of faith springs from this quickening
Spirit: So in Rom. 8: 1, 2. The apostle, having in the first verse
opened the blessed estate of them that are in Christ, shows us in
the second verse how we come to be in him: "The Spirit of life
(saith he) which is in Christ Jesus, has made me free from the law
of sin and death."
    There is indeed a quickening work of the Spirit, which is
subsequent to regeneration, consisting in his exciting, recovering,
and actuating of his own graces in us; and from hence is the
liveliness of a Christian; and there is a quickening act of the
Spirit in our regeneration, and from hence is the spiritual life of
a Christian; of this I am here to speak, and that I may speak
profitably to this point, I will in the doctrinal part labour to
open these five particulars.
    First, What this spiritual life is in its nature and
properties.
    Secondly, In what manner it is wrought or inspired into the
soul.
    Thirdly, For what end, or in what design, this life is so
inspired.
    Fourthly, I shall show this work to be wholly supernatural.
    And then, Fifthly, Why this quickening must be antecedent to
our actual closing with Christ by faith.
    First, We shall enquire into the nature and properties of this
life, and discover (as we are able) what it is. And we find it to
consist in that wonderful change which the Spirit of God makes upon
the frame and temper of the soul, by his infusing or implanting the
principle of grace in all the powers and faculties thereof.
    A change it makes upon the soul, and that a marvellous one, no
less than from death to life; for though a man be physically a
living man, i.e. his natural soul has union with his body, yet his
soul having no union with Christ, he is theologically a dead man,
Luke 15: 24. and Col. 2: 13. Alas, it deserves not the name of life,
to have a soul serving only to season and preserve the body a little
while from corruption: to carry it up and down the world, and only
enable it to eat, and drink, and talk, and laugh, and then die: Then
do we begin to live, when we begin to have union with Christ the
Fountain of life, by his Spirit communicated to us: From this time
we are to reckon our life as some have done: There be many changes
made upon men besides this, many are changed from profaneness to
civility, and from mere civility to formality, and a shadow of
religion, who still remain in the state and power of spiritual
death, notwithstanding: but when the Spirit of the Lord is poured
out upon us, to quicken us with the new spiritual life, this is a
wonderful change indeed: It gives us an esse supernaturale, a new
supernatural being, which is therefore called a new creature, the
new man, the hidden man of the heart: The natural essence and
faculties of the soul remain still, but it is divested of the old
qualities, and endowed with new ones, 2 Cor. 5: 17. Old things are
passed away, behold, all things are become new.
    And this change is not made by altering and rectifying the
disorders of the life only, leaving the temper and frame of the
heart still carnal; but by the intrusion of a supernatural permanent
principle into the soul, John 4: 14. "It shall be in him a well of
water:" principles are to a course of actions, as fountains or
springs are to the streams and rivers that flow from them, and are
maintained by them: and hence is the evenness and constancy of
renewed souls in the course of godliness.
    Nor is this principle or habit acquired by accustoming
ourselves to holy actions, as natural habits are acquired by
frequent acts, which beget a disposition, and thence grow up to an
habit or second nature, but it is infused, or implanted in the soul
by the Spirit of God. So we read, Ezek. 36: 25,26. "A new heart also
will I give you, and a new spirit will I put within you:" It grows
not up out of our natures, but is put or infused into us: as it is
said of the two witnesses, Rev. 11: 11. who lay dead in a civil
sense, three days and a half, that the Spirit of life from God
entered into them: so it is here in a spiritual sense, the Spirit of
life from God enters into the dead, carnal heart: it is all by way
of supernatural infusion.
    Nor is it limited to this or that faculty at the soul, but
grace or life is poured into all the faculties: "Behold, all thing
are become new," 2 Cor. 5: 17. The understandings, will, thoughts,
and affections, are all renewed by it: the whole inner man is
changed, yea, the tongue and hand, the discourses and actions, even
all the ways and courses of the outward man are renewed by it.
    But more particularly, we shall discerns the nature of this
spiritual life, by considering the properties of it; among which,
these are very remarkable.
    First, The soul that is joined to Christ is quickened with
divine life, so we read in 2 Pet. 1: 4. where believers are said to
be partakers of the divine nature: a very high expression, and
wearily to be understood. Partakers of the divine nature: not
essentially; so it is wholly incommunicable to the creature, nor yet
hypostatically, and personally; so Christ only was a partaker at it;
but our participation of the divine nature, must be understood in a
way proper to believers; that is to say, we partake of it by the
inhabitation of the Spirit of God in us, according to 1 Cor. 3: 16,
17. "Know ye not that ye are the temple of God, and that the Spirit
of God do dwelleth in you?" The Spirit, who is God by nature dwells
in, and actuates the soul whom he regenerates, and by sanctifying
it, causes it to live a divine life: from this life of God the
unsanctified are said to be alienated, Eph. 4: 18. but believers are
partakers of it.
    Secondly, And being divine, it must needs be the most
excellent, and transcendent life that any creature does, or can live
in this world: it surmounts the natural, rational, and moral life of
the unsanctified, as much as the angelical life excels the life of
flies and worms of the earth.
    Some think it a rare life to live in sensual pleasures; but the
scripture will not allow so much as the name of life to them; but
tell, us, "they are dead while they live," 1 Tim. 5:6. certainly it
is a wonderful elation of the nature of man to be quickened with
such a life as this. There are two ways wherein the blessed God has
honoured poor man above the very angels of heaven. One was by the
hypostatical union of our nature, in Christ, with the divine nature:
the other is by uniting our persons mystically to Christ, and
thereby communicating spiritual life to us: this latter is a most
glorious privilege, and in one respect a more singular mercy than
the former; for that honour which is done to our nature by the
hypostatical union, is common to all, good and bad, even they that
perish have yet that honour; but to be implanted into Christ by
regeneration, and live upon him as the branch does upon the vine,
this is a peculiar privilege, a mercy kept from the world that is to
perish, and only communicated to God's elect, who are to live
eternally with him in heaven.
    Thirdly, This life infused by the regenerating Spirit, is a
most pleasant life. All delights, all pleasures, all joys, which are
not fantastic and delusive, leave their spring and origin here, Rom.
8: 6. "To be spiritually minded is life and peace," i.e. a most
serene, placid life, such a soul becomes, so far as it is influenced
and sanctified by the spirit, the very region of life and peace:
when one think is thus predicated of another, in casu recta, (saith
a learned man) it speaks their intimate connection: peace is so
connatural to this life, that you may either call it a life that has
peace in it, or a peace that has life in it: yea, it has its
enclosed pleasures in it, "such as a stranger intermeddles not
with," Prov. 14: 10 Regeneration is the term from which all true
pleasure commences; you never live a cheerful day, till you begin to
live to God: therefore it is said, Luke 15: 24. when the prodigal
son was returned to his father, and reconciled, then they began to
be merry.
    None can make another, by any words, to understand what that
pleasure is which the renewed soul feels diffused through all its
collies and affections, in its communion with the Lord, and in the
sealings and witnessings of his spirit. That is a very apt and well
known similitude, which Peter Martyr used, and the Lord blessed to
the conversion of that noble marquis Galeacus: if, said he, a man
should see a company of people dancing, upon the top of a remote
hill, he would be apt to conclude they were a company of wild
distracted people, but if he draw nearer, and behold the excellent
order, and hear the ravishing sweet music that are among them, he
will quickly alter his opinion of them, and be for dancing himself
with them.
    All the delights in the sensual life, all the pleasure that
ever your lust gave you, are but at the putrid, stinking waters of a
corrupt pond, where loads lie croaking and spawning, compared to the
crystal streams of the most pure and pleasant fountain.
    Fourthly, This life of God, with which the regenerate are
quickened in their union with Christ, as it is a pleasant, so it is
also a rowing increasing life, John 4:14. "It shall be in him a well
of water springing up into everlasting life".
    It is not in our sanctification, as it is in our justification;
our justification is complete and perfect, no defect is found there;
but the new creature labours under many defects: all believers are
equally justified, but not equally sanctified. Therefore you read, 2
Cor. 4: 16 that "the inward man is renewed day by day:" And 2 Pet.
3: 18 Christians are exhorted "to grow in grace, and in the
knowledge of our Lord and Saviour:" if this work were perfect, and
finished at once, as justification is, there could be no renewing
day by day, nor growth in grace. Perfectum est cui nihil deest & cui
nihil addi potest; i.e. that is perfect which wants nothing, and to
which nothing can be added. The apostle indeed prays for the
Thessalonians, "that God would sanctify them," "holoteleis", wholly,
perfectly, 1 Thess. 5: 23. And this is matter of prayer and hope;
for, at last, it will grow up to perfection; but this perfect
holiness is reserved for the perfect state in the world to come, and
none but deluded, proud spirits boast of it here: but when "that
which is perfect is come, then that which is in part shall be done
away," 1 Cor. 13: 9, 10. And upon the imperfection of the new
creature in every faculty, that warfare and daily conflict spoken
of, Gal. 5: 17. and experienced by every Christian, is grounded;
grace rises gradually in the soul, as the sun does in the heavens,
"which shineth more and more unto a perfect day," Prov. 4: 18.
    Fifthly, To conclude, This life with which the regenerate are
quickened, is an everlasting life. "This is the record, that God has
given to us eternal life, and this life is in his Son," 1 John 5:
11. This principle of life, is the seed of God; and that remains in
the soul for ever, 1 John 3: 9. It is no transient, vanishing thing,
but a fixed, permanent principle, which abides in the soul for ever;
a man may lose his gifts, but grace abides; the soul may, and must
be separated from the body, but grace cannot be separated from the
soul: when all forsake us, this will not leave us.
    This infused principle is therefore vastly different, both from
the extraordinary gifts of prophecy, wherein the Spirit was
sometimes said to come upon men, under the Old Testament, 1 Sam. 10:
6, 10 and from the common vanishing effects he sometimes produceth
in the unregenerate, of which we have frequent accounts in the new
Testament, Heb 6: 4 and John 5: 35. It is one thing for the Spirit
to come upon a man in the way of present influence and assistance,
and another thing to dwell in a man as in his temple
    And thus of the nature and quality of this blessed work of the
Spirit in quickening us.
    Secondly, Having seen the nature and properties of the
spiritual life, we are concerned in the next place to enquire into
the way and manner in which it is wrought and infused by the Spirit,
and here we must say,
    First of all, that the work is wrought in the soul very
mysteriously; so Christ tells Nicodemus, John 3: 8 "The wind bloweth
where it listeth, and thou hearest the sound thereof, but canst not
tell whence it comes, or whither it goes, so is every one that is
born of the Spirit". There be many opinions among philosophers about
the original of wind; but we have no certain knowledge of it; we
describe it by its effects and properties, but know little of its
original: and if the works of God in nature be so abstruse, and
unsearchable, how much more so are these sublime, and supernatural
works of the Spirit?
    We are not able to solve the Phenomena of nature, we can give
no account of our own formation in the womb, Eccl 11: 5. Who can
exactly describe how the parts of the body are formed, and the soul
infused? "It is curiously wrought in the lowest parts of the earth,"
as the Psalmist speaks, Psal 139: 16. but how, we know not Basil
saith, divers questions may be moved about a fly, which may puzzle
the greatest philosopher: we know little of the forms and essences
of natural things, much less at these profound, and abstruse
spiritual things
    Secondly, But though we cannot pry into these secrets by the
eye of reason, yet God has revealed this to us in his word, that it
is wrought by his own mighty power, Eph. 1: 19. The apostle ascribes
this work to the exceeding greatness of the power of God; and this
must needs be, if we consider how the Spirit of God expresses it in
scripture by a new creation; i e. a giving being to something out of
nothing, Eph. 2: 10. In this it differs from all the effects of
human power, for man always works upon some pre-existent matter, but
here is no such matter; all that is in man, the subject of this
work, is only a passive capacity, or receptivity, but nothing is
found in him to contribute towards this work; this supernatural life
is not, nor can it be educed out of natural principles; this wholly
transcends the sphere of all natural power; but of this more anon.
    Thirdly, This also we may affirm of it, that this divine life
is infused into all the natural faculties. and powers of the soul,
not one exempted, 1 Thess. 5: 23. The whole soul and spirit is the
recipient subject of it, and with respect to this general infusion
into all the faculties and powers of the soul, it is called a new
creature, a new man, having an integral perfection, and fulness of
all its parts and members; it becomes light in the mind, Johns 17:
3. Obedience in the will, 1 Pet. 1: 2. In the affections an heavenly
temper and tenderness, Col. 3: 1, 2. And so is variously denominated
even as the sea is from the several shores it washes, though it be
one and the same sea. And here, we must observe, lies one main
difference betwixt a regenerate soul and an hypocrite; the one is
all of a piece, as I may say, the principle of spiritual life runs
into all, and every faculty and affections, and sanctifies or renews
the whole man; whereas the change upon hypocrites is but partial and
particular; he may have new light, but no new love; a new tongue,
but not a new heart; this or that vice may be reformed, but the
whole course of his life is not altered.
    Fourthly, and lastly, This infusion of spiritual life is done
instantaneously, as all creation work is; hence it is resembled to
that plastic power, which, in a moment, made the light to shine out
of darkness; just so God shines into our hearts, 2 Cor. 4: 6.
    It is true, a soul may be a long time under the preparatory
works of the Spirit, he may be under convictions and humiliations,
purposes and resolutions a long time; he may be waiting, at the pool
of Bethesda, attending the means and ordinances, but when the Spirit
comes once to quicken the soul, it is done in a moment: even as it
is in the infusion of the rational soul, the body is long ere it be
prepared and mounded, but when once the embryo or matter is ready,
it is quickened with the spirit of life in an instant: so it is
here; but O what a blessed moment is this! Upon which the whole
weight of our eternal happiness depends; for it is Christ in us,
i.e. Christ formed in us, who is the hope of glory, Col. 1: 27. And
our Lord expressly tells us, John 3: 3. That except we be regenerate
and born again, we cannot see the kingdom of God. And thus of the
way and manner of its infusion.
    Thirdly, Let the design and end of God, in this his quickening
work, be next considered; for what end and with what design and aim
this work is wrought. And if we consult the scriptures in this
matter, we shall find this principle of life is infused in order to
our glorifying God, in this world, by a life of obedience, and our
enjoying of God in the works to come.
    First, spiritual life is infused in order to a course of
obedience in this world, whereby God is glorified. So we read in
Eph. 2: 10, "Created in Christ Jesus unto good works, which God has
before ordained that we should walk in them:" habits are to actions,
as the root is to the fruit, it is for fruit sake that we plant the
root, and ingraft the branches. So in Ezek 36: 26, 27 "A new spirit
will I also put within you, and cause you to walk in my statutes,
and ye shall keep my judgements and do them". This is the next or
immediate design and end, not only of the first infusion of the
principle of life into the soul, but of all the exciting, actuating,
and assisting works of the Spirit afterwards. Now this principle of
spiritual life infused, has a twofold influence into obedience.
    First, This makes a sincere and true obedience, when it flows
from an inward vital principle of grace. The hypocrite is moved by
something ab extra, from without, as the applause of men, the
accommodation of fleshly interests, the force of education or if
there be any thing from within that moves him, it is but self-
interest, to quiet a disturbing conscience, and support his vain
hopes of heaven; but he never acts from a new principle, a new
nature, inclining him to holy actions. Sincerity mainly lies in the
harmony and correspondence of actions to their principles: from this
infused principle it is, that men hunger and thirst for God, and go
to their duties as men do to their meals, when they find an empty
craving stomach.
    O reader, pause a little upon this ere thou pass on, ask thy
heart whether it be so with thee: are holy duties connatural to
thee? Does thy soul move and work after God by a kind of
supernatural instinct? This then will be to thee a good evidence of
thy integrity.
    Secondly, From this infused principle of life results the
excellence of our obedience, as well as the sincerity of it; for by
virtue and reason thereof, it becomes free and voluntary, not forced
and constrained, it drops like honey, and of its own accord, out of
the comb, Cant. 4: 11. or as waters from the fountain, without
forcing, John 4: 14. An unprincipled professor must be pressed hard
by some weight of affliction, ere he will yield one tear, or pour
out a prayer, Psal 78: 14. "When he slew them, then they sought
him."
    Now the freedom of obedience is the excellency of it, God's eye
is much upon that, 1 Cor. 9: 17. yea, and the uniformity of our
obedience, which is also a special part of the beauty of it, results
from hence: he that acts from a principle acts fluently and
uniformly, and there is a proportion betwixt the parts of his
conversation; this is it which makes us holy, "en pasei anastrofe",
in all manner of conversation, or in every point and turning of our
conversations, as the word imports, 1 Pet. 1: 15. Whereas he that is
moved by this or that external accidental motive, must needs be very
uneven, "like the legs of a lame man," as the expression is, Prov.
26: 7. "which are not equal." Now a word of God, and then the
discourse runs muddy and profane or carnal again; all that evenness
and uniformity that are in the several parts of a Christian's life,
are the effect of this infused principle of spiritual life.
    Thirdly, Another aim and design of God in the infusion of this
principle of life, is thereby to prepare and qualify the soul for
the enjoyment of himself in heaven: "Except a man be born again he
cannot see the kingdom of God," John 3: 3. All that shall possess
that inheritance must be begotten again to it, as the apostle
speaks, 1 Pet. 1: 3, 4. This principle of grace is the very seed of
that glory; it is eternal life in the root and principle, John 17:
3. by this the soul is attempered and qualified for that state and
enjoyment. What is the life of glory but the vision of God, and the
soul's assimilation to God by that vision? From both which results
that unspeakable joy and delight which passeth understanding: but
what vision of God, assimilation to God, or delight in God, can that
soul have which was never quickened with the supernatural principle
of grace? The temper of such souls is expressed in that sad
character, Zech. 11: 8. "My soul loathed them, and their soul also
abhorred me." For want of this vital principle it is, that the very
same duties and ordinances which are the delights and highest
pleasures of the saints, are no better than a mere drudgery and
bondage to others, Mal. 1: 13. Heaven would be no heaven to a dead
soul; this principle of life, in its daily growth and improvement,
is our meetness, as well as our evidence, for heaven: these are the
main ends of its infusion.
    Fourthly, In the next place, according to the method proposed,
I am obliged to show you, that this quickening work is wholly
supernatural; it is the sole and proper work of the Spirit of God.
So Christ himself expressly asserts it, in John 3: 6, 8. "That which
is born of the flesh is flesh, and that which is born of the Spirit
is spirit: the wind bloweth where it listeth, and thou heareth the
sound thereof, but canst not tell whence it cometh, nor whither it
goes; so is every one that is born of the Spirit."
    Believers are the birth or offspring of the Spirit, who
produceth the new creature in them in an unintelligible manner, even
to themselves. So far is it above their own ability to produce, that
it is above their capacity to understated the way of its production:
as if you should ask, Do you know from whence the wind comes? No: Do
you know whither it goes? No: But you hear and feel it when it
blows? Yes: Why, so is every one that is born of the Spirit; he
feels the efficacy, and discerns the effect of the Spirit on his own
soul, but cannot understand or describe the manner of their
production. This is not only above the carnal, but above the renewed
mind to comprehend; we can contribute nothing, I mean actively, to
the production of this principle of life, we may indeed be said to
concur passively with the Spirit in it; i. e. there is found in us a
capacity, aptness, or receptiveness of this principle of life: our
nature is endowed with such faculties and powers as are meet
subjects to receive, and instruments to act this spiritual life: God
only quickens the rational nature with spiritual life.
    It is true also, that in the progress of sanctification, a man
does actively concur with the Spirit, but in the first production of
this spiritual principle he can do nothing; he can indeed perform
those external duties that have a remote tendency to it, but he
cannot by the power of nature perform any saving act, or contribute
any thing more than a passive capacity to the implantation of a new
principle: as will appear by the following arguments.
    Arg. 1 He that actively concurs to his own regeneration, makes
himself to differ; but this is denied to all regenerate men, 1 Cor
4: 7 "Who maketh thee to differ from another? And what hast thou
that thou midst not receive?"
    Arg. 2 That to which the scripture ascribes both impotence and
enmity, with respect to grace, cannot actively, and of itself,
concur to the production of it: but the scripture ascribes both
impotency and enmity to nature, with respect to grace. It denies to
it a power to do any thing of itself, John 15:5. And, which is less,
it denies to it a power to speak a good word, Mat. 12: 34. And,
which is least of all, it denies it power to think a good thought, 2
Cor 3:5. This impotency, if there were no more, cuts off all
pretence of our active concurrence; but then if we consider that it
ascribes enmity to our natures, as well as impotency, how clear is
the case! See Rom 8: 7 "The carnal mind is enmity against God". And
Col 1: 21. "And you that were enemies in your minds by wicked
works." So then nature is so far productive of this principle, as
impotency and enmity can enable it to be so
    Arg. 3 That which is of natural production, must needs be
subject to natural dissolution, that which is born of the flesh is
flesh, a perishing thing, for every thing is as its principle is,
and there can be no more in the effect, then there is in the cause:
but this principle of spiritual life is not subject to dissolution,
it is the water that springs up into everlasting life, John 4: 14.
The seed of God, which remaineth in the regenerate soul, 1 Johns 3:
9. And all this, because it is "born not of corruptible, but of
incorruptible seed," 1 Pet. 1: 23.
    Arg. 4. If our new birth be our resurrection, a new creation,
yea, a victory over nature, then we cannot actively contribute to
its production; but under all these notions it is represented to us
in the scriptures; it is our resurrection from the dead, Eph. 5: 14.
And you know the body is wholly passive in its resurrection: but
though it concurs not, yet it gives pre-existent matter: therefore
the metaphor is designedly varied, Eph. 4: 24. where it is called a
creation: in which there is neither active concurrence, nor pre-
existent matter; but though creation excludes pre-existent matter,
yet in producing something out of nothing, there is no reluctancy
not opposition: therefore to show how purely supernatural this
principle of life is, it is clothed and presented to us in the
notion of a victory, 2 Cor. 10: 4. And so leaves all to grace.
    Arg. 5. If nature could produce, or but actively concur to the
production of this spiritual life, then the best natures would be
soonest quickened with it; and the worst natures not at all, or at
last, and least of all: but contrarily, we find the worst natures
often regenerated, and the best left in the state of spiritual
death: with how many sweet homilitical virtues was the young man
adorned? Mark 10: 21. yet graceless: and what a sink of sin was Mary
Magdalene, Luke 7: 37. yet sanctified. Thus beautiful Rachel is
barren, while Leah bears children. And there is scarce any thing
that affects and melts the hearts of Christians more than this
comparative consideration does, when they consider vessels of gold
cast away, and leaden ones chosen for such noble uses. So that it is
plain enough to all wise and humble souls, that this new life is
wholly of supernatural production.
    Fifthly, and lastly, I shall briefly represent the necessary
antecedence of this quickening work of the Spirit, to our first
closing with Christ by faith: and this will easily let itself into
your understandings, if you but consider the nature of the vital act
of faith; which is the soul's receiving of Christ, and resting upon
him for pardon and salvation: in which two things are necessarily
included, viz.
    1. The renouncing of all other hopes and dependencies.
    2. The opening of the heart fully to Jesus Christ.
    First, The renouncing of all other hopes and dependencies
whatsoever. Self in all its acceptations, natural, sinful, and
moral, is now to be denied and renounced for ever, else Christ cam
never be received, Rom. 10: 3. not only self in its vilest
pollutions, but self in its richest ornaments and endowments: but
this is as impossible to the unrenewed and natural man, as it is for
rocks or mountains to start from their centre, and fly like
wandering atoms in the air: nature will rather chose to run the
hazard of everlasting damnation, than escape it by a total
renunciation of its beloved hosts, or self-righteousness: this
supernatural work necessarily requires a supernatural principle,
Rom. 8: 2.
    Secondly, The openings the heart fully to Jesus Christ, without
which Christ can never be received, Rev. 3: 20. but this also is the
effect of the quickening Spirit, the Spirit of life which is in
Christ Jesus. Sooner may we expect to see the flowers and blossoms
open without the influence of the sun, than the heart and will of a
sinner open to receive Christ without a principle of spiritual life
first derived from him: and this will be past doubt to all that
consider not only the impotence but the ignorance, prejudice, and
aversations of nature, by which the door of the heart is barred, and
chained against Christ, John 5: 40. So that nature has neither
ability nor will, power nor desire, to come to Christ: if any have
an heart opened to receive him, it is the Lord that opens it by his
Almighty Power, and that in the way of an infused principle of life
supernatural.
    Quest. But here it may be doubted and objected, against this
position. If we cannot believe till we are quickened with spiritual
life, as you say, and cannot be justified till we believe, as all
say, then it will follow, that a regenerate soul may be in the state
of condemnation for a time, and consequently perish, if death should
befall him in that juncture.
    Sol. To this I return, That when we speak of the priority of
this quickening work of the Spirit to our actual believing, we
rather understand it of the priority of nature, than of time, the
nature and order of the work requiring it to be so: a vital
principle must, in order of nature, be infused before a vital act
can be exerted. First, Make the tree good, and then the fruit good:
and admit we should grant some priority in time also to this
quickening principle, before actual faith, yet the absurdity
mentioned would be no way consequent upon that concession; for as
the vital act of faith quickly follows that regenerating principle,
so the soul is abundantly secured against the danger objected: God
never beginning any special work of grace upon the soul, and then
leaving it and the soul with it in hazard, but preserves both to the
finishing and completing of his gracious design, Phil. 1: 6.
    
                      First use of Information.
    
    Inf. 1. If such be the nature and necessity of this principle
of divine life, as you have heard it opened in the foregoing
discourse, then hence it follows, That unregenerate men are not
better than dead men. So the text represent them "you has he
quickened who were dead in trespasses and sins" i. e. spiritually
dead, though naturally alive; yea and lively too as any other
persons in the world. There is a threefold consideration of objects,
viz.
    1. Naturally
    2. Politically
    3. Theologically.
    First, Naturally, To all those things that are natural, they
are alive: they can understand, reason, discourse, project, and
contrive, as well as others; they can eat, drink, and build, plant,
and suck out the natural comfort of these things, as much as any
others. So their life is described, Job 21: 12 "They take the
timbrel and harp, and rejoice at the sound of the organ; they spend
their days in wealth," &c And James 5: 5 "Ye have lived in pleasure
upon earth," as the fish lives in the water its natural element, and
yet this natural sensual life is not allowed the name of life, 1
Tim. 5: 9 such persons are dead whilst they live; it is a base and
ignoble life, to have a soul only to salt the body or to enable a
man for a few years to eat, and drink, and talk; and laugh, and then
die.
    Secondly, Objects may be considered politically, and with
respect to such things, they are alive also: they can buy and sell,
and manage all their worldly affairs with as much dexterity, skill,
and policy as other men: yea, "the children of this world are wiser
in their generation than the children of light," Luke 16: 8. The
entire stream of their thoughts, projects, and studies, running in
that one channel; leaving but one design to manage, they must needs
excel in worldly wisdom: But then,
    Thirdly, Theologically considered, they are dead; without life,
sense, or motion, towards God, and the things that are above: their
understandings are dead, 1 Cor. 2: 14 and cannot receive the things
that are of God; their wills are dead, and cannot move towards Jesus
Christ, John 6: 65. Their affections are dead, even to the most
excellent and spiritual objects; and all their duties are dead
duties, without life or spirit. This is the sad case of the
unregenerate world.
    Inf. 2. This speaks encouragement to ministers and parents, to
wait in hopes of success at last, even upon those that yet give them
little hope of conversion at the present.
    The world you see is the Lord's; when the Spirit of life comes
upon their dead souls, they shall believe, and be made willing; till
then, we do but plough upon the rocks: yet let not our hand slack in
duty, pray for them, and plead with them: you know not in which
prayer, or exhortation, the spirit of life may breathe upon them.
Can these dry bones live? Yes, if the Spirit of life from God
breathe upon them, they can, and shall live: what though their
dispositions be averse to all things that are spiritual and serious,
yet even such have been regenerated, when more sweet and promising
natures have been passed by, and left under spiritual death.
    It was the observation of Mr. Ward, upon his brother Mr Daniel
Rogers, (who was a man of great gifts and eminent graces, yet of a
very bad temper and constitution) Though my brother Rogers, saith
he, has grace enough for two men, yet not half enough for himself.
    It may be you have prayed and striven long with your relations
and to little purpose, yet be not discouraged. How often was Mr John
Rogers, that famous and successful divine, a grief of heart to his
relations in his younger years, proving a wild and lewd young man,
to the great discouragement of his pious friends; yet, at last, the
Lord graciously changed him, so that Mr. Richard Rogers would say,
when he could exercise the utmost degree of charity or hope, for any
that at present were vile and naught, I will never despair of any
man for Johns Rogers' sake.
    Inf. 4. How honourable are Christians by their new birth! "They
are born not of blood, nor of the will of the flesh, nor of the will
of man, but of God," John 1: 13. i. e. not in an impure, or mere
natural way, but in a most spiritual and supernatural manner: they
are the offspring of God, the children of the Most High, as well by
regeneration as by adoption; which is the greatest advancement of
the human nature, next to its hypostatical union with the second
person. Oh, what honour is this for a poor sinful creature, to have
the very life of God breathed into his soul! All other dignities of
nature are trifles compared with this. This makes a Christian a
sacred hallowed thing, the living temple of God, 1 Cor 6: 19. The
special object of his delight.
    Inf. 4. How deplorable is the condition of the unregenerate
world, in no better case than dead men? Now to affect our hearts
with the misery of such conditions, let us consider and compare it
in the following particulars,
    First, There is no beauty in the dead, all their loveliness
goes away at death; there is no spiritual beauty or loveliness in
any that are unregenerate: It is true, many of them have excellent
moral homilitical virtues, which adorn their conversations in the
eyes of men; but what are all these, but so many sweet flowers
strewed over a dead corpse?
    Secondly, The dead have no pleasure nor delight; even so the
unregenerate are incapable of the delights of the Christian life;
"to be spiritually minded is life and peace," Rom. 8: 6. i.e. this
is the only serene, placid, and pleasant life: when the prodigal,
who was once dead, was alive, then he began to be merry, Luke 15:24.
They live in sensual pleasures, but this is to be dead while alive,
in scripture-reckoning.
    Thirdly, The dead have no heat, they are as cold as clay; so
are all the unregenerate towards God and things above: their lusts
are hot, but their affections to God cold and frozen: that which
makes a gracious heart melt, will not make an unregenerate heart
move.
    Fourthly, The dead must be buried, Gen. 23: 4. "Bury my dead
out of my sight:" So must the unregenerate be buried out of God's
sight for ever: buried in the lowest hell, in the place of darkness,
for ever, John 3: 3. Wo to the unregenerate, good had it been for
them had they never been born!
    Infer. 5. How greatly are all men concerned to examine their
condition with respect to spiritual life and death! It is very
common for men to presume upon their union with, and interest in
Christ. This privilege is, by common mistake, extended generally to
all that profess the Christian religion, and practice the external
duties of it, when, in truth, no more are or can be united to
Christ, than are quickened by the Spirit of life which is in Christ
Jesus, Rom. 8: 1, 2. O try your interest in Christ by this rule, if
I am quickened by Christ, I have union with Christ. And,
    First, If there be spiritual sense in your souls, there is
spiritual life in them: there are "aisteteria", senses belonging to
the spiritual as well as to the animal life, Heb. 5: 14. They can
feel and sensibly groan under soul pressures and burdens of sin,
Rom. 7: 24. The dead feel not, moan not under the burdens of sin,
but the living do: they may be sensible indeed of the evil of sin,
with respect to themselves, but not as against God, damnation may
scare them, but pollution does not; hell may fright them, but not
the offending of God.
    Secondly, If there be spiritual hunger and thirst, it is a
sweet sign of spiritual life; this sign agrees to Christians of a
day old, 1 Pet. 2: 2. Even "new born babes desire the sincere milk
of the word:" If spiritual life be in you, you know how to expound
that scripture, Psal. 42: 1. without any other interpreter than your
own experience: you will feel somewhat like the gnawing of an empty
stomach making you restless during the interruption of your daily
communion with the Lord.
    Thirdly, If there be spiritual conflicts with sin, there is
spiritual life in your souls, Gal. 5: l7. Not only a combat betwixt
light in the higher, and lust in the lower faculties; not only
opposition to more gross external corruptions, that carry more
infamy and horror with them than other sins do: but the same faculty
will be the seat of war; and the more inward and secret any lust is,
by so much the more will it be opposed and mourned over.
    In a word, the weakest Christian may, upon impartial
observation, find such signs of spiritual life in himself (if he
will allow himself time to reflect upon the bent and frame of his
own heart) as desires after God, conscience of duties, fears, cares,
and sorrows, about sin; delight in the society of heavenly and
spiritual men; and a loathing and burden in the company of vain and
carnal persons.
    Object. O but I have a very dead heart to spiritual things!
    Sol. It is a sign of life that you feel, and are sensible of
that deadness; and besides, there is a great deal of difference
betwixt spiritual deadness and death; the one is the state of the
unregenerate, the other is the disease of regenerate men.
    Object. Some signs of spiritual life are clear to me, but I
cannot close with others.
    Sol. If you can really close with any, it may satisfy you,
though you be dark in others; for if a child cannot go, yet if it
can suck; but if it cannot suck, yet if it can cry; yea, if it
cannot cry, yet if it breathe, it is alive.




Sermon 6.

Of that Act on our Part, by which we do actually and effectually
apply Christ to our own Souls.


John 1: 12.

But as many as received him, to them gave he power to become the
sons of God; even to them that believe on his Name.


    No sooner is the soul quickened by the Spirit of God, but it
answers, in some measure, the end of God in that work, by its active
reception of Jesus Christ, in the day of believing: What this vital
act of faith is upon which so great a weight depends, as our
interest in Christ and everlasting blessedness, this scripture
before us will give you the best account of; wherein (omitting the
consideration of the coherence and context of the words) we have
three things to ponder.
    First, The high and glorious privilege conferred, viz. "Power
to become the sons of God."
    Secondly, The subject of this privilege described, "As many as
received him."
    Thirdly, The description explained, by way of opposition, "Even
as many as believe on his name."
    First, The privilege conferred is a very high and glorious one,
than which no created being is capable of greater; "power to become
the sons of God:" this word "eksousian" is of large extent and
signification, and is, by some, rendered "this right, by others this
dignity, by others this prerogative, this privilege or honour:" It
implies a title or right to adoption, not only with respect to the
present benefits of it in this life, but also to that blessed
inheritance which is laid up in heaven for the sons of God. And so
Grotius rightly expounds it of our consummate sonship, consisting in
the actual enjoyment of blessedness, as well as that which is
inchoate: not only a right to pardon, favour, and acceptance now,
but to heaven and the full enjoyment of God hereafter. O what an
honour, dignity, and privilege is this!
    Secondly, The subjects of this privilege are described; "As
many as received him." This text describes them by that very grace,
faith, which gives them their title and right to Christ and his
benefits; and by that very act of faith, which primarily confers
their right to his person, and secondarily to his benefits, viz.
receiving him: there be many graces besides faith, but faith only is
the grace that gives us right to Christ; and there be many acts of
faith besides receiving, but this receiving or embracing of Christ,
is the justifying and saving act: "As many as received him," "hosoi
de elabon auton", as many, be they of any nation, sex, age, or
condition. For "there is neither Greek nor Jew, circumcision, nor
uncircumcision, Barbarian, Scythian, bond or free: but Christ is
all, and in all," Col. 3: 11.
    Nothing but unbelief bars men from Christ and his benefits. As
many as [received him;} the word signifies "to accept, take," or,
(as we fitly render it), to receive, assume, or take to us; a word
most aptly expressing the nature and office of faith, yea, the very
justifying and saving act; and we are also heedfully to note its
special object, "elabon auton"" The text saith not "auta", his, but
"auton", him, i.e. his person, as he is clothed with his offices,
and not only his benefits and privileges. These are secondary and
consequential things to our receiving him. So that it is a
receiving, assuming, or accepting the Lord Jesus Christ, which must
have respect to the tenders and proposals of the gospel, "for
therein is the righteousness of God revealed from faith to faith,"
Rom. 1: 17. therein is Jesus Christ revealed, proposed, and offered
unto sinners, as the only way of justification and salvation; which
gospel-offer, as before was opened, is therefore ordinarily
necessary to believing, Rom. 10: 11,12, 13, &c.
    Thirdly, This description is yet further explained by this
additional exegetical clause, [even to them that believe on his
name;] here the terms are varied, though the things expressed in
both be the same; what he called receiving there, is called
believing on his name here, to show us that the very essence of
saving faith consists in our receiving of Christ. By his name, we
are to understand Christ himself: it is usual to take these two,
believing in him, and believing in his name, as terms convertible,
and of the same importance, "hu hu; shmo ushmo", Ipse est nomen
suum, et nomen ejus ipse est: His name is Himself, and Himself is
his name. So that here we have the true nature and precious benefits
of saving faith excellently expressed in this scripture, the sum of
which take in this proposition;
    
    Doct. That the receiving of the Lord Jesus Christ is that
    saving and vital act of faith which gives the soul right both
    to his person and benefits.
    
    We cannot act spiritually till we begin to live spiritually:
Therefore the spirit of life must first join himself to us, in his
quickening work, (as was shown you in the last sermon), which being
done, we begin to act spiritually, by taking hold upon, or receiving
Jesus Christ, which is the thing designed to be opened in this
sermon.
    The soul is the life of the body, faith is the life of the
soul, and Christ is the life of faith. There are several sorts of
faith besides saving faith, and in saving faith there are several
acts, besides the justifying or saving act; but this receiving act,
which is to be our subject this day, is that upon which both our
righteousness and eternal happiness do depend. "This, as a form,
differences saving faith from all other kinds or sorts of faith;" by
this it is that we are justified and saved. "To as many as received
him, to them gave he power to become the sons of God:" yet it does
not justify and save us by reason of any proper dignity that is
found in this act, but by reason of the object it receives or
apprehends. The same thing is often expressed in scripture by other
terms, as "Coming to Christ," John 6: 35. Trusting or staying upon
Christ, Isa. 50: 10. But whatever is found in those expressions, it
is all comprehended in this, as will appear hereafter. Now, the
method into which I shall cast my discourse on this subject, that I
may handle it with as much perspicuity and profit as I can, shall
be,
    First, To explain and open the nature of this receiving of
Christ, and show you what it includes.
    Secondly, To prove that this is the justifying and saving act
of faith.
    Thirdly, To show you the excellency of this act of faith.
    Fourthly, To remove some mistakes, and give you the true
account of the dignity and excellency of this act.
    Fifthly, And then bring home all, in a proper and close
application.
    First, In the first place then, I will endeavour to explain and
open the nature of this receiving of Christ, and show you what is
implied in it.
    And, indeed, it involves many deep mysteries, and things of
greatest weight. People are generally very ignorant and unacquainted
with the importance of this expression; they have very slight
thoughts of faith who never passed under the illuminating,
convincing, and humbling work of the Spirit: but we shall find that
saving faith is quite another thing, and differs in its whole kind
and nature from that traditional faith, and common assent, which is
so fatally mistaken for it in the world.
    For, First, It is evident that no man can receive Jesus Christ
in the darkness of natural ignorance: we must understand and discern
who and what he is, whom we receive to be the Lord our
righteousness. If we know not his person, and his offices, we do not
take, but mistake Christ. It is a good rule in the civil law, Non
consentit qui non sentit. A mistake of the person invalidates the
match. He that takes Christ for a mere man, or denies the
satisfaction of his blood, or divests him of his human nature, or
denies any of his most glorious and necessary offices, let them cry
up as high as they will, his spirituality, glory, and exemplary life
and death, they can never receive Jesus Christ aright. This is such
a crack, such a flaw in the very foundation of faith, as undoes and
destroys all. Ignorantis non est consensus: All saving faith is
founded in light and knowledge, and therefore it is called
knowledge, Isa. 53: 11. and seeing is inseparably connected with
believing, John 6: 40. Men must hear and learn of the Father before
they can come to Christ, John 6: 45. The receiving act of faith is
directed and guided by knowledge. I will not presume to state the
degree of knowledge which is absolutely necessary to the reception
of Christ; I know the first acting of faith are, in most Christians,
accompanied with much darkness and confusion of understanding: but
yet we must say in the general, that wherever faith is, there is so
much light as is sufficient to discover to the soul its own sins,
dangers and wants, and the all-sufficiency, suitableness, and
necessity of Christ, for the supply and remedy of all; and without
this, Christ cannot be received. "Come unto me, all ye that labour,
and I will give you rest," Matt. 11: 28.
    Secondly, The receiving of Christ, necessarily implies the
assent of the understanding to the truths of Christ revealed in the
gospel, viz. his person, natures, offices, his incarnation, death,
and satisfaction; which assent, though it be not in itself saving
faith, yet is it the foundation and ground work of it; it being
impossible the soul should receive, and fiducially embrace, what the
mind does not assent unto as true and infallibly certain. Now, there
are three degrees of assent; conjecture, opinion, and belief:
Conjecture is but a slight and weak inclination to assent to the
thing propounded, by reason of the weighty objections that lie
against it. Opinion is a more steady and fixed assent, when a man is
almost certain, though yet some fear of the contrary remains with
him. Belief is a more full and assured assent to the truth; to which
the mind may be brought four ways.
    First, By the perfect intelligence of sense, not hindered or
deceived. So I believe the truth of these propositions, Fire is hot,
water is moist, honey is sweet, gall is bitter.
    Secondly, By the native clearness of self evident principles.
So I believe the truth of these propositions, The whole is more than
a part; the cause is before the effect.
    Thirdly, By discourse, and rational deduction. so I believe the
truth of this proposition, Where all the parts of a thing are, there
is the whole.
    Fourthly, By infallible testimony, when any thing is witnessed
or asserted by one whose truth is unquestionable. And of this sort
is the assent of faith, which is therefore called our receiving the
witness of God, 1 John 5: 9. our setting to our seal that God is
true, John 3: 33. This prima veritas, divine verity, is the very
formal object of faith: into this we resolve our faith. Thus saith
the Lord, is that firm foundation upon which our assent is built.
And thus we see good reason to believe those profound mysteries of
the incarnation of Christ; the hypostatical union of the two natures
in his wonderful person; the mystical union of Christ and believers;
though we cannot understand these things, by reason of the darkness
of our minds. It satisfies the soul to find these mysteries in the
written word; upon that foundation it firmly builds its assent: and
without such an assent of faith, there can be no embracing of
Christ: all acts of faith and religion, without assent, are but as
so many arrows shot at random into the open air, they signify
nothing for want of a fixed determinate object.
    It is therefore the policy of Satan, by injecting or fomenting
atheistical thoughts, (with which young converts use to find
themselves greatly infested) to undermine and destroy the whole work
of faith. But God makes his people victorious over them: yea, and
even at that time they do assent to the truths of the word, when
they think they do not; as appears by their tenderness and fear of
sin, their diligence and care of duty. If I discern these things in
a Christian's life, he must excuse me if I believe him not, when he
saith he does not assent to the truths of the gospel.
    Thirdly, Our receiving Christ necessarily implies our hearty
approbation, liking and estimation; yea, the acquiescence of our
very souls in Jesus Christ, as the most excellent, suitable, and
complete remedy for all our wants, sins, and dangers, that ever
could be prepared by the wisdom and love of God for us: We must
receive him with such a frame of heart, as rests upon, and trusts in
him, it ever we receive him aright, "To them that believe he is
precious," 1 Pet. 2: 7. This is the only sovereign-plaister in all
the world that is large enough, and efficacious enough, to cure our
wounds: And therefore as Christ is most highly esteemed, and
heartily approved, as the only remedy for our souls; so the
sovereign grace and wisdom of God are admired, and the way and
method he has taken to save poor souls, by Jesus Christ, most
heartily approved as the most apt and excellent method, both for his
glory and our good, that ever could be taken: for it is a plain
case, that none will espouse themselves with conjugal affections, to
that person whom they esteem not as the best for them that can be
chosen: none will forsake and quit all for his sake, except they
account him as the spouse did, "the chiefest of ten thousand."
    There are two things in Christ, which must gain the greatest
approbation in the soul of a poor convinced sinner, and bring it to
rest upon Jesus Christ.
    First, That it can find nothing in Christ that is distasteful,
or unsuitable to it, as it does experimentally find in the best
creatures. In him is no bleakness, but a fulness of all saving
abilities; "Able to save to the uttermost:" No pride, causing him to
scorn and condemn the most wretched soul that comes to him: No
inconstancy or levity, to cause him to cast off the soul whom he has
once received: No passion but a Lamb for meekness and patience:
There is no spot to be found in him, but "He is altogether lovely,"
Cant. 5: 16.
    Secondly, As the believer can find nothing in Christ that is
distasteful, so it finds nothing wanting in Christ that is
necessary, or desirable: Such is the fulness of wisdom,
righteousness, sanctification, and redemption that is in Christ,
that nothing is left to desire but the full enjoyment of him. O,
saith the soul, how completely happy shall I be, if I can but win
Christ! I would not envy the nobles of the earth, were I but in
Christ. I am hungry and athirst, and Christ is meat indeed, and
drink indeed; this is the best thing in all the world for me,
because so necessary and so suitable to the needs of a soul ready to
perish. I am a law-condemned and a self-condemned sinner, trembling
for fear of the execution of the curse upon me every moment; in
Christ is complete righteousness to justify my soul; O there is
nothing better for me than Christ. I see myself plunged, both in
nature and practice, into the odious pollutions of sin, and in
Christ is a fountain opened for sin and for uncleanness: His blood
is a fountain of merit, his spirit is a fountain of holiness and
purity: None but Christ, none but Christ. O the manifold wisdom and
unsearchable love of God, to prepare and furnish such a Christ so
fully answering all the needs, all the distresses, all the fears and
burdens of a poor sinner! Thus the believing soul approves of Christ
as best for it. And thus in believing, it gives glory to God, Rom.
4:21.
    Fourthly, Receiving Christ consists in the consent and choice
of the will; and this is the opening of the heart and stretching
forth of he soul to receive him: Thy people shall be willing in the
day of thy power," Psal. 110:3.
    It is the great design and main scope of the gospel, to work
over the wills of poor sinners to this: And this was the great
complaint of Christ against the incredulous Jews, John 5: 40. "Ye
will not come unto me that ye might have life."
    It is disputed by some, whether faith can be seated in two
distinct faculties, as we seem to place it, when we say it involves
both the approbation of the judgement and the consent of the will. I
will not here entangle my discourse with that fruitless dispute. I
am of the same judgement with those divines, that think faith cannot
be expressed fully by any one single habit, or act of the mind or
will distinctly, for that (as one well notes) there are such
descriptions given of it in scripture, such things are proposed as
the object of it, and such is the experience of all that sincerely
believe, as no one single act, either of the mind or will, can
answer unto: Nor do I see any thing repugnant to scripture or
philosophy if we place it in both faculties. Consent (saith Vasquez)
seems to denote the concourse at the will with the understanding;
but to leave that, it is most certain the saving, justifying act of
faith lies principally in the consent of the will, which consent is
the effect of the Almighty power of God, Eph. 1: 19. He allures and
draws the will to Christ, and he draws with the cords of a man, i.e.
he prevails with it by rational arguments: For the soul being
prepared by convictions of its lost and miserable estate by sin, and
that there is but one door of hope open to it for an escape from the
wrath to come, and that is Christ; being also satisfied of the
fulness and completeness of his saving ability, and of his
willingness to make it over for our salvation, upon such just and
equal terms; this cannot but prevail with the will of a poor
distressed sinner, to consent and chose him.
    Fifthly, and lastly, The last and principal thing included in
our receiving of Christ, is the respect that this act of acceptance
has unto the terms upon which Christ is tendered to us in the
gospel, to which it is most agreeable, 1 Cor. 15: 11. "So we preach,
and so ye believed:" Faith answers the gospel-offer, as the impress
upon the zeal does the engraving in the seal; and this is of
principal consideration, for there is no receiving Christ upon any
other terms but his own, proposed in the gospel to us; He will never
come lower, nor make them easier than they are for any man's sake in
the world; we must either receive him upon these, or part with him
for ever as thousands do, who could not be content to agree to some
articles, but rather choose to be damned for ever than submit to
all: This is the great controversy betwixt Christ and sinners; upon
this, many thousands break off the treaty, and part with Christ,
because he will not come to their terms; but every true believer
receives him upon his own, i.e. their acceptance of him by faith, is
in all things consentaneous to the overtures made of him in the
written word. So he tenders himself, and so they receive him, as
will be evident in the following particulars.
    First, The gospel offers Christ to us sincerely and really, and
so the true believer receives and accepts him, even with a faith
unfeigned; 1 Tim. 1: 5. If ever the soul be serious and in earnest
in any thing, it is so in this: Can we suppose the heart of him that
flies for his life to the refuge city, to be serious and in earnest
to escape by flight the avenger of blood who pursues him? Then is
the heart of a convinced sinner serious in this matter; for under
that notion is the work of faith presented to us, Heb. 6: 18.
    Secondly, Christ is offered to us in the gospel entirely and
undividedly, as clothed with all his offices, priestly, prophetical,
and regal; as Christ Jesus the Lord, Acts 16: 31. and so the true
believer receives him; The hypocrite, like the harlot, is for
dividing, but the sincere believer finds the need he has of every
office of Christ, and knows not how to want any thing that is in
him.
    His ignorance makes him necessary and desirable to him as a
prophet: His guilt makes him necessary as a priest: His strong and
powerful lusts and corruptions make him necessary as a king: and in
truth, he sees not any thing in Christ that he can spare; he needs
all that is in Christ, and admires infinite wisdom in nothing more
than the investing Christ with all these offices, which are so
suited to the poor sinner's wants and miseries. Look, as the three
offices are undivided in Christ, so they are in the believer's
acceptance; and before this trial no hypocrite can stand; for all
hypocrites reject and quarrel with something in Christ; they like
his pardon better than his government. They call him indeed, Lord
and Master, but it is but an empty title they bestow upon him; for
let them ask their own hearts if Christ be Lord over their thoughts,
as well as words; over their secret, as well as open actions; over
their darling lusts, as well as others; let them ask, who will
appear to be Lord and Master over them, when Christ and the world
come in competition? When the pleasure of sin shall stand upon one
side, and sufferings to death, and deepest points of self denial,
upon the other side? Surely it is the greatest affront that can be
offered to the Divine Wisdom and Goodness, to separate in our
acceptance, what is so united in Christ, for our salvation and
happiness. As without any one of these offices, the work of our
salvation could not be completed, so without acceptance of Christ in
them all, our union with him by faith cannot be completed.
    The gospel-offer of Christ includes all his offices, and gospel-
faith just so receives him; to submit to him, as well as to be
redeemed by him; to imitate him in the holiness of his life, as well
as to reap the purchases and fruits of his death. It must be an
entire receiving of the Lord Jesus Christ.
    Thirdly, Christ is offered to us in the gospel exclusively, as
the alone and only Saviour of sinners; with whose blood and
intercession nothing is to be mixed; but the soul of a sinner is
singly to rely and depend on him, and no other, Acts 4: 2. 1 Cor. 3:
11 and so faith receives him, Psal. 71: 16 "I will make mention of
thy righteousness, even of thine only", Phil 3: 9. "And be found in
him, not having mine own righteousness, which is of the law, but
that which is through the faith of Christ." To depend partly upon
Christ's righteousness, and partly upon our own, is to set one foot
upon a rock, and the other in a quick sand; either Christ will be to
us all in all, or nothing at all, in point of righteousness and
salvation; he affects not social honour; as he did the whole work,
so he expects the sole praise; if we be not able to save to the
uttermost, why do we depend capon him at all? and if he be, why do
we lean upon any beside him?
    Fourthly, The gospel offers Christ freely to sinners as the
gift, not the sale of God, John 4: 10; Isa. 55: 1; Rev 22: 17 and
even so faith receives him. The believer comes to Christ with an
empty hand, not only as an undeserving, but as an hell-deserving
sinner; he comes to Christ as to one that justifies the ungodly, Rom
4: 5. "Unto him that worketh not, but believeth in him that
justifieth the ungodly, his faith is counted for righteousness."
Where by him that worketh not, he means a convinced, humbled sinner
who finds himself utterly unable to do the task the law sets him,
i.e. perfectly to obey it; and therefore in a law sense is said not
to work; for it is all one as to the intent and purpose of the law,
not to work, and not to work perfectly. This is he convinced of; and
therefore comes to Christ as one that is in himself ungodly,
acknowledging the righteousness, by which alone he can stand before
God, is in Christ, and not in himself, in whole, or in part; and by
the way, let this encourage poor souls that are scared and daunted
for want of due qualifications, for closings with and embracing
Christ. There is nothing qualifies a man for Christ more than a
sense of his unworthiness of him, and the want of all excellencies
or ornaments, that may commend him to divine acceptance.
    Fifthly, The gospel offers Christ orderly to sinners, first his
person, then his privileges. God first gives his Son, and then with
him, or as a consequent of that gift, he gives us all things, Rom.
8: 32. In the same order must our faith receive him. The believer
does not marry the portion first, and then the person, but to be
found in him is the first and great care of a believer.
    I deny not but it is lawful for any to have an eye to the
benefits of Christ. Salvation from wrath is, and lawfully may be
intended and aimed at: "Look unto me, and be saved all ye ends of
the earth," Isa. 45: 22. Nor do I deny but there are many poor
souls, who being in deep distress and fear, may, and often do, look
mostly to their own safety at first, and that there is much
confusion, as well in the acting of their faith, as in their
condition; but sure I am, it is the proper order in believing, first
to accept the person of the Lord Jesus: Heaven is no doubt very
desirable, but Christ is more: "Whom have I in heaven but thee?"
Psal. 73: 25. Union with Christ is, in order of nature, antecedent
to the communication of his privileges, therefore so it ought to be
in the order and method of believing.
    Sixthly, Christ is advisedly, offered in the gospel to sinners,
as the result of God's eternal counsel, a project of grace upon
which his heart and thoughts have been much set, Zech. 6: 13. The
counsel of peace was betwixt the Father and the Son. And so the
believer receives him, most deliberately weighing the matter in his
most deep and serious thoughts; for this is a time of much
solicitude and thoughtfulness. The soul's espousals are acts of
judgement, Hos. 2: 19. on our part, as well as on God's; We are
therefore bid to sit down and count the cost, Luke 14: 28. Faith, or
the actual receiving of Christ, is the result of many previous
debates in the soul; The matter has been pondered over and over: The
objections and discouragements, both from the self-denying terms of
the gospel, and our own vileness and deep guilt, have been
ruminated, and lain upon our hearts day and night, and after all
things have been balanced in the most deep consideration, the soul
is determined to this conclusion, I must have Christ, be the terms
never so hard, be my sins never so great and many, I will yet go to
him, and venture my soul upon him; if I perish, I perish. I have
thought out all my thoughts, and this is the result, union with
Christ here, or separation from God for ever must be my lot.
    And thus does the Lord open the hearts of his elect, and win
the consent of their wills to receive Jesus Christ upon the deepest
consideration and debate of the matter in their own most solemn
thoughts: They understand and know, that they must deeply deny
themselves, take up his cross and follow him, Matt. 16: 24. renounce
not only sinful but religious self; these are hard and difficult
things, but yet the necessity and excellency of Christ make them
appear eligible and rational: by all which you see faith is another
thing than what the sound of that word (as it is generally
understood) signifies to the understandings of most men. This is
that fiducial receiving of Christ here to be opened.
    Secondly, Our next work will be to evince this receiving of
Christ as has been opened, to be that special saving faith of God's
elect: This is that faith of which such great and glorious things
are spoken in the gospel, which, whosoever has shall be saved, and
he that has it not shall be damned; and this I shall evidently prove
by the following arguments or reasons.
    Arg. 1. First, That faith which gives the soul right and title
to spiritual adoption, with all the privileges and benefits thereof,
is true and saving faith.
    But such a receiving of Christ as has been described, gives the
soul right and title to spiritual adoption, with all the privileges
and benefits thereof.
    Therefore such a receiving of Christ as has been described is
true and saving faith.
    The major proposition is undeniable, for our right and title to
spiritual adoption, and the privileges thereof arise from our union
with Jesus Christ; we being united to the Son of God, are, by virtue
of that union, reckoned or accounted sons, Gal. 3: 26. "You are all
the children of God by faith in Jesus Christ:" The act of saving
faith is union with Christ's person, the consequent of that union is
adoption, or right to the inheritance.
    The minor is most plain in the text: "To as many as received
him, to them gave he power or right to become the sons of God:"
false faith has no such privilege annexed to it; no unbeliever is
thus dignified: No stranger entitled to this inheritance.
    Arg. 2. Secondly, That only is saving and justifying faith,
which is in all true believers, in none but true believers, and in
all true believers at all times.
    But such a receiving of Christ as has been described, is in all
true believers, in none but true believers, and in all true
believers at all times.
    Therefore such a receiving of Christ as has been described, is
the only saving and justifying faith.
    The major is undeniable, that must needs contain the essence of
saving faith, which is proper to every true believer at all times,
and to no other.
    The minor will be as clear, for there is no other act of faith,
but this of fiducial receiving Christ as he is offered, that does
agree to all true believers, to none but true believers, and to all
true believers at all times.
    There be three acts of faith, assent, acceptance, and
assurance: The Papists generally give the essence of saving faith to
the first, viz. assent. The Lutherans, and some of our own, give it
to the last, viz. assurance: but it can be neither way so. Assent
does not agree only to true believers, or justified persons.
Assurance agrees to justified persons, and them only, but not to all
justified persons, and that at all times.
    Assent is too low to contains the essence of saving faith, it
is found in the unregenerate as well as the regenerate: yea, in
devils as well as men, James 2: 19. it is supposed and included in
justifying faith, but it is not the justifying or saving act.
Assurance is as much too high, being found only in some eminent
believers: and in them too but at some times. There is many a true
believer to whom the joy and comfort of assurance is denied; they
may say of their union with Christ, as Paul said of his vision;
whether in the body or out of the body, I cannot tell; so they,
whether in Christ or out of Christ, they cannot tell.
    A true believer may "walk in darkness, and see no light," Isa.
50: 10. Nay a man must be a believer before he know himself to be
so; the direct act of faith is before the reflex act: so that the
justifying act of faith lies neither in assent nor in assurance.
Assent saith, I believe that Christ is, and that he is the Saviour
of the elect. Assurance saith, I believe and am sure that Christ
died for me, and that I shall be saved through him. So that assent
widens the nature of faith too much, and assurance upon the other
hand straitens it too much; but acceptance, which saith, I take
Christ in all his offices to be mine, this fits it exactly, and
belongs to all true believers, and to none but true believers; and
to all true believers at all times. This therefore must be the
justifying and saving act of faith.
    Arg. 3. Thirdly, That and no other is the justifying and saving
act at faith, to which the properties and effects of saving faith do
belong, or in which they are only found.
    But in the fiducial receiving of Christ are the properties and
effects of saving faith only found.
    This therefore must be the justifying and saving act of faith.
    First, By saving faith, Christ is said to "dwell in our
hearts," Eph. 3: 17. but it is neither by assent, nor assurance, but
by acceptance, and receiving him that he dwells in our hearts; not
by assent, for then he would dwell in the unregenerate; nor by
assurance, for he must dwell in our hearts before we can be assured
of it: therefore it is by acceptance.
    Secondly, By faith we are justified, Rom. 5: 1. But neither
assent nor assurance, for the reasons above, do justify; therefore
it must be by the receiving act, and no other.
    Thirdly, The scripture ascribes great difficulties to that
faith by which we are saved, as being most cross and opposite to the
corrupt nature of man; but of all the acts of faith, none is clogged
with like difficulties, or conflicts with greater oppositions than
the receiving act does; this act is attended with the greatest
difficulties, fears, and deepest self-denial. In assent, a man's
reason is convinced, and yields to the evidence of truth, so that he
can do no other but assent to the truth. In assurance there is
nothing against man's will or comfort, but much for it; every one
desires it: but it is not so in the acceptance of Christ, upon the
self-denying terms of the gospel, as will hereafter be evinced. We
conclude there fore, that in this consists the nature and essence of
saving faith.
    Thirdly, Having seen what the receiving of Jesus Christ is, and
that it is the faith by which we are justified and saved, I next
come to open the dignity and excellency of this faith, whose praises
and encomiums are in all the scriptures; there you find it renowned
by the title of precious faith, 2 Pet. 1: 7. enriching faith, Jam.
2: 5. the work of God, John 6: 29. the great mystery of godliness, 1
Tim. 3: 16. With many more rich epithets throughout the scriptures
bestowed upon it.
    Now faith may be considered two ways, viz. either qualitatively
or relatively.
    Considered qualitatively, as a saving grace, it has the same
excellency that all other precious saving graces have; as it is the
fruit of the Spirit, it is more precious than gold, Prov. 8: 11, 19.
And so are all other graces as well as faith; in this sense they all
shine with equal glory, and that a glory transcending all the glory
of this world: but then consider faith relatively, as the instrument
by which the righteousness of Christ is apprehended and made ours;
and in that consideration it excels all other graces.
    This is the grace that is singled out from among all other
graces, to receive Christ, by which office it is dignified above all
its fellows: as Moses was honoured above the many thousands of
Israel, when God took him up into the mount, admitted him nearer to
himself than any other of all the tribes might come; for they stood
without the rail, while Moses was received into the special presence
of God, and was admitted to such views as others must not have: so
faith is honoured above all its fellow graces, in being singled out,
and solemnly appointed to this high office in our justification:
this is that precious eye that looks unto Christ as the stung
Israelites did to the brazen serpent, and derives healing virtue
from him to the soul. It is the grace which instrumentally saves us,
Eph. 2: 8. As it is Christ's glory to be the door of salvation, so
it is faith's glory to be the golden key that opens that door.
    What shall I say of faith? It is the bond of union; the
instrument of justification; the spring of spiritual peace and joy;
the means of spiritual life and subsistence; and therefore the great
scope and drift of the gospel; which aims at and presseth nothing
more than to bring men and women to believe.
    First, This is the bond of our union with Christ, that union is
begun in our vivification, and completed in our actual receiving of
Christ. The first is the bond of union on the Spirit's part, the
second a bond of union on our part. "Christ dwelleth in our hearts
by faith," Eph. 3: 17. And therein it is a door opened to let in
many rich blessings to the soul, for, by uniting us to Christ, it
brings us into special favour and acceptation with God, Eph. 1: 6.
Makes us the special objects of Christ's conjugal love and delight,
Eph. 5: 29. Draws from his heart sympathy and a tender sense of all
our miseries and burdens, Heb. 4: 15.
    Secondly, It is the instrument of our justification, Rom. 5: 1.
Till Christ be received (thus received by us) we are in our sins;
under guilt and condemnation; but when faith comes, then comes
freedom: "By him all that believe are justified from all things."
Acts 13: 38; Rom 8: 1. For it apprehends or receives the pure and
perfect righteousness of the Lord Jesus, wherein the soul, how
guilty and sinful soever it be in itself, stands faultless and
spotless before the presence of God; all obligations to punishment
are, upon believing, immediately dissolved; a full and final pardon
sealed. O precious faith! who can sufficiently value it!
    What respect, reader, wouldst thou have to that hand that
should bring thee a pardon when on the ladder or block? Why, such a
pardon, which thou canst not read without tears of joy, is brought
thee by the hand of faith O inestimable grace! This clothes the pure
righteousness of Jesus upon our defiled souls, and so causes us to
become the "righteousness of God in him," or as it is 1 John 3: 7
"Righteous as he is righteous:" Non formali & intrinsica justitia,
sed relativa: Not with a formal inherent righteousness of our own,
but with a relative imputed righteousness from another.
    I know this most excellent and most comfortable doctrine of
imputed righteousness, is not only denied but derided by Papists.
Stapleton calls it spectrum cerebri Lutherani: The monstrous birth
of Luther's brain! But, blessed be God, this comfortable truth is
well secured against all attempts of its adversaries. Let their
blasphemous mouths call it in derision, as they do putative
righteousness, i.e. a mere fancied or conceited righteousness: Yet
we know assuredly Christ's righteousness is imputed to us, and that
in the way of faith. If Adam's sin became ours by imputation, then
so does Christ's righteousness also become ours by imputation, Rom.
5: 17. If Christ were made a sinner by the imputation of our sins to
him, who had no sin of his own, then we are made righteous by the
imputations of Christ's righteousness to us, who have no
righteousness of our own, according to 2 Cor 5: 21. This was the way
in which Abraham, the father of them that believe, was justified;
and therefore this is the way in which all believers, the children
of Abraham, must, in the like manner, be justified, Rom 4: 22, 23,
24. Who can express the worth of faith in this one respect, were
this all it did for our souls?
    But, Thirdly, It is the spring of our spiritual peace and joy:
and that as it is the instrument of our justification. If it be an
instrument of our justification, it cannot but be the spring of our
consolation, Rom 5: 1 "Being justified by faith, we have peace with
God " In uniting us with Christ, and apprehending; and applying his
righteousness to us, it becomes the seed or root of all the peace
and joy of a Christian's life. Joy, the child of faith, therefore
bears its name, Phil 1 25 "The joy of faith". So 1 Pet 1. 8, 9
"believing we rejoice with joy unspeakable." We cannot forbear
rejoicing when by faith we are brought to the sight and knowledge of
such a privileged state; when faith has first given and then cleared
our title to Christ, joy is no more under the soul's command; we
cannot but rejoice, and that with joy unspeakable.
    Fourthly, It is the means of our spiritual livelihood and
subsistence: all other graces, like birds in the nest, depend upon
what faith brings in to them; take away faith, and all the graces
languish and die: joy, peace, hope, patience, and all the rest,
depend upon faith, as the members of the natural body do upon the
vessels by which blood and spirits are conveyed to them. "The life
which I now live (saith the apostle) is by the faith of the Son of
God," Gal. 2: 20. It provides our ordinary food, and extraordinary
cordials, Psal. 27: 13. "I had fainted, unless I had believed." And
seeing it is all this to our souls,
    Fifthly, In the last place, it is no wonder that it is the main
scope and drift of the gospel, to press and bring souls to
believing: it is the gospel's grand design to bring up the hearts of
men and women to faith. The urgent commands of the gospel aim at
this, 1 John 3: 23. Mark 1: 14, 15. John 12: 36. Hither also look
the great promises and encouragements of the gospel, John 6: 35, 37.
So Mark 16: 16. And the opposite sin of unbelief is every where
fearfully aggravated and threatened, John 16: 8, 9. John 3: 18, 35.
And this was the third thing promised, namely, a discovery of the
transcendent worth and excellency of saving faith.
    Fourthly, But lest we commit a mistake here, to the prejudice
of Christ's honour and glory, which must not be given to another, no
not to faith itself; I promised you in the fourth place, to show you
upon what account faith is thus dignified and honoured; that so we
may give unto faith the things that are faith's, and to Christ the
things that are Christ's.
    And I find four opinions about the interest of faith in our
justification: some will have it to justify us formally, not
relatively: i.e. upon the account of his own intrinsical value and
worth; and this is the popish sense of justification by faith. Some
affirm, that though faith be not our perfect legal righteousness,
considered as a work of ours, yet the act of believing is imputed to
us for righteousness, i.e. God graciously accepts it instead of
perfect legal righteousness, and so, in his esteem, it is our
evangelical righteousness. And this is the Armenian sense of
justification by faith.
    Some there are also, even among our reformed divines, that
contend that faith justifies and saves us, as it is the condition of
the new covenant. And lastly, others will have it to justify us as
an instrument apprehending, or receiving the righteousness of
Christ; with which opinion I must close. When I consider my text
calls it a receiving of Christ. Most certain it is,
    That, First, It does not justify in the popish sense, upon the
account of its own proper worth and dignity; for then,
    First, Justification should be of debt, not of grace; contrary
to Rom. 3: 23, 24.
    Secondly, This would frustrate the very scope and end of the
death of Christ; for if righteousness come by the law, i.e. by the
way of works and desert, then is Christ dead in vain, Gal. 2: 21.
    Thirdly, Then the way of our justification by faith would be so
far from excluding, that it would establish boasting, expressly
contrary to the apostle, Rom. 3: 26,27.
    Fourthly, Then there should be no defects or imperfections in
faith, for a defective or imperfect thing can never be the matter of
our justification before God: if it justify upon the account of its
own worth and proper dignity, it can have no flaw or imperfection in
it, contrary to the common sense of all believers. Nay,
    Fifthly, Then it is the same thing to be justified by faith,
and to be justified by works, which the apostle so carefully
distinguisheth and opposeth, Phil. 3: 9. and Rom. 4: 6. So that we
conclude it does not justify in the Popish sense, for any worth or
proper excellency that is in itself.
    Secondly, And it is as evident, it does not justify us in the
Arminian sense, viz. as the "to credere", the act of believing is
imputed or accepted by God, as our evangelical righteousness,
instead of perfect legal righteousness. In the former opinion you
have the dregs of Popery, and here you have refined Popery. Let all
Armenians know, we have as high an esteem for faith as any men in
the world, but yet we will not rob Christ to clothe faith. We cannot
embrace their opinion, because,
    First, We must then dethrone Christ to exalt faith: we are
willing to give it all that is due to it, but we dare not despoil
Christ of his glory for faith's sake: "He is the Lord our
righteousness," Jer. 23. We dare not set the servant above the
master. We acknowledge no righteousness but what the obedience and
satisfaction of Christ yields us. His blood, not our faith; his
satisfaction, not our believing it, is the matter of our
justification be fore God.
    Secondly, We dare not yield this point, lest we undermine all
the comfort of Christians, by setting their pardon and peace upon a
weak imperfect work of their own. Oh how tottering and unstable must
their station be, that stand upon such a bottom as this! What
alterations are there in our faith, what mixtures of unbelief at all
times, and prevalence of unbelief at some times; and is this a
foundation to build our justification and hope upon? Debile
fundamentum fallit opus: If we lay the stress here, we build upon
very loose ground, and must be at a continual loss both as to safety
and comfort.
    Thirdly, We dare not wrong the justice and truth of God at that
rate, as to affirm that he esteems and imputes our poor weak faith
for perfect legal righteousness. We know that the judgement of God
is always according to truth; if the justice of God require full
payment, sure it will not say, it is fully satisfied by any acts of
ours, when all that we can do amounts not to one mite of the vast
sum we owe to God. So that we deservedly reject this opinion also.
    Thirdly, And for the third opinion, That it justifies as the
condition of the new covenant; though some of great name and worth
among our Protestant divines seem to go that way, yet I cannot see,
according to this opinion, any reason why repentance may not as
properly be said to justify us as faith, for it is a condition of
the new covenant as much as faith; and if faith justify as a
condition, then every other grace that is a condition must justify
as well as faith. I acknowledge faith to be a condition of the
covenant, but cannot allow that it justifies as a condition. And
therefore must profess myself best satisfied in the last opinion,
which speaks it an instrument in our justification: it is the hand
which receives the righteousness of Christ that justifies us, and
that gives it its value above all other graces; as when we say a
diamond ring is worth one hundred pounds, we mean not the gold that
receives, but the stone that is set in it, is worth so much. Faith,
considered as an habit, is no more precious than other gracious
habits are, but considered as an instrument to receive Christ and
his righteousness, so it excels them all; and this instrumentality
of faith is noted in these phrases, "epi tei pisei", Rom. 3: 28. and
"dia tes pisteos", Rom. 3: 22. By faith, and through faith. And thus
much of the nature and excellency of saving faith.






Sermon 7.


John 1: 12.

But as many as received him, to them gave he power to become the
sons of God; even to then that believe on his name.

    
    The nature and excellency of saving faith, together with its
relation to justification, as an instrument in receiving Christ and
his righteousness, having been discoursed doctrinally already; I now
come to make application of it, according to the nature of this
weighty and fruitful point.
    And the uses I shall make of it will be for our,
    1. Information,    |    3. Exhortation, and,
    2. Examination,    |    4. Direction.
    
                      First Use of Information.
    
    Use 1. And in the first, this point yields us many great and
useful truths for our information: As,
    Inference 1. Is the receiving of Christ the vital and saving
act of faith, which gives the soul right to the person and
privileges of Christ? Then it follows, That the rejecting of Christ
by unbelief, must needs be the damning and soul-destroying sin,
which cuts a man off from Christ, and all the benefits purchased by
his blood. If there be life in receiving, there must needs be death
in rejecting Christ.
    There is no grace more excellent than faith; no sin more
execrable and abominable than unbelief. Faith is the saving grace,
and unbelief the damning sin, Mark 16: 16. "He that believeth not
shall be damned." See John 3: 18, 36. and John 8: 24.
    And the reason why this sin of unbelief is the damning sin is
this, because, in the justification of a sinner, there must be a
co-operation of all the con-causes that have a joint influence on
that blessed effect. As there must be free grace for an impulsive
cause, the blood of Christ as the meritorious cause, so, of
necessity, there must be faith, the instrumental cause, to receive
and apply what the free grace of God designed, and the blood of
Christ purchased for us. For where there are many social causes, or
con-causes to produce one effect, there the effect is not produced
till the last cause be in act.
    "To him give all the prophets witness, that through his name,
whosoever believeth in him shall receive remission of sins," Acts
10: 43. Faith in its place is as necessary as the blood of Christ in
its place: "It is Christ in you the hope of glory," Col. 1: 27. Not
Christ in the womb, not Christ in the grave, nor Christ in heaven,
except he be also Christ in you.
    Though Christ be come in the flesh; though he died and rose
again from the dead; yet if you believe not, you must for all that
die in your sins, John 8: 24. And what a dreadful thing is this!
better die any death whatever than die in your sins. If you die in
your sins, you will also rise in your sins, and stand at the bar of
Christ in your sins: you can never receive remission, till first you
have received Christ. O cursed unbelief, which damns the soul:
dishonours God, 1 John 5: 10. slights Jesus Christ, the wisdom of
God, as if that glorious design of redemption by his blood, the
triumph and master-piece of divine wisdom, were mere foolishness, 1
Cor. 1: 23, 24. Frustrates the great design of the gospel, Gal. 4:
11. and consequently it must be the sin of sins, the worst and most
dangerous of all sins; leaving a man under the guilt of all his
other sins.
    Inf. 2. If such a receiving of Christ, as has been described,
be saving and justifying faith, when faith is a work of greater
difficulty than most men understand it to be, and there are but few
sound believers in the world.
    Before Christ can be received, the heart must be emptied and
opened: but most men's hearts are full of self-righteousness and
vain confidence: this was the case of the Jews, Rom. 10: 3. "Being
ignorant of God's righteousness, and going about to establish their
own righteousness have not submitted themselves to the righteousness
of God."
    Man's righteousness was once in himself, and what liquor is
first put into the vessel, it ever afterwards savours of it. It is
with Adam's posterity as with bees, which have been accustomed to go
to their own hive, and carry all thither; if the hive be removed to
another place, they will still fly to the old place, hover up and
down about it, and rather die there than go to a new place. So it is
with most men. God has removed their righteousness from doing to
believing; from themselves to Christ, but who shall prevail with
them to forsake self? Nature will venture to be damned rather than
do it: there is much submission in believing, and great self denial:
a proud self-conceited heart will never stoop to live upon the stock
of another's righteousness.
    Besides, it is no easy thing to persuade men to receive Christ
as their Lord in all things, and submit their necks to his strict
and holy precepts, though it be a great truth that "Christ's yoke
does not gall, but grace and adorn the neck that bears it;" that the
truest and sweetest liberty is in our freedom from our lusts, not in
our fulfilling them; yet who can persuade the carnal heart to
believe this? And much less will men ever be prevailed withal, to
forsake father, mother, wife, children, inheritance, and life it
self, to follow Christ: and all this upon the account of spiritual
and invisible things: and yet this must be done by all that receive
the Lord Jesus Christ upon gospel terms; yea, and before the soul
has any encouraging experience of its own, to balance the manifold
discouragements of sense, and carnal reason, improved by the utmost
craft of Satan to dismay it: for experience is the fruit and
consequent of believing. So that it may well be placed among the
great mysteries of godliness, that Christ is believed on in the
world, 1 Tim. 3: 16.
    Inf. 3. Hence it will follow, That there may be more true and
sound believers in the world, than know, or dare conclude themselves
to be such.
    For, as many ruin their own souls by placing the essence of
saving faith in naked assent, so some rob themselves of their own
comfort, by placing it in full assurance. Faith, and sense of faith,
are two distinct and separable mercies: you may have truly received
Christ, and not receive the knowledge or assurance of it, Isa. 1.
10. Some there be that say, Thou art our God, of whom God never
said, You are my people: these have no authority to be called the
sons of God: others there are, of whom God saith, These are my
people, yet dare not call God their God: these have authority to be
called the sons of God, but know it not. They have received Christ,
that is their safety, but they have not yet received the knowledge
and assurance of it; that is their trouble: the Father owns his
child in the cradle, who yet knows him not to be his Father.
    Now there are two reasons why many believers, who might argue
themselves into peace, do yet live without the comforts of their
faith: and this may come to pass, either from,
    First, The inevidence of the premises.
    Secondly, Or the weighty importance of the conclusion.
    First, It may come to pass from the inevidence of the premises.
Assurance is a practical syllogism, and it proceeds thus:
    All that truly have received Christ Jesus, they are the
children of God.
    I have truly received Jesus Christ. Therefore am the child of
God.
    The major proposition is found in the scripture, and there can
be no doubt of that. The assumption depends upon experience, or
internal sense; I have truly received Jesus Christ; here usually is
the stumble: many great objections lie against it, which they cannot
clearly answer: As,
    Obj. 1. Light and knowledge are necessarily required to the
right receiving of Christ, but I am dark and ignorant; many carnal,
unregenerate persons know more than I do, and are more able to
discourse of the mysteries of religion than I am.
    Sol. But you ought to distinguish of the kinds and degrees of
knowledge, and then you would see that your bewailed ignorance is no
bar to your interest in Christ. There are two kinds of knowledge:
                 1. Natural.     |    2. Spiritual.
    There is a natural knowledge, even of spiritual objects, a
spark of nature blown up by an advantageous education; and though
the objects of this knowledge be spiritual things, yet the light in
which they are discerned is but a mere natural light.
    And there is a spiritual knowledge of spiritual things, the
teaching of the anointing, as it is called, 1 John 2: 27. i.e. the
effect and fruit of the Spirit's sanctifying work upon our souls,
when the experience of a man's own heart informs and teacheth his
understanding, when by feeling the workings of grace in our own
souls we come to understand its nature; this is spiritual knowledge.
Now, a little of this knowledge is a better evidence of a man's
interest in Christ, than the most raised and excellent degree of
natural knowledge: As the philosopher truly observes; Praestat
paucula de meliori scientia degustasse, quam de ignobilori multa:
One dram of knowledge of the best and most excellent things, is
better than much knowledge of common things. So it is here, a little
spiritual knowledge of Jesus Christ, that has life and savour in it,
is more than all the natural, sapless knowledge of the unregenerate,
which leaves the heart dead, carnal, and barren: it is not the
quantity, but the kind, not the measure, but the savour: If you know
so much of the evil of sin, as renders it the most bitter and
burdensome thing in the world to you, and so much of the necessity
and excellency of Christ, as renders him the most sweet and
desirable thing in the world to you, though you may be defective in
many degrees of knowledge, yet this is enough to prove yours to be
the fruit of the Spirit: you may have a sanctified heart, though you
have an irregular or weak head: many that knew more than you are in
hell: and some that once knew as little as you, are now in heaven:
In absoluto et facili stat aeternitas: God has not prepared heaven
only for clear and subtle heads. A little sanctified and effectual
knowledge of Christ's person, offices, suitableness, and necessity,
may bring thee thither, when others, with all their curious
speculations and notions, may perish for ever.
    Obj. 2. But you tell me, that assent to the truths of the
gospel is necessarily included in saving faith, which, though it be
not the justifying and saving act, yet it is pre-supposed and
required to it. Now I have many staggering and doubtings about the
certainty and reality of these things; many horrid atheistical
thoughts, which shake the assenting act of faith in the very
foundation, and hence I doubt I do not believe.
    Sol. There may be, and often is, a true and sincere assent
found in the soul, that is assaulted with violent atheistical
suggestions from Satan; and thereupon questions the truth of it. And
this is a very clear evidence of the reality of our assent, that
whatever doubts, or contrary suggestions there be, yet we dare not
in our practice contradict or slight those truths or duties which we
are tempted to disbelieve, ex. gr. We are assaulted with atheistical
thoughts, and tempted to slight and cast off all fears of sin, and
practice of religious duties, yet when it comes to the point of
practice, we dare not commit a known sin, the awe of God is upon us;
we dare not omit a known duty, the tie of conscience is found strong
enough to hold it close to it: in this case, it is plain we do
really assent, when we think we do not. A man thinks he does not
love his child, yet carefully provides for him in health, and is
full of griefs and fears about him in sickness: why now, so long as
I see all fatherly duties performed, and affections to his child's
welfare manifested, let him say what he will as to the want of love
to him, whilst I see this, he must excuse me if I do not believe
him, when he saith he has no love for him. Just so is it in this
case, a man saith I do not assent to the being, necessity, or
excellency of Jesus Christ; yet, in the mean time, his soul is
filled with cares and fears about securing his interest in him, he
is found panting and thirsting for him with vehement desires, there
is nothing in all the world would give him such joy, as to be well
assured of an interest in him; while it is thus with any man, let
him say or think what he will of his assent, it is manifest by this
he does truly and heartily assent, and there can be no better proof
of it than these real effects produced by it.
    Secondly, But if these, and other objections were never so
fully answered for the clearing of the assumption, yet it often
falls out, that believers are afraid to draw the conclusion; and
that fear partly arises from,
    First, The weighty importance of this matter.
    Secondly, The sense of the deceitfulness of their own hearts.
    First, The conclusion is of infinite importance to them, it is
the everlasting happiness of their souls, than which nothing is, or
can be of greater weight upon their spirits: things in which we are
most deeply concerned, are not lightly and hastily received by us:
it seems so great and so good, that we are still apt (if there be
any room for it) to suspect the truth and certainty thereof, as
never being sure enough.
    Thus when the women that were the first messengers and
witnesses of Christ's resurrection, Luke 24: 10,11. came and told
the disciples those wonderful and comfortable tidings, it is said,
"That their words seemed to them as idle tales, and they believed
them not." They thought it was too good to be true; too great to be
hastily received; so it is in this case.
    Secondly, The sense they have of the deceitfulness of their own
hearts, and the daily workings of hypocrisy there, makes them afraid
to conclude in so great a point as this is.
    They know that very many daily cozen and cheat themselves in
this matter; they know also that their own hearts are full of
falseness and deceit; they find them so in their daily observations
of them; and what if they should prove so in this? Why then they are
lost for ever! They also know there is not the like danger in their
fears and jealousies, that would be in their vain confidences and
presumptions; by the one, they are only deprived of their present
comfort, but by the other, they would be ruined for ever: and
therefore choose rather to dwell with their own fears (though they
be uncomfortable companions) than run the danger of so great a
mistake, which would be infinitely more fatal. And this being the
common case of most Christians, it follows that there must be many
more believers in the world than do think, or dare conclude
themselves to be such.
    Inf. 4. If the right receiving of Jesus Christ, be true,
saving, and justifying faith, then those that have the least, and
lowest degree and measure of saving faith, have cause for ever to
admire the bounty and riches of the grace of God to then therein.
    If you have received never so little of his bounty by the hand
of providence, in the good things of this life, yet if he have given
you any measure of true saving faith, he has dealt bountifully in
deed with you: this mercy alone is enough to balance all other wants
and inconveniences of this life, "poor in the world, rich in faith,
James 2: 5. O, let your hearts take in the full sense of this bounty
of God to you; say with the apostle, Eph. 1: 3. "Blessed be the God
and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, who has blessed us with all
spiritual blessings in heavenly places in Christ Jesus", and you
will in this one mercy, find matter enough of praise and
thanksgiving, wonder and admiration to your dying day, yea, to all
eternity: for, do but consider,
    First, The smallest measure of saving faith which is found in
any of the people of God, receives Jesus Christ; and in receiving
him, what mercy is there which the believing soul does not receive
in him, and with him? Rom. 8: 32.
    O believer, though the arms of thy faith be small and weak, yet
they embrace a great Christ, and receive the richest gift that ever
God bestowed upon the world: no sooner art thou become a believer,
but Christ is in thee the hope of glory; and thou hast authority to
become a son or daughter of God; thou hast the broad seal of heaven
to confirm thy title and claim to the privileges of adoption, for
"to as many as received him, to them gave he power to become the
sons of God." [To as many] be they strong, or be they weak, provided
they really receive Christ by faith; there is authority or power
given, so that it is no act of presumption in them to say, God is
our Father, heaven is our inheritance. O precious faith! the
treasures of ten thousand worlds cannot purchase such privileges as
these: all the crowns and sceptres of the earth, sold at full value,
are no price for such mercies.
    Secondly, The least degree of saving faith brings the soul into
a state of perfect and full justification. For if it receives Jesus
Christ, it must needs therefore in him, and with him, receive a
free, full, and final pardon of sin: the least measure of faith
receives remission for the greatest sins. "By him all that believe
are justified from all things," Acts 13: 39. It unites thy soul with
Christ, and then, as the necessary consequent of that union, there
is no condemnation, Rom. 8: 1. "ouden katakrima", not one
condemnation, how many soever our sins have been.
    Thirdly, The least measure or degree of saving faith, is a
greater mercy than God has bestowed, or ever will bestow upon many
that are far above you in outward respects: All men have not faith:
nay, it is but a remnant among men that believe. Few of the nobles
and potentates of the world have such a gift as this: they have
houses and lands, yea, crowns and sceptres, but no faith, no Christ,
no pardon; they have authority to rule over men, but no authority to
become the sons of God, 1 Cor. 1: 26, 27.
    Say therefore in thy most debased, straitened, afflicted
condition, "Return to thy rest, O my soul, for the Lord has dealt
bountifully with thee."
    Fourthly, The least degree of saving faith is more than all the
power of nature can produce. There must be a special revelation of
the arm of the Lord in that work, Isa. 53: 1. Believers are not born
of the flesh, nor of blood, nor of the will of man, but of God,"
John 1: 12,13. A11 believing motions towards Christ, are the effects
of the Father's drawing, John 6: 44. A glorious and irresistible
power goes forth from God to produce it, whence it is called "the
faith of the operation of God," Col. 2: 12.
    So then, let not believers despise the day of small things, or
overlook that great and infinite mercy which is wrapt up in the
least degree of saving faith.
    Infer. 5. Learn hence the impossibility of their salvation, who
neither know the nature, nor enjoy the means of saving faith.
    My soul pities and mourns over the infidel world. Ah! What will
become of the millions of poor unbelievers! there is but one door of
salvation, viz. Christ; and but one key of faith to open that floor:
and as that key was never given to the Heathen world: so it is laid
aside, or taken away from the people by their cruel guides, all over
the Popish world; were you among them, you should hear nothing else
pressed as necessary to your salvation but a blind, implicit faith,
to believe as the church believes; that is, to believe they know not
what.
    To believe as the pope believes; that is as an infidel
believes, for so they confess he may be, and though there be such a
thing as an explict faith sometimes spoken of among them, yet it is
very sparingly discoursed, very falsely described, and exceedingly
slighted by them as the merest trifle in the world.
    First, It is but sparingly discoursed of: they love not to
accustom the people's ears to such a doctrine; one of themselves
confesses that there is so deep a silence of explicit, particular
faith in the Romish church, that you may find many every where, that
believe no more of these things than Heathen philosophers.
    Secondly, When it is preached or written of, it is falsely
described: for they place the whole nature and essence of justifying
and saving faith in a naked assent, which the devils have as well as
men, James 2: 19. No more than this is pressed upon the people at
any time, as necessary to their salvation.
    Thirdly, And even this particular explicit faith, when it is
spoken or written of, is exceedingly slighted. I think if the devil
himself were in the pulpit, he could hardly tell how to bring men to
a more low and slight esteem of faith; to represent it more as a
very trifle, or a quite needless thing, than these his agents have
done. Some say if a man believe with a particular explicit faith,
i.e. if he actually assent to the scripture-truths once in a year,
it is enough. Yea, and others think it too much to oblige people to
believe once in twelve months; and, for their ease, tell them, if
they believe once in twelve years it is sufficient; and, lest this
should be too great a task, others affirm, that if it be done but
once in their whole life, and that at the point of death too, it is
enough, especially for the rude and common people. Good God! what a
doctrine is here! It was a saying long ago of Gregory (as I
remember,) Malus minister est nisius diaboli: A wicked minister is
the devil's goshawk, that goes a birding for hell; and O what game
leave these hawks of hell among such numerous flocks of people! O,
bless God while you live for your deliverance from popery; and see
that you prize the gospel, and means of grace you enjoy at an higher
rate, lest God bring you once more under that yoke, which neither
you nor your fathers could bear.
    
                     Second use for examination.
    
    Does saving faith consist in a due and right receiving of the
Lord Jesus Christ? Then let me persuade you to examine yourselves in
this great point of faith. Reflect solemnly upon the transactions
that have been betwixt Christ and your souls; think close on this
subject of meditation.
    If all you were worth in the world lay in one precious stone,
and that stone were to be tried by the skilful Lapidary, whether it
were true or false, whether it would fly or endure under the smart
stroke of his hammer, sure your thoughts could not be unconcerned
about the issue. Why all that you are worth in both worlds depends
upon the truth of your faith which is now to be tried.
    Therefore read not these lines with a running, careless eye,
but seriously ponder the matter before you. You would be loth to put
to sea, though it were but to cross the channel, in a rotten leaky
bottom: And will you dare to venture into the ocean of eternity in a
false rotten faith! God forbid. You know the Lord is coming to try
every man's faith as by fire, and that we must stand or fall for
ever with the sincerity or hypocrisy of our faith. Surely, you can
never be too exact and careful about that, on which your whole
estate depends, and that for ever.
    Now there are three things upon which we should have a very
tender and watchful eye, for the discovery of the sincerity of our
faith, and they are,
         / Antecedents  \
    The |  Concomitants | of Faith.
         \ Consequent   /
    As these are, so we must judge and reckon our faith to be. And,
accordingly they furnish us with three general marks or trials of
faith.
    First, If you would discern the sincerity of your faith,
examine whether those antecedents, and preparative works of the
spirit, were ever found in your souls, which use to introduce and
usher it into the souls of God's elect: Such are illumination,
conviction, self-despair, and earnest cries to God.
    First, Illumination is a necessary antecedent to faith: You can
not believe till God has opened your eyes to see your sin, your
misery by sin, and your remedy in Jesus Christ alone: You find this
act of the Spirit to be the first in order both of nature and time,
and introductive to all the rest, Acts 26: 18. "To turn them from
darkness to light, and from the power of Satan to God." As faith
without works (which must be a consequent to it) is dead, so faith
without light, which must be an antecedent to it, is blind: Faith is
the hand by which Christ is received, but knowledge is the eye by
which that hand is directed.
    Well then, has God opened your eyes to see sin and misery in
another manner than ever you saw them before? For certainly, if God
has opened your eyes by saving illuminations, you will find as great
a difference betwixt your former and present apprehensions of sin
and danger, as betwixt the painted lion upon the wall or a
sign-post, and the real living lion that meets you roaring in the
way.
    Secondly, Conviction is an antecedent to believing: Where this
goes not before, no faith can follow after: The Spirit first
convinces of sin, then of righteousness John 16: 8. So Mark 1: 15.
"Repent ye, and believe the gospel". Believe it, O man! that breast
of thine must be wounded, that vain and frothy heart of thine must
be pierced and stung with conviction, sense, and sorrow for sin:
Thou must have some sick days, and restless sights for sin, if ever
thou rightly close with Christ by faith. It is true, there is much
difference found in the strength, depth, and continuance of
conviction, and spiritual troubles in converts; but sure it is, the
child of faith is not ordinarily born without some pangs. Conviction
is the application of that light which God makes to shine in our
minds, to our particular case and condition by the conscience; and
sure, when men come to see their miserable and sad estate by a true
light, it cannot but wound them, and that to the very heart.
    Thirdly, Self-despair, or a total and absolute loss in
ourselves about deliverance, and the way of escape, either by
ourselves, or any other mere creature, does, and must go before
faith.
    So it was with those believers, Acts 2: 37. "Men and brethren,
what shall we do?" They are the words of men at a total loss: It is
the voice of poor distressed souls, that saw themselves in misery,
but knew not, saw not, nor could devise any way of escape from it,
by any thing they could do for themselves, or any other creature for
them: And hence the apostle uses that emphatical word, Gal. 3: 23.
"sungkekleisminoi", i.e. shut up to the faith, i.e. as men besieged
and distressed in a garrison in a time of storm, when the enemy
pours in upon them through the breaches, and overpowers them: There
is but one sally-port or gate, at which they can escape, and to that
they all throng, as despairing of life, if they take any other
course. Just so do men's convictions besiege them, distress them,
beat them off from all their holds and entrenchments, and bring them
to a pinching distress in themselves, shutting them up to Christ as
the only way to escape. Duties cannot save me, reformation cannot
save me; nor angels, nor men can save me; there is no way but one,
Christ, or condemnation for ever.
    I thought once, that a little repentance, reformation,
restitution, and a stricter life, might be a way to escape the wrath
to come; but I find the bed is too short, and the covering too
narrow: All is but loss, dung, dross, in comparisons with Jesus
Christ; if I trust to those Egyptian reeds, they will not only fail
me, but pierce and wound me too: I see no hope within the whole
Horizon of sense.
    Fourthly, Hence come vehement and earnest cries to God for
faith, for Christ, for help from heaven, to transport the soul out
of this dangerous condition, to that strong rock of salvation; to
bring it out of this furious, stormy sea of trouble, where it is
ready to wreck every moment, into that safe and quiet harbour,
Christ.
    O when a man shall see his misery and danger, and no way to
escape but Christ, and that he has no ability himself to come to
Christ, to open his heart thus to receive him, but that this work of
faith is wholly supernatural, the operations of God; how will the
soul return again, and again upon God, with such cries as in Mark 9:
24. "Lord, help my unbelief?" "Lord, enable me to come to Christ,
give me Christ or I perish for ever; What profit is there in my
blood? Why should I die in the sight and presence of a Saviour? O
Lord, it is thine own work, a most glorious work: Reveal thine arm
in this work upon my soul, I pray thee; give me Christ, if thou deny
me bread? give me faith, if thou deny me breath. It is more
necessary that I believe, than that I live."
    O Reader, reflect upon the days and nights that are past, the
places where thou hast been conversant: where are the bed-sides, or
the secret corners where thou hast besieged heaven with such cries?
If God have thus enlightened, convinced, distressed thy soul, and
thus set thee a mourning after Christ, it will be one good sign that
faith is come into thy soul; for here are certainly the harbingers
and forerunners of it, that ordinarily make way for faith into the
souls of men.
    Secondly, If you would be satisfied of the sincerity and truth
of your faith, then examine what concomitants it is attended with in
your souls. I mean, what frames and tempers your souls were in, at
that time when you think you received Christ. For certainly, in
those that receive Christ, (excepting those into whose hearts God
has in a more still and insensible way infused faith betides, by his
blessing upon pious education) such concomitant frames of spirit may
be remarked as these following.
    First, The heart is deeply serious, and as much in earnest in
this matter, as ever it was, or can be, about any thing in the
world. This you see in that example of the gaoler, Acts 16: 29. "He
came in trembling and astonished". It is the most solemn and
important matter that ever the soul had before it in this world, or
ever shall, or can have: How much are the hearts of men affected in
their outward straits and distresses, about the concernments of the
body? Their hearts are not a little concerned in such questions as
these, "What shall I eat? what shall I drink?" wherewithal shall I
and mine be fed and clothed? but certainly the straits that souls
are in about salvation, must be allowed to be greater than these;
and such questions as that of the gaoler's, "Sirs! what must I do to
be saved?" make deeper impressions upon the heart, than what shall I
eat or drink? Some indeed have their thoughts sinking deeper into
these things than others: These thoughts lie with different degrees
of weight upon men: but all are most solemnly and awfully concerned
about their condition: All frothiness and frolics are gone, and the
heart settles itself in the deepest earnest about its eternal state.
    Secondly, The heart that receives Jesus Christ is in a frame of
deep humiliation and self-abasement O, when a man begins to
apprehend the first approaches of grace, pardon, and mercy by Jesus
Christ to his soul: when a soul is convinced of its utter
unworthiness and desert of hell; and can scarce expect any thing
else from the just and holy God but damnation, how do the first
dawnings of mercy melt and humble them! "O Lord, what am I that thou
shouldst feed me, and preserve me! that thou shouldst but for a few
years spare me and forbear me! but that ever Jesus Christ should
love me, and give himself for me; that such a wretched sinner as I
should obtain union with his person, pardon, peace, and salvation by
his blood! Lord, whence is this to such a worm as I? and will Christ
indeed bestow himself upon me? shall so great a blessing as Christ
ever come within the arms of such a soul as mine? will God in very
deed be reconciled to me in his Son? what, to me! to such an enemy
as I have been! shall my sins which are so many, so horrid, so much
aggravated, beyond the sins of most men, be forgiven? O what am I,
vile dust? base wretch, that ever God should do this for me!" And
how is that scripture fulfilled and made good, Ezek 16: 63 "That
thou mayest remember, and be confounded, and never open thy mouth
any more, because of thy shame, when I am pacified towards thee for
all that thou hast done, saith the Lord God." Thus, that poor
broken-hearted believer stood behind Christ weeping, and washing his
feet with tears, as one quite melted down, and overcome with the
sense of mercy to such a vile sinner, Luke 7: 38.
    Thirdly, The soul that receives Jesus Christ is in a weary
condition, restless, and full of disquietness, neither able to bear
the burden of sin, nor knowing how to be discharged from it, except
Christ will give it ease, Mat. 11: 28, "Come unto me," that is,
believe in me, "you that are weary and heavy laden:" If they do not
look into their own souls, they know there is no safety, and if they
do, there is no comfort. O! the burdensome sense of sin overweighs
them; they are ready to fall, to sink under it.
    Fourthly, The soul that rightly receives Christ, is not only in
a weary, but in a longing condition: never did the hart pant more
earnestly for the water-brooks: never did the hireling desire the
shadow: never did a condemned person long for a pardon, more than
the soul longs after Jesus Christ. O, said David, that one would
give me of the water of the well of Bethlehem to drink. O, saith the
poor humbled sinner, that one would give me of the opened fountain
of the blood of Christ to drink! O for one drop of that precious
blood! O for one encouraging smile from Christ! O now were ten
thousand worlds at my command, and Christ to be bought, how freely
would I lay them all down to purchase him! but he is the gift of
God. O that God would give me Christ, if I should go in rags, and
hunger and thirst all my days in this world!
    Fifthly, The soul in the time of its closing with, or receiving
Christ, is in a state of conflict: It hangs between hopes and fears,
encouragements and discouragements, which occasions many a sad stand
and pause in the way of Christ; sometimes the number and nature of
its sins discourage it, then the riches and freeness of the grace of
Christ erects his hopes again: there is little hope, saith unbelief;
nay, it is utterly impossible, saith Satan, that ever such a wretch
as thou shouldst find mercy; now the hands hang down. O but then
there is a necessity, an absolute necessity, I have not the choice
of two, but am shut up to one way of deliverance; others have found
mercy and the invitation is to all that are weary, and to all that
are athirst he saith, him that comes to him, he will in no wise cast
out: now new hopes inspire the soul, and the hands that did hang
down are strengthened.
    These are the concomitant frames that accompany faith.
    3. Mark. Lastly, Examine the consequents and effects of faith,
if you would be satisfied of the truth and sincerity of it: and such
are,
    First, Evangelical meltings, and ingenuous thawings of the
heart under the apprehensions of grace and mercy: Zech. 12: 10.
"They shall look upon me whom they have pierced, and shall mourn."
    Secondly, Love to Christ, his ways and people, Gal. 5: 6. Faith
worketh by love, i. e. represents the love of God, and then makes
use of the sweetness of it by way of argument, to constrain the soul
to all acts of obedience, where it may testify the reality of its
love to God and Christ.
    Thirdly, Heart-purity, Acts 15: 9. "Purifying the hearts by
faith:" It does not only cleanse the lands but the heart. No
principle in man, besides faith, can do this: morality may hide
corruption, but faith only purifies the heart from it.
    Fourthly, Obedience to the commands of Christ, Rom. 16: 26. The
very name of faith is called upon obedience: for it accepts Christ
as Lord, and urges upon the soul the most powerful arguments in the
world to draw it to obedience.
    In a word, let the poor doubting believer, that questions his
faith, reflect upon those things that are unquestionable in his own
experience, which being well considered, will greatly tend to his
satisfaction in this point.
    It is very doubtful to you whether you believe, but yet in the
mean time, it may be past doubt, (being a matter of clear
experience) that you have been deeply convinced of sin, struck off
from all carnal props and refuges, made willing to accept Jesus
Christ upon what terms soever van might enjoy him. You doubt whether
Christ be yours, but it is past doubt that you have a most high and
precious esteem of Christ, that you heartily long for him, that you
prize and love all, whether persons or things, that bear his image:
that nothing in the world would please your hearts like a
transformation into his likeness: that you had rather your souls
should be filled with his Spirit, than your houses with gold and
silver. It is doubtful whether Christ be yours, but it is past doubt
that one smile from Christ, one token of his love would do you more
good than all the honours and smiles of the world; and no thing so
grieves you, as your grieving him by sin does. You dare not say that
you have received him, nor can you deny but that you have had many
sick days and nights for him; that you have gone into many secret
places with yearning bowels after him. Whether he be yours or not,
you cannot tell; but that you are resolved to be his, that you can
tell. Whether he will save you is but a doubt, but that you resolve
to lie at his feet, and wait only on him, and never go to another
for salvation, is no doubt.
    Well, well; poor pensive soul, if it be so, arise, lift up thy
dejected head, take thine own Christ into thine arms. These are
undoubted signs of a real closure with Christ, thou makes thyself
poor, and yet hast great riches: Such things as these are not found
in them that despise and reject Christ by unbelief.
    
                       3. Use of Exhortation.
    
    3.  Use. This point is likewise very improveable by way of
      exhortation, and that both to
                     Unbelievers and Believers.
    First, To unbelievers, who from hence must be pressed, as ever
they expect to see the face of God in peace, to receive Jesus Christ
as he is now offered to them in the gospel. This is the very scope
of the gospel; I shall therefore press it by three great
considerations, viz.
    First, that is in Christ whom you are to receive.
    Secondly, What is in the offer of Christ by the gospel.
    Thirdly, What is in the rejecting of that offer.
    
                            First Motive.
    
    First, Consider well what is in Christ, whom I persuade you
this day to receive: Did you know what is in Christ, you would never
neglect or reject him as you do: For,
    First, "God is in Christ," 2 Cor. 5: 19. the Deity has chosen
to dwell in his flesh; he is "God manifest in flesh," 1 Tim. 3: 16.
a Godhead dwelling in flesh is the world's wonder; so that in
receiving Christ, you receive God himself.
    Secondly, The authority of God is in Christ, Exod. 23: 21. "My
name is in him: Him has God the Father sealed," John 6: 27. he has
the commission, the great seal of heaven to redeem and save you. All
power in heaven and earth is given to him, Matth. 28: 18. he comes
in his Father's name to you, as well as in his own name.
    Thirdly, The wisdom of God is in Christ, 1 Cor. 1: 24. "Christ
the wisdom of God," yea, "in him are hid all the treasures of wisdom
and knowledge," Col. 2: 3. Never did the wisdom of God display
itself before the eyes of angels and men as it has done in Christ.
The "angels desire to look into it," 1 Pet. 1: 12. yet they are not
so much concerned in the project and design of this wisdom in
redemption as you are.
    Fourthly, The fulness of the Spirit is in Christ, yea, it fills
him so as it never did, nor will fill any creature, John 3: 34. "God
giveth not the Spirit by measure to him: all others have their
limits, stints, and measures; some more, some less; but the Spirit
is in Christ without measure. O how lovely and desirable are those
men that have a large measure of the Spirit in them! but he is
anointed with the Spirit of holiness above all his fellows, Psal.
45: 2, 7. Whatever grace is found in all the saints, which makes
them desirable and lovely, wisdom in one, faith in another, patience
in a third; they all centre in Christ as the rivers do in the sea,
quae faciunt divisa beatum, in hoc mixta fluunt.
    Fifthly, The righteousness of God is in Christ, by which only a
poor guilty sinner can be justified before God, 2 Cor. 5: 21. we are
"made the righteousness of God in him:" he is "Adonai Tsidkenu",
"the Lord our righteousness," Jer. 23: 6. "the author of our
righteousness", or the Lord who justifies us, by that name he will
be known, and called by his people, than which none can be sweeter.
    Sixthly, The love of God is in Christ, yea, the very yearning
bowels of divine love are in him: What is Christ, but the love of
God wrapt up in flesh and blood? 1 John 4: 9, 10. "In this was
manifested the love of God towards us:" and herein is love, that God
sent his Son; this is the highest flight that ever divine love made;
and higher than this it cannot mount. O love, unparalleled and
admirable!
    Seventhly, The mercies and compassions of God are all in
Christ, Jude, ver. 21. Mercy is the thing that poor sinners want, it
is that they cry for at the last gasp; it is the only thing that can
do them good. O what would they give to find mercy in that great
day? Why, if you receive Christ, you shall with him receive mercy;
but out of him there is no mercy to be expected from the hands of
God; for God will never exercise mercy to the prejudice of his
justice; and it is in Christ that justice and mercy meet and embrace
each other.
    Eighthly, To conclude, The salvation of God is in Christ, Acts
4: 12. "Neither is there salvation in any other." Christ is the door
of salvation, and faith is the key that opens that door to men. If
you therefore believe not, i.e. if you so receive not Jesus Christ,
as God has offered him, you exclude yourselves from all hopes of
salvation. The devils have as much ground to expect salvation as
you. You see what is in Christ to induce you to receive him.
    
                              Motive 2.
    
    Next, I beseech you, consider what there is in the offer of
Christ to sinners, to induce you to receive him. Consider well to
whom and how Christ is offered in the gospel.
    First, To whom is he offered; not to the fallen angels, but to
you; they lie in chains of darkness, Jude, ver. 6. as he took not
their nature, so he designs not their recovery, and therefore will
have no treaty at all with them: but he is offered to you, creatures
of an inferior rank and order by nature; nor is he offered to the
damned, the treaty of peace is ended with them: Christ will never
make then another tender of salvation; nor is he offered to millions
as good as you, now living in the world. The sound of Christ and
salvation is not come to their ears, but he is offered to you by the
special favour and bounty of heaven; and will you not receive him?
Oh! then how will the devils, the damned, an the heathen upbraid
your folly! and say, had we had one such tender of mercy, of which
you have had thousands, we would never have been now in this place
of torments.
    Secondly, Consider how Christ is offered to you, and you shall
find that he is offered,
    1. Freely, as the gift of God, to your souls; you are not to
purchase him, but only to receive him, Isa. 55: 1 "Ho, every one
that thirsteth, come ye to the waters, and you that has no money,
let him come," &c.
    2. Christ is offered importunately, by repeated intreaties, 2
Cor. 5: 20. "As though God did beseech you, we pray you in Christ's
name, be ye reconciled to God." O! what amazing condescension is
here in the God of mercy! God now beseeches you, will you not yield
to the entreaties of your God? O then what wilt thou say for
thyself, when God will not hear thee, when thou shalt entreat and
cry for mercy? Which brings us to
    Motive 3. Consider the sin and danger that there is in refusing
or neglecting the present offers of Christ in the gospel, and surely
there is much sin in it; the very malignity of sin, and the sum of
all misery lies here; for in refusing Christ,
    1. You put the greatest contempt and slight upon all the
attributes of God that is possible for a creature to do: God has
made his justice, his mercy, his wisdom, and all his attributes to
shine in their brightest glory in Christ. Never was there such a
display of the glory of God made to the world in any other way.
    O then, what is it to reject and despise Jesus Christ, but to
offer the greatest affront to the glory of God that it is possible
for men to put upon it?
    2. You hereby frustrate and evacuate the very design and
importance of the gospel to yourselves; you "receive the grace of
God in vain," 2 Cor. 6: 1. As good, yea, better has it been for you,
that Christ had never cone into the world, or, if he had, that your
lot had fallen in the dark places of the earth, where you had never
heard his name; yea, good had it been for that man if he had never
been born.
    3. Hereby a man murders his own soul. "I said therefore unto
you, that you shall die in your sins; for if ye believe not that I
am he, ye shall die in your sins," John 8: 24. Unbelief is
self-murder; you are guilty of the blood of your own souls: life and
salvation were offered you, and you rejected them. Yea;
    4. The refusing of Christ by unbelief will aggravate your
damnation above all others that perish in ignorance of Christ. O, it
will be more tolerable for heathens than for you; the greatest
measures of wrath are reserved to punish the worst of sinners; and
among sinners, none will be found worse than unbelievers.
    Secondly, To believers, this point is very useful to persuade
them to divers excellent duties; among which, I shall singly out two
principal ones, viz.
    1. To bring up their faith of acceptance, to the faith of
assurance.
    2. To bring up their conversations to the principles and rules
of faith.
    1. You that have received Jesus Christ truly, give yourselves
no rest till you are fully satisfied that you have done so;
acceptance brings you to heaven hereafter, but assurance will bring
heaven into your souls now. O, what a life of delight and pleasure
does the assured believer live! What pleasure is it to him to look
back and consider where he once was, and where he now is? To look
forward, and consider where he now is, and where shortly he shall
be! I was in my sins, I am now in Christ. I am in Christ now, I
shall be with Christ, and that for ever, after a few days. I was
upon the brink of hell, I am now upon the very borders of heaven; I
shall be in a very little while among the innumerable company of
angels and glorified saints, bearing part with them in the song of
Moses, and of the Lamb, for evermore.
    And why may not you that have received Christ, receive the
comfort of your union with him? There be all the grounds and helps
of assurance furnished to your hand, there is a real union betwixt
Christ and your souls, which is the very ground-work of assurance.
You have the scriptures before you which contain the signs of faith,
and the very things within you that answer those signs in the word.
So you read, and so, just so, you might feel it in your own hearts,
would you attend to your own experience. The Spirit of God is ready
to seal you, it is his office and his delight so to do. O therefore,
give diligence to this work, attend the study of the scriptures and
of your own hearts more, and grieve not the holy Spirit of God, and
you may arrive to the very desire of your hearts.
    2. Bring up your conversations to the excellent principles and
rules of faith; "As you have received Christ Jesus the Lord, so walk
in him," Cor. 2: 6. Live as you believe; you received Christ
sincerely in your first close with him, O maintain the like
seriousness and sincerity in all your ways, to the end of your
lives: you received him entirely and undividedly at first, let there
be no exceptions against any of his commands afterward. You received
him exclusively to all others, see that you watch against all self-
righteousness and self-conceitedness now, and mingle nothing of your
own with his blood, whatever gifts or enlargements in duty God shall
give you afterwards.
    You received him advisedly at first, weighing and considering
the self-denying terms upon which he was offered to you; O show that
it was real, and that you see no cause to repent the bargain,
whatever you shall meet with in the ways of Christ and duty
afterwards: convince the world of your constancy and cheerfulness in
all your sufferings for Christ, that you are still of the same mind
you were, and that Christ, with his cross, Christ, with a prison,
Christ, with the greatest afflictions, is worthy of all acceptation:
"As ye have received him, so walk ye in him." Let him be as sweet,
as lovely, as precious to you now, as he was in the first moment you
received him; yea, let your love to him, delights in him, and
self-denial for him, increase with your acquaintance with him, day
by day.
                          Use of direction.
    Use: Lastly, I will close all with a few words of direction to
all that are made willing to receive the Lord Jesus Christ; and sure
it is but needful that help were given to poor Christians: in this
matter, it is a time of trouble, fear, and great temptation;
mistakes are easily made of dangerous consequence; attend heedfully,
therefore, to a few directions.
    Direction 1. First, In your receiving Christ, Beware you do not
mistake the means for the end. Many do so, but see you do not.
Prayer, sermons, reformations, are means to bring you to Christ, but
they are not Christ; to close with those duties is one thing, and to
close with Christ is another thing. If I go into a boat, my design
is not to dwell there, but to be carried to the place whereon I
desire to be landed: so it must be in this case, all your duties
must land you upon Christ; they are means to bring you to Christ.
    Direct. 2. Secondly, See that you receive not Christ for a
present help, but for your everlasting portion. Many do so; they
will enquire after Christ, pray for Christ, cast themselves (in
their way) upon Christ, and the satisfaction of his blood, when the
efficacy and terror of conscience is upon them, and they feel the
sting of guilt within them; but as soon as the storm is over, and
the rod that conscience shaked over them laid by, there is no more
talk of Christ then: alas! it was not Christ, but quietness that
they sought; beware of mistaking peace for Christ.
    Direct. 3. Thirdly, In receiving, Christ, come empty-handed
unto him: "believing on him who justifies the ungodly," Rom. 4: 5.
and know that the deepest sense of your own vileness, emptiness, and
unworthiness, is the best frame of heart that can accompany you to
Christ. Many persons stand off from Christ for want of fit
qualifications; they are not prepared for Christ as they should be,
i. e. they would not come naked and empty, but have something to
commend them to the Lord Jesus for acceptance. O! this is the pride
of men's hearts, and the snare of the devil. Let him that has no
money come: you are not to come to Christ because you are qualified,
but that you may be qualified with whatever you want; and the best
qualification you can bring with your is a deep sense that you have
no worth nor excellency at all in you.
    Direct. 4. Fourthly, In receiving Christ, beware of dangerous
delays. O follow on that work till it be finished. You read of some
that are almost persuaded, and of others not far from the kingdom of
God; O take heed of what the prophet says, Hosea 13: 13. Delays here
are full of danger, life is uncertain, so are means of grace too.
The man-slayer needed no motives to quicken his flight to the city
of refuge.
    Direct. 5. Fifthly, See that you receive all Christ, with all
your heart. To receive all Christ, is to receive his person clothed
with all his offices; and to receive him with all your heart, is to
receive him into your understanding, will, and affections, Acts 8:
37. As there is nothing in Christ that may be refused, so there is
nothing in you from which he must be excluded.
    Direct. 6. Lastly, Understand that the opening of your hearts
to receive the Lord Jesus Christ, is not a work done by any power of
your own, but the arm of the Lord is revealed therein, Isa. 53: 1.
It is therefore your duty and interest to be daily at the feet of
God, pouring out your souls to him in secret, for abilities to
believe. And so much, as to our actual reception of Christ.
    
                 Thanks be to God for Jesus Christ.





Sermon 8.

Setting forth the Believer's Fellowship With Christ, the
next End of his Application to them.


Psalm 45:7.

Therefore God, thy God, hath anointed thee with the oil of gladness
above thy fellows.


    The method of grace in uniting souls with Jesus Christ, has
been opened in the former discourses; thus does the Spirit, (whose
office it is) make application of Christ to God's elect: The result
and next fruit whereof is communion with Christ in his graces and
benefits. Our mystical union is the very ground-work and foundation
of our sweet, soul enriching communion and participation of
spiritual privileges; we are first ingrafted into Christ, and then
suck the sap and fatness of the root: first married to the person of
Christ, then endowed and instated in the privileges and benefits of
Christ. This is my proper work to open at this time, and from this
scripture.
    "The words read, are a part of that excellent song of love,
that "heavenly Epithalamium, wherein the spiritual espousals of
Christ and the church are figuratively and very elegantly celebrated
and shadowed. The subject matter of this psalm is the very same with
the whole book of the Canticles;" and in this psalm, under the
figure of king Solomon, and the daughter of Egypt, whom he espoused,
the spiritual espousals of Christ and the church are set forth and
represented to us. Among many rapturous and elegant expressions in
praise of this glorious bridegroom, Christ, this is one, which you
have before you: "God, thy God, has anointed thee with the oil of
gladness above thy fellows:" i. e. enriched and filled thee, in a
singular and peculiar manner, with the fulness of the Spirit,
whereby thou art consecrated to thy office: and by reason whereof
thou out-shinest and excellest all the saints, who are thy fellows
or co-partners in these graces. So that in these words you have two
parts; viz. First, The saints' dignity, and Secondly, Christ's
pre-eminency:
    First, The saints' dignity, which consists in this, that they
are Christ's fellows. The Hebrew word is very full and copious, and
is translated "consorts, companions, co-partners, partakers: or, as
ours read it, fellows:" i. e. such as are partakers with him in the
anointing of the Spirit, who do, in their measure, receive the same
Spirit, every Christian being anointed, modo sibi proportionato,
with the same grace, and dignified with the same titles, 1 John 2:
27. Rev. 1: 6. Christ and the saints are in common one with another:
Does the spirit of holiness dwell in him? so it does in them too. Is
Christ King and Priest? Why, so are they too by the grace of union
with him. He has made us kings and priests to God, and his Father.
This is the saints' dignity to be Christ's fellows, consorts, or co-
partners; so that look, whatever spiritual grace or excellency is in
Christ, it is not appropriated to himself, but they do share with
him: for indeed he was filled with the fulness of the Spirit, for
their sakes and use: as the sun is filled with light, not to shine
to itself, but to others; so is Christ with grace. And therefore,
some translate the text, not prae consortibus, above thy fellows;
but propter consortes, for thy fellows. Making Christ the first
receptacle of grace, who first and immediately is filled from the
fountain, the Godhead: but it is for his people, who receive and
derive from him, according to their proportion.
    This is a great truth, and the dignity of the saints lies
chiefly in their partnership with Christ, though our translation,
above thy fellows, suits best, both with the importance of the word,
and scope of the place.
    Secondly, But then, whatever dignity is ascribed herein to the
saints, there is, and still must be, a pre-eminency acknowledged,
and ascribed to Christ: if they are anointed with the Spirit of
grace, much more abundantly is Christ: "God, thy God, has anointed
thee with the oil of gladness above thy fellows."
    By the oil of gladness understand the Spirit of holiness,
compared here with oil, of which there was a double use under the
law, viz. a civil and a sacred use. It had a sacred and a solemn
use, in the inauguration and consecration of the Jewish kings and
high priests; it had also a civil, and common use, for the anointing
their bodies, to make their limbs more agile, expedite, and nimbler
to make the face shine, for it gave a lustre, freshness, and
liveliness to the countenance. It was also used in lamps, to feed
and maintain the fire, and give them light. These were the principal
uses of oil. Now, upon all these accounts, it excellently
expresseth, and figuratively, represents to us the Spirit of grace
poured forth upon Christ and his people. For,
    First, By the Spirit poured out upon him, he was prepared for,
and consecrated to his offices, he was anointed with the Holy Ghost
and with power, Acts 10: 38.
    Secondly, As this precious oil runs down from Christ, the head,
to the borders of his garments, I mean, as it is shed upon
believers, so it exceedingly beautifies their faces, and makes them
shine with glory.
    Thirdly, It renders them apt, expedite, and ready to every good
ark: Non tardat uncta rota.
    Fourthly, It kindles and maintains the flame of divine love in
their souls, and, like a lamp, enlightens their minds in the
knowledge of spiritual things; the anointing teaches them.
    "And this oil is here called the oil of gladness, because it is
the cause of all joy and gladness to them that are anointed with
it": Oil was used (as you heard before) at the instalment of
sovereign princes, which was the day of the gladness of their
hearts; and, among the common people, it was liberally used at all
their festivals, but never upon their days of mourning. Whence it
becomes excellently expressive of the nature and use of the Spirit
of grace, who is the cause and author of all joy in believers, John
17: 13.
    And with this oil of gladness is Christ said to be anointed
above his fellows, i. e. to have a far greater share of the Spirit
of grace than they: "For to every one of the saints is given grace
according to the measure of the gift of Christ," Eph. 4: 7. But to
him the Spirit is not given by measure, John 3: 34. "It has pleased
the Father, that in him should all fulness dwell", Col. 1: 19. and
"of his fulness we all receive grace for grace," John 1: 16. The
saints partake with him, and through him in the same Spirit of
grace, for which reason they are his fellows; but all the grace
poured out upon believers comes exceeding short of that which God
has poured out upon Jesus Christ. The words being thus opened, give
us this note,
    
    Doct. That all true believers have a real communion or
    fellowship with the Lord Jesus Christ.
    
    From the saints' union with Christ, there does naturally and
immediately result a most sweet and blessed communion and fellowship
with him in graces and spiritual privileges, Eph. 1: 3. "Blessed be
the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, who has blessed us with
all spiritual blessings in heavenly places (or things) in Christ: in
giving us his Son, he freely gives us all things," Rom. 8: 32. So in
1 Cor. 1: 30. "Of him are ye in Christ Jesus, who of God is made
unto us wisdom, righteousness, sanctification and redemption." And
once more, 1 Cor. 3: 22, 23. "All are yours, and ye are Christ's."
What Christ is and has is theirs by communication to them, or
improvement for them, and this is very evidently implied in all
those excellent scripture metaphors, by which our union with Christ
is figured and shadowed out to us, as the marriage-union betwixt a
man and his wife, Eph. 5: 31,32. You know that this conjugal union
gives the wife interest in the estate and honours of the husband, be
she never so meanly descended in herself. The natural union betwixt
the head and members of the body, by which also the mystical union
of Christ and believers is set forth, 1 Cor. 12: 12. excellently
illustrates this fellowship or communion betwixt them, for from
Christ "the whole body fitly joined together, and compacted by that
which every joint supplieth, according to the effectual working in
the measure of every part, maketh increase of the body," as the
apostle speaks, Eph. 4: 16. The union betwixt the graff and the
stock, which is another emblem of our union with Christ, John 15: 1.
imports, in like manner, this communion or partnership betwixt
Christ and the saints; for no sooner does the graft take hold of the
stock, but the vital sap of the stock is communicated to the graft,
and both live by one and the same juice.
    Now, that the scope of this discourse be not mistaken, let the
reader know that I am not here treating of the saint's communion or
fellowship with God in his duties, as in prayer, hearing,
sacraments, &c. but of that interest which believers have in the
good things of Christ, by virtue of the mystical union betwixt then
through faith: there is a twofold communion of the saints with
Christ.
    The first is an act.
    The second is a state.
    There is an actual fellowship or communion the saints have with
Christ in holy duties, wherein Christians let forth their hearts to
God by desires, and God lets forth his comforts and refreshments
again into their hearts; they open their mouths wide, and he fills
them: this communion with God is the joy and comfort of a believer's
life, but I am not to speak of that here. It is not any act of
communion, but the state of communion, from which all acts of
communion flow, and upon which they all depend, that I am now to
treat of; which is nothing else but the joint interest that Christ
and the saints have in the same things; as when a ship, an house, or
estate, is among many partners, or joint heirs, every one of them
has a right to it, and interest in it, though some of them have a
greater, and others a lesser part. So it is betwixt Christ and his
people; there is a "koinonia", i. e. a fellowship or joint interest
betwixt them, upon which ground they are called co-heirs with
Christ, Rom. 8: 17. This communion or participation in Christ's
benefits, depends upon the hypostatical union of our nature, and the
mystical union of our persons with the Son of God; in the first he
partakes with us, in the second we partake with him; the former is
the remote, the latter the next cause thereof.
    In the explication of this point, I shall speak to these four
things:
    1. What are those things in which Christ and believers have
fellowship.
    2. By what means they come to have such a fellowship with
Christ.
    3. How great a dignity this is to have fellowship with Jesus
Christ.
    4. And then apply the whole in divers practical inferences.
    First, What are those things in which Christ and believers have
fellowship, to which I must speak both negatively and positively.
    1. Negatively, The saints have no fellowship with Jesus Christ
in those things that belong to him as God; such as his
consubstantiality, co-equality, and co-eternity with the Father. It
is the blasphemy of the wicked Familists to talk of being godded
into God, and christed into Christ. Neither men nor angels partake
in these things; they are the proper and incommunicable glory of the
Lord Jesus.
    2. The saints have no communion or fellowship in the honour and
glory of his mediatory works, viz. his satisfaction to God, or
redemption of the elect. It is true, we have the benefit and fruit
of his mediation and satisfaction: his righteousness also is imputed
to us for our personal justification, but we share not in the least
with Christ in the glory of this work; nor have we an inherent
righteousness in us as Christ has; nor can we justify and save
others as Christ does: we have nothing to do with his peculiar
honour and praise in these things. Though we have the benefit of
being saved, we may not pretend to the honour of being Saviours, as
Christ is to ourselves or others. "Christ's righteousness is not
made ours as to its universal value, but as to our particular
necessity; nor is it imputed to us as to so many causes of salvation
to others, but as to so many subjects to be saved by it ourselves."
    Secondly, But then there are many glorious and excellent things
which are in common betwixt Christ and believers, though in them all
he has the pre-eminence; he shines in the fulness of them, as the
sun, and we with a borrowed and lesser light, but of the same kind
and nature as the stars. Some of these I shall particularly, and
briefly unfold in the following particulars.
    First, Believers have communion with Christ in his names and
titles; they are called Christians from Christ, Eph. 3: 15. from him
the whole family in heaven and earth is named: this is that worthy
name the apostle speaks of, James 2: 7. He is the Son of God, and
they also, by their union with him, have power or authority to
become the sons of God, John 1: 12. He is the heir of ail things,
and they are joint-heirs with him, Rom. 8: 17. He is both King and
Priest, and he has made them kings and priests, Rev. 1: 6. But they
do not only partake in the names and titles, but this communion
consists in things as well as titles. And therefore,
    Secondly, They have communion with him in his righteousness,
i.e. the righteousness of Christ is made theirs, 2 Cor. 5: 21. and
he is "the Lord our righteousness," Jer. 23: 6. It is true, the
righteousness of Christ is not inherent in us, as it is in him; but
it is ours by imputation, Rev. 4: 5, 11. and our union with him is
the ground of the imputation of his righteousness to us, 2 Cor. 5:
21. "We are made the righteousness of God in him," Phil. 3: 9. for
Christ and believers are considered as one person, in construction
of law; as a man and his wife, a debtor and surety, are one: and so
his payment or satisfaction is in our name, or upon our account.
    Now, this is a most inestimable privilege, the very ground of
all our other blessings and mercies. O, what a benefit is this to a
poor sinner, that owes to God infinitely more than he is ever able
to pay, by doing or suffering; to have such a rich treasure of merit
as lies in the obedience of Christ, to discharge, in one entire
payment, all his debts to the last earthing? "Surely shall one say,
in the Lord have I righteousness," Isa. 45: 24. even as a poor woman
that owes more than she is worth, in one moment is discharged of all
her obligations, by her marriage to a wealthy man.
    Thirdly, Believers have communion with Christ in his holiness
or sanctification, for of God he is made unto them, not only
righteousness, but sanctification also; and as in the former
privilege, they have a stock of merit in the blood of Christ to
justify them; so here, they have the Spirit of Christ to sanctify
them, 1 Cor. 1: 30. and therefore we are said of his fullness to
receive "grace for grace," John 1: 16, i.e. say some, grace upon
grace, manifold graces, or abundance of grace; or grace for grace,
that is, grace answerable to grace: as in the seal and wax, there is
line for line, and cut for cut, exactly answerable to each other; or
grace for grace, that is, say others, the free grace of God in
Christ, for the sanctification or filling of our souls with grace:
be it in which sense it will, it shows the communion believers have
with Jesus Christ in grace and holiness. Now, holiness is the most
precious thing in the world, it is the image of God, and chief
excellency at man: it is our evidence for glory, yea, and the first
fruits of glory. In Christ dwells the fulness of grace, and from
him, our head, it is derived and communicated to us; thus he that
sanctifieth, and they that are sanctified, are all of one, Heb. 2:
11. You would think it no small privilege to have bags of gold to go
to, and enrich yourselves with, and yet that were but a very trifle
in comparison to have Christ's righteousness and holiness to go to
for your justification and sanctification. More particularly,
    Fourthly, Believers have communion with Christ in his death;
they die with him, Gal. 2: 20. "I am crucified with Christ," i.e.
the death of Christ has a real killing and mortifying influence upon
the lusts and corruptions of my heart and nature: true it is, he
died for sin one way, and we die to sin another way: he died to
expiate it, we die to it, when we mortify it: the death of Christ is
the death of sin in believers; and this is a very glorious
privilege; for the death of sin is the life of your souls; if sin do
not die in you by mortification, you must die for sin by eternal
damnation. If Christ had not died, the Spirit of God, by which you
now mortify the deeds of the body, could not have been given unto
you: then you must have lived vassals to your sins, and died at last
in your sins; but the fruit, efficacy, and benefit of Christ's death
is yours for the killing those sins in you, which else have been
your ruin.
    Fifthly, Believers have communion with Christ in his life and
resurrection from the dead; as he rose from the dead, so do they;
and that by the power and influence of his vivification and
resurrection. It is the Spirit of life which is in Christ Jesus that
makes us free from the law of sin and death, Rom. 8: 2. Our
spiritual life is from Christ, Eph. 2: 1. "And you has he quickened
who were dead in trespasses and sins:" and hence Christ is said to
live in the believer, Gal. 2: 20. "Now I live, yet not I, but Christ
liveth in me:" and it is no small privilege to partake of the very
life of Christ, which is the most excellent life that ever any
creature can live; yet such is the happiness of all the saints, the
life of Christ is manifest in them, and such a life as shall never
see death.
    Sixthly, To conclude, believers have fellowship with Jesus
Christ in his glory, which they shall enjoy in heaven with him: they
shall be ever with the Lord," 1 Thes. 4: 17. and that is not all,
(though, as one saith, it were a kind of heaven but to look through
the key-hole, and have but a glimpse of Christ's blessed face) but
they shall partake of the glory which the Father has given him; for
so he speaks, John 17: 22, 24. and more particularly, they shall sit
with him in his throne, Rev. 3: 21. And when he comes to judge the
world, he will come to be glorified in the saints, 2 Thes. 1: 10. So
that you may see what glorious and inestimable things are, and will
be in common betwixt Christ and the saints. His titles, his
righteousness, his holiness, his death, his life, his glory. I do
not say that Christ will make any saint equal with him in glory;
that is impossible, he will be known from all the saints in heaven,
as the sun is distinguished from the stars; but they shall partake
of his glory, and be filled with his joy there; and thus you see
what those things are that the saints have fellowship with Christ
in.
    Secondly, Next I would open the way and means by which we come
to have fellowship with Jesus Christ in these excellent privileges;
and this I shall do briefly in the following positions.
                             Position 1.
    First, No man has fellowship with Christ in any special saving
privilege by nature, howsoever it be cultivated or improved; but
only by faith uniting him to the Lord Jesus Christ; It is not the
privilege of our first, but second birth. This is plain from John 1:
12,13, "But to as many as received him, to them gave he power to
become the sons of God, even as many as believe on his name, who are
born not of flesh, nor of blood, nor of the will of man, but of
God." We are by nature children of wrath, Eph. 2: 3. we have
fellowship with Satan in sin and misery: the wild branch has no
communication of the sweetness and fatness of a more noble and
excellent root until it be ingrafted upon it, and have immediate
unions and coalition with it, John 15: 1, 2.
                             Position 2.
    Believers themselves have not an equal share one with another,
in all the benefits and privileges of their union with Christ, but
in some there is an equality, and in others an inequality; according
to the measure and gift of Christ, to every one.
    In justification they are all equal: the weak and the strong
believer are alike justified, because it is one and the same perfect
righteousness of Christ, which is applied to the one and to the
other, so that there are no different degrees of justification, but
all that believe are justified from all things, Act. 13: 39 and
"there is no condemnation to them that are in Christ Jesus," Rom 8:
1, be they never so weak in faith, or defective in degrees of grace.
But there is apparent difference in the measures of their
sanctification, some are strong men, and other's are babes in
Christ, 1 Cor. 3: 1. The faith of some flourishes and grows
exceedingly, 2 Thess. 1: 3 the things that are in others are ready
to die, Rev 3: 2. It is a plain case, that there is great variety
found in the degrees of grace, and comfort among them that are
jointly interested in Christ, and equally justified by him.
                             Position 3.
    The saints have not fellowship and communion with Christ, in
the fore-mentioned benefits and privileges by one and the same
medium, but by various mediums and ways, according to the nature of
the benefits, in which they participate.
    For instance, they have partnership and communion with Christ,
as has been said, in his righteousness, holiness, and glory, but
they receive these distinct blessings by divers mediums of
communion: we have communion with Christ in his righteousness, by
the way of imputation; we partake of his holiness, by the way of
infusion; and of his glory in heaven, by the beatifical vision. Our
justification is a relative change, our sanctification a real
change, our glorification a perfect change, by redemption from all
the remains both of sin and misery.
    Thus has the Lord appointed several blessings for believers in
Christ, and several channels of conveying them from him to us; by
imputed righteousness, we are freed from the guilt of sin: by
imparted holiness, we are freed from the dominion of sin, and by our
glorification with Christ, we are freed from all the relics and
remains both of sin and misery let in by sin upon our natures.
                             Position 4.
    That Jesus Christ imparts to all believers, all the spiritual
blessings that he is filled with, and withholds none from any that
have union with him, be these blessings never so great, or they that
receive them never so weak, mean, and contemptible in outward
respects, Gal 3: 27 "Ye are the children of God by faith in Jesus
Christ." The salvation that comes by Jesus Christ is stiled the
common salvation, Jude 3. and heaven the inheritance of the saints
in light, Col 1: 12. "There is neither Greek nor Jew, (saith the
apostle), circumcision, nor uncircumcision, Barbarian, Scythian,
bond nor free, hut Christ is all, and in all," Col. 3: 11. He means,
there is no privilege in the one to commend them to God, and no want
of any thing, in the other to debar them from God; let men have or
want outward excellencies, as beauty, honour, riches, nobility,
gifts of the mind. sweetness of nature, and all such like ornaments,
what is that to God? He looks not at these things, but respects
them, and communicates his favour to them as they are in Christ: He
is all and in all. The gifts and blessings of the Spirit are given
to men as they are in Christ, and without respect to any external
differences made in this world among men: hence we find excellent
treasures of grace in mean and contemptible persons in the world,
poor in the world and rich in faith, and heirs of the kingdom; and
as all believers, without difference, receive from Christ, so they
are not debarred from any blessing that is in Christ: "All is yours,
for ye are Christ's, 1 Cor. 3: ult. With Christ God freely gives us
all things," Rom. 8: 32.
                             Position 5.
    The communion believers have with Christ, in spiritual
benefits, is a very great mystery, far above the understandings of
natural men. There are no footsteps of this thing in all the works
of creation; therefore the apostle calls it "The unsearchable riches
of Christ," Eph. 3: 8, "aneksichniaston plouton tou Christou": The
word signifies, that which has no footsteps to trace it by: yea, it
is so deep a mystery, that the angels themselves stoop down to look
into it, 1 Pet. 1: 12. "Eye has not seen, nor ear heard, neither
have entered into the heart of man the things which God has prepared
for them that love him: but God has revealed them unto us by his
Spirit," 1 Cor. 2: 9, 10.
    Thirdly, and lastly, I shall, in a few particulars, spell the
dignity and excellency of this fruit of our union with Christ, and
show you, that a greater glory and honour cannot be put upon man,
than to be thus in fellowship with Jesus Christ, John 17: 22. "The
glory which thou gavest me, I have given them, that they may be one,
as we are one:" And therefore, more particularly, let it be
considered,
    First, With whom we are associated, even the Son of God; with
him that is over all, God blessed for ever. Our association with
angels is an high advancement, for angels and saints are
fellowservants in the same family, Rev. 19: 10. and through Christ
we are come to an innumerable company of angels, Heb. 12: 22. But
what is all this to our fellowship with Jesus Christ himself; and
that in another manner than angels have? Nor though Christ be to
then an head of dominion, yet not an head of vital influences, as he
is to his mystical body the church; this therefore is to them a
great mystery, which they greatly affect to study and pry into.
    Secondly, What we are that are dignified with this title, the
fellows or co-partners with Jesus Christ: not only dust by nature,
(Dust thou art), but sinful dust; such wretched sinners, as, by
nature, and the sentence of the law, ought to be associated with
devils, and partakers with them of the wrath the Almighty God to all
eternity.
    Thirdly, The benefits we are partakers of, in and with the Lord
Jesus Christ; and, indeed, they are wonderful and astonishing
things, so far as they do already appear, but yet we see but little
of them comparatively, to what we shall see, 1 John 3: 1, 2. "Now
are we the sons of God, and it does not yet appear what we shall be,
but we know that when he shall appear, we shall be like him, for we
shall see him as he is." O, what will that be! to see him as he is,
and to be transformed into his likeness!
    Fourthly, The way and manner in which we are brought into this
fellowship with Christ; which is yet more admirable. The apostle
gives us a strange account of it in 2 Cor. 8: 9. "For you know the
grace of our Lord Jesus Christ, that though he was rich, yet for
your sakes he became poor, that ye through his poverty might be
rich:" he empties himself of his glory, that we might be filled; he
is made a curse, that we might enjoy the blessing, he submits to be
crowned with thorns, that us might be crowned with glory and honour;
he puts himself into the number of worms, Psal. 22: 6. that we might
be made equal to the angels. O, the inconceivable grace of Christ!
    Fifthly, The reciprocal nature of that communion which is
betwixt Christ and believers; we do not only partake of what is his,
but he partakes of what is ours: he has fellowship with us in all
our wants, sorrows, miseries and afflictions; and we have communion
with him in his righteousness, grace, sonship and glory: he takes
part of our misery, and we take part of his blessedness; our
sufferings are his sufferings, Col. 1: 24. O, what an honour is it
to thee, poor wretch, to whom a great many would not turn aside to
ask how thou dost; to have a King, yea, the Prince of all the kings
of the earth, to pity, relieve, sympathise, groan and bleed with
thee, to sit by thee in all thy troubles, and give thee his
cordials; to say thy troubles are my troubles, and thy afflictions
are my afflictions: whatever toucheth thee, toucheth me also. O what
name shall we give unto such grace as this is!
    Sixthly, and lastly, Consider the perpetuity of this privilege:
Your fellowship with Christ is interminable, and abides for ever.
Christ and the saints shall be glorified together, Rom. 8: 17. While
he has any glory they shall partake with him. It is said indeed, 1
Cor. 15: 24. that there shall be a time when Christ will deliver up
the kingdom to his Father but the meaning is not that ever he will
cease to be the Head of his saints, or they from being his members:
No, the relation never ceases; justification, sanctification and
adoptions are everlasting things, and we can never be divested of
them.
    Inference 1. Are the saints Christ's fellows? What honourable
persons then are they! And how should they be esteemed and valued in
the world! If a king, who is the fountain of honour, do but raise a
man by his favour, and dignify him by bestowing some honourable
title upon him, what respect and observance is presently paid him by
all persons? But what are all the vain and empty titles of honour,
to the glorious and substantial privileges with which believers are
dignified, and raised above all other men by Jesus Christ? He is the
Son of God, and they are the sons of God also: he is the Heir of all
things, and they are joint heirs with Christ; he reigns in glory,
and they shall retort with him: he sits upon the throne, and they
shall sit with him in his throne. O that this vile world did but
know the dignity of believers, they would never slight, hate, abuse,
and persecute them as they do! And O that believers did but
understand their own happiness and privileges by Christ, they would
never droop and sink under every small trouble at that rate they do!
    Inf. 2. How abundantly has God provided for all the necessities
and wants of believers! Christ is a storehouse filled with blessings
and mercies, and it is all for them: from him they "receive
abundance of grace, and of the gift of righteousness<" Rom 5: 17.
"Of his fulness they all receive grace for grace," John 1: 16. All
the fulness of Christ is made over to them for the supply of their
wants: "My God shall supply all your needs, (saith the apostle)
according to his riches in glory by Jesus Christ," Phil. 4: 19. If
all the riches of God can supply your needs, then they shall be
supplied. Say not, Christ is in the possession of consummate glory,
and I am a poor creature, struggling with many difficulties, and
toiling in the midst of many cares and fears in the world; for care
is taken for all thy wants, and orders given from heaven for their
supply: My God shall supply all your need. O say with a melting
heart, I have a full Christ, and he is filled for me: I have his
pure and perfect righteousness to justify me, his holiness to
sanctify me, his wisdom to guide me, his comforts to refresh me, his
power to protect me, and his all-sufficiency to supply me. O be
cheerful, be thankful, you have all your hearts can wish; and yet be
humble; it is all from free-grace to empty and unworthy creatures
    Inf. 3. How absurd, disingenuous, and unworthy of a Christian,
is it to deny, or withhold from Christ any thing he has, or by which
he may be served or honoured? Does Christ communicate all he has to
you, and can you withhold any thing from Christ? On Christ's part it
is not mine, and thine, but ours, or mine and yours; John 20: 17 "I
ascend to my Father, and your Father; to my God, and your God." But
O this cursed idol self! which appropriates all to its own designs
and uses. How liberal is Christ! and how penurious are we to him!
Some will not part with their credit for Christ, when yet Christ
abased himself unspeakably for them. Some will not part with a drop
of blood for Christ, when Christ spent the whole treasure of his
blood freely for us; yea, how loth are we to part with a shilling
for Christ, to relieve him in his distressed members, when as yet
"we know the grace of out Lord Jesus Christ, that though he was
rich, yet for our sakes he became poor, that we through his poverty
might be rich!" O ungrateful return! O base and disingenuous
spirits!" The things Christ gives us are great, and the things we
deny to him are small: he parts with the greatest, and yet is denied
the least. The things he communicates to us are none of ours, we
have no right nor title by nature, or any desert of ours to them;
the things we deny or grudge to Christ are by all titles his own,
and he has the fullest and most unquestionable title to them all;
what he gives to us, he gives to them that never deserved it; what
we withhold from him, we withhold from one that has deserved that,
and infinitely more from us than we have or are.
    He interested you freely in all his riches when you were
enemies; you stand upon trifles with him, and yet call him your best
and dearest friend: he gave himself and all he has to you, when you
could claim nothing from him; you deny to part with these thing to
Christ, who may not only claim them upon the highest title, his own
sovereignty, and absolute property, but by your own act, who profess
to have given all in covenant to him: what he gives you return no
profit to him, but what you give or part with for him is your
greatest advantage. O that the consideration of these things might
shame and humble your souls!
    Inf. 4. Then certainly no man is or can be supposed to be a
loser by conversion, seeing from that day, whatever Christ is or has
becomes his.
    O what an inheritance are men possessed of by their new birth!
Some men cry out, Religion will undo you; but with what eyes do
these men see? Surely, you could never so reckon, except your souls
were so incarnated, as to reckons pardon. Peace, adoption, holiness,
and heaven, for nothing; that invisibles a non-entities, and
temporals the only realities. It is true, the converted soul may
lose his estate, his liberty, yea, his life for Christ but what
then? Are they losers that exchange brass for gold? or part with
their present comforts for an hundred-fold advantage? Mark 10: 29.
So that none need be frightened at religion, for the losses that
attend it, whilst Christ and heaven are gained by it: they that
count religion their loss have their portion in this life.
    Inf. 5. How securely is the saints inheritance settled upon
them, seeing they are in common with Jesus Christ? Christ and his
saints are joint-heirs, and the inheritance cannot be alienated but
by his consent: he must lose his interest, if you lose yours. Indeed
Adam's inheritance was by a single title, and moreover, it was in
his own hand, and so he might, (as indeed he soon did) divest
himself and his posterity of it; but it is not so betwixt Christ and
believers; we are secured in our inheritance by Christ our co-heir,
who will never alienate it: and therefore it was truly observed by
the father, Faelicior Job in sterquilinio, quam Adamus in paradiso:
Job was happier upon the dunghill, than Adam was in paradise. The
covenant of grace is certainly the best tenure; as it has the best
mercies, so it gives the fullest security top enjoy them.
    Inf. 6. How rich and full is Jesus Christ, who communicates
abundantly to all the saints, and yet has infinitely still more in
himself, than has ever been received by them all.
    Take all the faith of Abraham all the meekness of Moses, all
the patience of Job, all the wisdom of Solomon, all the zeal of
David, all the industry of Paul, and all the tender-heartedness of
Josiah; and to this all the grace that is poured (though in lesser
measure) into all the elect vessels. in the world, yet still it is
short of that which remains in Christ; "He is anointed with oil of
gladness above his fellows:" And in all things he has and must ever
have the pre-eminence. There are many thousand stars glittering
above your head, and one star differs from another star in glory,
yet there is more light and glory in one sun, than in many thousand
stars. Grace beautifies the children of men exceedingly, but still
that is true of Christ, Psal. 45: 2. "Thou art fairer than the
children of men, grace is poured into thy lips". Yet all grace is
secondarily, and derivatively in the saints, but it is primitively
and originally in Christ, John 5: 16. Grace is imperfect and
defective in them, but in him it is in its most absolute perfection
and fulness, Col 1: 19. In the saint. it is mixed with abundance of
corruption, but in Christ it is altogether unmixed, and exclusive of
its opposite, Heb. 7: 26. So that as the Heathen said of moral
virtue, I may much more say of Christ, That were he to be such with
mortal eyes, he would compel love and admiration from all men, for
"he is altogether lovely," Cant. 5: l6.
    Inf. 7. What delight and singular advantage must needs be in
the communion of the saints, who have communion with Jesus Christ in
all his races and benefits.
    "That which we have seen and heard, declare we unto you, that
ye also may have fellowship with us: And truly our fellowship is
with the Father, and with his Son Jesus Christ", 1 John 1: 3. O it
is sweet to have fellowship with those that have fellowship with God
in Jesus Christ. Christ has communicated to the saints varieties of
graces, in different measures and degrees; And as they all receive
from Christ the fountain, so it is sweet and most delightful to be
improving themselves by spiritual communion one with another: Yea,
for that end one is furnished with one grace more eminently than
another, that the weak may be assisted by the strong, as a modern
divine well observes. Athanasius was prudent and active, Basil of an
heavenly, sweet temper, Chrysostom laborious, without affection,
Ambrose resolved and grave, Luther courageous, and Calvin acute and
judicious. Thus every one has his proper gift from Christ, the
fountain of gifts and graces, 1 Cor 7: 7. One has quickness of
parts, another solidity of judgement, but not ready and presential;
one is zealous, but ungrounded; another well principled, but
timorous; one is wary and prudent; another open and plain; one is
trembling and melting; another cheerful and joyous; one must impart
his light, another his heat: The eye, the knowing man, cannot say to
the hand, the active man, I have no need of thee. And O how sweet
would it be, if gifts, graces, and experiences were frequently and
humbly imparted: But idle notions earthly mindedness, self-
interests, and want of more communion with Christ, have almost
destroyed the comfort of Christian fellowship everywhere in the
world.
    Inf. 8. In a word, those only have ground to claim interest in
Christ, who do really participate of his graces, and in whom are
found the effects and fruits of their union and communion with him.
    If you have interest in Christ, you have communion in his
graces and benefits; and if you have such communion, it will appear
in your maintaining daily actual communion with God in duties;
whereby will be produced,
    First, The increase of your sanctification, by fresh
participations from the fountain; as cloth which is often dipt into
the vat receives the deeper dye, and livelier tincture; so will your
souls by assiduous communion with God. It will also be discerned,
    Secondly, In your deeper humiliation, and spiritual sense of
your own vileness: The more any man partakes of God, and is
acquainted with him, and assimilated to him, the more base and vile
in his own sight he still grows, Job 42: 5, 6. Isa. 6: 5.
    Thirdly, It will appear in your more vehement longings after
the full enjoyment of God in heaven, 1 Pet 1: 8. and Rom. 8: 23. You
that have the first fruits will groan within yourselves after the
full harvest, and satisfying fruition; you will not be so taken with
things below, as to be content with the best lot on earth for your
everlasting, portion. O! if these communicated drops be so sweet,
what is there in Christ the fountain?
    And thus I have opened the method of grace in bringing home
Christ and his benefits to God's elect by union, in order to
communion with him.
                 Thanks be to God for Jesus Christ.






Sermon 9.

Containing the first general Use of Exhortation, inviting all Men to
apply Jesus Christ.


Matth. 11:28.

Come unto me, all ye that labour and are heavy laden, and I will
give you rest.


    The impetration of our redemption by Jesus Christ, being
finished in the first part, and the way and means by which Christ is
applied to sinners in the foregoing part of this treatise; I am now
orderly come to the general use of the whole; which in the first
place shall be by way of exhortation, to invite and persuade all men
to come to Christ; who, in all the former sermons, had been
represented in his garments of salvations, and in his apparel,
prepared and offered to sinners as their all-sufficient and only
remedy: and in the following sermons, will be represented in his
perfumed garments coming out of his ivory palaces, Psalm 45: 8, to
allure and draw all men unto him.
    For a general head to this use, which will be large, I have
chosen this scripture, "Come unto me all ye that labour, and are
heavy laden, and I will give you rest."
    These words are the voice of our Lord Jesus Christ himself, in
which there is a vital, ravishing sound: It is your mercy to have
such a joyful sound in your ears this day. And in them I will
consider their dependence, parts, and scope.
    As to their dependence, it is manifest they have an immediate
relation to the foregoing verse, wherein Christ opens his
commission, and declares the fulness of this authority and saving
power, and the impossibility of comings to God any other way. "All
things are delivered to me of my Father, and no man knoweth the Son
but the Father: neither knoweth any man the Father save the Son, and
he to whomsoever the Son will reveal him," ver. 27.
    The 28th verse is brought in proleptically to obviate the
discouragements of any poor, convinced, and humbled soul, who might
thus object: Lord, I am fully satisfied of the fulness of thy saving
power, but greatly doubt whether ever I shall have the benefit
thereof; for I see so much sin and guilt in myself, so great
vileness and utter unworthiness, that I am over weighed, and even
sink under the burden of it: My soul is discouraged because of sin.
This objection is prevented in the words of my text, "Come unto me,
all ye that labour, and are heavy laden", q. d. Let not the sense of
your sin and misery drive you from your only remedy: Be your sins
never so many, and the sense and burden of them never so heavy, yet,
for all that, Come unto me: You are the persons whom I invite and
call. I came not to call the righteous, but sinners to repentance.
    In the words, three things are especially remarkable.
    1. The soul's spiritual distress and burthen: Weary and heavy
laden.
    2. Its invitations to Christ under that burthen: Come unto me.
    3. Its encouragement to that great duty: I will give you rest.
    First, The soul's spiritual distress and burthen expressed in
two very emphatical words, "hoi kopiontes kai pefortismenoi", "You
that labour and are heavy laden." The word which we translate
labour, signifies a labouring even to faintness and tiring, to the
consumption and waste of the spirits; and the other word signifies
such a pressure by a burthen that is too heavy to be borne, that we
do even sink down under it.
    There is some difference among expositors about the quality of
this burthen. Chrysostom, and some others after him, expound it of
the burthen of the legal rites and ceremonies, which was a heavy
burthen indeed, such as neither they, nor their fathers could bear.
Under the task and burthen of these legal observances, they did
sweat and toil to obtain a righteousness to justify them before God,
and all in vain: and this is a pious sense: But others expound it of
the burthen of sin in general; the corruption of nature, and evils
of practice, which souls convinced have brought them under the
curse, anti will bring them to hell, and therefore labour and
strive, all that in them lies, by repentance and reformation, to
clear themselves from it; but all in vain, whilst they strive in
their own strength. Such are they that are here called to come to
Christ, which is the second thing; namely,
    Secondly, The invitation of burthened souls to Christ: "Come
unto me all ye that labour, and are heavy laden: Come unto me," i.e.
believe in me, lean and rest your burthened souls upon me. I am able
to ease all your burthens; in me are that righteousness and peace -
which you seek in vain in all the legal rites and ceremonies; or in
your repentance, reformations, and duties; but it will give you no
ease, it will be no benefit to you, except you come unto me. Faith
is often expressed under this notion, see John 6: 37. and John 7:
37. and it is to be further noted, that all burthened souls are
invited to come, "All ye that labour. What ever your sin or guilt
have been, whatever your fears or discouragements are, yet come,
i.e. believe in me.
    Thirdly, Here is the encouragement Christ gives to this duty,
And I will give you rest: "anapauso mas". I will refresh you, I will
give you rest from your labour, your consciences shall be pacified,
your hearts at rest and quiet in that pardon, peace and favour of -
God which I will procure for you by my death. But here it must be
heedfully noted, that this promise of rest in Christ is not made to
men simply as they are sinners, nor yet as they are burthened and
heavy laden sinners, but as they come to Christ, i.e. as they are
believers. For let a man break his heart for sin, let him weep out
his eyes, let him mourn as a dove, and shed as many tears for sin
(if it were possible) as ever there fell drops of rain upon the
ground, yet if he come not to Christ by faith, his repentance shall
not save him, nor all his sorrows bring him to true rest. Hence
note,
    
    Doct. 1. That some souls are heavy laden with the burthensome
         sense of sin.
    
    Doct. 2. That all burthened souls are solemnly invited to cone
         to Christ.
    
    Doct. 3. That there is rest in Christ for all that come to him
         under the heavy burthen of sin.
    
    
    
    Doct. 1. Some souls are heavy laden with the burthensome sense
         of sin.
    
    I do not say all are so, for "fools make a mock at sin," Pro.
14: 9. It is so far from being burthensome to some, that it is a
sport to them, Prov. 10: 23. But when a man's eyes are opened to see
the evil that is in sin, and the eternal misery that follows it,
(sin and hell being linked together with such strong chains as
nothing but the blood of Christ can loose) then no burden is like
that of sin. "A wounded conscience who can bear?" Prov. 18: 14. For
let us but consider the efficacy that the law of God has upon the
consciences of men, when it comes in the spirituality and power of
it, to convince and humble the soul of a sinner. For then,
    First, The memory of sin long since committed, is refreshed and
revived, as if it had been but yesterday: There are fresh
recognitions of sin long since acted and forgotten, as if they had
never been: What was done in our youth is fetched back again, and by
a new impression of fear and horror set home upon the trembling
conscience, Job 13. 26. "Thou writest bitter things against me, and
makest me to possess the sins of my youth." Conscience can call back
the days that are past, and draw up a new charge upon the score of
old sins, Gen. 42: 21. All that ever we did is recorded and entered
into the book of conscience, and now is the time to open that book,
when the Lord will convince and awaken sinners. We read in Job 14:
17 of sealing up iniquities in a bag, which is an allusion to the
Clerk of the assizes, that takes all the indictments that are made
against persons at the assizes and seals them up in a bag, in order
to a trial. This is the first office and work of conscience; upon
which
    The second, namely, its accusations, do depend. These
accusations of conscience are terrible things; who can stand before
them? They are full, they are clear, and all of them referring to
the approaching judgement of the great and terrible God.
    Conscience dives into all sins, secret as well as open, and
into all the circumstances and aggravations of sin, as being
committed against light, against mercy, against the strivings,
warnings, and regrets of conscience. So that we may say of the
efficacy of conscience, as it is said, Psal. 19: 6. of the influence
of the sun, "nothing is hid from the heat and power thereof." "Come
(saith the woman of Samaria) see a man that has told me all that
ever I did," John 4: 29. Christ convinced her but of one sin by his
discourse, but conscience, by that one, fetched in, and charged all
the rest upon her. And as the accusations of conscience are full, so
they are clear and undeniable. A man becomes self convinced, and
there remains no shift, excuse, or plea, to defend himself. A
thousand witnesses cannot prove any point more clearly than one
testimony of conscience does. Mat. 22: 12. "The man was speechless,
a mute; muzzled (as the word signifies) by the clear testimony of
his own conscience. These accusations are the second work of
conscience, and they make way for the third, namely,
    Thirdly, The sentence and condemnation of conscience: And truly
this is an insupportable burthen: The condemnation of conscience is
nothing else but its application of the condemning sentence of the
law to a man's person: The law curseth every one that transgresseth
it, Gal. 3: 10. Conscience applies this curse to the guilty sinner.
So that it sentences the sinner in God's name and authority, from
whence there is no appeal: The voice of conscience is the voice of
God, and what it pronounces in God's name and authority, he will
confirm and ratify, 1 John 3: 20. "If our hearts, (i. e.) our
consciences condemn us, God is greater than our hearts, and knoweth
all things. This is that torment which no man cam endure. See the
effects of it in Cain, in Judas, and in Spira; it is a real
foretaste of hell-torments: This is that worm that never dies, Mark
9: 44. For look, as a worm in the body is bred of the corruption
that is there, so the accusations and condemnations of conscience
are bred in the soul by the corruption and guilt that are there. As
the worm in the body preys and bites upon the tender, sensible,
inward parts, so does conscience touch the very quick. This is the
third enact, or work, to sentence and condemn; and this also makes
way for a fourth, namely,
    Fourthly, To upbraid and reproach the sinner under his misery:
and this makes a man a very terror to himself: To be pitied in
misery is some relief, but to be upbraided and reproached, doubles
our affliction. You know it was one of the aggravations of Christ's
sufferings to be reproached by the tongues of his enemies, whilst he
hanged in torments upon the cursed tree; but all the scoffs and
reproaches, the bitter jeers and sarcasms in the world, are nothing
to those of a man's own conscience, which will cut to the very bone.
    O! when a man's conscience shall say to him in a day of
trouble, as Reuben to his afflicted brethren, (Gen. 43:22. "Spake I
not unto you, saying, do not sin against the child, and ye would not
hear; therefore behold also his blood is required." So conscience,
did I not warn you, threaten you, persuade you in time against these
evils, but you would not hearken to me, therefore behold now you
must suffer to all eternity for it. The wrath of God is kindled
against thy soul for it: This is the fruit of thy own wilful madness
and obstinacy. Now thou shalt know the price of sinning against God,
against light and conscience. O, this is terrible! Every bite of
conscience makes a poor soul to startle, and in a terrible fright to
cry, O the worm! O. the bitter foretaste of hell! A wounded spirit
who can bear?
    This is a fourth wound of conscience, and it makes way for a
fifth; for here it is as the pouring out of the vials, and the
sounding of those woe-trumpets in Revelations; one woe is past, and
another cometh. After all these deadly blows of conscience upon the
very heart of a sinner, comes another as dreadful as any that is yet
named; and that is,
    Fifthly, The fearful expectation of wrath to come, which it
begets in the soul of a guilty sinner: Of this you read, Heb. 10:
27. "A fearful looking for of Judgement, and fiery indignation." And
this makes the stoutest sinner faint and sink under the burthen of
sin. For the tongue of man cannot declare what it is to lie down and
rise with those fearful expectations. The case of such sinners is
somewhat like that which is described in Deut. 28: 65, 66, 67. "The
Lord shall give thee a trembling heart, and failing of eyes, and
sorrow of mind. And thy life shall hang in doubt before thee, and
thou shalt fear day and night, and shall have no assurance of thy
life. In the morning thou shalt say, would to God it were even: And
at even thou shalt say, would to God it were morning: For the fear
of thine heart, wherewith thou shalt fear,- &c. Only in this it
differs, in this scripture you have the terror of those described,
whose temporal life hangs in doubtful suspense, but in the persons I
am speaking of, it is a trembling under the apprehensions and
expectations of the vengeance of eternal fire.
    Believe it, friends, words cannot express what those poor
creatures feel, that lie down, and rise up under these fears, and
frights of conscience. Lord, what will become of me! I am free among
the dead, yea, among the damned. I hang by the frail thread of a
momentary life, which will, and must, break shortly, and may break
the next moment, over the everlasting burnings: No pleasant bread is
to be eaten in these days, but what is like the bread of condemned
men.
    And thus you see what the burden of sin is, when God makes it
to bear upon the consciences of men, no burden of affliction is like
it: losses of dearest relations, sorrows for an only son, are not so
pungent and penetrating as these: For,
    First, to creature-enjoyment is pleasant under these inward
troubles: In other troubles they may signify something to a man's
relief; but here they are nothing; the wound is too deep to be
healed by any thing but the blood of Jesus Christ; conscience
requires as much to satisfy it, as God requires to satisfy him. When
God is at peace with thee, (saith conscience) then will I be at
peace with thee too; but, till then, expect no rest nor peace from
me. All the pleasures and diversions in the world shall never stop
my mouth: go where thou wilt, I will follow thee like thy shadow: be
thy portion in the world as sweet as it will, I will drop in gall
and wormwood into thy cup, that thou shalt taste no sweetness in any
thing, till thou hast got thy pardon.
    These inward troubles for sin alienate the mind from all former
pleasures and delights; there is no more taste or savour in them,
than in the white of an egg. Music is out of tune; all instruments
jar and groan. Ornaments have no beauty; what heart has a poor
creature to deck that body, in which dwells such a miserable soul!
to feed and pamper that carcase that has been the soul's inducement
to, and instrument in sin, and must be its companion in everlasting
misery!
    Secondly, These inward troubles for sin put a dread into death,
beyond whatever the soul saw in it before. Now it looks like the
King of terrors indeed. You read in Heb. 2: 15. of some that through
fear of death are all their life long subject to bondage. O what a
lively comment is a soul in this case able to make upon such a text!
They would not scare at the pale horse, nor at him that sits on him,
though his name be called Death, if it were not for what follows
him, Rev. 6: 8. but when they consider that hell follows, they
tremble at the very name or thoughts of death.
    Thirdly, Such is the nature of these inward troubles of spirit,
that they swallow up the sense of all outward troubles. Alas! these
are all lost in the deeps of soul sorrows, as the little rivulets
are in the vast sea; he that is wounded at the heart will not cry
Oh, at the bite of the smallest insect. And surely no greater is the
proportion betwixt outward and inward sorrows. A small matter
formerly would discompose a man, and put him into a fret; now ten
thousand outward troubles are lighter than a feather: For, saith he,
"why doth the living man complain?" Am I yet on this side of eternal
burnings! O let me not complain then whatever my condition be. Have
I losses in the world, or pains upon my body? Alas! these are not to
be named with the loss of God, and the feeling of his wrath and
indignation for evermore. Thus you see what troubles, inward
troubles for sin be.
    Secondly, If you ask, in the second place, how it comes to pass
that any soul is supported under such strong troubles of spirit,
that all that feel them do not sink under them; that all that go
down into these deep waters of sorrow, are not drowned in them? The
answer is,
    First, Though this be a very sad time with the soul (much like
that of Adam, betwixt the breach of the first covenant, and the
first promise of Christ made to him) yet the souls that are thus
heavy laden, do not sink, because God has a most tender care over
them, and regard to them; underneath them are the everlasting arms,
and thence it is they sink not: were they left to grapple with these
troubles in their own strength, they could never stand. But God
takes care of these mourners, that their spirits do not fail before
him, and the souls that he has made; I mean those of his elect, whom
he is this way preparing for, and bringing unto Christ.
    Secondly, The Lord is pleased to nourish still some hope in the
soul under the greatest fears and troubles of spirit. Though it have
no comfort or joy, yet it has some hope, and that keeps up the
heart. The afflicted soul does, in this case, as the afflicted
church, Lam. 3: 29. "He putteth his mouth in the dust, if yet there
may be hope:" He saith, "It is good for a man to hope, and quietly
to wait for the salvation of God." There are usually some
glimmerings or downings of mercy through Christ, in the midnight
darkness of inward troubles; non dantur purae, tenabrae. In hell,
indeed, there is no hope to enlighten the darkness, but it is not so
upon earth.
    Thirdly, The experiences of others, who have been in the same
deeps of trouble, are also of great use to keep up the soul above
water. The experience of another is of great use to prop up a
desponding mind, whilst as yet it has none of its own; and, in deed,
for the support of souls in such cases, they were recorded. 1 Tim.
1: 16. "For this cause I obtained mercy that in me first Jesus
Christ might shew forth all long-suffering, for a pattern "to them
which should hereafter believe on him to life everlasting." For an
encouraging Pattern, an eminent precedent to all poor sinners that
were to come after him, that none might absolutely despair of
finding mercy through Christ. You know if a man be taken sick, and
none can tell what the disease is, none can say that ever they heard
of such a disease before, it is exceeding frightful; but if one and
another, it may be twenty, come to the sick man's bed side, and tell
him, sir, be not afraid, I have been in the very same case that you
now are in, and so have many more, and all did well at last; why
this is half a cure to the sick man. So it is here a great support
to hear the experiences of other saints.
    Fourthly, As the experiences of others support the soul under
these burdens, so the riches of free grace through Jesus Christ
uphold it. It is rich and abundant, Psal. 130: 7, 8. plenteous
redemption; and it is free, and to the worst of sinners, Isa. 1: 18.
And under these troubles it finds itself in the way and proper
method of mercy, for so my text (a text that has upheld many
thousand drooping hearts) states it. All this gives hope and
encouragement under trouble.
    Fifthly, and lastly, Though the state of the soul be sad and
sinking, yet Jesus Christ usually makes haste in the extremity of
trouble to relieve it by sweet and seasonable discoveries of his
grace; cum duplicantur lateris, venit Moses, in the mount of the
Lord it shall be seen. It is with Christ as it was with Joseph,
whose bowels yearned towards his brethren, and he was in pain till
he had told them, "I am Joseph your brother." This is sweetly
exhibited to us in that excellent parable of the prodigal, Luke 15,
when his father saw him, being yet a great way off, he ran and fell
upon his neck, and kissed him. Mercy runs nimbly to help, when souls
are ready to fall under the pressure of sin. And thus you see both
how they are burdened, and how upheld under the burden.
    Thirdly, If it be enquired, in the last place, why God makes
the burden of sin press so heavy upon the hearts of poor sinners? It
is answered,
    First, He does it to divorce their hearts from sin, by giving
them an experimental taste of the bitterness and evil that is in
sin. Men's hearts are naturally glued with delight to their sinful
courses; all the persuasions and arguments in the world are too weak
to separate them from their beloved lusts. The morsels of sin go
down smoothly and sweetly, they roll them with much delectation
under their tongues, and it is but need that such bitter potions as
these should be administered "to make their stomachs rise against
sin", as that word used by the apostle in 2 Cor. 7: 11. signifies,
in that ye sorrowed after a Godly sort, what indignation it wrought?
It notes the rising of the stomach with rage, a being angry even
unto sickness; and this is the way, the best and most effectual way
to separate the soul of a sinner from his lusts; for, in these
troubles, conscience saith, as it is in Jer. 4: 18. "Thy way and thy
doings have procured these things unto thee; this is thy wickedness,
because it is great, because it reacheth unto thy heart."
    Secondly, The Lord does this to make Jesus Christ most welcome
and desirable to the soul. Christ is not sweet till sin be made
bitter to us. Matth. 9: 12. "They that be whole need not a
physician, but they that are sick." If once God wounds the heart of
a sinner, with the stinging sense of sin, then nothing in the world
is so precious, so necessary, so vehemently desired and panted for
as Jesus Christ! O that I had Christ, if I did go in rags, if I did
feed upon no other food all my days, but the bread and water of
affliction! This is the language of a soul filled with the sense of
the evil of sin.
    Thirdly, The Lord does this to advance the riches of his free
grace in the eyes of sinners. Grace never appears grace till sin
appear to be sin. The deeper our sense of the evil of sin is, the
deeper our apprehensions of the free grace of God in Christ will be.
The louder our groan have been under the burden of sin, the louder
will our acclamations and praises be for our salvation from it by
Jesus Christ. "To me (saith Paul) the chiefest of sinners, was this
grace given," 1 Tim. 1: 15. Never does the grace of a prince so melt
the heart of a traitor, as when trial, sentence, and all
preparations for his execution have passed, before his unexpected
pardon comes.
    Fourthly, The Lord does this to prevent relapses into sin: "In
that you sorrowed after a godly sort, what carefulness it wrought!"
2 Cor. 2:7. The burnt child dreads the fire, the bird that is de of
the talons of the hawk, trembles afterwards at the noise of his
bells. "After such a deliverance as this, should we again break thy
commandments?" Ezra 9: 13, 14. Ask poor penitent soul, that has been
in the deeps of sorrow for sin, Will you return to your former
course of sin again? And it sounds in his ears, as if you should ask
him, Will you run into the fire? Will you go to the rack again? O
no, it has cost him dear already.
    Fifthly, Lastly, This the Lord does, to make them both skilful
and compassionate in relieving others that are under like inward
troubles. None can speak so judiciously, so pertinently, so
feelingly to another's case, as he that has been in the same case
himself; this furnishes them with the tongue of the learned, to
speak a word in season to the weary soul; by this means they are
able to "comfort others with the same comforts wherewith they
themselves have been comforted of God," 2 Cor. 1: 4.
    Thus you have had a brief account, what the burden of sin is,
how souls are supported under that burden, and why the Lord causes
sin to lie so heavy upon the souls of some sinners. The improvement
of all will be in a double use, viz.
                    Of information and direction.
    
                     First use for information.
    
    Inference 1. Is there such a load and burden in sin? What then
was the burden that our Lord Jesus Christ felt and bare for us, upon
whom the whole weight of all the sins of all God's elect lay! Isa.
53: 6. "He has made the iniquities of us all to meet on him." Our
burden is heavy, but nothing to Christ's. O there is a vast
difference betwixt that which Christ bare, and that which we bear.
We feel but the single weight of our own sins; Christ felt the whole
weight of all our sins. You do not feel the whole weight that is in
any one sin; alas, it would sink you, if God should let it bear in
all its aggravations and effects upon you. Psal. 130: 2, 3. "If
thou, Lord, shouldst mark iniquity, O Lord, who shall stand!" You
would sink presently, you can no more stand under it, than under the
weight of a mighty mountain. But Christ bare all the burden upon
himself; his understanding was deep and large; he knew the extent of
its evil, which we do not: we have many reliefs and helps under our
burden, he had none; we have friends to counsel, comfort, and pity
us; all his friends and familiars forsook him, and fled in the day
of his trouble: we have comforts from heaven, he had frowns from
heaven: "My God, my God, (saith he in that doleful day) why hast
thou forsaken me?" There is no comparison betwixt our load and
Christ's.
    
    Inf. 2. If there be such a burden in sin, then certainly
sinners will pay dear for all the pleasure they find in sin in the
days of their vanity. "What one saith of crafty counsels, we may say
of all sins; though they seem pleasant in their first appearance,
they would be found sad in the event:" they are honey in the mouth,
but the gall of asps in the belly; they tickle the fancy, but rend
the conscience. O sinner, thy mirth will certainly be turned into
mourning, as sure as thou livest; that vain and frothy breast of
thine shall be wounded; thou shalt feel the sting and pain, as well
as relish the sweet and pleasure of sin. O that thou wouldst but
give thyself the leisure seriously to ponder those scriptures in the
margin; methinks they should have the same effect that the
handwriting upon the plaister of the wall had upon that jovial king
in the height of a frolic, Daniel 5: 5. Reason thus with thine own
heart, and thou wilt find the conclusion unavoidable; either I shall
repent for sin, or I shall not: If I shall not, then must I howl
under the wrath of God for sin, in the lowest hell for evermore. If
I shall, then by what I have now read of the throbs and wounds of
conscience, I see what this heart of mine, this vain heart of mine,
must feel in this world. O how much wiser was the choice that Moses
made, Heb. 11: 25. the worst of sufferings rather than the best of
sin, the pleasures of sin, which are but for a season!
    Inf. 3. Is there such a burden in sin, then the most tender
compassion is a debt due to souls addicted and heavy laden with sin.
Their condition cries for pity, whatever their tongues do; they seem
to call upon you, as Job upon his friends; "Have pity, have pity
upon me, O ye my friends, for the hand of God has touched me", Job
19: 21. And O let all that have felt the wounds and anguish of an
afflicted conscience themselves, learn from their own experience
tenderly to pity and help others. Gal. 6: 1. "You that are
spiritual, restore (it or set him in joint again) in the spirit of
meekness, considering thyself."
    Israel was commanded to be kind to strangers, for, saith God,
you know the heart of a stranger. And surely if any case in the
world require help, pity, and all compassionate tenderness, this
does; and yet how do some slight spiritual troubles upon others?
Parents slight them in their own children, masters in their
servants; the more brutish and wicked they! O had you but felt
yourselves what they feel, you would never treat them as you do. But
let this comfort such poor creatures, Christ has felt them, and will
pity and help them; yea, he therefore would feel them himself, that
he might have compassion upon you. If men will not, God will pity
you; if men be so cruel to persecute him whom God has smitten, God
will be so kind to pour balm into the grounds that sin has made: if
they pull away the shoulder from you, and will not be concerned
about your troubles, except it be to aggravate them, God will not
serve you so: but certainly you that have passed through the same
difficulties, you cannot be without compassion to them that are now
grappling with them.
    Inf. 4. How inexpressible dreadful is the state of the damned,
who must bear the burden of all their sins upon themselves, without
relief, or hope of deliverance! Mark 9: 49. "where their worm dies
not, and the fire is not quenched."
    O! If sin upon the soul that is coming to Christ for
deliverance, be so burdensome, what is it upon the soul that is shut
out from Christ, and all hopes of deliverance for ever! For, do but
ponder these differences betwixt these two burdens.
    First, No soul is so capacious now, to take in the fulness of
the evil and misery of sin, as they are who are gone down to the
place of torments. Even as the joys of God's face above are as much
unknown to them that have the fore-tastes and first fruits of them
here by faith, so the misery of the damned is much unknown, even to
them that have in their consciences now, the bitterest taste and
sense of sin in this world: as we have the visions of heaven, so we
have the visions of hell also, but darkly through a glass.
    Secondly, No burden of sin presseth so continually upon the
soul here as it does there. Afflicted souls, on earth, have
intermissions, and breathing times; but in hell there are no lucid
intervals, the wrath of God there is still flowing; it is in fluxu
continuo, Isa. 30: 33. a stream of brimstone.
    Thirdly, No burden of sin lies upon any of God's elect so long
as on the damned, who do, and must bear it: our troubles about sin
are but short, though they should run parallel with the line of
life; but the troubles of the damned are parallel with the endless
line of eternity.
    Fourthly, Under these troubles, the soul has hope, but there,
all hope is cut off: all the gospel is full of hope, it breathes
nothing but hope to sinners that are moving Christ-ward under their
troubles; but in hell the pangs of desperation rend their
consciences for ever. So that, upon all accounts, the state of the
damned is inexpressibly dreadful.
    Inf. 5. If the burden of sin be so heavy, how sweet then must
the pardon of sin be to a sin burdened soul! Is it a refreshment to
a prisoner to have his chains knocked off? A comfort to a debtor to
have his debts paid, and obligations cancelled? What joy must it
then be to a sin-burthened soul, to hear the voice of pardon and
peace in his trembling conscience! Is the light of the morning
pleasant to a man after a weary, tiresome night? the spring of the
year pleasant after a hard and tedious winter? They are so indeed;
but nothing so sweet as the favour, peace, and pardon of God, to a
soul that has been long restless, and anxious, under the terrors and
fears of conscience. For, though after pardon and peace a man
remembers sin still, yet it is as one that remembers the dangerous
pits, and deep waters, from which he has been wonderfully delivered,
and had a narrow escape. O the inconceivable sweetness of a pardon!
Who can read it without tears of joy? Are we glad when the grinding
pain of the stone, or racking fits of the cholic are over? And shall
we not be transported, when the accusations and condemnations of
conscience are over? Tongue cannot express what these things are;
his joy is something that no words can convey to the understanding
of another, that never felt the anguish of sin.
    Inf. 6. Lastly, In how sad a case are those that never felt any
burden in sin, that never were kept waking and restless one night
for sin?
    There is a burdened conscience, and there is a benumbed
conscience. The first is more painful, but the last more dangerous.
O it is a fearful blow of God upon a man's soul, to strike it
senseless and stupid, so that though mountains of guilt lie upon it,
it feels no pain or pressure: and this is so much more sad, because
it incapacitates the soul for Christ, and is a presage and fore
runner of hell. It would grieve the heart of a man, to see a
delirious person in the rage and height of a fever, to laugh at
those that are weeping for him, call them fools, and telling them he
is as well as any of them: much so is the case of many thousand
souls; the God of mercy pity them.
    
                       Second use for counsel.
    
    The only further use I shall make of this point here, shall be
to direct and counsel souls that are weary and heavy laden with the
burden of sin, in order to their obtaining true rest and peace. And
first,
    
                           First counsel.
    
    Satisfy not yourselves in fruitless complaints to men. Many do
so, but they are never the nearer. I grant it is lawful in spiritual
distresses to complain to men, yea, and it is a great mercy if we
have any near us in times of trouble that are judicious, tender and
faithful, into whose bosoms we may pour out our troubles; but to
rest in this, short of Christ, is no better than a snare of the
devil to destroy us. Is there not a god to go to in trouble? The
best of men, in the neglect of Christ, are but physicians of no
value. Be wise and wary in your choice of Christian friends, to whom
you open your complaints; some are not clear themselves in the
doctrine of Christ and faith, others are of a dark and troubled
spirit, as you are, and will but entangle you more. "As for me
(saith Job) is my complaint to mans and if it were so, why should
not my spirit be troubled?" Job 21: 4. One hour betwixt Christ and
thy soul in secret, will do more to thy true relief than all other
counsellors and comforters in the world can do.
    
                           Second counsel.
    
    Beware of a false peace, which is more dangerous than your
trouble for sin can be. Many men are afraid of their troubles, but I
think they have more cause to fear their peace a great deal. There
is a twofold peace that ruins most men, peace in sin, and peace with
sin: O how glad are some persons when their troubles are gone; but I
dare not rejoice with them. It is like him that rejoices his ague is
gone, that it has left him in a deep consumption. You are got rid of
your troubles, but God knows how you have left them; your wounds are
skinned over, better they were kept open. Surely they have much to
answer for, that help on these delusions, healing the hurt of souls
slightly, by crying, Peace, peace, when there is no peace. The false
peace you beget in them, will be a real trouble to yourselves in the
issue, Jer. 6: 14.
    
                           Third counsel.
    
    Let all that are under inward troubles for sin, take heed of
drawing desperate conclusions against themselves, and the final
state of their own souls. Though your case be sad, it is not
desperate; though the night be troublesome and tedious, keep on in
the way to Christ, and light will spring up. To mourn for sin is
your duty; to conclude there is no hope for you in Christ, is your
sin. You have wronged God enough already, do not add a further and
greater abuse to all the rest, by an absolute despair of mercy. It
was your sin formerly to presume beyond any granite, it is your sin
now to despair against many commands. I would say as the apostle in
another case, I would not have you mourn as men that have no hope:
your condition is sad as it is, but yet it is much better than once
it was. You were once full of sin and void of sense, now you have
the sense of sin, which is no small mercy. You were once quite out
of the way and method of mercy, now you are in that very path
wherein mercy meets the elect of God. Keep hope, therefore, at the
bottom of all your troubles.
    
                           Fourth counsel.
    
    Observe whether your troubles for sin produce ouch fruits and
effects in your souls as theirs do, which end at last in Christ and
everlasting peace.
    First, One that is truly burdened with sin, will not allow
himself to live in the secret practice of sin; either your trouble
will put an end to your course of sinning, or your sinning will put
an end to your troubles. Consult 2 Cor. 7: 11.
    Secondly, True sorrow for sin, will give you very low and vile
thoughts of yourselves; as you were covered with pride before, so
you will be covered with shame after God has convinced and humbled
you, Rom. 6: 21.
    Thirdly, A soul really burdened with sin will never stand in
his own justification before God, nor extenuate and mince it in his
confessions to him, Psal. 2: 8, 4.
    Fourthly, The burdens of sin will make a man set light by all
other burdens of affliction, Lam. 3: 22. Micah 7: 9. The more you
feel sin, the less you feel affliction.
    Fifthly, A soul truly burdened for sin will take no hearty joy
or comfort in any outward enjoyment of this world, till Christ come
and seek peace to the soul, Lam. 3: 28. Just so the soul sits alone
and keepeth silence; merry company is a burden, and music is but
howling to him.
    
                           Fifth counsel.
    
    Beware of those things that make your troubles longer than they
ought to be. There be several errors and mistakes that hold poor
souls much longer in their fears and terrors than else they might
be; and such are,
    First, Ignorance of the nature of saving faith, and the
necessity of it. Till you come to believe, you cannot have peace;
and while you mistake the nature, or apprehend not the necessity of
faith, you are not like to find that path at peace.
    Secondly, Labouring to heal the wounds that the law has made
upon your consciences, by a more strict obedience to it for the
future, in the neglect of Christ and his righteousness.
    Thirdly, In observance of what God has already done for you, in
these preparatory works of the law, in order to your salvation by
Jesus Christ. O! if you would but compare what you now are, with
what you lately were, it would give some relief. But the last and
principal thing is this:
    
                           Sixth counsel.
    
    Hasten to Christ in the way of faith, and you shall find rest;
and till then all the world cannot give you rest. The sooner you
transact with Christ, in the way of faith, the sooner you shall be
at peace and enter into his rest; for those that believe do now
enter into rest. You may labour and strive, look this way and that,
but all in vain; Christ and peace come together. No sooner do you
come to him, and roll your burden on him, receive him as he offers
himself; but the soul feels itself eased on a sudden; "being
justified by faith, we have peace with God", Rom. 5: 1. And thus in
finishing the first, we are brought home to the second observation.
    
    
    Doct. 2. That sin-burdened souls are solemnly invited to come
         to Christ.
    
    This point sounds sweetly in the ear of a distressed sinner; it
is the most joyful voice that ever the soul heard: the voice of
blessing from mount Gerizim, the ravishing voice from mount Zion,
"Ye are come to Jesus the Mediator." In opening of it I will shew,
    1. What it is to come to Christ.
    2. How Christ invites men to come to him.
    3. Why his invitation is directed to burdened souls.
    
    First, We will enquire what it is to come to Christ, and how
many things are included in it.
    In general, to come to Christ, is a phrase equipollent, or of
tile same amount with believing in Christ. It is an expression that
carries the nature and necessity of faith in it, and is reciprocated
with believing. John 6: 35. "He that cometh to me shall never
hunger; and he that believeth in me shall never thirst." Coming to
Christ, is believing in Christ; and believing in Christ, is coming
to Christ; they are synonyma's, and import the self same thing. Only
in this notion of faith, there are many rich and excellent things
hinted to us, which no other word can so aptly convey to our minds.
As,
    First, It hints this to us, That the souls of convinced and
burdened sinners do not only discern the reality of Christ, or that
he is, but also the necessity of applying Christ, and that their
eternal life is in their union with him: for this is most certain,
that the object of faith must be determinate and fixed; the soul
must believe that Christ is, or else there can be no emotions of the
soul after him: all coming pre-supposes a fixed term to which we
come, Heb. 11: 6. "He that cometh to God, must believe that God is."
Take away this, and all motions after Christ presently stop. No
wonder then that souls, in their first motions to Christ, find
themselves clogged with so many atheistical temptations, shaking
their assent to the truth of the gospel at the very root and
foundation of it; but they that come to Christ, do see that he is,
and that their life and happiness lie in their union with him, else
they would never come to him upon such terms as they do.
    Secondly, Coming to Christ implies the soul's despair of
salvation any other way. The way of faith is a supernatural way, and
souls will not attempt it until they have tried all natural ways to
help and save themselves, and find it all in vain; therefore the
text describes these comers to Christ as weary persons, that have
been labouring and striving all other ways for rest, but can find
none; and so are forced to relinquish all their fond expectations of
salvation in any other way, and come to Christ as their last and
only remedy.
    Thirdly, Coming to Christ notes a supernatural and almighty
power, acting the soul quite above its own natural abilities in this
motion. John 6: 44. "No man can come unto me, except my Father which
has sent me draw him." It is as possible for the ponderous mountains
to start from their bases and centres, mount themselves aloft into
the air, and there fly like wandering atoms hither and thither, as
it is for any man, of himself, i.e. by a pure natural power of his
own, to come to Christ. It was not a stranger thing for Peter to
come to Christ, walking upon the waves of the sea, than for his, or
any man's soul, to come to Christ in the way of faith.
    Fourthly, Coming to Christ notes the voluntariness of the soul
in its motion to Christ. It is true, there is no coming without the
Father's drawing; but that drawing has nothing of coaction in it; it
does not destroy, but powerfully, and with an overcoming sweetness,
persuade the will. It is not forced or driven, but it comes; being
made "willing in the day of God's power," Psal. 110: 3. Ask a poor
distressed sinner in that season, Are you willing to come to Christ?
O rather than live! life is not so necessary as Christ is! O! with
all my heart, ten thousand worlds for Jesus Christ, if he could be
purchased, were nothing answerable to his value in mine eyes! The
soul's motion to Christ is free and voluntary, it is coming.
    Fifthly, It implies this in it, That no duties, or ordinances,
(which are but the ways and means by which we come to Christ), are,
or ought to be central and terminative to the soul: i.e. the soul of
a believer is not to sit down, and rest in them, but to come by them
or through them to Jesus Christ, and take up his rent in him only.
No duties, no reformations, no ordinances of God, how excellent
soever these things are in themselves, and how necessary soever they
are in their proper place and use, can give rest to the weary and
heavy laden soul: it cannot centre in any of them, and you may see
it cannot, because it still gravitates, and inclines to another
thing, even Christ, and cannot terminate its motion till it be come
to him. Christ is the term to which a believer moves; and therefore
he cannot sit down by the way, or be as well satisfied as if he were
at his journey's end. Ordinances and duties have the nature and use
of means to bring us to Christ, but not to be to any man instead of
Christ.
    Sixthly, Coming to Christ, implies an hope or expectation from
Christ in the coming soul. If he has no hope, why does it move
forward? As good sit still, and resolve to perish where it is, as to
come to Christ, if there is no ground to expect salvation by him.
Hope is the spring of motion and industry; if you cut off hope, you
hinder faith: it cannot move to Christ, except it be satisfied, at
least, of the possibility of mercy and salvation by him. Hence it
is, that when comers to Christ are struggling with the doubts and
fears of the issue, the Lord is pleased to enliven their faint
hopes, by setting home such scriptures as these, John 6: 87. "He
that cometh to me, I will in no wise cast out." And Heb. 7: 25. "He
is able to save to the uttermost, all that come unto God by him."
This puts life into hope, and hope puts life into industry and
motion.
    Seventhly, Coming to Christ for rest implies, that believers
have, and lawfully may have an eye to their own happiness, in
closing with the Lord Jesus Christ. The poor soul comes for rest; it
comes for salvation; its eye and aim are upon it; and this aim of
the soul at its own good, is legitimated, and allowed by that
expression of Christ, John 5: 40. "Ye will not come unto me, that ye
may have life." If Christ blame them for not coming to him, that
they might have life, sure he would not blame them, had they come to
him for life.
    Eighthly, but Lastly, and which is the principal thing in this
expression; Coming to Christ, notes the all-sufficiency of Christ,
to answer all the needs and wants of distressed souls, and their
betaking themselves accordingly to him only for relief, being
content to come to Christ for whatever they need, and live upon that
fulness that is in him. If there were not an all-sufficiency in
Christ, no soul would come to him; for this is the very ground upon
which men come. Heb. 7: 25. "He is able to save to the uttermost,
all that come to God by him:" "Eis to panteles", to the uttermost:
In the greatest plunges, difficulties, and dangers. He has a fulness
of saving power in him, and this encourages souls to come unto him.
One beggar uses not to wait at the door of another, but all at the
doors of them they conceive able to relieve them. And as this notes
the fulness of Christ as our Saviour, so it must needs note the
emptiness and humility of the soul as a comer to him. This is called
submission, in Rom. 10: 8. Proud nature must be deeply distressed,
humbled, and moulded into another temper, before it will be
persuaded to live upon those terms, to come to Christ for every
thing it wants, to live upon Christ's fulness in the way of grace
and favour, and have no stock of its own to live upon. O! this is
hard, but it is the way of faith.
    Secondly, In the next place, let us see how Christ invites men
to come to him, and you shall find the means employed in this work,
are either internal, and principal, namely, the Spirit of God, who
is Christ's vicegerent, and comes to us in his name and room, to
persuade us to believe, John 15: 26; or external, namely, the
preaching of the gospel by commissioned ambassadors, who, in
Christ's stead, beseech men to be reconciled to God, i.e. to come to
Christ by faith, in order to their reconciliation and peace with
God. But an means and instruments employed in this work of bringing
men to Christ, entirely depend upon the blessing and concurrence of
the Spirit of God, without whom they signify nothing. How long may
ministers preach, before one soul comes to Christ, except the Spirit
co-operate in that work! Now as to the manner in which men are
persuaded, and their wills wrought upon to come to Christ, I will
briefly note several acts of the Spirit, in order there unto.
    First, There is an illustrating work of the Spirit upon the
minds of sinners, opening their eyes to see their danger and misery;
till these be discovered, no man stirs from his place: It is sense
of danger that rouses the secure sinner, that distresses him, and
makes him look about for deliverance, crying, What shall I do to be
saved? And it is the discovery of Christ's ability to save, which is
the ground and reason, (as was observed above,) of its motion to
Christ. Hence, seeing the Son, is joined with believing, or coming
to him, in John 6: 40.
    Secondly, There is the authoritative call, or commanding voice
of the Spirit in the word; a voice that is full of awful majesty and
power. 1 John 3: 23. "This is his commandment, that we should
believe on the name of his Son Jesus Christ". This call of the
Spirit to come to Christ, removes one great obstruction, namely, the
fear of presumption out of the soul's way to Christ, and, instead of
presumption in coming, makes it rebellion, and inexcusable
obstinacy, to refuse to come. This answers all pleas against coming
to Christ from our unworthiness and deep guilt; and mightily
encourages the soul to come to Christ, what ever it has been, or
done.
    Thirdly, There are soul-encouraging, conditional promises, to
all that do come to Christ in obedience to the command. Such is that
in my text, I mill give you rest: And that in John 6: 37. "Him that
cometh to me, I will in no wise cast out". And these breathe life
and encouragement into poor souls that fear, and are daunted through
their own unworthiness.
    Fourthly, There are dreadful threatenings denounced by the
Spirit in the word, against all that refuse or neglect to come to
Christ, which are of great use to engage and quicken souls in their
way to Christ. Mark 16: 16. "He that believes not shall be damned:
Die in his sins," John 8: 14. "The wrath of God shall remain on
him," John 3: ult. Which is as if the Lord had said, Sinners, do not
dally with Christ, do not be always treating, and never concluding,
or resolving: for if there be justice in heaven, or fire in hell,
every soul that comes not to Christ, must, and shall perish to all
eternity. Upon your own heads let the blood and destruction of your
own souls be for ever, if you will not come unto him.
    Fifthly, There are moving examples set before souls in the
word, to prevail with them to come, alluring and encouraging
examples of such as have come to Christ, under the deepest guilt and
discouragement, and yet found mercy. 1 Tim. 1: 15, 16. "This is a
faithful saying, and worthy of all acceptation, that Jesus Christ
came into the world to save sinners, of whom I am chief: howbeit,
(or nevertheless) for this cause I have obtained mercy, that in me
first Jesus Christ might shew forth all long-suffering, for a
pattern to them which should hereafter believe in him to life
everlasting." Who would not come to Christ after such an example as
this? And if this will not prevail, there are dreadful examples
recorded in the word, setting before us the miserable condition of
all such as refuse the calls of the word to come to Christ. 1 Pet.
3: 19, 20. "By which also he went and preached to the spirits which
are in prison, which sometime were disobedient, when once the
longsuffering of God waited in the days of Noah." The meaning is,
the sinners that lived before the flood, but now are in hell, clapt
up in that prison, had the offers of grace made them, but despised
them, and now lie for their disobedience in prison, under the wrath
of God for it, in the lowest hell.
    Sixthly, and lastly, There is an effectual persuading,
overcoming and victorious work of the Spirit upon the hearts and
wills of sinners, under which they come to Jesus Christ. Of this I
have spoken at large before, in the fourth sermon and therefore
shall not add any thing more here. This is the way and manner in
which souls are prevailed with to come to Jesus Christ.
    Thirdly, In the last place, if you enquire why Christ makes his
invitations to weary and heavy laden souls and to no other, the
answer is briefly this:
    First, Because in so doing, he follows the commission which he
received from his Father: so you will find it runs, in Isa. 61: 1.
"The Spirit of the Lord is upon me, because the Lord has anointed me
to preach good tidings to the meek, he has sent me to bind up the
broken hearted, to proclaim liberty to the captives, and the opening
of the prison to them that are bound. You see here how Christ's
commission directs him: his Father sent him to poor broken hearted
sinners, and he will keep close to his commission. "He came not to
call the righteous, but sinners, (i. e. sensible burdened sinners)
to repentance." Matth. 9: 13. "I am not sent (saith he,) but unto
the lost sheep of the house of Israel." Thus his instructions and
commission from the Father limit him only to sensible and burdened
souls, and he will be faithful to his commission.
    Secondly, The very order of the Spirit's work in bringing men
to Christ, shows us to whom the invitation and offers of grace in
Christ are to be made. For none are convinced of righteousness, i.e.
of complete and perfect righteousness, which is in Christ for their
justification, until first they be convinced of sin; and,
consequently, no man will, or can come to Christ by faith, till
convictions of sin have awakened and distressed him, John 16: 8, 9.
This being the due order of the Spirit's operation, the same order
must be observed in gospel-offers and invitations.
    Thirdly, It behoves that Christ should provide for his own
glory, as well as for our safety; and not to expose one to secure
the other; but save us in that way which will bring him most honour
and praise. And certainly such a way as this, by first convincing,
humbling, and burdening the souls of men, and then bringing them
home to rest in himself.
    Alas! let those that never saw, or felt the evil of sin, be
told of rest, peace, and pardon in Christ, they will but despise it
as a thing of no value, Luke 5: 31. "The whole need not a physician,
but those that are sick." Bid a man that thinks himself sound and
whole go to a physician and he will but laugh at the motion; if you
offer him the richest composition, he will refuse it, slight it, and
it may be, spill it upon the ground. Ay, but if the same man did
once feel an acute disease, and were made to sweat and groan under
strong pains, if ever he come to know what sick days and restless
nights are, and to apprehend his life to be in imminent hazard; then
messengers are sent, one after another, in post-haste to the
physician; then he begs him with tears to do what in him lies for
his relief: he thankfully takes the bitterest potions, and praises
the care and skill of his physician with tears of joy. And so the
patient's safety and the physician's honour are both secured. So is
it in this method of grace. The uses follow.
    Infer. 1. If sin-burdened souls are solemnly invited to come to
Christ, Then it follows, that whatever guilt lies upon the
conscience of a poor humbled sinner, it is no presumption, but his
duty to come to Christ, notwithstanding his own apprehended vileness
and great unworthiness.
    Let it be carefully observed, how happily that universal
particle "all", is inserted in Christ's invitation, for the
encouragement of sinners; "Come unto me, [all] ye that labour;" q.d.
Let no broken hearted sinner exclude himself, when he is not by me
excluded from mercy: my grace is my own, I may bestow it where I
will, and upon whom I will. It is not I, but Satan that impales and
incloses my mercy from humbled souls that are made willing to come
unto me; he calls that your presumption, which invitation makes your
duty.
    Objec. 1. But I doubt my case is excepted by Christ himself, in
Mat. 12: 31. where blasphemy against the Holy Ghost is exempted from
pardon, and I have had many horrid blasphemous thoughts injected
into my soul.
    Sol. Art thou a burdened and heavy laden soul? If so, thy case
is not in that, or any other scripture exempted from mercy; for the
unpardonable sin is always found in an impenitent heart: as that sin
finds no pardon with God, so neither is it followed with contrition
and sorrow in the soul that commits it.
    Objec. 2. But if I am not guilty of that sin, I am certainly
guiltier of many great and heinous abominations of another kind, too
great for me to expect mercy for; and therefore I dare not go to
Christ.
    Sol. The greater your sins have been, the more need you have to
go to Jesus Christ. Let not a motive to go to Christ be made an
obstacle in your way to him. Great sinners are expressly called,
Isa. 1: 18. Great sinners have come to Christ and found mercy, 1
Cor. 6: 7. and to conclude, it is an high reproach and dishonour to
the blood of Christ, and mercy of God, which flows so freely through
him, to object the greatness of sin to either of them. Certainly you
have not sinned beyond the extent of mercy, or beyond the efficacy
of the blood of Christ: but pardon and peace may be had, if you will
thus come to Christ for it.
    Objec. 3. Oh! but it is now too late; I have had many thousand
calls by the gospel, and refused them; many purposes in my heart to
go to Christ, and quenched them; my time therefore is past, and now
it is to no purpose.
    Sol. If the time of grace be past, and God intends no mercy for
thee, how comes it to pass thy soul is now filled with trouble and
distress for sin? Is this the frame of a man's heart that is past
hope. Do such signs as these appear in men that are hopeless?
Beside, the time of grace is a secret hid in the breast of God; but
coming to Christ is a duty plainly revealed in the text: And why
will you object a thing that is secret and uncertain, against a duty
that is so plain and evident? Nor do you yourselves believe what you
object; for at the same time that you say your seasons are over, it
is too late, you are, notwithstanding, found repenting, mourning,
praying, and striving to come to Christ. Certainly, if you knew it
were too late, you would not be found labouring in the use of means.
Go on, therefore, and the Lord be with you. It is not presumption,
but obedience, to come when Christ calls, as he here does, "Come
unto me, all ye that labour, and are heavy laden."
    Infer. A. Hence it follows, That none have cause to be
troubled, when God makes the souls of their friends or relation sick
with the sense of sin. It was the saying (as I remember) of Hieron
to Sabinian, Nothing (said he) makes my heart sadder, than that
nothing can make my heart sad. It is matter of joy to all that
rightly understand the matter, when God smites the heart of any man
with the painful sense of sin; of such sickness it may be said,
"This sickness is not unto death, but for the glory of God." Yet how
do many carnal relations lament and bewail this as a misery, as an
undoing to their friends and acquaintances; as if then they must be
reckoned lost, and never till then, that Christ is finding and
saving them. O! if your hearts were spiritual and wise, their groans
for sin would be as music in your ears. When they go alone to bewail
their sin, you would go alone also to bless God for such a mercy,
that ever you should live to such a happy day: You would say, Now is
my friend in the blessed pangs of the new birth; now is he in the
very way of mercy; never in so hopeful a condition as now. I had
rather he should groan now at the feet of Christ, than groan
hereafter under the wrath of God for ever. O! parents, beware, as
you love the souls of your children, that you do not damp and
discourage them, tempt or threaten them, divert or hinder them in
such cases as this, lest you bring the blood of their souls upon
your own heads.
    Inf. 3. It also follows from hence, That those to whom sin was
never any burthen, are not yet come to Christ, nor have any interest
in him. We may as well suppose a child to be born without any pangs,
as a soul to be born again, and united to Christ, without any sense
or sorrow for sin. I know many have great frights of conscience,
that never were made duly sensible of the evil of sin; many are
afraid of burning, that never were afraid of sinning. Slight and
transient troubles some have had, but they vanished like au early
cloud, or morning dew. Few men are without checks and throbs of
conscience at one time or other; but instead of going to the closet,
they run to the alehouse or tavern for cure. If their sorrow for sin
had been right, nothing but the sprinkling of the blood of Christ
could have appeased their consciences, Heb. 10: 22. How cold should
the consideration of this thing strike to the hearts of such
persons! Methinks, reader, if this be thy case, it should send thee
away with an aking heart; thou hast not yet tasted the bitterness of
sin, and if thou do not, thou shalt never taste the sweetness of
Christ, his pardons and peace.
    Inf. 4. How great a mercy is it for sin-burthened souls to be
within the sound and call of Christ in the gospel!
    There be many thousands in the Pagan and Popish parts of the
world, that labour under distresses of conscience as well as we, but
have no such reliefs, no such means of peace and comfort as we have
that live within the joyful sound of the gospel. If the conscience
of a Papist be burdened with guilt, all the relief he has, is to
afflict his body to quiet his soul; a penance, or pilgrimage, is all
the relief they have. If a Pagan be in trouble for sin, he has no
knowledge of Christ, nor notion of a satisfaction made by him; the
voice of nature is, Shall I give my first-born for my transgression,
the fruit of my body for the sin of my soul? The damned endure the
terrible blows and wounds of conscience for sin, they roar under
that terrible lash, but no voice of peace or pardon is heard among
them. It is not, "Come unto me, ye that labour, and are heavy
laden,", but "depart from me, ye cursed."
    Blessed are your ears, for you hear the voice of peace; you are
come to Jesus the Mediator, and to the blood of sprinkling. O. you
can never set a due value upon this privilege.
    Inf. 5. How sweet and unspeakably relieving is the closing of a
burthened soul with Jesus Christ, by faith! It is rest to the weary
soul.
    Soul-troubles are spending, wasting troubles; the pains of a
distressed conscience are the most acute pains. A poor soul would
fain be at rest, but knows not where; he tries this duty and that,
but finds none. At last, in a way of believing, he casts himself,
with his burthen of guilt and fear, upon Christ, and there is the
rest his soul desires. Christ and rest come together; till faith
brings you to the bosom of Jesus, you can find no true rest: The
soul is rolling and tossing, sick and weary, upon the billows of its
own guilt and fears. Now the soul is come like a ship tossed with
storms and tempests, out of a raging ocean into the quiet harbour!
or like a lost sheep that has been wandering in weariness, hunger,
and danger, into the fold. Is a soft bed in a quiet chamber sweet to
one that is spent and tired with travel? Is the sight of a shore
sweet to the shipwrecked mariner, who looked for nothing but death?
Much more sweet is Christ to a soul that comes to him pressed in
conscience, and broken in spirit under the sinking weight of sin.
    How did the Italians rejoice, after a long and dangerous
voyage, to see Italy again! crying, with loud and united voices
which made the very heavens ring again, Italy! Italy! But no shore
is so sweet to the weather beaten passenger, as Christ is to a
broken-hearted sinner: This brings the soul to a sweet repose. Heb.
4: 3. "We, which have believed, to enter into rest." And this
endears the way of faith to their souls ever after.
    Inf. 6. Learn hence the usefulness of the law to bring souls to
Jesus Christ. It is utterly useless, as a covenant, to justify us;
but exceeding useful to convince and humble us; it cannot relieve
nor ease us, but it can and does awaken and rouse us. It is a fair
glass to shew us the face of sin, and till we have seen that we
cannot see the face of Jesus Christ.
    The law, like the fiery serpent, smites, stings, and torments
the conscience; this drives us to the Lord Jesus, lifted up in the
gospel, like the brazen serpent in the wilderness, to heal us. The
use of the law is to make us feel our sickness; this makes us look
out for a Physician: "I was alive once, without the law, (saith
Paul) but when the commandment came, sin revived, and I died," Rom.
7: 9. The hard, vain, proud hearts of men require such an hammer to
break them to pieces.
    Inf. 7. It is the immediate duty of weary and heavy laden
sinners to come to Christ by faith, and not stand off from Christ,
or delay to accept him upon any terms whatsoever.
    Christ invites and commands such to come unto him; it is
therefore your sin to neglect, draw back, or defer whatever seeming
reasons and pretences there may be to the contrary. When the gaoler
was brought (where I suppose thee now to be) to a pinching distress,
that made him cry, "Sirs, what must I do to be saved?" The very next
counsel the apostles gave him was, "Believe on the Lord Jesus
Christ, and thou shalt be saved," Acts 16: 30, 31. And, for your
encouragement, know, that he who calleth you to come, knows your
burden, what your sins have been and troubles are, yet he calls you:
if your sin hinder not Christ from calling, neither should it hinder
you from coming. He that calls you, is able to ease you, "to save to
the uttermost, all that cone to God by him," Heb. 7: 25. Whatever
fulness of sin be in you, there is a greater fulness of saving power
in Christ. Moreover, he that calls you to come, never yet rejected
any poor burdened soul that came to him; and has said he never will.
John 6: 37. "Him that cometh unto me, I will in no wise cast out."
Fear not, therefore, he will not begin with thee, or make thee the
first instance and example of the feared rejection.
    And, Lastly, Bethink thyself, what wilt thou do, and whither
wilt thou go, in this case, If not to Jesus Christ? Nothing shall
ease or relieve thee till thou dost come to him. Thou art under an
happy necessity to go to him; with him only is found rest for the
weary soul; which brings us to the third and last observation,
    
    Doct. 3. That there is rest in Christ, for all that come unto
him under the heavy burden of sin.
    
    Rest is a sweet word to a weary soul; all seek it, but none but
believers find it. We which have believed, (saith the apostle) do
enter into rest, Heb. 4: 3. "He does not say, they shall, but they
do enter into rest; noting their spiritual rest to be already begun
by faith on earth in the tranquillity of conscience, and shall be
consummated in heaven, in the full enjoyment of God." There is a
sweet calm upon the troubled soul after believing, an ease, or rest
of the mind, which is an unspeakable mercy to a poor weary soul.
Christ is to it as the ark was to the dove, when she wandered over
the watery world, and found no place to rest the sole of her foot.
Faith centres the unquiet spirit of man in Christ, brings it to
repose itself and its burden on him. It is the soul's dropping
anchor in a storm, which stays and settles it.
    The great debate which cost so many anxious thoughts is now
issued into this resolution; I will venture my all upon Christ, let
him do with me as seemeth him good. It was impossible for the soul
to find rest, whilst it knew not where to bestow itself, or how to
be secured from the wrath to come; but when all is embarked in
Christ for eternity, and the soul fully resolved to lean upon him,
and to trust to him, now it feels the very initials of eternal rest
in itself: it finds an heavy burden unloaded from its shoulders; it
is come, as it were, into a new world; the case is strangely
altered. The word rest, in this place, notes, (and is so rendered by
some) a recreation; it is restored, renewed, and recreated, as it
were, by that sweet repose it has upon Christ. Believers, know that
faith is the sweetest recreation you can take. Others seek to divert
and lose their troubles, by sinful recreations, vain company, and
the like; but they little know what the recreation and sweet
restoring rest that faith gives the soul is. You find, in Christ,
what they seek in vain among the creatures. Believing is the highest
recreation known in this world. But to prevent mistakes, three
cautions need to be premised, lest we do, in ipso limine impingere,
stumble at the threshold, and so lose our way all along afterward.
    
                             Caution 1.
    
    You are not to conceive, that all the soul's fears, troubles
and sorrows are presently over end at an end, as soon an it is come
to Christ by faith. They will have many troubles in the world after
that, it may be, more than ever they had in their lives: "Our flesh
(saith Paul) had no rest," 2 Cor. 7: 5. They will be infested with
many temptations after that; that, it may be, the assaults of Satan
may be more violent upon their souls than ever. Horribilia de Deo,
terribilia de fide: injections that make the very bones to quake,
and the belly to tremble. They will not be wholly freed from sin;
that rest remains for the people of God; nor from inward trouble and
grief of soul about sin. These things are not to be expected
presently.
    
                             Caution 2.
    
    We may not think all believers do immediately enter into the
full, actual sense of rest and comport, but they presently enter
into the state of rest. "Being justified by faith, we have peace
with God," Rom. 5: 1. i.e. we enter into the state of peace
immediately. "Peace is sown for the righteous, and gladness for the
upright in heart," Psal. 117: 1l. And he is a rich man that has a
thousand acres of corn in the ground, as well as he that has so much
in his barn, or the money in his purse. They have rest and peace in
the seed of it, when they have it not in the fruit; they have rest
in the promise, when they have it not in possession; and he is a
rich man that has good bonds and bills for a great sum of money, if
he have not twelve-pence in his pocket. All believers have the
promise, have rest and peace granted them under God's own hand, in
many promises which faith brings them under; and we know that the
truth and faithfulness of God stands engaged to make good every line
and word of the promise to them. So that though they have not a full
and clear actual sense and feeling of rest, they are, nevertheless
by faith come into the state of rest.
    
                             Caution 3.
    
    We may not conceive that faith itself is the soul's rest, but
the means and instruments of it only. We cannot find rest in any
work or duty of our own, but we may find it in Christ, whom faith
apprehends for justification and salvation.
    
    Waving thus guarded the point against misapprehensions, by
these needful cautions, I shall next show you how our coming to
Christ by faith brings us to rest in him. And here let it be
considered what those things are that burden, grieve and disquiet
the soul before its coming to Christ; and how it is relieved and
eased in all those respects, by its coming to die Lord Jesus; and
you shall find,
    First, That one principal ground of trouble is the guilt of sin
upon the conscience, of which I spoke in the former point. The curse
of the law lies heavy upon the soul, so heavy that nothing is found
in all the world able to relieve it under that burden; as you see in
a condemned man, spread a table in prison with the greatest
dainties, and send for the rarest musicians, all will not charm his
sorrow: but if you can produce an authentic pardon, you ease him
presently. Just so it is here, faith plucks the thorn out of the
conscience, which so grieved it, unites the soul with Christ, and
then that ground of trouble is removed: for "there is no
condemnation to them that are in Christ Jesus," Rom. 8: 1. The same
moment the soul comes to Christ, it has passed from death to life,
is no more under the law, but grace. If a man's debt be paid by his
surety, he need not fear to show his face boldly abroad; he may
freely meet the sergeant at the prison-door.
    Secondly, The soul of a convinced sinner is exceedingly
burdened with the uncleanness and filthiness wherewith sin has
defiled and polluted it. Conviction discovers the universal
pollution of heart and life, so that a man loathes and abhors
himself by reason thereof: if he do not look into his own
corruptions, he cannot be safe; and if he do, he cannot bear the
sight of them; he has no quiet; nothing can give rest, but what
gives relief against this evil; and this only is done by faith
uniting the soul with Jesus Christ. For though it be true that the
pollution of sin be not presently and perfectly taken away by coming
to Christ, yet the burden thereof is exceedingly eased; {or, upon
our believing, there is an heart purifying principle planted in the
soul, which does, by degrees, cleanse that fountain of corruption,
and will at last perfectly free the soul from it. Acts 15: 9.
"Purifying their hearts by faith;" and being once in Christ, he is
concerned for the soul as a member now of his own mystical body, to
purify and cleanse it, that at last he may present it perfect to the
Father, without spot or wrinkle, or any such thing, Eph. 5: 26. The
reigning power of it is gone immediately upon believing, and the
very existence and being of it shall at last be destroyed. 0, what
rest must this give under those troubles for sin:
    Thirdly, It was an intolerable burden to the soul to be under
the continual fears, alarms, and frights of death and damnation; its
life has been a life of bondage, upon this account, ever since the
Lord opened his eyes to see his condition. Poor souls lie down with
tremblings, for fear what a night may bring forth. It is a sad life
indeed to live in continual bondage of such fears; but faith sweetly
relieves the trembling conscience, by removing the guilt which
breeds its fears. The sting of death is sin. When guilt is removed,
fears vanquish. "Smite, Lord, smite, said Luther, for my sins are
forgiven." Now, if sickness come, it is another thing than it was
wont to be. Isa. 33: 24. "The inhabitant shall not say, I am sick,
the people that dwell therein shall be forgiven their iniquities" A
man scarce feels his sickness, in comparison to what lie did, whilst
he was without Christ and hope of pardon.
    Fourthly, A convinced sinner, out of Christ, sees every thing
against him; nothing yields any comfort, yea, every thing increases
and aggravates his burden, when he looks to things past, present, or
to come. If he reflect upon things past, his soul is filled with
anguish, to remember the sins committed and the seasons neglected,
and the precious mercies that have been abused; if he look upon
things present, the case is doleful end miserable; nothing but
trouble and danger, Christless and comfortless; and if he looks
forward to things to come, that gives him a deeper cut to the heart
than any thing else; for though it be sad and miserable for the
present, yet he fears it will be much worse hereafter; all these are
but the beginning of sorrows. And thus the poor, awakened sinner
becomes a Magor Missabib; fear round about.
    But, upon his coming to Christ, all things are marvellously
altered; a quite contrary face of things appears to him; every thing
gives him hope and comfort, which way soever he looks. So speaks the
apostle, 1 Cor. 3: 22, 23. "All things are yours, (saith he) whether
life or death, or things present, or things to come; all is yours,
and ye are Christ's, and Christ is God's:" They are ours, i.e. for
our advantage, benefit, and comfort. More particularly upon our
coming to Christ,
    First, Things past are ours, they conduce to our advantage and
comfort. Now the soul can begin to read the gracious end and design
of God, in all its preservations and deliverances; whereby it has
been reserved for such a day as this. O! it melts his heart to
consider his companions in sin and vanity are cut off, and he
spared; and that for a day of such mercy, as the day of his
espousals with Christ is. Now all his past sorrows, and deep
troubles of spirit, which God has exercised him with, begin to
appear the greatest mercies that ever he received; being all
necessary and introductive to this blessed union with Christ.
    Secondly, Things present are ours, though it be not yet with us
as we would have it; Christ is not sure enough, the heart is not
pure enough; sin is too strong, and grace is too weak; many things
are yet out of order; yet can the soul bless God for this, with
tears of joy and praise, being full of admiration and holy
astonishment, that it is as it is; and that be is where he is,
though he be not yet where he would be. O! it is a blessed life to
Live as a poor recumbent, by acts of trust and affiance, though, as
yet, he have but little evidence; that he is resolved to trust all
with Christ, though he be not yet certain of the issue. O this it a
comfortable station, a sweet condition to what it was, either when
the soul wallowed in sin, in the days before conviction, or was
swallowed up in fears and troubles for sin after conviction; now it
has hope, though it want assurance; and hope is sweet to a soul
coming out of such deep distresses. Now it sees the remedy, and is
applying it; whereas before the wound seemed desperate. Now all
hesitations and debates are at an end in the soul; it is no longer
unresolved what to do; all things have been deeply considered, and
after consideration, issued into this resolve, or decree of the
will: I will go to Christ; I will venture all upon his command and
call; I will embark my eternal interests in that bottom; here I fix,
and here I resolve to live and die. O! how much better is this than
that floating life it lived before, rolling upon the billows of
inward fears and troubles, not able to drop anchor anywhere, nor
knowing where to find an harbour?
    Thirdly, Things to come are ours; and this is the best and
sweetest of all: Man is a prospecting creature, his eye is much upon
things to come, and it will not satisfy him that it is well at
present, except he have a prospect that it shall be so hereafter.
But now the soul has committed itself and all its concernments to
Christ for eternity, and this being done, it is greatly relieved
against evils to come.
    I cannot (saith the believer) think all my troubles over, and
that I shall never meet any more afflictions; It were a fond vanity
to dream of that: but I leave all these things where I have left my
soul: he that has supported me under inward, will carry me through
outward troubles also. I cannot think all my temptations to sin
past; O! I may yet meet with sore assaults from Satan, yet it is
infinitely better to be watching, praying, and striving against sin,
than it was when I was obeying it in the lusts of it. God, that has
delivered me from the love of sin, will, I trust, preserve me from
ruin by sin. I know also death is to come; I must feel the pangs and
agonies of it: but yet the aspect of death is much more pleasant
than it was. I come, Lord Jesus to thee, who art the death of death,
whose death has disowned death of its sting: for I fear not its dart
if I feel not its sting. And thus you see briefly, how by faith
believers enter into rest; how Christ gives rest, even at present,
to them that come to him, and all this but as a beginning of their
everlasting rest.
    Inference 1. Is there rest in Christ for weary souls that come
unto him? Then, certainty it is a design of Satan against the peace
and welfare of men's souls, to discourage them from coming to Christ
in the way of faith.
    He is a restless spirit himself, and would make us so too; it
is an excellent note of Minutius Felix, "Those desperate and
restless spirits (saith he) have no other peace but in bringing us
to the same misery themselves are in:" He goes about as a roaring
lion, seeking whom he may devour. It frets and grates his proud and
envious mind, to see others find rest when he can find none; an
effectual plaister applied to heal our wound, when his own must
bleed to eternity: And he obtains his end fully, if he can but keep
off souls from Christ. Look therefore, upon all those objections and
discouragements raised in your hearts against coming to Christ, as
so many artifices and cunning devices of the devil, to destroy and
ruin your souls. It is true they have a very specious and colourable
appearance; they are gilded over with pretences of the justice of
God, the heinous nature of sin, the want of due and befitting
qualifications for so holy and pure a God, the lapsing of the season
of mercy, and an hundred others of like nature: but I beseech you,
lay down this as a sure conclusion, and hold it fast; that whatever
it be that discourages and hinders you from coming to Christ, is
directly against the interest of your souls, and the hand of the
devil is certainly in it.
    Infer. 2. Hence also it follows that unbelief is the true
reason of all that disquietness and trouble, by which the minds of
poor dinners are so racked and tortured.
    If you will not believe, you cannot be established; till you
come to Christ, peace cannot cone to you: Christ and peace are
undivided. Good souls, consider this; you have tried all other ways,
you have tried duties, and no rest comes; you have tried
reformation, restitution, and a stricter course of life; yet your
wounds are still open, and fresh bleeding: these things, I grant,
are in their places both good and necessary; but, of themselves,
without Christ, utterly insufficient to give what you expect from
them: why will you not try the way of faith? Why will you not carry
your burthen to Christ? O! that you would be persuaded to it, how
soon would you find what so long you have been seeking in vain! How
long will you thus oppose your own good? How long will you keep
yourselves upon the rack of conscience? Is it easy to go under the
throbs and wounds of an accusing and condemning conscience? You know
it is not: you look for peace, but no good comes; for a time of
healing, and behold trouble. Alas! it must and will be so still,
until you are in the way of faith, which is the true and only method
to obtain rest.
    Inf. 3. What cause have we all to admire the goodness of God,
in providing for us a Christ, in whom we may find rest to our souls!
    How has the Lord filled and furnished Jesus Christ with all
that is suitable to a believer's wants! Does the guilt of sin
terrify his conscience? Lo, in him is perfect righteousness to
remove that guilt, so that it shall neither be imputed to his
person, nor reflected by his conscience, in the way of condemnation
as it was before. In him also is a fountain opened, for washing and
for cleansing the filth of sin from our souls; in him is the
fullness both of merit, and of spirit, two sweet springs of peace to
the souls of men: well might the apostle say, "Christ the wisdom of
God," 1 Cor. 1: 30. and well might the Church say, "He is altogether
lovely," Cant. 5: 16. Had not God provided Jesus Christ for us, we
had never known one hour's rest to all eternity.
    Inf. 4. How unreasonable, and wholly inexcusable, in believers,
is the sin of backsliding from Christ! Have you found rest in him,
when you could not find it in any other! Did he receive, and ease
your souls, when all other persons and things were physicians of no
value? And will you, after this, backslide from him again? O what
madness is this! "Will a man leave the snow of Lebanon, which cometh
from the rock of the field? Or shall the cold, flowing waters, that
come from another place, be forsaken?" No man that is in his wits
would leave the pure, cold, refreshing stream off a crystal
fountain, to go to a filthy puddle, lake, or an empty cistern; such
the best enjoyments of this world are, in comparison with Jesus
Christ.
    That was a melting expostulation of Christ's with the
disciples, John 6: 67, 68. when some had forsaken him, "Will ye also
go away?" And it was a very suitable return they made, Lord, whither
away from thee should we go! q. d. From thee, Lord! No, where can we
mend ourselves? be sure of it, whenever you go from Christ, you go
from rest to trouble. Had Judas rest? Had Spira rest? and do you
think you shall have rest? No, no, "The backslider in heart shall be
filled with his own ways," Prov. 14: 14. "Cursed be the man that
departeth from him, he shall be as the heath in the desert, that
sees not when good cometh, and shall inhabit the parched places of
the wilderness," Jer. 17: 5. If fear of sufferings, and worldly
temptations, ever draw you off from Christ, you may come to those
straits and terrors of conscience that will make you wish yourselves
back again with Christ in a prison, with Christ at a stake.
    Infer. 5. Let all that come to Christ learn to improve him to
the rest and peace of their own souls, in the midst of all the
troubles and outward distresses they meet with in the world.
    Surely rest may be found in Christ in any condition; he is able
to give you peace in the midst of all your troubles here. So he
tells you in John 16: 33. "These things have I spoken to you, that
in me you might have peace; in the world ye shall have tribulation."
By peace he means not a deliverance from troubles, by taking off
affliction from them, or taking them away by death from all
afflictions; but it is something they enjoy from Christ in the very
midst of troubles, and amidst all their addictions, that quiets and
gives them rest, so that troubles cannot hurt them. Certainly,
believers, you have peace in Christ, when there is little in your
own hearts; and your hearts might be filled with peace too, if you
would exercise faith upon Christ for that end. It is your own fault
if you be without rest in any condition in this world. Set
yourselves to study the fulness of Christ, and to clear your
interest in him; believe what the scriptures reveal of him, and live
as you believe, and you will quickly find the peace of God filling
your hearts and minds.







Sermon 10.


Wherein the general Exhortation is enforced by one Motive drawn from
the first Title of Christ.


Matth. 9: 12.

But when Jesus heard that, he said unto them, They that be whole
need not a physician, but they that are sick.
    
    
    
    Having opened, in the former discourses, the nature and method
of the application of Christ to sinners; it remains now that I press
it upon every soul, as it expects peace and pardon from God, to
apply and put on Jesus Christ, i.e. to get union with him by faith,
whilst he is yet held forth in the free and gracious tenders of the
gospel. To which purpose I shall now labour in this general use of
exhortation, in which my last subject engaged me; wherein divers
arguments will be further urged, both from
    1. The titles, and
    2. The privileges of Jesus Christ.
    The titles of Christ are so many motives or arguments fitted to
persuade men to come unto him. Amongst which, Christ, as the
Physician of souls, comes under our first consideration, in the text
before us.
    The occasion of these words of Christ, was the call of Matthew
the publican, who, having first opened his heart, next opened his
house to Christ, and entertains him there. This strange and
unexpected change, wrought upon Matthew, quickly brings in all the
neighbourhood, and many publicans and sinners resorted thither; at
which the stomachs of the proud Pharisees began to swell. From this
occasion they took offence at Christ, and, in this verse, Christ
takes off the offence, by such an answer as was fitted both for
their conviction and his own vindication. But when Jesus heard that,
he said unto them, "The whole have no need of a physician, but they
that are sick".
    He gives it, saith one, as a reason why he conversed so much
with Publicans and sinners, and so little among the Pharisees,
because there was more work for him; Christ came to be a physician
to sick souls; Pharisees were so well in their own conceit, that
Christ saw that they would have little to do with him, and so he
applied himself to those who were more sensible of their sickness.
    In the words, we have an account of the temper and state both
of,
    1. The secure and unconvinced sinner,
    2. The humbled and convinced sinner. And,
    3. Of the carriage of Christ, and his different respect to
both.
    First, The secure sinner is here described, both with respect
to his own apprehensions of himself, as one that is whole, and also
by his low value and esteem for Christ, he sees no need of him; "The
whole have no need of a physician."
    Secondly, The convinced and humbled sinner is here also
described, and that both by his state and condition, he is sick; and
by his valuation of Jesus Christ, he greatly needs him: they that
are sick need the physician.
    Thirdly, We have here Christ's carriage, and different respect
to both; the former he rejects and passeth by, as those with whom he
has no concernment; the latter he converseth with in order to their
cure.
    The words thus opened, are fruitful in observations. I shall
neither note nor insist upon any beside this one, which suits the
scope of my discourse, viz.
    
    Doct. That the Lord Jesus Christ is the only physician for sick
         souls.
    
    The world is a great hospital, full of sick and dying souls,
all wounded by one and the same mortal weapon, sin. Some are
senseless of their misery, feel not their pains, value not a
physician; others are full of sense, as well as danger: mourn under
the apprehension of their condition, and sadly bewail it. The
merciful God has, in his abundant compassion to the perishing world,
sent a physician from heaven, and given him his orders under the
great seal of heaven, for his office, Isa. 61: 1,2. which he opened
and read in the audience of the people, Luke 4: 18. "The Spirit of
the Lord is upon me, because he has anointed me to preach; good
tidings unto the meek, he has sent me to bind up the broken-
hearted," &c. He is the tree of life, whose leaves are for the
healing of the nations: he is Jehovah Rophe, the Lord that healeth
us; and that as he is Jehovah Tzidkenu, the Lord our righteousness.
The brazen serpent that healed the Israelites in the wilderness, was
an excellent type of our great physician, Christ, and is expressly
applied to him, John 3: 14. He rejects none that come, and heals all
whom he undertakes; but more particularly, I will,
    First, Point at those diseases which Christ heals in sick
souls, and by what means he heals them.
    Secondly, The excellency of this physician above all others:
there is none like Christ, he is the only physician for wounded
souls.
    First, We will enquire into the diseases which Christ the
physician cures, and they are reducible to two heads, viz.
    1. Sin, and,
    2. Sorrow.
    First, The diocese of sin; in which three things are found
exceeding burdensome to sick souls.
    1. The guilt,
    2. The dominion,
    3. The inherence of sin; all cured by this physician, and how.
    First, The guilt of sin; this is a mortal wound, a stab in the
very heart of a poor sinner. It is a fond and groundless distinction
that Papists make of sins mortal and venial; all sin, in its own
nature is mortal, Rom. 6: 25. "The wages of sin is death." Yet
though it be so in its own nature, Christ can and does cure it by
the sovereign balsam of his own precious blood, Eph. 1: 7. "In whom
we have redemption through his blood, the forgiveness of sins,
according to the riches of his grace." This is the deepest and
deadliest wound the soul of man feels in this world. What is guilt
but the obligation of the soul to everlasting punishment and misery?
It puts the soul under the sentence of God to eternal wrath; the
condemning sentence of the great and terrible God; than which,
nothing is found more dreadful and insupportable: put all pains, all
poverty, all afflictions, all miseries, in one scale, and God's
condemnation in the other, and you weigh but so many feathers
against a talent of lead.
    This disease, our great physicians Christ, cures, by remission,
which is the dissolving of the obligation to punishment; the loosing
of the soul that was bound over to the wrath and condemnation of
God, Col. 1: 13, 14. Heb. 6: 12. Micah 7: 17, 18, 19. This remission
being made, the soul is immediately cleared from all its obligations
to punishment. Rom. 8: 1. "There is no condemnation." All bonds are
cancelled, the guilt of all sins is hewed or removed, original and
actual, great and small. This cure is performed upon souls by the
blood of Christ; nothing is found in heaven or earth, besides his
blood that is able to heal this disease. Heb. 9: 22. "Without
shedding of blood there is no remission;" nor is it any blood that
will do it, but that only which dropped from the wounds of Christ.
Isa. 53: 5. "By his stripes we are healed. His blood only is
innocent and precious blood, 1 Pet. 1: 19. blood of infinite worth
and value; blood of God, Acts 20:18 blood prepared for this very
purpose, Heb. 10: 5. This is the blood that performs the cure, and
how great a cure is it! for this cure, the souls of believers shall
be praising and magnifying their great Physician in heaven to all
eternity, Rev. 1: 5, 6. "To him that loved us, and washed us from
our sins in his own blood, &c. to him be glory and dominion, for
ever and ever."
    Secondly, The next evil in sin cured by Christ, is the dominion
of it over the souls of poor sinners. Where sin is in dominion, the
soul is in a very sad condition; for it darkens the understanding,
depraves the conscience, stiffens the will, hardens the heart,
misplaces and disorders all the affections; and thus every faculty
is wounded by the power and dominion of sin over the soul. How
difficult is the cure of this disease! It passes the skill of angels
or men to heal it; but Christ undertakes it, and makes a perfect
cure of it at last, and this he does by his Spirit. As he cures the
guilt of sin by pouring out his blood for us; so he cures the
dominion of sin by pouring out his Spirit upon us. Justification is
the cure of guilt, sanctification the cure of the dominion of sin.
For,
    First, As the dominion of sin darkens the understanding, 1 Cor.
2: 14. so the Spirit of holiness which Christ sheds upon his people,
cures the darkness and blindness of that noble faculty, and restores
it again, Eph. 5: 8. They that were darkness are hereby light in the
Lord; the anointing of the Spirit teacheth them all things, 1 John
2: 27.
    Secondly, As the dominion of sin depraved and defiled the
conscience, Tit. 1: 15. wounded it to that degree, as to disable it
to the performance of all its offices and functions; so that it was
neither able to apply, convince, or tremble at the word: So, when
the Spirit of holiness is shed forth, O what a tender sense fills
the renewed conscience! For what small things will it check, smite,
and rebuke! How strongly will it bind to duty, and bar against sin.
    Thirdly, As the dominion of sin stiffened the will and made it
stubborn and rebellious, so Christ, by sanctifying it, brings it to
be pliant and obedient to the will of God. "Lord, (saith the sinner)
what wilt thou have me to do!" Acts 9: 6.
    Fourthly, As the power of sin hardeneth the heart so that
nothing could affect it, or make any impression upon it; when
sanctification comes upon the soul, it thaws and breaks it, as hard
as it was, and makes it to dissolve in the breast of a sinner in
godly sorrow, Ezek. 36: 26. "I will take away the heart of stone out
of your flesh, and I will give you an heart of flesh." It will now
melt ingenuously under the threatenings of the word, 2 Kings 22: 19.
or the strokes of the rod, Jer. 31: 18. or the manifestations of
grace and mercy, Luke 7: 88.
    Fifthly, As the power of sin misplaced and disordered all the
affections, so sanctification reduces them again and sets them
right, Psal. 4: 6, 7. And thus you see how sanctification becomes
the rectitude, health, and due temper of the soul, so far as it
prevails, curing the diseases that sin in its dominion filled the
soul with. True it is, this cure is not perfected in this life;
there are still some remains of the old diseases in the holiest
souls, notwithstanding sin be dethroned from its dominion over them:
but the cure is begun, and daily advances towards perfection, and at
last will be complete, as will appear in the cure of the next evil
of sin; namely,
    Thirdly, The inherence of sin in the soul: this is a sore
disease, the very core and root of all our other complaints and
ailes. This made the holy apostle bemoan himself and wail so
bitterly, Rom. 7: 17. because of "sin that dwelt in him." And the
same misery is bewailed by all sanctified persons all the world
over.
    It is a wonderful mercy to have the guilt and dominion of sin
cured, but we shall never be perfectly sound and well, till the
existence or indwelling of sin in our natures be cured too: when
once that is done, then we shall feel no more pain nor sorrows for
sin: and this our great Physician will at last perform for us and
upon us. But as the cure of guilt was by our justification, the cure
of the dominion of sin by our sanctification: so the third and last,
which perfects the whole cure, will be by our glorification: and
till then, it is not to be expected. For it is a clear case, that
sill like ivy in the old walls, will never be gotten out till the
walls be pulled down, and then it is pulled up by the roots. This
cure Christ will perform in a moment, upon our dissolution. For it
is plain,
    First, That none but perfected souls, freed from all sin, are
admitted into heaven, Eph. 5: 27. Heb. 12: 23. Rev. 21: 27.
    Secondly, It is as plain, that no such personal perfection and
freedom is found in any man on this side death and the grave, 1 John
1: 8. 1 Kings 8: 46. Phil. 3: 12. a truth sealed by the sad
experience of all the saints on earth.
    Thirdly, If such freedom and perfection must be before we can
be perfectly happy, and no such thing be done in this life, it
remains that it must be done immediately upon their dissolution, and
at the very time of their glorification. As sin came in at the time
of the union of their souls and bodies in the womb, will go out at
the time of their separation by death; then will Christ put the last
hand to this glorious work, and perfect that cure which has been so
long under his hand, in this world; and thenceforth sin shall have
no power upon them, it shall never tempt them more, it shall never
defile them more, it shall never grieve and sadden their hearts any
more: henceforth it shall never cloud their evidences, darken their
understandings, or give the least interruption to their communion
with God. When sin is gone, all these, its mischievous effects, are
gone with it. So that I may speak it to the comfort of all gracious
hearts, according to what the Lord told the Israelites, in Deut. 12:
8, 9. (to which I allude for illustration of this most comfortable
truth) "Ye shall not do after all the things that ye do here this
day, every man whatsoever is right in his own eyes, for ye are not
as yet come to the rest, and to the inheritance which the Lord your
God giveth you." Whilst you are under Christ's cure upon earth, but
not perfectly healed, your understandings mistake, your thoughts
wander, your affections are dead, and your communion with God is
daily interrupted; but it shall not be so in heaven, where the cure
is perfect: you shall not there know, love, or delight in God in the
manner you do this day; for you are not as yet come to the rest, and
to the inheritance which the Lord your God giveth you. And so much
as to the diseases of sin, and Christ's method of curing them.
    Secondly, As sin is the disease of the saints, so also is
sorrow: the best saints must pass through the valley of Bacha, to
heaven. How many tears fall from the eyes of the saints, upon the
account of outward as well as inward troubles, even after their
reconciliation with God? Through much tribulation we must enter into
the "kingdom of God;' Acts 14: 22. It would be too great a
digression in this place, to note but the more general heads under
which almost infinite particulars of troubles and afflictions are
found; it shall suffice only to show, that whatever distress or
trouble any poor soul is in, upon any account whatsoever, if that
soul belongs to Jesus Christ, he will take care of it for the
present, and deliver it at last by a complete cure.
    First, Christ cures troubles, by sanctifying them to the souls
of his that are wider affliction, and makes their very troubles
medicinal and healing to them. Trouble is a scorpion, and has a
deadly sting, but Christ is a wise physician, and extracts a
sovereign oil out of this scorpion, that heals the wound it makes.
By afflictions, our wise Physician purges our corruptions, and so
prevents or cures greater troubles by lesser; inward sorrows by
outward ones. Isa 27: 9. "By this therefore shall the iniquity of
Jacob be purged, and this is all the fruit to take away his sin."
    Secondly, Christ cures outward troubles by inward consolations,
which are made to rise in the inner man as high as the waters of
affliction do upon the outward man, 2 Cor. 1: 5. One drop of
spiritual comfort is sufficient to sweeten a whole ocean of outward
trouble. It was an high expression of an afflicted father, whom God
comforted, just upon the death of his dear and only son, with some
clearer manifestations of his love than was usual: "O (said he)
might I but have such consolations as these, I could be willing
(were it possible) to lay an only son into the grave every day I
have to live in this world." Thus all the troubles of the world are
cured by Christ. John 16: 33. "In the world ye shall have trouble,
but in me ye shall have peace.
    Thirdly, Christ cures all outward sorrows and troubles in his
people by death, which is their removal from the place of sorrows to
peace and rest for evermore. Now God wipes all tears from their
eyes, and the days of their mourning are at an end; they then put
off the garments and spirit of mourning, and enter into peace, Isa.
57: 2. They come to that place and state where tears and sighs are
things unknown to the inhabitants; one step beyond the state of this
mortality, brings us quite out of the sight and hearing of all
troubles and lamentations. These are the diseases of souls; sin, and
sorrow; and thus they are cured by Christ, the Physician.
    Secondly, Next I shall shew you that Jesus Christ is the only
Physician of souls, none like him for a sick sinner; and this will
be evident in divers respects.
    First, None so wise and judicious as Jesus Christ, to
understand and comprehend the nature, depth and danger of soul-
diseases. O how ignorant and unacquainted are men with the state and
case of afflicted souls! But "Christ has the tongue of the learned,
that he should know how to speak a word in season to him that is
weary," Isa. 50: 4. He only understands the weight of sin, and depth
of inward troubles of sin.
    Secondly, None so able to cure and heal the wounds of afflicted
souls as Christ is; he only has those medicines that can cure a sick
soul. The blood of Christ, and nothing else, in heaven or earth, is
able to cure the mortal wounds which guilt inflicts upon a trembling
conscience; let men try all other receipts and costly experience
shall convince them of their insufficiency. Conscience may be
benumbed by stupefactive medicines, prepared by the devil, for that
end; but pacified it can never be but by the blood of Christ, Heb.
16: 22.
    Thirdly, None so tender-hearted and sympathising with sick
souls as Jesus Christ; he is full of bowels and tender compassions
to afflicted souls; he is one that can have compassion, because he
has had experience, Heb. 5: 2. If I must come unto the surgeon's
hands with broken bones, give me such an one to chose whose own
bones have been broken, who has felt the anguish in himself. Christ
knows what it is by experience, having felt the anguish of inward
troubles, the weight of God's wrath, and the terrors of a forsaking
God, more than any or all the sons of men: this makes him tender
over distressed souls. Isa. 42: 3. "A bruised reed he will not
break, and smoking flax he will not quench."
    Fourthly, None cures in so wonderful a method as Christ does;
he heals us by his stripes, Isa. 53: 5. The Physician dies that the
patient may live: his wounds must bleed, that ours may be cured; he
feels the smart and pain, that we might have ease and comfort. No
physician but Christ will cure others at this rate.
    Fifthly, None so ready to relieve a sick soul as Christ; he is
within the call of a distressed soul at all times. Art thou sick for
sin, weary of sin, and made truly willing to part with sin? lift up
but thy sincere cry to the Lord Jesus for help, and he will quickly
be with thee. When the prodigal, the emblem of a convinced, humbled
sinner, said, in himself; I will return to my father, the father ran
to meet him, Luke 15: 20. He can be with thee in a moment.
    Sixthly, None so willing to receive and undertake all
distressed and afflicted souls as Jesus Christ is, he refuses none
that come to him. John 6: 37. "He that cometh unto me, I will in no
wise cast out." Whatever their sins have been, or their sorrows are
however they have wounded their own souls with the deepest gashes of
guilt; how desperate and helpless soever their case appears in their
own or others eyes, he never puts them off, or discourages them, if
they be but willing to come, Isa. 1: 18, 19.
    Seventhly, None so happy and successful as Christ; he never
fails of performing a perfect cure upon those he undertakes; never
was it known that any soul miscarried in his hands, John 3: 15, 16.
Other physicians, by mistakes, by ignorance, or carelessness, fill
church yards, and cast away the lives of men; but Christ suffers
none to perish that commit themselves to him.
    Eighthly, None so free and generous as Christ; he does all
gratis; he sells not his medicines, though they be of infinite
value; but freely gives them; Isa. 55: 1. "He that has no money, let
him come." If any be sent away, it is the rich, Luke 1: 53. not the
poor and needy: those that will not accept the remedy as a free
gift, but will needs purchase it at a price.
    Ninthly, and lastly, None rejoice in the recovery of souls more
than Christ does. O! it is unspeakably delightful to him to see the
efficacy of his blood upon our souls; Isa 53: 11. "He shall see the
travail of his soul, (i. e. the success of his death and sufferings)
and shall be satisfied." When he foresaw the success of the gospel
upon the world, it is said, Luke 10: 21. "In that hour Jesus
rejoiced in Spirit". And thus you see there is no physician like
Christ for sick souls
    The uses of this point are,
    
                    For information and direction
    
    First, From whence we are informed of many great and necessary
truths deducible from this: As,
    Inference 1. How inexpressible id the grace of God, in
providing such a physician as Christ, for the sick and dying souls
of sinners! O blessed be God that there is a balm in Gilead, and a
Physician there! that their case is not desperate, forlorn and
remediless, as that the devils and damned is. There is but one case
exempted from cure, and that, such as is not incident to any
sensible, afflicted soul, Matth. 12:31. and this only excepted, all
manner of sins and diseases are capable of a cure. Though there be
such a disease as is incurable, yet take this for thy comfort, never
any soul was sick, i.e. sensibly burdened with it, and willing to
come to Jesus Christ for healing; for under that sin the will is so
wounded, that they have no desire to Christ. O inestimable mercy!
that the sickest sinner is capable of a perfect cure! There be
thousands, and ten thousands now in heaven and earth, who said once,
Never was any case like theirs; so dangerous, so hopeless. The
greatest of sinners have been perfectly recovered by Christ, 1 Tim.
1: 15. 1 Cor. 6: 11. O mercy, never to be duly estimated!
    Infer. 2. What a powerful restraint from sin is the very method
ordained by God, for the cure of it! Isa 53: 5. "By his stripes we
are healed." The Physician must die, that the patient might live; no
other thing but the blood, the precious blood of Christ, is found in
heaven or earth able to heal us, Heb. 9: 22, 26. This blood of
Christ must be freshly applied to every new wound sin makes upon our
souls, 1 John 2: 1, 2. every new sin wounds him afresh, opens the
wounds of Christ anew. O think of this again and again, you that so
easily yield to the solicitations of Satan. Is it so easy and so
cheap to sin as you seem to make it? Does the cure of souls cost
nothing? True, it is free to us, but was it so to Christ? No, it was
not; he knows the price of it, though you do not. Has Christ healed
you by his stripes, and can you put him under fresh sufferings for
you so easily? Have you forgot also your own sick days and nights
for sin, that you are careless in resisting and preventing it? Sure
it is not easy for saints to wound Christ, and their own souls, at
one stroke. If you renew your sins, you must also renew your sorrows
and repentance, Psal. 51 title. 2 Sam. 12: 13. you must feel the
anguish and pain of a troubled spirit again, things with which the
saints are not unacquainted; of which they may say, as the church,
"Remembering my affliction, the wormwood and the gal], my soul has
them still in remembrance," Lam. 3: 19. Yea, and if you will be
remiss in your watch, and so easily incur new guilt, though a pardon
in the blood of Christ may heal your souls, yet some rod or other,
in the hand of a displeased father, shall afflict your bodies, or
smite you in your outward comforts, Psal. 89: 23.
    Inf. 3. If Christ be the only physician of sick souls, what sin
and folly is it for me, to take Christ's work out of his hands, and
attempt to be their own physician.
    Thus do those that superstitiously endeavour to heal their
souls by afflicting their bodies; not Christ's blood, but their own,
must be the plaister: and as blind Papists, so many carnal and
ignorant Protestants strive, by confession, restitution,
reformation, and stricter course of life, to heal those moulds that
sin has made upon their souls, without any respect to the blood of
Christ: but this course shall not profit them at all. It may, for a
time divert, but can never heal them: the wounds so skinned over,
will open and bleed again. God grant it be not when our souls shall
be out of the reach of the true and only remedy.
    Inf. 4. How sad is tile case of those souls, to whom Christ has
not yet been a physician? They are mortally wounded by sin, and are
like to die of their sickness, no saving, healing applications have
hitherto been made unto their souls: and this is the case of the
greatest part of mankind, yea, of them that live under the
discoveries of Christ in the gospel. Which appears by these sad
symptoms.
    First, In that their eyes have not yet been opened, to see
their sin and misery; in which illumination the cure of souls begin,
Acts 26: 18. To this day he has not given them eyes to see, Deut.
29: 4. but that terrible stroke of God which blinds and hardens
them, is too visibly upon them, mentioned in Isa. 6: 9, 10. No hope
of healing, till the sinner's eyes be opened to see his sin and
misery.
    Secondly, In that nothing will divorce and separate them from
their lusts; a sure sign they are not under Christ's cure, nor were
ever made sick of sin. O if ever Christ be a physician to thy soul,
he will make thee loathe what now thou lovest, and say to thy most
pleasant and most profitable lusts, Get ye hence, Isa. 30: 22. Till
then, there is no ground to think that Christ is a physician to you.
    Thirdly, In that they have no sensible and pressing need of
Christ, nor make any earnest enquiry after him, as most certainly
you would do, if you were in the way of healing and recovery. These,
and many other sad symptoms, do too plainly discover the disease of
sin, to be in its full strength upon your souls; and if it so
continue, how dreadful will the issue be? See Isa. 6: 9, 10.
    Inf. 5.. What cause have they to be glad, that are under the
hand and care of Christ, in order to a cure, and who do find, or
may, upon due examination, find their souls are in a very hopeful
way of recovery! Can we rejoice when the strength of a natural
disease is broken, and nature begins to recover ease and vigour
again? And shall we not much more rejoice, when our souls begin to
mend, and recover sensibly, and all comfortable signs of health and
life appear upon them? particularly, when the understanding, which
was ignorant and dark, has the light of life beginning to dawn into
it; such is that in 1 John 2: 27. When the will which was rebellious
and inflexible to the will of God, is brought to comply with that
holy will, saying, "Lord, what wilt thou have me to do?" Acts 9: 6.
When the heart, which was harder than an adamant, is now brought to
contrition for sin, and can mourn as heartily over it, as ever a
father did for a dead son, a beloved and only son; when its
aversations from God are gone, at least have no such power as once
they had; but the thoughts are now fixed much upon God, and
spiritual things begin to grow pleasant to the soul; when times of
duty come to be longed for, and the soul never better pleased than
in such seasons: when the hypocrisy of the heart is purged out, so
that we begin to do all that we do heartily, as unto the Lord, and
not unto men, Col. 3: 28. 1 Thess. 2: 4. when we begin to make
conscience of secret sins, Psal. 119: 118. and of secret duties,
Matth. 6: 5, 6. when we have an equal respect to all God's
commandments, Psal. 119: 8. and our hearts are under the holy and
awful eye of God, which does indeed over-awe our souls, Gen. 17: 1.
O what sweet signs of a recovering soul are these! Surely such are
in the skilful hand of the great Physician, who will perfect what
yet remains to be done.
    
                      Second use for direction.
    
    In the last place, this point yields matter of advice and
direction to poor souls that are under the disease of sin; and they
are of two sorts, which I will distinctly speak to: viz. First, Such
as are under their first sickness of spiritual sorrow for sin, and
know not what course to take: or, Secondly, Such as have been longer
in the hands of Christ the Physician, but are troubled to see the
cure advance so slowly upon them, and fear the issue.
    First, As to those that are in their first troubles for sin,
and know not what course to take for ease and safety; I would
address to them these following counsels.
    First, Shut your ears against the dangerous counsels of carnal
persons, or relations; for as they themselves are unacquainted with
these troubles, so also are they with all proper remedies: and it is
very usual with the devil to convex his temptations to distressed
souls, by such hands; because, by them, he can do it with least
suspicion. It was Augustine's complaint, that his own father took
little care for his soul; and many parents act, in this case, as if
they were employed by Satan.
    Secondly, Be not too eager to get out of trouble, but be
content to take God's way, and wait his time. No woman that is wise,
would desire to have her travail hastened one day before the due
time; nor will it be your interest to hasten too soon out of
trouble. It is true, times of trouble are apt to seem tedious; but a
false peace will endanger you more than a long trouble: a man may
lengthen is own troubles to the loss of his own peace, and may
shorten them to the hazard of his own soul.
    Thirdly, Open your case to wise, judicious, and experienced
Christians, and especially the ministers of Christ, whose office it
is to counsel and direct you in these difficulties; and let not your
troubles lie, like a secret, smothering fire, always in your own
breasts. I know men are more ashamed to open their sins under
convictions, than they were to commit them before conviction: but
this is your interest, and the true way to your rest and peace. If
there be with you, or near you, an interpreter, one of a thousand,
to shew you your righteousness, and remedy, as it lies in Christ;
neglect not your own souls, in a sinful concealment of your case: it
will be the joy of their hearts to be employed in such work as this.
    Fourthly, Be much with God in secret, open your hearts to him,
and pour out your complaints into his bosom. The 102 Psalm bears a
title very suitable to your case and duty; yea, you will find in
Your troubles work kindly, and God intend a cure upon your souls,
that nothing will be able to keep God and your souls asunder:
whatever your incumbrances in the world be, some time will be daily
redeemed, to be spent betwixt God and you.
    Fifthly, Plead hard with God in prayer for help and healing.
"Heal my soul, (saith David) for I have sinned against thee," Psal.
41: 4. Tell him Christ has his commission sealed for such as you
are: he was sent to "bind up the broken hearted," Isa. 61: 1. Tell
him he came into the world, "to seek and save that which was lost,"
and so are you now, in your own account and apprehensions. Lord,
what profit is there in my blood? Wilt thou pursue a dried leaf? And
why is my heart wounded with the sense of sin, and mine eyes open to
see my danger and misery; Are not these the first dawnings of mercy
upon sinners? O let it appear, that the time of mercy, even the set
time, is now come.
    Sixthly, Understand your peace to be in Christ only, and faith
to be the only way to Christ and rest; let the great enquiry of your
souls be after Christ and faith; study the nature and necessity of
these, and cry to God day and night for strength to carry you to
Christ in the way of faith.
    Secondly, As to those that have been longer under the hands of
Christ, and yet are still in troubles, and cannot obtain peace, but
their wounds bleed still, and all they hear in sermons, or do in the
way of duty, will not bring them to rest; to such I only add two or
three words for a close.
    First, Consider whether you have rightly closed with Christ
since your first awakening, and whether there be not some way of
sin, in which you still live: if so, no wonder your wounds are kept
open, and your souls are strangers to peace.
    Secondly, If you be conscious of no such flaw in the
foundation, consider how much of this trouble may arise from your
constitution and natural temper, which being melancholy, will be
doubtful and suspicious; you may find it so in other cases of less
moment, and be sure Satan will not be wanting to improve it.
    Thirdly, Acquaint yourselves more with the nature of true
justifying faith; a mistake in that has prolonged the troubles of
many; if you look for it in no other act but assurance, you may
easily overlook it as it lies, in the mean time, in your affiance or
acceptance. A true and proper conception of saving faith would go
far in the cure of many troubled souls.
    Fourthly, Be more thankful to shun sin, than to get yourselves
clear of trouble: it is sad to walk in darkness, but worse to lie
under guilt. Say, Lord, I would rather be grieved myself, than be a
grief to thy Spirit. O keep me from sin, how long soever thou keep
me under sorrow. Wait on God in the way of faith, and in a tender
spirit towards sin, and thy wounds shall be healed at last by thy
great Physician.
    
                 Thanks be to God for Jesus Christ.





Sermon 11.

Containing the Second Motive to enforce the general Exhortation,
from a second Title of Christ.


Luxe 1: 72.

To perform the mercy promised to our fathers, and remember his
holy covenant.
    
    
    This scripture is part of Zechariah's prophecy, at the rising
of that bright star, John, the harbinger and fore-runner of Christ:
They are some of the first words he spake after Gad had loosed his
tongue, which, for a time, was struck dumb for his unbelief. His
tongue is now unbound, and at liberty to proclaim to all the world,
the unspeakable riches of mercy through Jesus Christ, in a song of
praise. Wherein note,
    The mercy celebrated, viz. redemption by Christ, ver. 68.
    The description of Christ by place and property, ver. 69.
    The faithfulness of God in our redemption this way, ver. 70.
    The benefit of being so redeemed by Christ, ver. 71.
    The exact accomplishment of all the promises made to the
fathers in sending Christ, the mercy promised, into the world, ver.
72. "To perform the mercy promised to our fathers," &t. In these
words we find two parts, viz.
    1. A mercy freely promised.
    2. The promised mercy faithfully performed.
    First, You have a mercy freely promised, viz. by God the
Father, from the beginning of the world, and often repeated and
confirmed in several succeeding ages, to the fathers, in his
covenant-transactions.
    This mercy is Jesus Christ, of whom he speaks in this prophecy
the same which he stilts "An horn of salvation in the house of
David," ver. 69.
    The mercy of God in scripture, is put either for,
    1. His free favour to the creature. Or,
    2. The effects and fruits of that favour.
    It is put for the free and undeserved favour of God to the
creature, and this favour of God may respect the creature two ways,
either as undeserving, or as ill-deserving.
    It respected innocent man, as undeserving, for Adam could put
no obligation upon his benefactor. It respecteth fallen man, as ills
deserving. Innocent man could not merit favour, and fallen man did
merit wrath: the favour or mercy of God to both is every way free;
and that is the first acceptation of the word mercy: but then it is
also taken for the effects and fruits of God's favour, and they are
either,
    1. Principal and primary: or,
    2. Subordinate and secondary.
    Of secondary and subordinate mercies, there are multitudes,
both temporal, respecting the body, and spiritual, respecting the
soul; but the principal and primary mercy is but one, and that is
Christ, the first-born of mercy; the capital mercy, the
comprehensive root-mercy, from whom are all other mercies; and
therefore called by a singular emphasis in my text, The mercy; i.e.
the mercy of all mercies; without whom no drop of saving mercy can
flow to any of the sons of men; and in whom are all the tender
bowels of divine mercy yearning upon poor sinners. 'The mercy, and
the mercy Promised. The first promise of Christ was made to Adam,
Gen. 3: 15. and was frequently renewed afterwards to Abraham, to
David, and as the text speaks, unto the fathers, in their respective
generations.
    Secondly, We find here also the promised mercy faithfully
performed; "To perform the mercy promised." What mercy soever the
love of God engaged him to promise, the faithfulness of God stands
engaged for the performance thereof. Christ, the promised mercy, is
not only performed truly, but he is also performed according to the
promise in all the circumstances thereof, exactly. So he was
promised to the fathers, and just so performed to us their children:
Hence the note is,
    
    Doct. That Jesus Christ, the mercy of mercies, was graciously
         promised and faithfully performed by God to his people.
    
    Three things are here to be opened.
    First, Why Christ is stiled the mercy.
    Secondly, What kind of mercy Christ is to his people.
    Thirdly, How this mercy was performed.
    First, Christ is the mercy, emphatically so called: the
peerless, invaluable, and matchless mercy: Because he is the prime
fruit of the mercy of God to sinners. The mercies of God are
infinite; mercy gave the world and us our being; all our protection,
provision, and comforts in this world are the fruits of mercy, the
free gifts of divine favour: but Christ is the first end chief; all
other mercies, compared with him, are but fruits from that mot, and
streams from that fountain of mercy; the very bowels of divine mercy
are in Christ, as in ver. 78. according to the tender mercies, or as
the Greek, the yearning bowels of the mercy of God.
    Secondly, Christ is the mercy, because all the mercy of God to
sinners is dispensed and conveyed through Christ to them, John 1:
16. Col. 2: 3. Eph. 4: 7. Christ is the medium of all divine
communications, the channel of grace, through him are both the
decursus et recursus gratiarum; the flows of mercy from God to us,
and the returns of praise from us to God. Fond and vain therefore
are all the expectations of mercy out of Christ; no drop of saving
mercy runs beside this channel.
    Thirdly, Christ is the mercy, because all inferior mercies
derive both their nature, value, sweetness, and duration from
Christ, the fountain mercy of all other mercies.
    First, They derive their nature from Christ; for out of him,
those things which men call mercies, are rather traps and snares,
than mercies to them, Prov. 1: 32. The time will come when the rich
that are christless, will wish, O that we had been poor! And nobles,
that are now ennobled by the new birth, O that we had been among the
low rank of men! All these things that pass for valuable mercies,
like cyphers, signify much when such an important figure as Christ
stands before them, else they signify nothing to any man s comfort
or benefit.
    Secondly, They derive their value as well as nature from
Christ: For how little, I pray you, does it signify to any man to be
rich, honourable, politic, and successful in all his designs in this
world, if after all he must lie down in hell?
    Thirdly, All other mercies derive their sweetness from Christ,
and are but insipid things without him. There is a twofold sweetness
in things; one natural, another spiritual: Those that are out of
Christ can relish the first, believers only relish both. They have
the natural sweetness that is in mercy itself, and a sweetness
supernatural from Christ and the covenant, the way in which they
receive them. Hence it is, that some men taste more spiritual
sweetness in their daily bread, than others do in the Lord's supper;
and the same mercy, by this means, becomes a feast to soul and body
at once.
    Fourthly, All mercies have their duration and perpetuity from
Christ; all christless persons hold their mercies upon the greatest
contingencies and terms of uncertainty; if they be continued during
this life, that is all: there is not one drop of mercy after death.
But the mercies of the saints are continued to eternity; the end of
their mercies on earth, is the beginning of their better mercies in
heaven. There is a twofold end of mercies, one perfective, another
destructive; the death of the saints perfects and completes their
mercies; the death of the wicked destroys and cuts off their
mercies. For these reasons, Christ is called the mercy.
    Secondly, In the next place, let us enquire what kind of mercy
Christ is; and we shall find many lovely and transcendent properties
to commend him to our souls.
    First, He is free and undeserved mercy, called upon that
account, The gift of God, John 4: 10. And to shew how free this gift
was, God gave him to us when we were enemies, Rom. 5: 8. Needs must
that mercy be free, which is given, not only to the undeserving, but
to the ill deserving; the benevolence of God was the sole, impulsive
cause of this gift, John 3: 16.
    Secondly, Christ is a full mercy, replenished with all that
answers to the wishes, or wants of sinners; in him alone is found
whatever the justice of an angry God requires for satisfaction, or
the necessities of souls require for their supply. Christ is full of
mercy, both extensively, and intensively; in him are all kinds and
sorts of mercies; and in him are the highest and most perfect
degrees of mercy; "For it pleased the Father, that in him should all
fulness dwell," Col. 1: 19.
    Thirdly, Christ is the seasonable mercy, given by the Father to
us in due time, Rom. 5: 6. In the fulness of time, Gal. 4: 4. a
seasonable mercy in his exhibition to the world in general, and a
seasonable mercy in his application to the soul in particular; the
wisdom of God pitched upon the best time for his incarnation, and it
takes the very properest for its application. When a poor soul is
distressed, lost, at its wits end, and ready to perish, then comes
Christ. All God's works are done in season, but none more seasonable
than this great work of salvation by Christ.
    Fourthly, Christ is the necessary mercy, there is an absolute
necessity of Jesus Christ; hence in scripture he is called the
"bread of life," John 6: 41. he is bread to the hungry; he is the
"water of life," John 7: 37. as cold water to the thirsty soul. He
is a ransom for captives, Mat. 20: 28. a garment to the naked, Rom.
13. ult. Bread is not so necessary to the hungry, nor water to the
thirsty, nor a ransom to the captive, nor a garment to the naked, as
Christ is to the soul of a sinner: The breath of our nostrils, the
life of our souls is in Jesus Christ.
    Fifthly, Christ is a fountain-mercy, and all other mercies flow
from him: A believer may say with Christ, "All my springs are in
thee;" from his merit, and from his spirit, flow our redemption,
justification, sanctification, peace, joy in the Holy Ghost, and
blessedness in the world to come: "In that day shall there be a
fountain opened," Zech. 13: 1.
    Sixthly, Christ is a satisfying mercy; he that is full of
Christ, can feel the want of nothing. "I desire to know nothing but
Jesus Christ, and him crucified," 1 Cor. 2: 2. Christ bounds and
terminates the vast desires of the soul: He is the very sabbath of
the soul. How hungry, empty, and straitened on every side is the
soul of man in the abundance end fulness of all outward things, till
it come to Christ? the weary motions of a restless soul, like those
of a river, cannot be at rest till they pour themselves into Christ,
the ocean of blessedness.
    Seventhly, Christ is a peculiar mercy, intended for, and
applied to a remnant among men; some would extend redemption as
large as the world, but the gospel limits it to those only that
believe; and those believers are upon that account called a peculiar
people, 1 Pet. 2: 9. The offers of Christ indeed are large and
general, but the application of Christ is but to few, Isa. 53: 1.
The greater cause have they to whom Christ comes, to lie with their
mouths in the dust, astonished and overwhelmed with the sense of so
peculiar and distinguished a mercy.
    Eighthly, Jesus Christ is a table mercy, suited in every
respect to all our needs and wants, 1 Cor. 1: 20. wherein the
admirable wisdom of God is illustriously displayed; "Ye are complete
in him," (saith the apostle) Col. 2: 20. Are we enemies? He is
reconciliation: Are we sold to sin and Satan? He is redemption: Are
we condemned by the law? He is the Lord our righteousness: Has sin
polluted us? He is a fountain opened for sin, and for uncleanness:
Are we lost by departing from God? He is the way to the Father. Rest
is not so suitable to the weary, nor bread to the hungry, as Christ
is to the sensible sinner.
    Ninthly, Christ is an astonishing and wonderful mercy; his Name
is called wonderful, Isa 9: 6. and as his name is, so is he; a
wonderful Christ: His Person is a wonder, 1 Tim. 3: 16. "Great is
the mystery of godliness, God manifested in the flesh.*
    His abasement is wonderful, Phil. 2: 6. His love is a wonderful
love; his redemption full of wonders; angels desire to look into it.
He is, and will be admired by angels and saints to all eternity.
    Tenthly, Jesus Christ is an incomparable and matchless mercy;
"as the apple tree among the trees of the wood, so is my beloved
among the sons," (saith the enamoured spouse) Cant. 2: 8. Draw the
comparison how you will betwixt Christ and all other enjoyments, you
will find none in heaven nor on earth to equal him: He is more than
all externals, as the light of the sun is more than that of a
curdle: Nay, even the worst of Christ is better than the best of the
world; his reproaches are better than the world's pleasures, Heb.
11: 25. He is more than all spirituals, as the fountain is more than
the stream. He is more than justification, as the cause is more than
the effect; more than sanctification, as the person him self is more
than the image or picture. He is more than all peace, all comfort,
all joy, as the tree is more than the fruit. Nay, draw the
comparison betwixt Christ and things eternal, and you will find him
better than they; for what is in heaven without Christ, Psal. 73:
25. "Whom have I in heaven but thee?" If Christ should say to the
saints, take heaven among you, but as for me I will withdraw myself
from you; the saints would weep, even in heaven itself, and say,
Lord, heaven will be no more heaven to us, except thou be there, who
art by far the better half of heaven.
    Eleventhly, Christ is an unsearchable mercy; who can fully
express his wonderful name? Prov. 30: 4. Who can tell over his
unsearchable riches, Eph. 3: 8. Hence it is that souls never tire in
the study or love of Christ, because new wonders are eternally
rising out of him. He is a deep which no line of any created
understanding, angelical or human, can fathom.
    Twelfthly, and lastly, Christ is an everlasting mercy; "the
same yesterday, to day, and for ever," Heb. 13: 8. All other
enjoyments are perishable, time-eaten things; time, like a moth,
will fret them out; But the riches of Christ are durable riches,
Prov. 8: 18. The graces of Christ are durable graces, John 4: 14.
All the creatures are flowers, that appear and fade in their month;
but this Rose of Sharon, this Lily of the Valley never withers. Thus
you see the mercy performed with its desirable properties.
    Thirdly, The last thing to be opened is the manner of God's
performing his mercy to his people; which the Lord did,
    1. Realty and truly, as he had promised him.
    2. Exactly agreeable to the promises and predictions of him.
    First, Really and truly; as he had promised, so he made good
the promise. Acts 2: 36. "Let all the house of Israel know
assuredly, that God has made that same Jesus, whom ye crucified,
both Lord and Christ."
    The manifestation of Christ in the flesh was no phantasm or
delusion, but a most evident and palpable truth. 1 John 1: 1. "That
which we have heard, which we have seen with our eyes, which we have
looked upon, and our hands have handled." A truth so certain, that
the assertors of it appealed to the very enemies of Christ for the
certainty thereof, Acts 2: 22. Yea, not only the sacred, but profane
writers, witness to it; not only the evangelists and apostles, but
even the heathen writers of those times, both Roman and Jewish, as
Suetonius, Tacitus, Plinius the younger, and Josephus the Jewish
antiquary, do all acknowledge it.
    Secondly, As God did really and truly perform Christ the
promised mercy, so he performed this promised mercy exactly
agreeable to the promises, types, and predictions made of him to the
fathers, even the most minute circumstances thereof. This is a great
truth for our faith to be established in: let us, therefore, cast
our eyes both upon the promises and performances God, with respect
to Christ, the mercy of mercies. See how he was represented to the
fathers long before his manifestation in the flesh; and what an one
he appeared to be when he was really exhibited in the flesh.
    First; As to his person and qualifications, as it was foretold,
so it was fulfilled. His original was said to be unsearchable and
eternal, Micah 5: 2. and so he affirmed himself to be, Rev. 1: 11.
"I am Alpha and Omega, the first and the last." John 6: 31, 32.
"Before Abraham was, I am." His two natures, united into one person,
were plainly foretold, Zech. 13: 7. The man my Fellow; and such a
one God performed, Rom. 9: 5. His immaculate purity and holiness
were foretold, Dan. 9: 24. "To anoint the most Holy;" some render
it, the great Saint, the Prince of Saints; and such an one he was
indeed, when he lived in this world. John 8: 46. "Which of you
convinceth me of sin?" His Offices were foretold, the prophetical
Office predicted, Deut. 18: 15. and fulfilled in him, John 1: 18.
His priestly office foretold, Psal. 110: 4. fulfilled, Heb. 9: 14.
his kingly Office foretold, Micah 5: 2. and in him fulfilled; his
very enemies being judges, Matth; 27: 37.
    Secondly, As to his birth, the time, place, and manner thereof
were foretold to the fathers, and exactly performed to a little.
    First, The time prefixed, more generally in Jacob's prophecy,
Gen. 44: 10. When the sceptre should depart from Judah, as, indeed,
it did in Herod the Idumean: More particularly in Daniel's seventy
weeks, from the decree of Darius, Dan. 9: 24. answering exactly to
the time of his birth; so cogent and full of proof, that Porphyry,
the great enemy of Christians, had no other evasion, but that this
prophecy was devised after the event: Which yet the Jews (as bitter
enemies to Christ as himself) will by no means allow to be true.
And, lastly, the time of his birth was exactly pointed at in
Haggai's prophecy, Hag. 2: 7, 9. compared with Mal 3: 1. He must
come while the second temple stood; at that time was a general
expectation of him, John 1: 19. and at that very time he came, Luke
2: 38.
    Secondly, The place of his birth was foretold to be Bethlehem
Ephrata, Micah 5: 2. and so it was, Matth. 2: 5, 6. to be brought up
in Nazareth, Zech. 6: 12. "Behold the man whose name is the Branch."
The word is Netzer, whence is the word Nazarite. And there indeed
was our Lord brought up, Mat. 2: 23.
    Thirdly, His parent was to be a virgin, Isa. 7: 14. punctually
fulfilled, Matth. 50: 20, 21, 22, 23.
    Fourthly, His stock, or tribe, was foretold to be Judah, Gen.
49: 10. and it is evident, saith the apostle, "that our Lord sprang
out of Judah," Heb. 7: 14.
    Fifthly, His harbinger, or forerunner was foretold, Mal 4: 5,
6. fulfilled in John the Baptist, Luke 1: 16, 17.
    Sixthly, The obscurity and meanness of his birth were
predicted, Isa. 53: 2. Zech. 9: 9. to which the event answered, Luke
2: 12.
    Thirdly, His doctrine and miracles were foretold, Isa. 16: 1,
2. 35: 4, 5. the accomplishment whereof in Christ is evident in the
history of all the evangelism.
    Fourthly, His death for us was foretold by the prophets, Dan.
9: 26. "The Messiah shall be cut off, but not for himself:" Isa. 53:
5. "He was wounded for our transgressions." And so he was, John 11:
50. The very kind and manner of his death was prefigured in the
brazen serpent, his type; and answered in his death upon the cross,
John 3: 14.
    Fifthly, His burial in the tomb of a rich man was foretold,
Isa. 53: 9. and accomplished most exactly, Matth. 27: 59, 60.
    Sixthly, His resurrection from the dead was typed out in Jonah,
and fulfilled in Christ's abode three days and nights in the grave,
Matth. 12: 49.
    Seventhly, The wonderful spreading of the gospel in the world,
even to the Isles of the Gentiles, was prophesied of, Isa. 49: 6. to
the truth whereof we are not only the witnesses, but the happy
instances and examples of it. Thus the promised mercy was performed.
    Inference 1. If Christ be the mercy of mercies, the medium of
conveying all other mercies from God to men; then in vain do men
expect and hope for mercy of God out of Jesus Christ.
    I know many poor sinners comfort themselves with this, when
they come upon a bed of sickness; I am sinful, but God is merciful:
and it is very true God is merciful; plenteous in mercy; his mercy
is great above the heavens; mercy pleaseth him; and all this they
that are in Christ shall find experimentally, to their comfort and
salvation. But what is all this to thee, if thou art christless?
There is not one drop of saving mercy that comes in any other
channel than Christ to the soul of any man.
    But must I then expect no mercy out of Christ? This is a hard
case, very uncomfortable doctrine. Yes, thou mayest be a Christless,
and covenantless soul, and yet have variety of temporal mercies, as
Ishmael had, Gen. 17: 20, 21. God may give thee the fatness of the
earth, riches, honours, pleasures, a numerous and prosperous
posterity; will that content thee? Yes, yes, if I may have heaven
too: No, neither heaven, nor pardon, nor any other spiritual or
eternal mercy may be expected out of Christ. Jude, ver. 21. 0
deceive not yourselves in this point; there are two bars betwixt you
and all spiritual mercies, viz. the guilt of sin, and the filth of
sin; and nothing but your own union with Christ can remove these,
and so open the passage for spiritual mercies to your souls.
    Why, but I will repent of sin, strive to obey the commands of
God, make restitution for the wrongs I have done, cry to God for
mercy, bind my soul with vows and strong resolutions against sin for
time to come: will not all this lay a ground work for hope of mercy
to my soul? No, this will not, this cannot do.
    First, All your sorrows, tears and mournings for sin cannot
obtain mercy; could you shed as many tears for any sin that ever you
committed, as all the children of Adam have shed upon any account
whatsoever, since the creation of the world; they will not purchase
the pardon of that one sin; for the law accepts no short payment; it
requires plenary satisfaction, and will not discharge any soul
without it; nor can it acknowledge or own your souls to be such. The
repentance of a soul finds, through Christ, acceptance with God, but
out of him it is nothing.
    Secondly, All your strivings to obey the commands of God, and
live more strictly for time to come, will not obtain mercy. Matth 5:
20. "Except your righteousness shall exceed the righteousness of the
Scribes and Pharisees, ye shall in no case enter into the kingdom of
heaven."
    Thirdly, Your restitution, and reparation of wrongs you have
done, cannot obtain mercy. Judas restored, and yet was damned. Man
is repaired, but God is not. Remission is the act of God, it is he
must loose your consciences from the bond of guilt, or they can
never be loosed.
    Fourthly, All your cries to God for mercy will not prevail for
mercy, if you be out of Christ, Matth. 7: 22. Job 27: 29. A
righteous judge will not reverse the just sentence of the law,
though the prisoner at the bar fall upon his knees, and cry, Mercy.
mercy.
    Fifthly, Your vows and engagements to God for time to come
cannot obtain mercy; for they being made in your own strength, it is
impossible you should keep them; and if you could, yet it is
impossible they should obtain remission and mercy: should you never
sin more for time to come, yet how shall God be satisfied for sins
past? Justice must have satisfaction, or you can never have
remission, Rom. 3: 25, 26. and no work wrought by man can satisfy
divine justice; nor is the satisfaction of Christ made over to any
for their discharge, but to such only as are in him: therefore never
expect mercy out of Christ.
    Inf. 2. Is Christ, the mercy of mercies, greater, better, and
more necessary than all other mercies: then let no inferior mercy
satisfy you for your portion.
    God has mercies of all sorts to give, but Christ is the chief,
the prime mercy of all mercies; O be not satisfied without that
mercy. When Luther had a rich present sent him, "he protested God
should not put him off so:" and David was of the same mind, Psal.
17: 14. If the Lord should give any of you the desires of your
hearts in the good things of this life, let not that satisfy you,
whilst you are Christless. For,
    First, What is there in these earthly enjoyments, whereof the
vilest men have not a greater fulness than you? Job 21: 7, 8, 9, 10,
11. Psal. 17: 10. and 73: 3, 12.
    Secondly, What comfort can all these things give to a soul
already condemned as thou art; John 3: 18.
    Thirdly, What sweetness can be in them, whilst they are all
unsanctified things to you? enjoyments and sanctification are two
distinct things, Psal. 37: 16. Prov. 10: 22. Thousands of
unsanctified enjoyments will not yield your souls one drop of solid
spiritual comfort.
    Fourthly, What pleasure can you take in these things, of which
death must shortly strip you naked? You must die, you must die; and
whose then shall all those things be, for which you have laboured?
Be not so fond, to think of leaving a great name behind you: it is
but a poor felicity (as Chrysostom well observes) to be tormented
where thou art, and praised where thou art not: the sweeter your
portion has been on earth, the more intolerable will your condition
be in hell; yea, these earthly delights do not only increase the
torments of the damned, but also prepare (as they are instruments of
sin) the souls of men for damnation, Prov. 1: 32. "Surely the
prosperity of fools shall destroy them." Be restless, therefore,
till Christ, the mercy of mercies, be the root and fountain,
yielding and sanctifying all other mercies to you.
    Inf. 3. Is Christ, the mercy of mercies, infinitely better than
all other mercies? Then let all that be in Christ be content, and
well satisfied, whatever other inferior mercies the wisdom of God
sees fit to deny them. You have a Benjamin s portion, a plentiful
inheritance in Christ; will you yet complain? Others have houses,
splendid and magnificent upon earth; but you have "an house made
without hands, eternal in the heavens," 2 Cor. 5: 1. Others are
clothed with rich and costly apparel, your souls are clothed with
the white, pure robes of Christ's righteousness. Isa. 61: 10. "I
will greatly rejoice in the Lord, my soul shall be joyful in my God:
for he has clothed me with the garment of salvation, he has covered
me with the robe of righteousness, as a bridegroom decketh himself
with ornaments, and as a bride adorneth herself with jewels." Let
those that have full tables, heavy purses, rich lands, but no
Christ, be rather objects of your pity, than envy: it is better,
like store cattle, to be kept lean and hungry, than with the fatted
ox; to tumble in flowry meadows, thence to be lead away to the
shambles. God has not a better mercy to give than Christ, thy
portion; in him all necessary mercies are secured to thee, and thy
wants and straits sanctified to thy good. O! therefore, never open
thy mouth to complain against the bountiful God.
    Inf. 4. Is Christ the mercy, i.e. he in whom all the tender
mercies of God towards poor sinners are, then let none be
discouraged in going to Christ, by reason of the sin and
unworthiness that are in him: his very name is mercy, and as his
name is, so is he. Poor drooping sinner, encourage thyself in the
way of faith; the Christ to whom thou art going, is mercy itself to
broken hearted sinners moving towards him in the way of faith; doubt
not that mercy will repulse thee; it is against both its name and
nature so to do. Jesus Christ is so merciful to poor souls that come
to him, that he has received and pardoned the chiefest of sinners;
men that stood as remote from mercy as any in the world, 1 Tim. 1:
15. 1 Cor. 6: 11. Those that shed the blood of Christ, have yet been
washed in that blood from their sin, Acts 2: 86, 87. Mercy receives
sinners, without exception of great and heinous ones. John 7: 37.
"If any man thirst, let him come to me and drink." Gospel
invitations run, in general terms, to all sinners that are heavy
laden, Mat. 11: 28. When Mr. Bilney the martyr heard a minister
preaching at this rate, O thou old sinner, who hast been serving the
devil these fifty or sixty years; dost thou think that Christ will
receive thee now? O! said he, what a preaching of Christ is here?
Had Christ been thus preached to me in the day of my trouble for
sin, what had become of me? But, blessed be God there is a
sufficiency both of merit and mercy in Jesus Christ for all sinners,
for the vilest among sinners, whose hearts shall be made willing to
come unto him. So merciful is the Lord Jesus Christ, that he moves
first, Isa. 62: 1, 2. so merciful, that he upbraids none, Ezek. 18:
22. so merciful, that he will not despise the weakest, if sincere,
desires of souls, Isa. 13: 3. so merciful, that nothing more grieves
him than our unwillingness to come unto him for mercy, John 5: 40.
so merciful, that he waiteth to the last upon sinners to shew them
mercy, Rom. 10: 21. Mat. 23: 37. in a word, so merciful, that it is
his greatest joy when sinners come unto him, that he may show them
mercy, Luke 15: 5, 22.
    Object. But yet it cannot enter into my thoughts that I should
obtain mercy.
    Sol. First, thou measure God by yourselves, 1 Sam. 24:19. "If a
man find his enemy, will he let him go well away?" Man will not, but
the merciful God will, upon the submission of the enemies to him.
    Secondly, You are discouraged, because you have not tried. Go
to Jesus Christ, poor distressed sinners; try him, and then report
what a Christ thou findest him to be.
    Object. But I have neglected the time of mercy, and now it is
too late.
    Sol. How know you that? Have you seen the book of life, or
turned over the records of eternity? Or do you not unwarrantably
intrude into the secrets of God, which belong not to you? Besides,
if the treaty were at an end, how is it that thy heart is now
distressed for sin, and solicitous after deliverance from it?
    Object. But I have waited long, and yet see no mercy for me.
    Sol. May not mercy be coming, and you not see it? Or have you
not waited at the wrong door? If you wait for the mercy of God
through Christ, in the way of humiliation and faith, and continue
waiting, assuredly mercy shall come at last.
    Inf. 5. Has God performed the mercy promised to the Fathers,
the great mercy, the capital mercy, Jesus Christ; then let no man
distrust God for the performance of lesser mercies contained in any
other promises of the scripture. The performance of this mercy
secures the performance of all other mercies to us. For,
    First, Christ is a greater mercy than any other which yet
remains to be performed, Rom. 8: 32.
    Secondly, This mercy virtually comprehends all other mercies, 1
Cor. 3: 21, 22, 23.
    Thirdly, The promises that contain all other mercies, are
ratified and confirmed to believers in Christ, 2 Cor. 1: 20.
    Fourthly, It was much more improbable that God would bestow his
own Son upon the world, than that he should bestow any other mercy
upon it. Wait, therefore, in a comfortable expectation of the
fulfilling of all the rest of the promises in their seasons. Has he
given thee Christ? He will give thee bread to eat, raiment to put
on, support in troubles, and whatsoever else thy soul or body stands
in need of: The blessings contained in all other promises are fully
secured by the performance of this great promise; thy pardon, peace,
acceptance with God now, and enjoyment of him for ever shall be
fulfilled: The great mercy, Christ, makes way for all other mercies
to the souls of believers.
    Inf. 6. Lastly, How mad are they that part with Christ, the
best of mercies, to secure and preserve any temporal lesser mercies
to themselves! Thus Demas and Judas gave up Christ to gain a little
of the world; O soul undoing bargain! How dear do they pay for the
world, that purchase it with the loss of Christ, and their own peace
for ever!
    
       Blessed be God for Jesus Christ, the Mercy of mercies.
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
Sermon 12.
    
Containing a third Motive to enliven the general Exhortation from a
third Title of CHRIST.
    
    
                     Cant. 5. Part of Verse 16.
                    Yea, He is altogether lovely.
    
    
    At the ninth verse of this chapter, you have a query propounded
to the spouse, by the daughters of Jerusalem, "What is thy beloved
more than another beloved?" To this question the spouse returns her
answers in the following verses, wherein she asserts his excellency
in general. Ver. 10. "He is the chiefest among ten thousands;"
confirms that general assertion, by an enumeration of his particular
excellencies, to ver. 16. where she closes up her character and
encomium of her beloved, with an elegant epiphonema, in the words
that I have read: "Yea, he is altogether lovely."
    The words, you see, are an affirmative proposition, setting
forth the transcendent loveliness of the Lord Jesus Christ; and
naturally resolve themselves into three parts, viz.
    1. The subject.
    2. The predicate.
    S. The manner of predication.
    First, The subject, He, viz. the Lord Jesus Christ, after whom
she had been seeking, for whom she was sick of love; concerning whom
these daughters of Jerusalem had enquired: whom she had endeavoured
so graphically to describe in his particular excellencies. This is
the great and excellent subject of whom she here speaks.
    Secondly, The predicate, or what she affirmeth or saith of him,
viz. That he is a lovely one, Machamaddim, desires; according to the
import of the original, "which signifies earnestly to desire, covet,
or long after that which is most pleasant, grateful, delectable, and
admirable." The original word is both in the abstract, and of the
plural number, which speaks Christ to be the very essence of all
delights and pleasures, the very soul and substance of them. As all
the rivers are gathered into the ocean, which is the congregation or
meeting place of all the waters in the world: so Christ is that
ocean in which all true delights and pleasures meet.
    Thirdly, The manner of predication; He is [altogether] lovely,
Totus, totus desiderabilis; lovely in all, and in every part; as if
she had said, Look on him in what respect or particular you will;
cast your eye upon this lovely object, and view him any way; turn
him in your serious thoughts which way you will; consider his
person, his offices, his works, or any other thing belonging to him;
you will find him altogether lovely, There is nothing ungrateful in
him, there is nothing lovely without him. Hence note,
    
    Doct. That Jesuit Christ is the loveliest person souls can set
         their eyes upon, Psal. 14: 2. "Thou art fairer than the
         children of men."
    
    That is said of Jesus Christ, which cannot be said of any
creature; that he is "altogether lovely." In opening this lovely
point I shall,
    1. Weigh the importance of this phrase "altogether lovely."
    2. Shew you in what respect Christ is so.
    First, Let us weigh this excellent expression, and particularly
consider what is contained in it, and you shall find this expression
"altogether lovely."
    First, That it excludes all unloveliness and distastefulness
from Jesus Christ. So Vatablus; "there is nothing in him which is
not amiable." The excellencies of Jesus Christ are perfectly
exclusives of all their opposites; there is nothing of a contrary
nature or quality found in him to alloy or debase his excellency.
And in this respect Christ infinitely transcends the most excellent
and loveliest creatures. For whatsoever loveliness is found in them,
it is not without a distasteful tang; the fairest pictures must have
their shadows: The most orient and transplendent stones must have
their foils to set off their beauty; the best creature is but a
bitter street at best: If there be somewhat pleasing, there is also
somewhat distasting; if there be gracious and natural excellencies
in the same person to delight us, yet there is also some natural
corruption intermixed with it to distaste us: But it is not so in
our altogether lovely Christ, his excellencies are pure and unmixed;
he is a sea of sweetness without one drop of gall.
    Secondly, Altogether lovely, i.e. as there is nothing unlovely
found in him, so all that is in him is wholly lovely; as every ray
of God is precious, so every thing that is in Christ is precious:
Who can weigh Christ in a pair of balances, and tell you what his
worth is? "His price is above rubies, and all that thou canst desire
is not to be compared with him," Prov. 8: 11.
    Thirdly, Altogether lovely, i.e. He is comprehensive of all
things that are lovely: he seals up the sum of all loveliness: Quae
faciunt divisa beatum, in hoc mixta fluunt: Things that shine as
single stars with a particular glory, all meet in Christ as a
glorious constellation. Col. 1: 19. "It pleased the Father that in
him should all fulness dwell." Cast your eyes among all created
beings, survey the universe, observe strength in one, beauty in a
second, faithfulness in a third, wisdom in a fourth; but you shall
find none excelling in them all as Christ does. Bread has one
quality, water another, raiment another, physic another; but none
has all in itself as Christ has: He is bread to the hungry, water to
the thirsty, a garment to the naked, healing to the wounded; and
whatever a soul can desire is found in him, 1 Cor. 1: 30.
    Fourthly, Altogether lovely, i.e. Nothing is lovely in
opposition to him, or in separation from him. If he be altogether
lovely, then whatsoever is opposite to, or separate from him can
have no loveliness in it; take away Christ, and where is the
loveliness of any enjoyment? The best creature-comfort out of
Christ, is but a broken cistern; it cannot hold one drop of true
comfort, Psal. 73: 26. It is with the creature, the sweetest and
loveliest creature, as with a beautiful image in the glass: turn
away the face and where is the image? Riches, honours, and
comfortable relations are sweet when the face of Christ smiles upon
us through them; but without him, what empty trifles are they all?
    Fifthly, Altogether lovely, i.e. Transcending all created
excellencies in beauty and loveliness; so much it speaks. If you
compare Christ and other things, be they never so lovely, never so
excellent and desirable; Christ carries away all loveliness from
them; "He is (saith the apostle) before all things," Col. 1: 17. Not
only before all things in time, nature, and order; but before all
things in dignity, glory, and true excellency: In all things he must
have the pre-eminence. For let us but compare Christ's excellency
with the creature's in a few particulars, and how evidently will the
transcendent loveliness of Jesus Christ appear! For,
    First, All other loveliness is derivative and secondary; but
the loveliness of Christ original and primary. Angels and men, the
world and all the desirables in it, receive what excellency they
have from him; they are streams from the fountain. But as the waters
in the fountain itself are more abundant, so more pure and pleasant
than in the streams. And the farther any thing departs, and is
removed from its fountain and original, the less excellency there is
in it.
    Secondly, The loveliness and excellency of all other things, is
but relative and respective, consisting in its reference to Christ,
and subserviency to his glory; but Christ is lovely, considered
absolutely in himself: He is desirable for himself, other things are
so for him.
    Thirdly, The beauty and loveliness of all other things is
fading and perishing; but the loveliness of Christ is fresh to all
eternity: the sweetness of the best creatures is a fading flower; if
not before, yet certainly at death it must fade away. Job 4: 21.
"Does not their excellency, which is in them, go away?" Yes, yes,
whether natural excellencies of the body, or acquired endowments of
the mind, lovely features, amiable qualities, attracting
excellencies; all these like pleasant flowers are withered, faded,
and destroyed by death; "but Christ is still the same, yesterday,
today, and for ever," Heb. 13: 8.
    Fourthly, The beauty and holiness of creatures are endearing
and dangerous; a man may make an idol thereof; and dote beyond the
bounds of moderation upon them, but there is no danger of excess in
the love of Christ. The soul is then in the healthiest frame and
temper when it is most sick of love to Christ, Cant. 5: 8.
    Fifthly, The loveliness of every creature is of a cloying and
glutting nature; our estimation of it abates and sinks by our nearer
approach to it, or longer enjoyment of it: creatures, like pictures,
are fairest at a due distance, but it is not so with Christ; the
nearer the soul approacheth him, and the longer it lives in the
enjoyment of him, still the more sweet and desirable is he.
    Sixthly, and lastly, All other loveliness is unsatisfying and
straitening to the soul of man; there is not room enough in any one,
or in all the creatures for the soul of man to dilate and expatiate
itself; but it still feels itself confined and narrowed within those
strait limits: And this comes to pass from the inadequateness and
unsuitableness of the creature, to the nobler and more excellent
soul of man, which like a ship in a narrow liver has not room to
turn; and besides, is ever told anon striking ground and foundering
in those shallows. But Jesus Christ is every way adequate to the
vast desires of the soul; in him it has see-room enough; there it
may spread all its sails, no fear of touching the bottom. And thus
you see what is the importance of this phrase, Altogether lovely.
    Secondly, Next I promised to shew you in what respects Jesus
Christ is altogether lovely. And,
    First, He is altogether lovely in his person: a Deity dwelling
in flesh, John 1: 14. The wonderful union and perfection of the
divine and human nature in Christ, render him an object of
admiration and adoration to angels and men, 1 Tim. 3: 16. God never
presented to the world such a vision of glory before: And then
consider how the human nature of our Lord Jesus Christ is
replenished with all the graces of the Spirit, so as never any of
all the saints was filled; O how lovely does this render him! John
3: 34. "God giveth not the Spirit by measure unto him." This makes
him fairer than the children of men, grace being poured into his
lips, Psal. 45: 2. If a small measure of grace in the saints make
them such sweet and desirable companions, what must the riches and
fulness of the Spirit of grace filling Jesus Christ without measure,
make him in the eyes of believers? O what a glory and lustre must it
stamp upon him!
    Secondly, He is altogether lovely in his offices: for let us
but consider the suitableness, fulness, and comfortableness of them.
    First, The suitableness of the offices of Christ to the
miseries and wants of men; and we cannot but adore the infinite
wisdom of God in his investiture with them; we are, by nature, blind
and ignorant, at best but groping in the dim light of nature after
God, Acts 17: 27. Jesus Christ is a light to lighten the Gentiles,
Isa. 49: 6. When this great prophet came into the world, then did
the day-spring from on high visit us, Luke 1: 78. The state of
nature is a state of alienation from, and enmity against God; Christ
comes into the world an atoning sacrifice, making peace by the blood
of his cross, Col. 1: 20. All the world, by nature, are in bondage
and captivity to Satan, a lamentable thraldom; Christ comes with
kingly power, to rescue sinners, as a prey from the mouth of the
terrible one.
    Secondly, Let the fulness of his offices be also considered, by
reason whereof he is able "to save to the uttermost, all that come
to God by him," Heb. 7: 25. The three offices, comprising in them
all that our souls do need, become an universal relief to all our
wants; and therefore,
    Thirdly, Unspeakably comfortable must the offices of Christ be
to the souls of sinners. If light be pleasant to our eyes, how
pleasant is that light of life springing from the Sun of
righteousness! Ma1. 4: 2. If a pardon be sweet to a condemned
malefactor, how sweet must the sprinkling the blood of Jesus be to
the trembling conscience of a law condemned sinner? If a rescue from
a cruel tyrant be sweet to a poor captive, how sweet must it be to
the ears of enslaved sinners, to hear the voice of liberty and
deliverance proclaimed by Jesus Christ? Out of the several offices
of Christ, as out of so many fountains, all the promises of the new
covenant flow, as so many soul-refreshing streams of peace and joy:
all the promises of illumination, counsel and direction flow out of
the prophetical office; all the promises of reconciliation, peace,
pardon, and acceptation flow out of the priestly office, with the
sweet streams of joy, and spiritual comforts depending thereupon;
all the promises of converting, increasing, defending, directing,
and supplying grace, flow out of the kingly office of Christ;
indeed, all promises may be reduced to the three offices: so that
Jesus Christ must needs be altogether lovely in his offices.
    Thirdly, Jesus Christ is altogether lovely in his relations.
    First, He is a lovely Redeemer, Isa. 61: 1. He came to open the
prison-doors to them that are bound. Needs must this Redeemer be a
lovely one, if we consider the depth of misery from which he
redeemed us, even "from the wrath to come," 1 Thess. 1: 10. How
lovely was Titus, in the eyes of the poor enthralled Greeks, whom he
delivered from their bondage! this endeared him to them to that
degree, that when their liberty was proclaimed, they even trod one
another to death to see the herald that proclaimed It; and all the
night following, with instruments of music, danced about his tent,
crying with united voices, "a Saviour, a Saviour." Or, whether we
consider the numbers redeemed, and the means of their redemption.
Rev. 5: 9. And they sang a new song, saying, "Thou art worthy to
take the book, and to open the seals thereof: for thou wast slain,
and hast redeemed us to God by thy blood, out of every kindred and
tongue, and people, and nation." He redeemed us not with silver and
gold, but with his own precious blood, by way of price, 1 Pet. 1:
18, 19. with his out-stretched and glorious arm, by way of power,
Col. 1: 13. he redeemed us freely, Eph. 1: 7. fully, Rom. 8: 1.
seasonably, Gal. 4: 4. and out of special and peculiar love, John
17: 9. In a word, he has redeemed us for ever, never more to come
into bondage, 1 Pet. 1: 5. John 10: 28. O how lovely is Jesus Christ
in the relation of a Redeemer to God's elect!
    Secondly, He is a lovely bridegroom to all that he espouses to
himself. How does the church glory in him, in the words following my
text; "this is my Beloved, and this is my Friend, O ye daughters of
Jerusalem!" q. d. Heaven and earth cannot show such another: which
needs no fuller proof than the following particulars.
    First, That he espouses to himself, in mercy and in loving
kindness, such deformed, defiled, and altogether unworthy souls as
we are, who have no beauty, no excellency to make us desirable in
his eyes; all the springs of his love to us are in his own breast,
Deut. 7: 7. he chuseth us, not because we were, but that he might
make us lovely, Eph. 5: 27. he passed by us when we lay in our
blood, and said unto us, Live; and that was the time of love, Ezek.
16: 5.
    Secondly, He expects nothing with us, and yet bestows himself,
and all that he has, upon us. Our poverty cannot enrich him, but he
made himself poor to enrich us, 2 Cor. 8: 9. 1 Cor. 3: 22.
    Thirdly, No husband loves the wife of his bosom, as Christ
loved his people, Eph. 5: 25. He loved the church and gave himself
for it.
    Fourthly, None bears with weaknesses and provocations as Christ
does; the church is stiled "the Lamb's wife," Rev. 19: 9.
    Fifthly, No husband is so immortal and everlasting a husband as
Christ is; death separates all other relations, but the soul's union
with Christ is not dissolved in the grave; yea, the day of a
believer's death, is his marriage day, the day of his fullest
enjoyment of Christ. No husband can say to his wife, what Christ
saith to the believer, "I will never leave thee, nor forsake thee,
Heb. 13: 5.
    Sixthly, No bridegroom advanceth his bride to such honours by
marriage, as Christ does; he relates them to God as their father;
and from that day the mighty and glorious angels think it no
dishonour to be their servants, Heb. 1: 14. they are brought in
admiring the beauty and glory of the spouse of Christ, Rev. 21: 9.
    Seventhly, and lastly, No marriage was ever consummated with
such triumphal solemnity, as the marriage of Christ and believers
shall be in heaven, Psal. 14: 14, 15. "She shall be brought to the
king in raiment of needle-work, the virgins, her companions that
follow her, shall be brought unto thee; with gladness and rejoicing
shall they be brought; they shall enter into the king's palace."
Among the Jews the marriage house was called Bethillula, the house
of praise; there was joy upon all hands, but none like the joy that
will be in heaven, when believers, the spouse of Christ, shall be
brought thither: God the Father will rejoice, to behold the blessed
accomplishment and confirmation of those glorious designs of his
love. Jesus Christ, the Bridegroom, will rejoice to see the travail
of his soul, the blessed birth and issue of all his bitter pangs and
agonies, Isa. 53: 11. The Holy Spirit will rejoice to see the
completion and perfection of that sanctifying design which was
committed to his hand, 2 Cor. 5: 5. to see those souls whom he once
found as rough stones, now to shine as the bright, polished stones
of the spiritual temple. Angels will rejoice: great was the joy when
the foundation of this design was laid, in the incarnation of
Christ, Luke 2: 18. great therefore must their joy be, when the top-
stone is set up with shouting, crying, Grace, grace, The saints
themselves shall rejoice unspeakably, when they shall enter into the
King's palace, and be for ever with the Lord, 1 Thess. 4: 17. Indeed
there will be joy on all hands, except among the devils and damned,
who shall gnash their teeth with envy at the everlasting advancement
and glory of believers.
    Thus Christ is altogether lovely, in the relation of a
Bridegroom.
    Thirdly, Christ is altogether lovely, in the relation of an
Advocate. 1 John 2: 1. "If any man sin, we have an advocate with the
Father, Jesus Christ the righteous, and he is the Propitiation;" it
is he that pleads the cause of believers in heaven; appears for them
in the presence of God, to prevent all new breaches, and continues
the state of friendship and peace betwixt God and us. In this
relation Christ is altogether lovely. For,
    First, He makes our cause his own, and acts for us in heaven,
as for himself, Heb. 4: 15. He is touched with the tender sense of
our troubles and dangers, and is not only one with us, by way of
representation, but also one with us in respect of sympathy and
affection.
    Secondly, Christ our Advocate, follows our suit and business in
heaven, as his great and main design and business) therefore, in
Heb. 7: 25. he is said to "live for ever to make intercession for
us;" as if our concernments were so minded by him there, as to give
up himself wholly to that work, as if all the glory and honour which
is paid him in heaven would not satisfy him, or divert him one
moment from our business.
    Thirdly, He pleads the cause of believers by his blood; it
satisfies him not, as other advocates, to be at the expense of words
and oratory, which is a cheaper way of pleading; but he pleads for
us by the voice of his own blood, Heb. 12: 24. where we are said to
be come "to the blood of sprinkling, that speaketh better things
than that of Abel:" Every wound he received for us on earth, is a
mouth opened to plead with God on our behalf in heaven; Quot
vulnera, tot ora. And hence it is, that in Rev. 5: 6. he is
represented standing before God, as a lamb that had been slain; as
it were, exhibiting and opening in heaven those deadly wounds
received on earth, from the justice of God, on our account. Other
advocates spend their breath, Christ his blood.
    Fourthly, He pleads the cause of believers freely. Other
advocates plead for reward, and exhaust the purses, while they plead
the causes of their clients.
    Fifthly, In a word, he obtaineth for us all the mercies for
which he pleads; no cause miscarries in his hand, which he
undertakes, Rom. 8: 33, 34. O what a lovely Advocate is Christ for
believers!
    Fourthly, Christ is altogether lovely in the relation of a
friend, for in this relation he is pleased to own his people, Luke
12: 4, 5. There are certain things in which one friend manifests his
affection and friendship to another, but none like Christ. For,
    First, No friend is so open hearted to his friend as Christ is
to his people: he reveals the very counsels and secrets of his heart
to them. John 15: 15. "Henceforth I call you not servants, for the
servant knoweth not what his Lord does; but I have called you
friends; for all things that I have heard of my Father, I have made
known unto you.
    Secondly, No friend in the world is so generous and bountiful
to his friend, as Jesus Christ is to believers; John 15: 18. he
parts with his very blood for them; "Greater love (saith he) has no
man than this, that a man lay down his life for his friends." He has
exhausted the precious treasures of his invaluable blood to pay our
debts. O what a lovely friend is Jesus Christ to believers!
    Thirdly, No friend sympathises so tenderly with his friend in
affliction, as Jesus Christ does with his friends: "In all our
afflictions he is afflicted, Heb. 4: 15. He feels all our sorrows,
wants and burdens as his own. Whence it is that the sufferings of
believers are called the sufferings of Christ, Col. 1: 24.
    Fourthly, No friend in the world takes that complacency in his
friend, as Jesus Christ does in believers. Cant. 4: 9. "Thou hast
ravished my heart, (saith he to the spouse) thou hast ravished my
heart with one of thine eyes, with one chain of thy neck. The
Hebrew, here rendered "ravished", signifies to puff up, or to make
one proud: how is the Lord Jesus pleased to glory in his people! how
is he taken and delighted with those gracious ornaments which
himself bestows upon them! No friend so lovely as Christ.
    Fifthly, No friend in the world loves his friend with so
fervent and strong affection as Jesus Christ loves believers. Jacob
loved Rachel, and endured for her sake the parching heat of summer
and cold of winter; but Christ endured the storms of the wrath of
God, the heat of his indignation, for our sakes. David manifested
his love to Absalom, in wishing, "O that I had died for thee!"
Christ manifested his love to us, not in wishes that he had died,
but in death itself, in our stead, and for our sakes.
    Sixthly, No friend in the world is so constant and unchangeable
in friendship as Christ is, John 13: 1. "Having loved his own which
were in the world, he loved them unto the end." He bears with
millions of provocations and injuries, and yet will not break
friendship with his people. Peter denied him, yet he will not disown
him; but after his resurrection he saith, "Go, tell the disciples,
and tell Peter," q. d. Let him not think he has forfeited, by that
sin of his, his interest in me; though he have denied me, I will not
disown him, Mark 16: 7. O how lovely is Christ in the relation of a
friend! I might farther shew you the loveliness of Christ in his
ordinances and in his providences, in his communion with us and
communications to us, but there is no end of the account of Christ's
loveliness: I will rather chuse to press believers to their duties
towards this altogether lovely Christ, which I shall briefly
dispatch in a few words.
    Use. First, Is Jesus Christ altogether lovely, then I beseech
you set your souls upon this lovely Jesus. Methinks such an object
as has been here represented, should compel love from the coldest
breast and hardest heart. Away with those empty nothings, away with
this vain deceitful world, which deserves not the thousandth part of
the love you give it; let all stand aside and give way to Christ. O
did you but know his worth and excellency, what he is in himself,
what he has done for, and deserved from you, you would need no
arguments of mine to persuade you to love him.
    Secondly, Esteem nothing lovely but as it is enjoyed in Christ,
or improved for Christ. Affect nothing for itself, love nothing
separate from Jesus Christ. In two things we all sin in love of
creatures, viz. in the excess of our affections, loving them above
the rate and value of creatures; and in the inordinacy of our
affections, i.e. in loving them out of their proper places.
    Thirdly, Let us all be humbled for the baseness of our hearts,
that are so free of their affections to vanities and trifles, and so
hard to be persuaded to the love of Christ, who is altogether
lovely. O how many pour out streams of love and delight upon the
vain and empty creature; whilst no arguments can draw forth one drop
of love from their obdurate and unbelieving hearts to Jesus Christ!
I have read of one Joannes Mollius, who was observed to go often
alone, and weep bitterly; and being pressed by a friend to know the
cause of his troubles; O! said he, it grieves me that I cannot bring
this heart of mine to love Jesus Christ more fervently.
    Fourthly, Represent Christ, as he is, to the world, by your
carriage towards him. Is he altogether lovely; let all the world see
and know that he is so, by your delights in him and communion with
him, zeal for him, and readiness to part with any other lovely thing
upon his account; proclaim his excellencies to the world, as the
spouse here did; convince them how much your beloved is better than
any other beloved; display his glorious excellencies in your
heavenly conversations; hold him forth to others, as he is in
himself, altogether lovely. See that you "walk worthy of him unto
all well pleasing," Col. 1: 10. "Shew forth the praises of Christ,"
1 Pet. 2: 19. Let not that "worthy name be blasphemed through you,"
James 2: 7. He is glorious in himself, and will put glory upon you;
take heed ye put not shame and dishonour upon him; he has committed
his honour to you, do not betray that trust.
    First, Never be ashamed to own Christ: he is altogether lovely;
he can never be a shame to you; it will be your great sin to be
ashamed of him. Some men glory in their shame; be not you ashamed of
your glory: if you be ashamed of Christ now, he will be ashamed of
you when he shall appear in his own glory, and the glory of all his
holy angels. Be ashamed of nothing but sin; and among other sins, be
ashamed especially for this sin, that you have no more love for him
who is altogether lovely.
    Sixthly, Be willing to leave every thing that is lovely upon
earth, that you may be with the altogether lovely Lord Jesus Christ
in heaven. Lift up your voices with the spouse, Rev. 20: 20. "Come
Lord Jesus, come quickly." It is true, you must pass through the
pangs of death into his bosom and enjoyment; but sure it is worth
suffering much more than that to be with this lovely Jesus. "The
Lord direct your hearts into the love of God, and the patient
waiting for Jesus Christ," 2 Thes. 3: 5.
    Seventhly, Strive to be Christ-like, as ever you would be
lovely in the eyes of God and man. Certainly, my brethren, it is the
Spirit of Christ within you, and the beauty of Christ upon you,
which only can make you lovely persons; the more you resemble him in
holiness, the more will you discover of true excellency and
loveliness; and the more frequent and spiritual your converse and
communion with Christ is, the more of the beauty and loveliness of
Christ will be stamped upon your spirits, changing you into the same
image, from glory to glory.
    Eighthly, Let the loveliness of Christ draw all men to him. Is
loveliness in the creature so attractive? And can the transcendent
loveliness of Christ draw none? O the blindness of man! If you see
no beauty in Christ why you should desire him, it is because the god
of this world has blinded your minds.
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
Sermon 13.
    
    
    
Alluring the Hearts of Men to come to Christ, by a fourth Motive
contained in another Title of Christ.
    
                            Haggai 2: 7.
    
             -- And the desire of all nation shall come.
    
    
    The former chapter is mainly spent, in reproving the negligence
of the Jews, who, being discouraged from time to time, had delayed
the rebuilding the temple: and, in the mean time, employed their
care and cost in building and adorning their own houses: but, at
last, beings persuaded to set about the work, they met with this
discouragement, that such was the poverty of the present time, that
the second structure would no way answer the magnificence and
splendour of the first. In Solomon's days the nation was wealthy,
now drained; so that there would be no proportion betwixt the second
and the first. To this grand discouragement the prophet applies this
relief; that whatsoever should be wanting in external pomp and
glory, should be more than recompensed by the presence of Jesus
Christ in this second temple. For Christ, "the desire of all
nations," saith he, shall come into it. Which, by the way, may give
us this useful note: That the presence of Jesus Christ gives a more
real and excellent glory to the places of his worship, than any
external beauty or outward ornaments whatsoever can bestow upon
them. Our eyes, like the disciples, are apt to be dazzled with the
goodly stones of the temple, and, in the mean time, to neglect and
overlook that which gives it the greatest honour and beauty.
    But to return. In these words we have both the description of
Christ, and an index pointing at the time of his incarnation: he is
called "the desire of all nations;" and the time of his coming in
the flesh, is plainly intimated to be whilst the second temple
should be standing. Where, by the way, we find just cause to admire
at and bemoan the blindness that is happened to the Jews, who,
owning the truth of this prophecy, and not able to deny the
destruction of the second temple, many hundred years past, will not
yet be brought to acknowledge the incarnation of the true Messiah
notwithstanding.
    But to the point. The character, or description of Christ,
stiled the desire of all nations, who was to come into the world in
the time of the second temple, Mal. 3: 12. and that, after grievous
concussions and shakings of the world, which were to make way for
his coming; for so our prophet here speaks, "I will shake all
nations, and the desire of all nations shall come," to which the
apostle alludes, in Heb. 12: 26. applying this prophecy to Jesus
Christ, here called the "desire of all nations:" putting the act for
the object, desire for the thing desired: as in Ezek. 24: 16. "The
desire of thine eyes," i.e. the desirable wife of thy bosom; so
here, the "desire of all nations," i.e. Christ, the object of the
desires of God's elect, in all nations of the world: a Saviour
infinitely desirable in himself, and actually desired by all the
people of God, dispersed among all kindreds, tongues, and nations of
the world. From whence this note is,
    
    Doct. That the desires of God's elect in all kingdoms, and
         among, all people of the earth, are, and shall be drawn out
         after, and fixed upon the Lord Jesus Christ.
    
    The merciful God beholding the universal ruins of the world by
sin, has provided an universal remedy for his own elect, in every
part of the earth. Christ is not impropriated to any one kingdom or
nation in the world; but intended to be God's salvation to the ends
of the earth; and accordingly speaks the apostle, Col. 2: 11. "There
is neither Greek, nor Jew, Barbarian, Scythian, bond nor free; but
Christ is all and in all." In the explication of this point two
things must be enquired into.
    1. Why Christ is called the desire of all nations.
    2. Upon what account the people of God, in all nations, desire
him.
    First, Why he is called the desire of all nations, and what
that phrase may import; and there are divers things that are
supposed, or included in it.
    First, That God the Father has appointed him as a common remedy
for the sins and miseries of his people, in all parts and quarters
of the world. So in the covenant of redemption, betwixt the Father
and the Son, the Lord expresseth himself, Isa. 49: 6. and he said,
"It is a light thing that thou shouldest be my servant, to raise up
the tribes of Jacob, and to restore the presented of Israel: I will
also give thee for a light to the Gentiles, that thou mayest be my
salvation unto the end of the earth." Suitable thereunto is that
prophecy, Isa. 52: 15. "He shall sprinkle many nations." If God had
not appointed him for, he could not be desired by all nations.
    And, indeed, herein the grace of God does admirably shine forth
in the freeness of it, that even the most barbarous nations are not
excluded from the benefits of redemption by Christ. This is what the
apostle admires, that Christ should be preached to the Gentiles, 1
Tim. 3: 16. a people that seemed to be lost in the darkness of
idolatry; yet even for them Christ was given by the Father, "Ask of
me (saith he) and I will give thee the Heathen for thine
inheritance, and the uttermost parts of the earth for thy
possession.
    Secondly, Christ, the desire of all nations, plainly notes the
sufficiency that is in him, to supply the wants of the whole world;
as the sun in the heavens suffices all nations for light and
influence, so does the Sun of righteousness suffice for the
redemption, justification, sanctification and salvation of the
people of God all over the world; Isa 14: 22. "Look unto me, and be
ye saved, all ye ends of the earth."
    Thirdly, It implies the reality that is in godliness. It shews
you that religion is no fancy, as the atheistical world would
persuade us; and this evidently appears in the uniform effects of it
upon the hearts of all men, in all nations of the world, that are
truly religious: all their desires, like so many needles touched by
one and the same loadstone, move towards Jesus Christ, and all meet
together in one and the same blessed object, Christ. Were it
possible for the people of God to come out of all nations, kindreds
and languages in the world, into one place, and there confer and
compare the desires and workings of their hearts, though they never
saw each other's faces, nor heard of each other's names, yet, as
face answers to face in a glass, so would their desires after Christ
answer to each other. All hearts work after him in the same manner;
what one saith, all say: These are my troubles and burdens, these my
wants and miseries; the same things my desires and fears: one and
the same Spirit works in all believers throughout the world; which
could never be if religion were but a fancy, as some call it; or a
combination or confederacy, as others call it: fancies are as
various as faces; and confederacies presuppose mutual acquaintance
and conference.
    Fourthly, Christ, the desire of all nations, implies the vast
extent his kingdom has, and shall have in the world; out of every
nation under heaven some shall be brought to Christ, and to heaven
by him; and though the number of God's elect, compared with the
multitudes of the ungodly in all nations, is but a remnant, a little
flock; and, in that comparative sense, there are few that shall be
saved; yet considered absolutely, and in themselves, they are a vast
number, which no man can number, Matth. 8: 11. "Many shall come from
the east, and from the west, and shall sit down with Abraham, and
Isaac, and Jacob, in the Kingdom of heaven." In order whereunto, the
gospel, like the sun in the heavens, circuits the world. It arose in
the east, and takes its course towards the western world; rising, by
degrees, upon the remote, idolatrous nations of the earth: out of
all which a number is to be saved, even "Ethiopia shall stretch out
her hands to God," Psal. 68: 31. And this consideration should move
us to pray earnestly for the poor Heathens, who yet sit in darkness,
and the shadow of death; there is yet hope for them.
    Fifthly, It holds forth this, that when God opens the eyes of
men to see their sin and danger by it, nothing but Christ can give
them satisfaction: it is not the amenity, fertility, riches and
pleasures, the inhabitants of any kingdom of the world do enjoy,
that can satisfy the desires of their souls: when once God touches
their hearts with the sense of sin and misery, then Christ, and none
but Christ is desirable and necessary, in the eyes of such persons.
Many kingdoms of the world abound with riches and pleasures; the
providence of God has carved liberal portions of the goody things of
this life to many of them, and scarce left any thing to their
desires that the world can afford. Yet all this can give no
satisfaction without Jesus Christ, the desire of all nations, the
one thing necessary, when once they come to see the necessity and
excellency of him: then take the world who will, so they may have
Christ, the desire of their souls. Thus we see upon what grounds and
reasons Christ is stiled the desire of all nations.
    Object. But there lies one great objection against this truth,
which must be solved; viz. if Christ be the desire of all nations,
how comes it to pass, that Jesus Christ finds no entertainment in so
many nations of the world among whom Christianity is hissed at, and
Christians not tolerated to live among them? Who see no beauty in
him that they should desire him.
    Sol. First, We must remember the nations of the world have
their times and seasons of conversion; those that once embraced
Christ, have now lost him, and idols are now set up in the places
where he once was sweetly worshipped. The sun of the gospel is gone
down upon them, and now shines in another Hemisphere; and so the
nations of the world are to have their distinct days and seasons of
illumination. The gospel, like the sea, gaineth in one place what it
loseth in another; and in the times and seasons appointed by the
Father, they come successively to be enlightened in the knowledge of
Christ; and then shall the promise be fulfilled, Isa. 49: 7. "Thus
saith the Lord, the Redeemer of Israel, and his holy One, To him
whom man despiseth, to him whom the nation abhorreth, to a servant
of rulers; kings shall see and arise, princes also shall worship,
because of the Lord that is faithful.
    Secondly, Let it also be remembered, that although Christ be
rejected by the rulers and body of many nations; yet he is the
desire of all the elect of God dispersed and scattered among those
nations.
    In the next place, Secondly, we are to enquire upon what
account Christ becomes the desire of all nations, i.e. of all those
in all the nations of the world, that belong to the election of
grace. And the true ground and reason thereof is, because Christ
only has that in himself which relieves their wants, and answers to
all their need. As.
    First, They are all, by nature, under condemnation, Rom. 5: 16,
18. under the curse of the law; against which, nothing is found in
heaven or earth, able to relieve their consciences, but the blood of
sprinkling, the pure and perfect righteousness of the Lord Jesus:
and hence it is, that Christ becomes so desirable in the eyes of
poor sinners, all the world over. If any thing in nature could be
found to pacify and purge the consciences of men from guilt and
fear, Christ would never be desirable in their eyes; but finding no
other remedy but the blood of Jesus, to him, therefore, shall all
the ends of the earth look for righteousness, and for peace.
    Secondly, All nations of the world are polluted with the filth
of sin, both in nature and practice, which they shall see, and
bitterly bewail, when the light of the gospel shall shine amongst
them; and the same light, by which this shall be discovered, will
also discover the only remedy of this evil to lie in the spirit of
Christ, the only fountain opened to all nations for sanctification
and cleansing: and this will make the Lord Jesus incomparably
desirous in their eyes. O how welcome will he be that cometh unto
them, not by blood only, but by water also, John 1: 5, 6.
    Thirdly, When the light of the gospel shall shine upon the
nations, they shall then see, that by reason of the guilt and filth
of sin, they are all barred out of heaven; those doors are chained
up against them, and that none but Christ can open an entrance for
them into that kingdom of God! that "no man cometh to the Father but
by him," John 14: 6. "Neither is there any name under heaven given
among men, whereby they must be saved, but the name of Christ," Acts
4: 12. Hence the hearts of sinners shall pant after him, as a hart
panteth for the water-brooks. And thus you see upon what grounds
Christ becomes the desire of all nations. The improvement of all
followeth, in five several uses of the point; viz.
    1. For information.
    2. For examination.
    3. For consolation.
    4. For exhortation.
    5. For direction.
    
                     First use for information.
    
    First, Is Christ the desire of all nations? how vile a sin is
it then in any nation, upon whom the light of the gospel has shined,
to reject Jesus Christ? And say, as those in Job 21: 14. "Depart
from us, we desire not the knowledge of thy ways." To thrust away
his worship, government, and servants from amongst them; and in
effect to say, as it is Luke 19: 14. "We will not have this man to
reign over us." Thus did the Jews, Acts 13: 46. they put away Christ
from among them, and thereby judged themselves unworthy of eternal
life. This is at once a fearful sin, and a dreadful sign. How soon
did vengeance overtake them like the overthrow of Sodom? O. let it
be for a warning to all nations to the end of the world. He would
have gathered the children of Israel under his wings as a hen does
her brood, even when the Roman Eagle was hovering over them, but
they would not; therefore their houses were left unto them desolate,
their city and temple made an heap.
    Secondly, If Jesus Christ be the desire of all nations, how
incomparably happy then must that nation be, that enjoys Christ in
the power and purity of his gospel-ordinances! If Christ, under a
vail made Canaan a glorious land, (as it is called) Dan. 11: 41.
what a glorious place must that nation be, that beholds him with
open face in the bright sun-shine of the gospel! O England, know thy
happiness and the day of thy visitation: what others desire, thou
enjoyest: provoke not the Lord Jesus to depart from thee, by
corrupting his worship, longing after idolatry, abusing his
messengers, and oppressing his people, lest his soul depart from
thee.
    
                     Second use for examination.
    
    If Christ be the desire of all nations, examine whether he be
the desire of your souls in particular; else you shall have no
benefit by him. Are your desires after Christ true spiritual
desires? Reflect, I beseech you, upon the frames and tempers of your
heart. Can you say of your desires after Christ, as Peter did of his
love to Christ? Lord, thou knowest all things; thou knowest that I
desire thee. Try your desires as to their sincerity by the following
characters:
    First, Are they vehement and ardent? Has Christ the supreme
place in your desires? Do you esteem all things to be but dross and
dung in comparison of the excellencies of Jesus Christ your Lord?
Phil. 3: 8. Is he to you as the refuge city to the man-slayer? Heb.
6: 18, 19. As a spring of water in a dry place, as the shadow of a
great rock in a weary land? Isa. 32: 2. Such vehement desires are
true desires.
    Secondly, Are your desires after Christ universal; i.e. is
every thing in Christ desirable in your eyes? The hypocrite, like
the harlot, is for a divided Christ; they would be called by his
name, but live upon their own stock, Isa. 4: 1. If his holiness and
government, his cross and sufferings be desirable for his saints:
such universal desires are right desires.
    Thirdly, Are your desires after Christ industrious desires,
using all the means of accomplishing what you desire! thou say you
desire Christ, but what will you do to obtain your desires? If you
seek him carefully and incessantly in all the ways of duty; if you
will strive in prayer, labour to believe, cut off right hands, and
pluck out right eyes, i.e. be content to part with the most
profitable and pleasant ways of sin that you may enjoy Christ, the
desire of your souls; then are your desires right desires.
    Fourthly, Are your desires after Christ permanent desires, or
only a sudden motion or fit which goes off again without effect? If
your desires after Christ abide upon your hearts, if your longings
be after him at all times, though not in the same height and degree,
then are your desires right desires. Christ always dwells in the
desires of his people; they can feel him in their desires, when they
cannot discern him in their love or delight.
    Fifthly, Will your desires after Christ admit no satisfaction,
nor find rest any where but in the enjoyment of Christ? then are
your desires right desires. The soul that desires Christ, can never
be at rest till it come home to Christ, 2 Cor. 5: 2, 6. Phil. 1: 23.
The devil can satisfy others with the riches and pleasure of this
world, as children are quieted with rattles; but if nothing but
Christ can rest and terminate your desires, surely such restless
desires are right desires.
    Sixthly, Do your desires after Christ spring from a deep sense
of your need and want of Christ? Has conviction opened your eyes to
see your misery, to feel your burthens, and to make you sensible
that your remedy lies only in the Lord Jesus? then are your desires
right desires. Bread and water are made necessary and desirable by
hunger and thirst; by these things try the truth of your desires
after Christ.
    
                     Third use for consolation.
    
    Do you indeed, upon serious trial, find such desires after
Christ as were described above? O, bless the Lord for that day
wherein Christ, the desire of all nations, became the desire of your
souls; and for your comfort, know that you are happy and blessed
souls at present.
    First, Blessed in this, that your eyes have been opened to see
both the want and worth of Christ. Had not Christ applied his
precious eye-salve to the eyes of your mind, you could never have
desired him; you would have said with them in Isa. 53: 2, 3. "He has
no form nor comeliness, and when we shall see him, there is no
beauty that we should desire him:" Or, as they to the spouse, Cant.
5: 9. "What is thy beloved more than another beloved." O, blessed
souls, enlightened of the Lord, to see those things that are hid
from them that perish!
    Secondly, You are blessed in this, that your desires after
Christ are a sure evidence that the desire of Christ is towards you:
had he not first desired you, you could never have desired him. We
may say of desires, as it is said of love, we desire him because he
first desired us: our desires after Christ are inflamed from the
desires of Christ after you.
    Thirdly, Blessed in this, that your desires shall surely be
satisfied, Matt. 5: 6. "Blessed are they that hunger and thirst
after righteousness, for they shall be filled." Prov. 10: 24. "The
desires of the righteous shall be granted." God never raised such
desires as these in the souls of his people, to be a torment to them
for ever.
    Fourthly, Blessed in this, that God has guided your desires to
make the best choice that ever was made in the world; whilst the
desires of others are hunting after riches, pleasure, and honour in
the world; toiling themselves like children in pursuit of a painted
butter fly, which when they have caught, does but daub their
fingers: God, meanwhile, has directed your desires to Christ, the
most excellent object in heaven or earth. Any good will satisfy some
men; O, happy soul, if none but Christ can satisfy thee! Psal. 4: 6.
    Fifthly, Blessed in this, that there is a work of grace
certainly wrought upon thy soul; and these very desires after Christ
are a part thereof.
    Sixthly, Blessed in this, that these desires after Christ keep
thy soul active and working after him continually in the ways of
duty, Psal. 27: 4. "One thing have I desired, that will I seek
after." Desire will be a continual spring to diligence and industry
in the ways of duty; the desire of the end quickeneth to the use of
means, Prov. 18: 1. Others may fall asleep and cast off duty, but it
will be hard for you to do so, whose souls burn with desire after
Christ.
    Seventhly, Blessed in this, that your desires after Christ will
make death much the sweeter and easier to you, Phil. 1: 23. "I
desire to be dissolved, and to be with Christ, which is far better."
When a Christian was once asked, Whether he was willing to die? He
returned this answer, "Let him be unwilling to die, who is unwilling
to go to Christ." And much like it, was that of another, Vivere
renuo, ut Christo vivam: I refuse this life, to live with Christ.
    
                     Fourth use for exhortation.
    
    In the fourth place, let me exhort and persuade all to make
Jesus Christ the desire and choice of their souls. And here I fall
in with the main scope and design of the gospel. And O that I could
effectually press home this exhortation upon your hearts; let me
offer some moving considerations to you, and may the lard accompany
them to your hearts.
    First, Every creature naturally desires its own preservation;
do not you desire the preservation of your precious and immortal
soul! If you do, then make Christ your desire and choice, without
whom they can never be preserved, Jude, ver. 1.
    Secondly, Do not your souls earnestly desire the bodies they
live in? How tender are they over them, how careful to provide for
them? though they pay a dear rent for those tenements they live in.
And is not union with Christ infinitely more desirable than the
union of soul and body? O covet union with him! then shall your
souls be happy, when your bodies drop off from them at death, 2 Cor.
5: 1, 2. yea, soul and body shall be happy in him, and with him for
evermore.
    Thirdly, How do the men of this world desire the enjoyments of
it? They pant after the dust of the earth; they rise early, sit up
late, eat the bread of carefulness; and all this for very vanity:
Shall a worldling do more for earth, than you for heaven? Shall the
creature be so earnestly desired, and Christ neglected?
    Fourthly, What do all your desires in this world benefit you,
if you go christless? Suppose you had the desire of your hearts in
these things, how long should you have comfort in them, if you miss
Christ?
    Fifthly, Does Christ desire you, who have nothing lovely or
desirable in you? And have you no desires after Christ, the most
lovely and desirable one in both worlds? "His desires are towards
you," Prov. 8: 31. O make him the desire and choice of your souls.
    Sixthly, How absolutely necessary is Jesus Christ to your
souls? Bread and water, breath and life, are not so necessary as
Christ is; "One thing is necessary," Luke 10: 42. and that one thing
is Christ. If you miss your desires in other things, you may yet be
happy; but if you miss Christ you are undone for ever.
    Seventhly, How suitable a good is Christ to your souls!
comprising whatsoever they want, 1 Cor. 1: 30. Set your hearts where
you will, none will be found to match and suit them, as Christ does.
    Eighthly, How great are the benefits that will redound to you
by Jesus Christ! In him you shall have a rich inheritance settled
upon you: all things shall be yours, when you are Christ's, 1 Cor.
3: 22. And is not such a Christ worth desiring?
    Ninthly, All your well-grounded hopes of glory are built upon
your union with Christ, 1 Cor. 1: 21. If you miss Christ, you must
die without hope. Will not this draw your desires to him;
    Tenthly, Suppose you were at the judgement seat of God, where
you must shortly stand, and saw the terrors of the Lord in that day;
the sheep divided from the goats; the sentences of absolution and
condemnation passed, by the great and awful Judge, upon the
righteous and wicked: would not Christ be then desirable in your
eyes? As ever you expect to stand with comfort at that bar, let
Christ be the desire and choice of your souls now.
    
                      Fifth use for direction.
    
    Do these, or any other considerations, put thee upon this
enquiry; how shall I get my desires kindled and inflamed towards
Christ? Alas! my heart is cold and dead, not a serious desire
stirring in it after Christ. To such I shall offer the following
directions.
    Direct. 1. Redeem some time every day for meditation; get out
of the noise and clamour of the world, Psal. 4: 4. and seriously
bethink yourselves how the present state of your soul stands, and
how it is like to go with you for ever: here all sound conversion
begins, Psal. 69: 59.
    Direct. 2. Consider seriously of that lamentable state, in
which you came into the world; children of wrath by nature, under
the curse and condemnation of the law: so that either Your state
must be changed, or you inevitably damned, John 3: 3.
    Direct. 3. Consider the way and course you have taken since you
came into the world, proceeding from iniquity to iniquity. What
command of God have you not violated a thousand times over? What sin
is committed in the world, that you are not one way or other guilty
of before God? How many secret sins upon your score, unknown to the
most intimate friend you have in the world? Either this guilt must
be separated from your souls, or your souls from God to all
eternity.
    Direct. 4. Think upon the severe wrath of God due to every sin;
"The wages of sin is death," Rom. 6: 23. And how intolerable the
fulness of that wrath must be when a few drops sprinkled upon the
conscience in this world, are so insupportable, that has made some
to chase strangling rather than life, and yet this wrath must abide
for ever upon you, if you get not interest in Jesus Christ, John 3:
36.
    Direct. 5. Ponder well the happy state and condition they are
in who have obtained pardon and peace by Jesus Christ, Psal. 32: 12.
And seeing the grace of God is free, and you are set under the means
thereof; why may not you be as capable thereof as others?
    Direct. 6. Seriously consider the great uncertainty of your
time, and preciousness of the opportunities of salvation, never to
be recovered, when they are once past, John 9: 4. let this provoke
you to lay hold upon those golden seasons whilst they are yet with
you; that you may not bewail your folly and madness, when they are
out of your reach.
    Direct. 7. Associate yourselves with serious Christians; get
into their acquaintance, and beg their assistance; beseech them to
pray for you; and see that you rest not here, but be frequently upon
your knees, begging of the Lord a new heart, and a new state.
    In conclusion of the whole, let me beseech and bear all the
people of God, as upon my knees, to take heed, and beware, lest by
the carelessness and scandal of their lives they quench the weak
desires beginning to kindle in the hearts of others. You know what
the law of God awards for striking a woman with child, so that her
fruit go from her, Exod. 21: 22, 23. O shed not soul-blood, by
stifling the hopeful desires of any after Christ.
    
     Blessed be God for Jesus Christ. the desire of all nations.
    
    
    
    
    
    
Section 14.
    
Containing the fifth Motive to apply Christ, drawn from another
excellent Title of Christ.
    
    
    
1 Cor. 2: 8.

Which, none of the princes of this world have known, for had they
known him, they would not have crucified the Lord of glory.
    
    In this chapter the apostle discourses to the Corinthians, of
the excellency of his ministry, both to obviate the contempt which
some cast upon it for want of human ornaments, and to give the
greater authority unto it among all: and whereas the spiritual
simplicity of his ministry laid it under the contempt of some, he
removes that several ways, by showing them,
    First, That it was not suitable to the design and end of his
ministry, his aim being "to know nothing among them, save Jesus
Christ, and him crucified," ver. 1, 2.
    Secondly, Neither was it for the advantage of their souls; it
might indeed tickle their fancies, but could be no solid foundation
to their faith and comfort, ver. 4, 5.
    Thirdly, Though his discourses seemed jejune and dry to carnal
hearers, yet they had a depth and excellency in them, which
spiritual and judicious Christians saw and acknowledged, ver. 6, 7.
    Fourthly, Therefore this excellent wisdom which he preached far
transcended all the natural wisdom of this world; yea, the most
raised and improved understandings of those that were most renowned
and admired in that age for wisdom, ver. 8. "which none of the
princes of this world knew."
    In which words we have,
    1. A negative proposition.
    2. The proof of the proposition.
    First, A negative proposition: None of the princes of this
world knew that spiritual wisdom which he taught. By princes of this
world, or rather, principes seculi, the princes of that age, he
means, as Cameron well notes, the learned Rabbies, Scribes, and
Pharisees, renowned for wisdom and learning among them; and honoured
upon that account as so many princes: but he adds a diminutive term,
which darkens all their glory: They are but the princes of this
world, utterly unacquainted with the wisdom of the other world. To
which he adds,
    Secondly, A clear and full proof; "For had they known it, they
would not have crucified the Lord of glory." In which words we find
one of Christ's glorious and royal titles, The Lord of glory: upon
which title will be my present discourse. The words being fitly
rendered, and nothing of ambiguity in them, they give us this
observation,
    
    Doct. That' Christ crucified is the Lord of glory.
    
    Great and excellent is the glory of Jesus Christ, the
scriptures every where proclaim his glory: yea, we may observe a
notable climax, or gradation, in those scriptures that speak of his
glory. The prophet Isaiah, speaking of him, calls him glorious; Isa.
4: 2. "In that day shall the branch of the Lord be beautiful and
glorious." John, speaking of his glory, rises a step higher, and
ascribeth to him a "glory as of the only begotten Son of the
Father," John 1: 14. i.e. a glory meet for, and becoming the Son of
God: proper to him, and incommunicable to any other. The apostle
James rises yet higher, and does not only call him glorious, or
glorious as the only begotten of the Father, but the glory, James 2:
1. glory in the abstract; "My brethren, (saith he) have not the
faith of our Lord Jesus Christ, the glory, with respect of persons;"
For the word "Lord", which is in our translation, is a supplement;
Christ is glory itself, yea, the glory emphatically so stiled; the
glory of heaven; the glory of Sion; the glory of our souls for ever.
The author to the Hebrews goes yet higher, and calls him not simply
the glory, but "the brightness of the Father's glory," Heb. 1: 3. as
though he should say, the radiancy, sparkling, or beaming forth of
his Father's glory; the very splendour or refulgency of divine
glory. O what a glorious Lord is our Lord Jesus Christ! the bright,
sparkling diamond of heaven; who shines in glory there, above the
glory of angels and saints, as the glory of the sun excels the
lesser, twinkling stars. When he appeared to Paul, Acts 26: 13. "I
saw (saith he) a light from heaven above the brightness of the sun,
shining round about me:" Needs must the glory of Christ be
unspeakable, who reflects glory upon all that are with him, John 17:
24. and stamps glory upon all that belong to him. His works on earth
were glorious works, Luke 13: 17. the purchased liberty of his
people, a glorious liberty, Rom. 8: 21. the church his mystical
body, a glorious church, Eph. 5: 27. the gospel which reveals him is
a glorious gospel, 1 Tim. 1: 11.
    But more particularly let us consider the glory of Christ, as
it is distinguished into his either,
    1. Essential, or,
    2. Mediatorial glory.
    First, The essential glory of Christ, which he has as God from
everlasting; which is unspeakable and inconceivable glory: For
(saith the apostle, Phil. 2: 6.) "He being in the form of God,
thought it no robbery to be equal with God," i.e. he has a peerage
or equality with his Father in glory; John 10: 80. "I and my Father
are one." And again, John 16: 15. "All things that the Father has
are mine:" the same name, the same nature, the same essential
properties, the same will, and the same glory.
    Secondly, The mediatorial glory of Christ is exceeding great.
This is proper to him, as the head of the church, which he has
purchased with his own blood. Of this glory the apostle speaks,
Phil. 2: 9, 10. "Wherefore God also has exalted him, and given him a
name, which is above every name, &c. "huperupsose", exalted above
all exaltation. Now the mediatorial glory of our Lord Jesus Christ
consisteth either,
    1. In the fulness of grace inherent in him; or,
    2. In the dignity and authority put upon him.
    First, In the tallness of grace inherent in him: The humanity
of Christ is filled with grace, as the sun with light: John 1: 14.
"Full of grace and truth." Never any creature was filled by the
Spirit of grace, as the man Christ Jesus is filled; for "God gives
not the Spirit to him by measure," John 3:34. By reason of this
fulness of grace inherent in him, he is "fairer than the children of
men," Psal. 14: 2. excelling all the saints in spiritual lustre and
gracious excellencies.
    Secondly, In the dignity and authority put upon him. He is
crowned King in Sion; all power in heaven and earth is given unto
him, Matth. 28: 18. he is a law-giver to the church, James 4: 12.
all acts of worship are to be performed in his name; prayer,
preaching, censures, sacraments, all to be administered in his name.
Church officers are commissioned by him, Eph. 4: 11. The judgement
of the world in the great day will be administered by him; Matth.
25: 81. "Then shall he sit upon the throne of his glory."
    To conclude, Jesus Christ shall have glory and honour ascribed
to him for evermore, by angels and saints, upon the account of his
mediatorial work; this some divines call his passive glory, the
glory which he is said to receive from his redeemed ones. Rev. 5: 8,
9, 10. "And when he had taken the book, the four beasts, and the
four and twenty elders, fell down before the Lamb, having every one
of them harps, and golden vials full of odours, which are the
prayers of the saints; and they sung a new song, saying, Thou art
worthy to take the book, and to open the seals thereof; for thou
west slain, and hast redeemed us to God by thy blood, out of every
kindred, and tongue, and people, and nation," &c. And thus you see
that our Lord Jesus Christ is upon all accounts the Lord of glory.
The uses follow.
    Inference 1. How wonderful was the love of Christ, the Lord of
Priory, to be so abased and bumbled, as he was for us, vile and
sinful dust? It is astonishing to conceive that ever Jesus Christ
should strip himself of his robes of glory, to clothe himself with
the mean garment of our flesh: O what a stoop did he make in his
incarnation for us! If the most magnificent monarch upon earth had
been degraded into a toad; if the sun in the heavens had been turned
into a wandering atom; if the most glorious angel in heaven had been
transformed even into a fly; it had been nothing to the abasement of
the Lord of glory. This act is everywhere celebrated in scripture as
the great mystery, the astonishing wonder of the whole world, 2 Tim.
3: 16. Phil 2: 8. Rom. 8: 3. The Lord of glory looked not like
himself, when he came in the habit of a man; Isa. 53: 3. "We hid, as
it were our faces from him:" Nay, rather like a worm than a man,
Psal. 22: 6. "A reproach of men, and despised of the people." The
birds of the air and beasts of the earth were here provided of
better accommodations than the Lord of glory, Matth. 8: 20. O
stupendous abasement! O love unspeakable! "Though he was rich, yet
for our sakes he became poor, that we through his poverty might be
rich," 2 Cor. 8: 9. He put off the crown of glory to put on the
crown of thorns; Quanto pro me vilior, tanto mihi charior, said
Bernard; The lower he humbled himself for me, the dearer he shall be
to me.
    Inf. 2. How transcendently glorious is the advancement of be
believers, by their union with the Lord of glory? This also is an
admirable and astonishing mystery; it is the highest dignity of
which our nature is capable, to be hypostatically united; and the
greatest glory of which our persons are capable is to be mystically
united to this Lord of glory, to be bone of his bone, and flesh of
his flesh. O what is this! Christian, dost thou know and believe all
this, and thy heart not burn within thee in love to Christ? O! then,
what a heart hast thou? What art thou, by nature, but sinful dust, a
loathsome sinner, viler than the vilest creature, cast out to the
loathing of thy person in the day of thy nativity! O that ever the
Lord of glory should unite himself to such a lump of vileness! take
such a wretch into his very bosom! Be astonished, O heavens and
earth, at this! this is the great mystery which the angels stooped
down to look into: Such an honour as this could never have catered
into the heart of man. It would have seemed a rude blasphemy in us,
once to have thought or spoken of such a things, had not Christ made
first the motion thereof; yet how long didst thou make this Lord of
glory wait upon thy undetermined will, before he gained thy consent?
Might he not justly have spurned thee into hell, upon thy first
refusal, and never have made thee such another offer? Wilt thou not
say, Lord, what am I, and what is my father's house, that so great a
King, should stoop so far beneath himself, to such a worm as I am!
That strength should unite itself to weakness, infinite glory to
such baseness! O grace, grace, for ever to be admired!
    Inf. 3. Is Jesus Christ the Lord of glory? Then let no man
count himself dishonoured by suffering the vilest indignities for
his sake: The Lord of glory puts glory upon the very suffering you
undergo in this world for him. "Moses esteemed the reproaches of
Christ greater riches than the treasures of Egypt," Heb. 11: 26. he
cast a kingdom at his heels, to be crowned with reproaches, for the
name of Christ. The diadem of Egypt was not half so glorious as self-
denial for Christ. This Lord of' glory freely degraded himself' for
thee; wilt thou stand hesitating with him upon terms? It is
certainly your honour to be dishonoured for Christ, Acts 5: 41. to
you it is given, in behalf of Christ, not only to believe, but also
to suffer for his sake, Phil. 1: 29. The gift of suffering is there
matched with the gift of faith; it is given as an honorarium, a
badge of honour to suffer for the Lord of glory. As all have not the
honour to wear the crown of glory in heaven, so few have the honour
to wear the chain of Christ upon earth. Thanus reports of Ludovicus
Marsacus, a knight of France, that being led to suffer with other
martyrs, who were bound, and he unbound, because a person of honour;
he cried out, "Why don't you honour me with a chain too, and create
me a knight of that noble order?" My brethren, count it all joy when
ye fall into divers temptations, James 1: 2. i.e. trials by
sufferings. David thought it an honour to be vile for God, and that
is a true observation that disgrace itself is glorious when endured
for the Lord of glory.
    Inf. 4. Is Christ the Lord of glory? How glorious then shall
the saints one day be, when they shall be made like this glorious
Lord, and partake of his glory in heaven?, John 17: 22. "The glory
which thou gavest me, I have given them:" Yea, the vile bodies of
believers shall be made like to the glorious body of Christ, Phil.
3: 21. What glory then will be communicated to their souls? True,
his essential glory is incommunicable; but there is a glory which
Christ will communicate to his people. "When he comes to judge the
world, he will come to be glorified in his saints, and to be admired
in all them that believe," 2 Thes. 1: 10. Thus he seemeth to account
his social glory, which shall result from his saints, a great part
of his own glory: As we have now fellowship with him in his
sufferings, so we shall have a fellowship or communion with him in
his glory: When he shall appear, then shall we also appear with him
in glory; then the poorest believer shall be more glorious than
Solomon in all his royalty. It was a pious saying of Luther, that he
had rather be Christianus rusticus, quam Ethnicus Alexander; a
Christian clown, then a Pagan emperor. The righteous is more
excellent than his neighbour, though he live next door to a
graceless nobleman: But it does not yet appear what they shall be.
The day will come, it certainly will come, for the Lord has spoken
it, when they shall shine forth as the sun in the kingdom of their
Father.
    Inf. 5. How has the devil blindfolded, and deluded them that
are frighted off from Christ, by the fears of being dishonoured by
him? Many persons have half a mind to religion, but when they
consider the generality of its processors to be persons of the
lowest and meanest rank in the world, and that reproaches and
sufferings attend that way; they shrink back as men ashamed, and as
Salvian saith, Mali esse coguntur, ne viles habeantur; they chuse
rather to remain wicked, than to be esteemed vile: But to them that
believe, Christ is an honour; as the word which we translate
"precious" might be rendered, 1 Pet. 2: 7. Till God open men's eyes
thus, they will put evil for good, and good for evil. But O dear
bought honours, for which men stake their souls and everlasting
happiness! Paul was not of your mind: for birth he was an Hebrew of
the Hebrews; for dignity and esteem, a Pharisee; for moral
accomplishments, touching the law, blameless: Yet all this he
trampled under his feet, counting it all but dross and dung in
comparison of Jesus Christ. Moses had more honour to lay down for
Christ than you; yet it was no temptation to him to conceal or deny
the faith of Christ. Noble Galeacius would not be withheld from
Christ by the splendour and glory of Italy; but O, how does the
glory of this world dazzle and blind the eyes of many: "How can ye
believe (saith Christ) who receive honour one of another?" John 5:
44. Saints and sinners, upon this account, are wonders one to the
other. It is the wonder of the world to see Christians glory in
reproaches; they wonder that the saints run not with them into the
same excess of riot; and it is a wonder to believers, how such poor
toys and empty titles (rather than titles of honour) should keep the
world as it does from Jesus Christ, and their everlasting happiness
in him.
    Inf. 6. If Christ be the Lord of glory, how careful should all
be who profess him, that they do not dishonour Jesus Christ, whose
name is called upon by them? Christ is a glory to you, be not you a
shame and dishonour to him. How careful had Christians need to be,
to draw every line and action of their lives exactly: The more
glorious Christ is, the more circumspect and watchful ye had need to
be. How lovely would Jesus Christ appear to the world, if the lives
of Christians did adorn the doctrine of God their Saviour, in all
things! Remember, you represent the Lord of glory to the world; it
is not your honour only, but the honour of Christ which is engaged
and concerned in your actions. O let not the carelessness or scandal
of your life, make Jesus Christ ashamed to be called your Lord. When
Israel had grievously revolted from God, he bids Moses rise and get
down from thence; for (saith he) thy people, which thou hast brought
forth out of Egypt, have corrupted themselves, Deut. 9: 12. as if
the Lord were ashamed to own them for his people any longer. It was
a cutting question, James 2: 7. apt to startle the consciences of
these loose professors; "Do they not blaspheme that worthy name by
which ye are called? Your duty is to adorn the gospel by your
conversations, Titus 2: 10. The words signify to deck, trim, or
adorn the gospel, to make it trim, neat, and lovely, to the eyes of
beholders. When there is such a beautiful harmony, and lovely
proportion betwixt Christ's doctrine and your practices, as there is
in the works of creation, wherein the comeliness and elegancy of the
world much consists, (for to this the apostle's word here alludes)
then do we walk suitably to the Lord of glory.
    Inf. 7. What delight should Christians take in their daily
converse with Jesus Christ in the way of duty? Your converses in
prayer, hearing, and meditation, are with the Lord of glory: The
greatest peers in the kingdom count it more honour to be in the
presence of a king, bare-headed, or upon the knee at court, than to
have thousands standing bare to them in the country. When you are
called to the duties of communion with Christ, you are called to the
greatest honour, dignified with the noblest privilege creatures are
capable of in this world: Had you but a sense of that honour God
puts upon you by this means, you would not need so much pressing and
striving, to bring a dead and backward heart into the special
presence of Jesus Christ. When he saith, Seek ye my face, your
hearts would echo to his calls; Thy face, Lord, will we seek. But
alas! the glory of Christ is much hid and veiled by ignorance and
unbelief, from the eyes of his own people; it is but seldom the best
of saints, by the eye of faith, do see the King in his glory.
    Inf. 8. If Christ be so glorious, how should believers long to
be with him, and behold him in his glory above? Most men need
patience to die, a believer should need patience to live. Paul
thought it well worth enduring the pangs of death, to get a sight of
Jesus Christ in his glory, Phil. 1: 23. "The Lord direct your hearts
into the love of God, and into the patient waiting for Christ,"
(saith the apostle) 2 Thess. 3: 5. intimating that the saints have
great need of patience, to enable them to endure the state of
distance and separation from Christ, so long as they must endure it
in this world. The spirit and the bride say, come, and let him that
heareth say, come, and let him that is a-thirst come: even so, come
Lord Jesus, and be thou as a swift roe upon the mountains of
separation.
    
         Blessed be God for Jesus Christ, the Lord of glory.
    
    
    
    
    
    
Sermon 15.
    
    
    Opening the sixth Motive to come to Christ, contained in the
sixth and last Title of Christ.
    
    
    Luke 2: 25.
    
    -- Waiting for the [Consolation} of Israel.
    
    
    Several glorious titles of Christ have been already spoken to,
out of each of which much comfort flows to believers: It is
comfortable to a wounded soul to eye him as a Physician; comfortable
to a condemned and unworthy soul to look upon him under the notion
of mercy: The loveliness, the desirableness, and the glory of
Christ, are all so many springs of consolation. But now I am to show
you, from this scripture, that the saints have not only much
consolation from Christ, but that Christ himself is the very
consolation of believers: He is pure comfort wrapped up in flesh and
blood.
    In this context, you have an account of Simeon's prophecy
concerning Christ; and in this text, a description of the person and
quality of Simeon himself, who is described two ways.
    1. By his practice.
    2. By his principle.
    His practice was heavenly and holy; he was a just and devout
man: The principle from which his righteousness and holiness did
flow, was his faith in Christ; "he waited for the consolation of
Israel." In which words, by way of periphrasis, we have,
    1. A description of Christ, the consolation of Israel.
    2. The description of a believer, one that waited for Christ.
    First, That the consolation of Israel it a phrase descriptive
of Jesus Christ, is beyond all doubt, if you consult ver. 26. where
he, i.e. Simeon is satisfied by receiving Christ into his arms, the
consolation for which he had so long waited.
    Secondly, And that waiting for Christ is a phrase describing
the believers of those times that preceded the incarnation of Christ
is past doubt; they all waited for that blessed day: But it was
Simeon's lot to fall just upon that happy point of time, wherein.
the prophecies and promises of his incarnation were fulfilled.
Simeon and others that waited with him, were sensible that the time
of the promise was come, which could not but raise (as indeed it
did) a general expectation of him, John 9: 19. But Simeon's faith
was confirmed by a particular revelation, ver. 26. That he should
see Christ before he saw death, which could not but greatly
encourage and raise his expectation to look out for him, whose
coming would be the greatest consolation to the whole Israel of God.
The consolation, "paraklesis", The Spirit is frequently called in
scripture, "parakletes", the Comforter: But Christ in this place is
called "paraklesis", comfort, or consolation itself: The reason of
both is given in John 16: 14. "He shall take of mine and shew it
unto you:" Where Christ is said to be the matter, and the Spirit,
the applier of true comfort to the people of God. Now this
consolation is here expressed both with a singular emphasis [the
consolation] intimating that there is nothing of consolation in any
thing besides him; all other comforts compared with this, are not
worth naming. And as it is emphatically expressed, so it is also
limited and bounded within the compass of God's Israel, i.e. true
believers, stiled the Israel of Cod, whether Jews or Gentiles, Gal.
6: 16. From whence the point of doctrine is,
    
    Doct. That Jesus Christ is the only consolation of believers,
         and of none besides them.
    
    So speaks the apostle, Phil. 3: 3. "For we are the
circumcision, which worship God in the Spirit, and rejoice in Christ
Jesus, and have no confidence in the flesh." Those that worship God.
in the Spirit are sincere believers; to such sincere believers,
Christ is consolation, our rejoicing is in Christ Jesus: And they
have no consolation in any thing beside him; nothing in the world
can give them comfort without Christ, We have no confidence in the
flesh. The gospel is glad tidings of great joy; but that which makes
it to be so is Jesus Christ, whom it imparts and reveals to us, Luke
2: 10, 1l. In the opening of this comfortable point, four things
must be spoken to, for the right stating the method of our
discourse. viz.
    1. What is meant by consolation.
    2. That Christ, and he only, is consolation to believers.
    S. That believers only have consolation in Christ.
    4. How it comes to pass that any believer should be dejected,
since Christ is consolation to all believers.
    The first thing to be opened, is the nature of consolation,
which is nothing else but the cheerfulness of a man's spirit,
whereby he is upheld, and fortified against all evils felt, or
feared. Consolation is to the soul what health is to the body after
wasting sickness; or the reviving spring to the earth after a long
and hard winter. And there are three sorts of consolation, or
comfort, suitable to the disposition and temper of the mind, viz.
    Natural,
    Sinful, and
    Spiritual.
    Natural comfort is the refreshment of our natural spirits by
the good creatures of God, Acts 14: 17. "Filling their hearts with
food and gladness." Sinful comfort is the satisfaction and pleasure
men take in the fulfilling of their lusts, by the abuse of the
creatures of God, James 5: 5. "Ye have lived in pleasure upon
earth," i.e. your life has been a life of sensuality and sin.
    Spiritual comfort is the refreshment, peace, and joy, gracious
souls have in Christ, by the exercise of faith, hope, and other
graces, Rom. 5: 2. And this only deserves the name of true solid
consolation: To which four things are required.
    First, That the matter thereof be some spiritual, eminent, and
durable good; else our consolation in it will be but as the
crackling of thorns under a pot, a sudden blaze, quickly extinct
with the failing matter of it. Christ only gives the matter of
solid, durable consolation; the righteousness of Christ, the pardon
of sin, the favour of God, the hopes of glory, are the substantial
materials of a believer's consolation, Rom. 5: 2. Mat. 9: 2. Psal.
4: 6, 7. 2 Pet. 1: 8. Things are as their foundations be.
    Secondly, Interest and propriety in these comfortable things,
are requisite to our consolation by them, Luke 1: 47. "My spirit
rejoiceth in God my Saviour." It is no consolation to him that is
hungry to see a feast; to him that is poor to see a treasure; if the
one may not taste, or the other partake thereof.
    Thirdly, Knowledge, and evidence of interest, in some degree is
requisite to actual consolation, though without it a man may be in
the state of consolation; for that which appears not, is (in point
of actual comfort) as if it were not.
    Fourthly, In order hereunto, the work of the Spirit upon our
hearts is requisite, both to give, and clear our interest in Christ
and the promises: And both these ways he is the Comforter, "The
fruit of the Spirit is joy," Gal. 5: 22. And thus briefly of the
nature of consolation.
    Secondly, Next I will shew you that Christ, and he only, is
matter of consolation to believers: which will demonstratively
appear by this argument.
    First, He that brings to their souls all that is comfortable,
and removes from their souls all that is uncomfortable, must needs
be the only consolation of believers.
    But Jesus Christ brings to their souls all that is comfortable,
and removes from their souls all that is uncomfortable.
    Therefore Christ only is the consolation of believers.
    First, Jesus Christ brings whatsoever is comfortable to the
souls of believers. Is pardon comfortable to a person condemned? No
thing can be matter of greater comfort in this world. Why, this
Christ brings to all believers, Jer. 23: 6. "And this is the name
whereby he shall be called, the Lord our righteousness." This cannot
but give strong consolation; righteousness is the foundation of
peace, and joy in the Holy Ghost, Rom. 14: 17. "The work of
righteousness shall be peace; and the effect of righteousness,
quietness and assurance for ever," Isa. 32: 17. Come to a dejected
soul, labouring under the burden of guilt, and say, cheer up, I
bring you good tidings, there is such an estate befallen you, or
such a troublesome business comfortably ended for you; alas! this
will not reach the heart: If you can bring me (saith he) good news
from heaven, that my sins are forgiven, and God reconciled, how soon
should I be comforted! And therefore (as one well observes) this was
the usual receipt with which Christ cured the souls of men and
women, when he was here on earth; Son or daughter, "be of good
cheer, thy sins be forgiven thee." And, indeed, it is as easy to
separate light and warmth from the beams of the sun, as cheerfulness
and comfort from the voice of pardon.
    Are the hopes and expectations of heaven and glory comfortable!
Yes sure, nothing is comfortable if this be not, Rom. 5: 2. "We
rejoice in hope of the glory of God." Now, Christ brings to the
souls of men all the solid grounds and foundations upon which they
build their expectations of glory, Col. 1: 27. "Which is Christ, in
you, the hope of glory." Name any thing else that is solid matter of
comfort to the souls of men, and the grounds thereof will be found
in Christ, and in none but Christ; as might easily be demonstrated
by the exoneration of multitudes of particular instances, which I
cannot now insist upon.
    Secondly, Jesus Christ removes from believers whatever is
uncomfortable; therein relieving them against all the matters of
their affliction and sorrow. As namely,
    First, Is sin a burden and matter of trouble to believers?
Christ, and none but Christ, removes that burden, Rom. 7: 24, 25. "O
wretched man that I am! (saith sin-burdened Paul) who will deliver
me from the body of this death? I thank God through Jesus Christ our
Lord." The satisfaction of his blood, Eph. 5: 2. The sanctification
of his Spirit, John 1: 5, 6. His perfect deliverance of his people
from the very being of sin at last, Eph. 5: 26, 27. This relieves at
present, and removes at last the matter and ground of all their
troubles and sorrows for sin.
    Secondly, Do the temptations of Satan burden believers? O yes,
by reason of temptations, they go in trouble and heaviness of
spirit. Temptation is an enemy under the walls; temptation greatly
endangers, and therefore cannot but greatly afflict the souls of
believers; but Christ brings the only matter of relief against
temptations. The intercession of Christ is a singular relief at
present, Luke 22:32. "But I have prayed for thee that thy faith fail
not." And the promises of Christ are a full relief for the future;
"The God of peace shall shortly tread Satan under your feet," Rom.
16: 20.
    Thirdly, Is spiritual desertion, and the hiding of God's face,
matter of affliction and casting down to believers? Yes, yes, it
distresses their hearts, nothing can comfort them; "Thou hidest thy
face, and I was troubled," Psal. 30: 7. Outward afflictions do but
break the skin, this touches the quick; they like rain fall only
upon the tiles, this soaks into the house; but Christ brings to
believers substantial matter of consolation against the troubles of
desertion: He himself was deserted of God for a time, that they
might not be deserted for ever. In him also the relieving promises
are made to believers, that notwithstanding God may desert them for
a time, yet the union betwixt him and them shall never be dissolved,
Heb. 13: 4. Jer. 32: 40. Though he forsake them for a moment, in
respect of evidenced favour, yet he will return again and comfort
them, Isa 54: 7. Though Satan pull hard, yet he will never "be able
to pluck them out of his Fathers hand," John 10: 20. O, what relief
is this! What consolation is Christ to a deserted believer.
    Fourthly, Are outward afflictions matter of dejection and
trouble? Alas, who finds them not to be so? How do our hearts fail
and our spirits sink under the many smarting rods of God upon us?
But our relief and consolation under them all is in Christ Jesus;
for the rod that afflicts us is in the hand of Christ that loveth
us, Rev. 3: 29. "Whom I love, I rebuke and chasten." His design in
affliction is our profit, Heb. 12: 10. That design of his for our
good shall certainly be accomplished, Rom. 8: 28. And after that no
more afflictions for ever. Rev. 21: 3, 4. "God shall wipe away all
tears from their eyes". So that upon the whole, two things are most
evident.
    First, Nothing can comfort the soul without Christ! he is the
soul that animates all comforts; they would be dead things without
him. Temporal enjoyments, riches, honours, health, relations yield
not a drop of true comfort without Christ. Spiritual enjoyments,
ministers, ordinances, promises, are fountains sealed and springs
shut up; till Christ open them, a man may go comfortless in the
midst of them all.
    Secondly, No troubles, sorrows, or deletions can deject or sink
the soul that Christ comforteth, 2 Cor. 6: 20. "As sorrowful, yet
always rejoining." A believer may walk with a heart full of comfort
amidst all the troubles of this world: Christ makes the darkness and
troubles to be light round about his people. So that the conclusion
stands firm, and never to be shaken, that Christ, and Christ only,
is the consolation of believers; which was the thing to be proved.
    In the third place, I am to shew you that believers, and none
but believers, can have consolation in Christ; which will
convincingly appear from the consideration of those things which we
laid down before as the requisites to all true spiritual
consolation. For,
    First, No unbeliever has the materials, out of which spiritual
comfort is made, which (as I there told you) must be some solid,
spiritual, and eternal good, as Christ and the covenant are: what do
unregenerate men rejoice in but trifles and mere vanities, in a
thing of nought? Amos 6: 13. See how their mirth is described in Job
21: 12. "They take their timbrel and harp, and rejoice at the sound
of the organ." He does not say, they take the Bible, turn to the
promises, and rejoice in Christ and the covenant; it is not the
melody of a good conscience, the joy of the Holy Ghost; no, no, they
have no acquaintance with such music as that; but the rejoicing of
believers is in those things, 2 Cor. 1: 12. and this is well built
consolation, which reaches the heart.
    Secondly, I told you that propriety and interest in Christ and
the promises are required to all spiritual consolation: but no
unbeliever has any title or interest in Christ and the promises, and
so they can signify nothing to him in point of comfort. It is not
another man's money, but my own, that must feed, clothe and comfort
me; nor is it another man's Christ, but my own Christ, that must
justify, save, and comfort my soul.
    Thirdly, You were told, that evidence of a man's peace and
reconciliation with God, is necessary to his actual consolation,
which no unbeliever can possibly have; he has neither grace within
him to make him a qualified subject of any special promise, nor any
witness or seal of the Spirit, to confirm and clear his propriety in
Christ; for he never seals, but where he first sanctifies. So that
it is beyond all contradiction, that believers, and none but
believers are partakers of the consolations that are in Christ
Jesus.
    Fourthly and lastly, There is one inquiry remains to be
satisfied; namely, seeing Jesus Christ is consolation to believers,
how it comes to pass, that so many believers in the world should
walk so dejectedly as they do, without any spiritual consolation?
    First, This need not be wondered at, if we consider that the
consolations of Christ are of two sorts, seminal and in preparation,
or actual in present possession. Every believer in the world has the
root and seed of comfort planted and sown for him, Psal. 97: 11.
"Light is sown for the righteous, and gladness for the upright in
heart." They have Christ and the promises, which are the seeds of
consolation, and will bring forth joy at last, though at present
they have no actual consolation; the seed of all joy is sown, and in
due time they shall reap the full lope fruit thereof.
    Secondly, It must be remembered, that interest and evidence are
distinct blessings, every believer has interest in Christ: but every
believer has not the evidence thereof, Isa. 1. 10. "Who is among
you, that feareth the Lord, and obeyeth the voice of his servant;
that walketh in darkness, and has no light?" Every child of God is
not of sufficient age to know his Father, or take comfort in that
blessed inheritance whereunto he is begotten again, 1 Pet. 1: 3, 4.
    Thirdly, Every believer does not walk with like strictness, and
exact holiness: all do not exercise faith in a like degree. Among
Christians some are strong in grace, rich in faith, strict in
obedience, tender of sin to an eminent degree; these usually are
owners of much consolation: but others are weak in grace, poor in
faith, comparatively careless of their hearts and ways, frequently
grieving the good Spirit of God, and wounding their own consciences
(the vessel into which spiritual consolation is poured;) and these
are usually denied the joy and comfort which others abound withal.
    Fourthly, The consolations of Christ are arbitrarily dispensed
by the Spirit, who is the Comforter, and giveth to every man in such
proportions, and at such seasons, as pleaseth him: whence it comes
to pass, that he that is rich in comfort to-day, may be poor
tomorrow; and, contrarily, the heart that is quite full of sorrow
one hour, is filled with peace and joy in believing in the next.
Things that are necessary to the rein of a Christian, are fixed and
stable; but things belonging only to the well-being of a Christian,
come and go, according to the good pleasure and appointment of the
Spirit. The use of all follows.
    Inf. 1. Hence it follows, That the state of unbelievers is the
most sad and uncomfortable state in the world, having no interest in
Christ, the consolation of Israel. It is true, they abound in
creature comforts; they live in pleasure upon earth; joy displays
its colours in their faces; but for all this, there is not the least
drop of true consolation in any of their hearts; they have some
comfort in the creature, but none in Christ: that little they gather
from the creature now, is all their portion of joy, Luke 6: 24. "Ye
have received your consolation:" as this is all they have, so they
shall enjoy it but a little while, Job 21: 13, 17. And while they do
enjoy it, it is mixed with many gripes of conscience, Job 14: 13.
"Even in laughter the heart is sorrowful, and the end of that mirth
is heaviness." Whatever consolation any unbeliever speaks of besides
this, is but by rote; for when the day of his distress cometh, and
the terrors of conscience shall awake him out of his pleasant
dreams, all his sensual joys will vanish from him, and the doors of
true consolation will be shut against him. Let him go to Jesus
Christ, knock at that door, and say, Lord Jesus, thy name is
consolation: my heart is really to burst within me; hast thou no
consolation for me? O Lord, for one drop of spiritual comfort now;
but alas there is none, no not in Christ himself, for any
unbeliever. It is children's bread, the saints privilege; comfort
and grace are undivided. Let him return into himself, search his own
conscience for comfort, and say, O conscience! thou art more than a
thousand witnesses, and thousands have been comforted by thee; where
thou speakest comfort, none can speak trouble; hast thou no
consolation for me in my deepest distress? Alas, no; if God condemn
thee, wherewithal shall I comfort thee? I can speak neither more nor
less than the scriptures put into my mouth, and I find not one word
in all the book of God warranting me to be thy comforter. Believe it
is an undoubted truth (though the sense of the bewitched world
overrules it) that the state of unbelievers, even at the best, is a
sad and dismal state.
    Inf. 2. Let all believers fetch ad their comfort out of Christ,
who is the Consolation of his people: "We rejoice (saith the
apostle) in Christ Jesus, and have no confidence in the flesh." That
is the true temper of a believing soul: take heed you live not
partly upon Christ and partly upon the creature for your comfort,
much rather beware that you forsake not Christ, the fountain of
living waters, and hew out cisterns for yourselves which can hold no
water, Jer. 2: 13. If you make any creature the spring and fountain
of your comfort, assuredly God will dry up that spring. If your
souls draw their comfort from any creature, you know they must
outlive that creature, and what then will you do for comfort?
Besides, as your comforts are, so are you. The food of every
creature is suitable to its nature. You see divers creatures feeding
upon several parts of the same herb, the bee upon the flower, the
bird upon the seeds, the sheep upon the stalk, and the swine upon
the root, according to their nature so is their food. Sensual men
feed upon sensual things; spiritual men upon spiritual things; as
your food is, so are you. If carnal comforts can content thy heart,
sure thy heart must then be a very carnal heart. Yea, and let
Christians themselves take heed, that they fetch not their
consolations out of themselves instead of Christ. Your graces and
duties are excellent means and instruments, but not the ground work
and foundation of your comfort, they are useful buckets to draw, but
not the well itself in which the springs of consolation rise. If you
put your duties in the room of Christ, Christ will put your comforts
out of the reach of your duties.
    Inf. 3. If Christ be the consolation of believers, what a
comfortable life should all believers live in the world? Certainly,
if the fault be not your own, you might live the happiest and
comfortablest lives of all men in the world. If you would not be a
discomfort to Christ, he would be a comfort to you every day, and in
every condition, to the end of your lives. Your condition abounds
with all the helps and advantages of consolation. You have the
command of Christ to warrant your comforts, Phil. 4: 4. You have the
Spirit of Christ for a spring of comfort; you have the scriptures of
Christ for the rules of comfort; you have the duties of religion for
the means of comfort. Why is it then that you go comfortless? If
your afflictions be many in the world, yet your encouragements are
more in Christ. Your troubles in the world have been turned into
joy, but your comforts in Christ can never be turned into trouble.
Why should troubles obstruct your comfort, when the blessing of
Christ upon your troubles makes them subservient to promote your
happiness? Rom. 8: 28. Shake off despondency then, and live up to
the principles of religion. Your dejected life is uncomfortable to
yourselves, and of very ill use to others.
    Inf. 4. If Christ be the consolation of believers, then let all
that desire comfort in this world, or in that to come, embrace Jesus
Christ, and get real union with him. The same hour you shall be in
Christ, you shall also be at the fountain head of all consolations:
thy soul shall be then a pardoned soul, and a pardoned soul has all
reason in the world to be a joyful soul: in that day the conscience
shall be sprinkled with the blood of Christ; and a sprinkled
conscience has all the reason in the world to be a comforting
conscience: in that day you become the children of your Father in
heaven, and he that has a Father in heaven, has all reason to be the
joyfullest man upon earth; in that day you are delivered from the
sting and hurt of death; and he that is delivered from the sting of
death, has the best reason to take in the comfort of life. O come to
Christ! come to Christ! till you come to Christ, no true comfort can
come to you
    
    
    
    
    
Sermon 16.


Enforcing the general Exhortation, by a seventh Motive drawn from
the first Benefit purchased by Christ.

Eph. 1: 7.

In whom we have redemption through his blood, the forgiveness of
sins according to the riches of his grace.
    
    
    
    Six great motives have been presented already from the titles
of Christ, to draw the hearts of sinners to him; more are now to be
offered from the benefits redounding to believers by Christ;
essaying, by all means, to win the hearts of men to Christ. To this
end I shall in the first place, open that glorious privilege of
gospel-remission, freely and fully conferred upon all that come to
Christ by faith, "in whom we have redemption by faith," &c.
    In which words we have, first, a singular benefit, or choice
mercy bestowed, viz. redemption, interpreted by way of opposition,
the remission of sins: this is a privilege of the first rank, a
mercy by itself; none sweeter, none more desirable among all the
benefits that come by Christ. And therefore,
    Secondly, You have the price of this mercy, an account what it
cost, even the brood of Christ, in whom we have redemption [through
his blood:] precious things are of great price; the blood of Christ
is the meritorious cause of remission.
    Thirdly, You have here also the impulsive cause, moving God to
grant pardons at this rate to sinners, and that is said to be the
riches of his grace: where, by the way, you see that the freeness of
the grace of God, and the fulness of the satisfaction of Christ,
meet together without the least jar in the remission of sin,
contrary to the vain cavil of the Socinian adversaries: "In whom we
have redemption, even the remission of sins, according to the riches
of his grace."
    Fourthly, You have the qualified subjects of this blessed
privilege, viz. Believers, in whose name he here speaks, [we] have
remission, i. e. We the saints and faithful in Christ Jesus, ver. 1.
We whom he has chosen in Christ before the foundation of the world,
and predestinated unto the adoption of children, ver. 4, 5. We that
are made accepted in the beloved, ver. 6. It is we, and we only, who
have redemption through his blood. Hence observe,
    
    Doct. That all believers, and none but believers, receive the
         remission of their sins through the riches of grace, by the
         blood of Jesus Christ.
    
    In the explication of this point three things must be spoken
to.
    1. That all that are in Christ are in a pardoned state.
    2. That their pardon is the purchase of the blood of Christ.
    3. That the riches of grace are manifested in remission.
    First, That all that are in Christ are in a pardoned state:
where I will first shew you what pardon or remission of sin is.
    Secondly, That this is the privilege of none but believers.
    First, Now remission of sin is the gracious act of God, in and
through Christ, discharging a believing sinner from all the guilt
and punishment of his sin, both temporal and eternal.
    It is the act of God; he is the author of remission; none can
forgive sins but God only, Mark 2: 7. Against him only, i.e.
principally and especially, the offence is committed, Psal. 51: 4.
To his judgement guilt binds over the soul; and who can remit the
debt but the creditor? Matth. 6: 12.
    It is an act of God, discharging the sinner; it is God's
loosing of one that stood bound, the cancelling of his bond or
obligation, called therefore remission or releasing in the text; the
blotting out of our iniquities, or the removing of our sins from us,
as it is called in other scriptures; see Psal. 103: 11. Micah 7:
18,19.
    It is a gracious act of God, the effect of pure grace, done for
his own name's sake, Isa. 43: 25. discharging us without any
satisfaction at all by us: there is much grace in that; and
providing a surety for us every way able to pay our debt, there is
more grace in that.
    It is the gracious act of God in and through Christ: the
satisfaction of Christ is the procuring cause of our remission, and
so God declares himself just in the remission of our sin, Rom. 3:
25. "Gracious is the Lord and righteous," Psal. 116: 5. Justice and
mercy meet here, and embrace each other; "in whom (saith the text)
we have remission:" no other price could purchase this privilege,
Micah 6: 6, 7. not rivers of oil, or of human blood.
    And this gracious act of God discharges the pardoned soul both
from guilt and punishment. Guilt is nothing else but the force and
power that is in sin, to oblige the sinner to undergo the penalty
due to sin; therefore sinners are said to be guilty of hell-fire.
Matth 5: 22. Guilty of eternal judgement, Mark 3: 29. To be under
the judgement of God, Rom. 3: 19. Remission takes away both guilt
and punishment together; it takes away all guilt, Acts 13: 38, 39.
and all punishment. And so much of the first thing to be opened,
namely, what the remission of sin is.
    Secondly, Now that this remission of sin is the privilege of
believers, is most apparent, for all the causes of remission are in
conjunction to procure it for them; the love of God, which is the
impulsive cause of pardon; the blood of Christ, which is the
meritorious cause of pardon; and saving faith, which is the
instrumental cause of pardon, do all co-operate for their remission,
as is plain in the text.
    Besides, all the promises of pardon are made to them, Jer. 31:
34. Micah 7: 18. And, lastly, all the signs of pardon are found in
them, and in them only, that love God, Luke 7: 47. Mercifulness to
others, Matth. 6: 14. A blessed calmness and peace in the
conscience, Rom. 5: 1. So that it is a truth beyond controversy,
that all that are in Christ are in a pardoned state.
    Secondly, Next I will shew you, that the pardon of believers is
the purchase of the blood of Christ: nothing but the blood of Christ
is a price equivalent to the remission of sin, for this blood was
innocent and untainted blood, 1 Pet. 1: 19. the blood of a Lamb
without spot; this blood was precious blood, blood of infinite worth
and value, the blood of God, Acts 20: 28. It was prepared blood for
this very purpose, Heb. 10: 5. Prepared by God's eternal
appointment; prepared by Christ's miraculous and extraordinary
production by the operation of the Spirit; prepared by his voluntary
sequestration, or sanctification of himself to this very use and
purpose.
    The blood of Jesus is not only innocent, precious, and prepared
blood, but it is also blood actually shed and sacrificed to the
justice of God, for the expiation of guilt, and procurement of our
discharge, Isa. 53:5. O. To conclude, the severe justice of God
could put in no exception against the blood of Christ, it is
unexceptionable blood, being, (as before was noted,) untainted by
sin, and dignified above all estimation by the person whose blood it
was. Justice required no less, and could demand no more; and this is
the price at which our pardons are purchased, and without which no
sin could be pardoned; for "without shedding of blood, (such blood
as this) there is no remission," Heb. 9: 22.
    Thirdly, The last thing to be opened is, That God has
manifested the riches of his grace, in the remission of our sins. So
speaks the apostle, Rom. 5: 20. "Where sin abounded, grace did much
more abound: And, 1 Tim. 1: 14. "The grace of our Lord (viz. in the
pardon of sin) was exceeding abundant." Which will appear, if we
bring our thoughts close to the matter, in several particulars.
    First, From the nature of the mercy, which is the richest of
all mercies, except Christ the purchaser of it: No mercy sweeter
than a pardon to a condemned sinner; no pardon like God's pardon to
a man condemned at his  bar; all the goodness of God is made to pass
before our eyes in his pardoning acts of grace, Exod. 33: 19.
    Secondly, The very riches of grace must needs be in the pardon
of sin, if we consider the method in which pardons are dispensed,
which is, as the text speaks, "through his blood." Herein "God
commends his love to us," Rom. 5: 8. He commends it more than if he
had pardoned sin without such a sacrifice, for then he had only
displayed his mercy, but not caused mercy and justice to meet and
triumph together.
    Thirdly, The riches of his grace shine forth in the peculiarity
of the mercy. Remission is no common favour; it is never extended to
the fallen angels, nor to the greater part of the children of men,
but only to a little flock, a small remnant of mankind, Luke 12: 82.
John 17: 9.
    Fourthly, The riches of grace are manifested in remission, if
we consider the subjects of this privilege, who are not only equally
plunged into sin and misery with others by nature, Eph. 2: 3. but
many of the Lord's pardoned ones have been actually guilty of a
deeper dyed abomination than many unpardoned ones, in the civilised
world, are defiled with. "To me, (saith Paul), the greatest of
sinners, one that was before a blasphemer, a persecutor, &c. yet to
me is this grace given; I obtained mercy," 1 Tim. 1: 15. "And such
were some of you, but ye are justified," 1 Cor. 6: 11. Yea, God
singles out the most base, despised, poor, and contemptible ones
among men, to be the subjects of this glorious privilege, 2 Cor. 1:
26. "You see your calling, brethren," &c.
    Fifthly, More of the riches of grace still appear, if we view
the latitude and extent of this act of grace. O how innumerable are
our transgressions! "Who can understand his errors;" Psal. 19: 12.
"Yet the blood of Christ cleanseth us from all sin," 1 John 1: 7.
Small and great sins, open and secret sins, old and new sins, all
pardoned without exception. O the riches of grace! O the
unsearchable goodness of God! "With the Lord there is mercy and with
him there is plenteous redemption; and he shall redeem Israel from
all his iniquities," Psal. 130: 7. 8.
    Sixthly, and lastly, The riches of grace shine forth in the
irrevocableness and perpetuity of remission. As grace pardons all
sins without exception, so the pardons it bestows are without
revocation: The pardoned soul shall "never come into condemnation,"
John 5: 24. "As far as the east is from the west, so far has he
removed our transgressions from us," Psal. 103: 10. The east and
west are the two opposite points of heaven, which can never come
together; neither shall the pardoned soul and its sins ever meet any
more. "Thou hast cast, (saith Hezekiah) all my sins behind thy
back." The penitent believer sets his sins before his face, but the
merciful God casts them all behind his back, never to behold them
more, so as to charge them upon his pardoned people. And thus you
see what the pardon of sin is, what the price that purchaseth pardon
is, and what riches of grace God manifesteth in the remission of a
believer's sins; which were the things to be explained and opened in
the doctrinal part. The improvement of the whole you will have in
the following uses.
    Inference 1. If this be so, that all believers, and none but
believers, receive the remission of their sins through the riches of
grace, by the blood of Christ; What a happy condition then are
believers in! Those that never felt the load of sin may make light
of a pardon; but so cannot you, that have been in the deeps of
trouble and fear about it; those that have been upon the rack of an
accusing and condemning conscience, as David, Heman, and many of the
saints have been, can never sufficiently value a pardon. "Blessed is
the man whose transgression is forgiven, whose sin is covered;
blessed is the man unto whom the Lord imputeth not iniquity," Psal.
32: 1, 2. or, O the blessedness and felicities of the pardoned man!
as in the Hebrew. Remission cannot but appear the wonder of mercies,
if we consider through what difficulties the grace of God makes way
for it to our souls; what strong bars the love of God breaks
asunder, to open our way to this privilege; for there can be no
pardon without a Mediator; no other Mediator but the Son of God: the
Son of God cannot discharge our debts, but by taking them upon
himself as our surety, and making full payment, by bearing the wrath
of God for us; and when all this is done, there can be no actual
pardon, except the Spirit of grace open our blind eyes, break our
hard hearts, and draw them to Christ in the way of believing. And as
the mercy of remission comes to us through wonderful difficulties,
so it is in itself a complete and perfect mercy: God would not be at
such vast expense of the riches of his grace, Christ would not lay
out the invaluable treasures of his precious blood to procure a
cheap and common blessing for us. Rejoice then, ye pardoned souls,
God has done great things for you, for which you have cause to be
glad.
    Inf. 2. Hence it follows, That interest in Christ by faith,
brings the conscience of a believer into a state of rest and peace,
Rom. 5: 1. "Being justified by faith, we have peace with God." I say
not that every believer is presently brought into actual peace and
tranquillity of conscience; there may be many fears, and much
trouble even in a pardoned soul; but this is an undoubted truth,
that faith brings the pardoned soul into that condition and state,
where he may find perfect rest in his conscience, with respect to
the guilt and danger of sin. The blood of Christ sprinkles us from
an evil (that is, an accusing, condemning) conscience. We are apt to
fear, that this or that special sin, which has most terrified and
affrighted our conscience, is not forgiven: but if there be riches
enough in the grace of God, and efficacy enough in the blood of
Christ, then the sins of believers, all their sins, great as well as
small, one as well as another, without limitation or exception, are
pardoned.
    For let us but consider, If Christ remits no sin to any man,
but with respect to the blood of Christ, then all sins are pardoned,
as well as any one sin; because the dignity and desert of that blood
is infinite, and as much deserves an universal pardon for all sins,
as the particular pardon of any, even the least sin: moreover,
remission is an act of God's fatherly love in Christ; and if it be
so, then certainly no sin of any believer can be retained or
excluded from pardon; for then the same soul should be in the favour
of God, so far as it is pardoned, and out of favour with God, so far
as it is unpardoned, and all this at one and the same instant of
time: which is a thing both repugnant to itself, and to the whole
strain of the gospel.
    To conclude: What is the design and end of remission, but the
saving of the pardoned soul? But if any sin be retained or excluded
from pardon, the retaining of that sin must needs make void the
pardon of all other sins; and so the acts of God must cross and
contradict each other, and the design and end of God miscarry and be
lost; which can never be. So then we conclude, faith brings the
believing soul into a state of rest and peace.
    Inf. Hence it also follows, That no remission is to be expected
by any soul, without an interest by faith in Jesus Christ: no
Christ, no pardon; no faith, no Christ. Yet how apt are many poor
deluded souls to expect pardon in that way, where never any soul yet
did, or ever can meet it. Some look for pardon from the absolute
mercy of God, without any regard to the blood of Christ, or their
interest therein: we have sinned, but God is merciful! Some expect
remission of sin by virtue of their own duties, not Christ's merits:
I have sinned, but I will repent, restore, reform, and God will
pardon! But little do such men know how they therein diminish the
evil of sin, undervalue the justice of God, slight the blood of
Christ, and put an undoing cheat upon their own souls for ever. To
expect pardon from absolute mercy, or our own duties, is to knock at
the wrong door, which God has shut up to all the world, Rom. 3: 20.
Whilst these two principles abide firm, that the price of pardon is
only in the blood of Christ, and the benefit of pardon, only by the
application of his blood to us; this must remain a sure conclusion,
that no remission is to he expected by any soul, without an interest
by faith in Jesus Christ. Repentance, restitution, and reformation
are excellent duties in their kind, and in their proper places, but
they were never meant for saviours, or satisfaction to God for sin.
    Inf. 2 It the riches of grace be thus manifested in the pardon
of sin, How vile an abuse is it of the grace of God, to take the
more liberty to sin, because grace abounds in the pardon of it!
    "Shall we continue in sin, that grace may abound? God forbid!"
Rom. 6: 1, 2. Will nothing cheaper than the grace of God serve to
make a cloak for sin? O vile abuse of the most excellent thing in
the whole world? Did Christ shed his blood to expiate our guilt, and
dare we make that a plea to extenuate our guilt? God forbid!
    If it be intolerable ingratitude among men, to requite good
with evil, sure that sin must want a name bad enough to express it,
which puts the greatest dishonour upon God for the greatest mercy
that ever was given by God to the world. "There is mercy with thee,
(saith the Psalmist,) that thou mayest be feared;" not that thou
mayest be the more abused, Psal. 130: 4. Nay, let me say, the devils
never sinned at this rate; they cannot abuse the pardoning grace of
God, because such grace was never offered unto them. And certainly,
if the abuse of the common mercies of God, as meat and drink, by
gluttony and drunkenness, be an heinous sin and highly provoking to
God; then the abuse of the riches of his grace, and the precious
blood of his Son, must be out of measure sinful, and the greatest
affront we can put upon the God of mercy.
    Inf. 5. To conclude: If this be so, as ever you expect pardon.
and, mercy from God, come to Christ in the way of faith; receive and
embrace him now in the tenders of the gospel.
    To drive home this great exhortation, I beseech you, as in the
bowels of Christ Jesus, and by all the regard and value you have for
your souls, let these following considerations sink down in your
hearts.
    First, That all Christless persons are actually under the
condemnation of God, John 3: 113. "He that believeth not is
condemned already:" and it must needs be so, for every soul is
concluded under the curse of the law, till Christ make him free,
John 8: 36. Till we are in Christ, we are dead by law; and when we
believe unto justification, then we pass from death to life. A blind
mistaken conscience may possibly acquit you, but assure ourselves
God condemns you.
    Secondly, Consider what a terrible thing it is to lie under the
condemnation of God; the most terrible things in nature cannot
shadow forth the misery of such a state; put all sicknesses, all
poverty, all reproaches, the torments invented by all tyrants into
one scale, and the condemnation of God into the other, and they will
be all found lighter than a feather. Condemnation is the sentence of
God, the great and terrible God; it is a sentence shutting you up to
everlasting wrath: it is a sentence never to be reversed, but by the
application of Christ in the season thereof. O souls! you cannot
bear the wrath of God; you do not understand it, if you think it
tolerable: One drop of it upon your consciences now, is enough to
distract you in the midst of all the pleasures and comforts of this
world: yet all that are out of Christ, are sentenced to the fulness
of God's wrath for ever.
    Thirdly, There is yet a possibility of escaping the wrath to
come; a door of hope opened to the worst of sinners; a day of grace
is offered to the children of men, Heb. 3: 15. God declares himself
unwilling that any should perish, 2 Pet. 3: 9. O what a mercy is
this! Who, that is on this side heaven or hell, fully understands
the worth of it?
    Fourthly, The door of mercy will be shortly shut, Luke 12: 25.
God has many ways to shut it: he sometimes shuts it by withdrawing
the means of grace, and removing the candlesticks; a judgement at
this time to be greatly feared. Sometimes he shuts it by withdrawing
the Spirit and blessing from the means, whereby all ordinances lose
their efficacy, 1 Cor. 3: 7. But if he shut it not by removing the
means of grace from you, certain it is, it will be shortly shut by
your removal from all the means and opportunities of salvation by
death.
    Fifthly, When once the door of mercy is shut, you are gone
beyond all the possibilities of pardon and salvation for evermore.
The night is then come, in which no man can work, John 9: 4. All the
golden seasons you now enjoy, will be irrecoverably gone out of your
reach.
    Sixthly, Pardons are now daily granted to others: some (and
they once as far from mercy as you now are,) are at this day reading
their pardons with tears of joy dropping from them. The world is
full of the examples and instances of the riches of pardoning grace.
And whatever is needful for you to do in the way of repentance and
faith to obtain your pardon, how easily shall it be done, if once
the day of God's power come upon you? Psal. 110:3. 0 therefore, lift
up your cries to heaven, give the Lord no rest, take no denial till
he open the blind eye, break the stony heart, open and bow the
stubborn will, effectually draw thy soul to Christ, and deliver thy
pardon signed in his blood.
    
    
    
    
    
Sermon 17.
    
    
Opening the eighth Motive to come to CHRIST, drawn from the sixth
Benefit purchased by Christ for Believers.


Eph. 1: 6.

To thc praise of the glory of his grace, wherein he has made us
accepted in the Beloved.


    IN our last discourse we opened to you the blessed privilege of
remission of sin, from the following verse; in this verse lies
another glorious privilege, viz. the acceptation that believers have
with God through Jesus Christ; both which comprise (as the two main
branches) our justification before God. In the words read, (to omit
many things that might be profitably observed from the method and
dependence of the apostle's discourse) three things are observable,
viz.
    1. The privilege itself,
    2. The meritorious cause,
    3. The ultimate end thereof.
    First, The privilege itself, which is exceeding rich and sweet
in its own nature; "he has made us accepted;" the word is
"echaritosen hemas", he has ingratiated us, or brought us into the
grace, favour and acceptance of God the Father; endeared us to him,
so that we find grace in his sight.
    Secondly, The meritorious cause, purchasing and procuring this
benefit for us, noted in the words, "en toi egapemenoi", in the
Beloved; which words are a periphrasis of Christ, who is here
emphatically stiled the Beloved, the great favourite of heaven, the
delight of God's soul, the prime object of his love: it is he that
obtaineth this benefit for believers: he is accepted for his own
sake, and we for his.
    Thirdly, The ultimate end and aim of conferring this benefit
upon believers; "To the praise of the glory of his grace;" or, to
the end that his grace might be made glorious in praises: there are
riches of grace in this act of God; and the work and business of
believers, both in this world and in that to come, is to search and
admire, acknowledge and magnify God for his abundant grace herein.
Hence the note is,
    
    Doct. That Jesus Christ has purchased and procured special
         favour and acceptation with God for all that are in him.
    
    This point lies plain in scripture, Eph. 2: 13. "But now in
Jesus Christ, ye who sometimes were afar off; are made nigh by the
blood of Christ," ""engus egenetete", made nigh, a term of
endearedness: nothing is taken into the very bosom and embraces but
what is very dear, precious and acceptable, and in Rev. 2: 5, 6.
believers are said to be made by Jesus Christ "kings and priests
unto God, and his Father," i. e. dignified favourites, upon whom the
special marks of honour are set by God.
    In opening of this point three things must be doctrinally
discussed and opened, viz.
    1. What the acceptation of our persons with God is?
    2. How it appears that believers are so accepted with God?
    3. How Christ the Beloved procures this benefit for believers?
    First, What the acceptation of our persons with God is? To open
which, it may be proper to remember, that there is a twofold
acceptance of persons mentioned in scripture.
    1. One is the sinful act of corrupt man.
    2. The other the gracious act of a merciful God.
    First, Accepting of persons is noted in scripture as the sinful
act of a corrupt man; a thing which God abhors, being the corruption
and abuse of that power and authority which men have in judgement;
overlooking the merit of the cause through sinful respect to the
quality of the person whose cause it is; so that the cause doth not
commend the person, but the person the cause. This God everywhere
brands in men, as a vile perverting of judgement, and utterly
disclaims it himself, Gal. 2: 6. "God accepteth no man's person;"
Rom. 2: 11. "There is no respect of persons with God."
    Secondly, There is also an accepting of persons, which is the
gracious act of a merciful God; whereby he receives both the persons
and duties of believers into special grace and favour for Christ's
sake; and of this my text speaks. In which act of favour three
things are supposed or included.
    First, It supposes an estate of alienation and enmity; those
only are accepted into favour that were out of favour; and indeed so
stood the case with us, Eph. 2: 12, 13 "Ye were aliens and
strangers, but now in Christ Jesus, ye who sometimes were afar off,
are made nigh by the blood of Christ". So the apostle Peter, in 1
Pet. 2: 10. "Which in time past were not a people, but now are the
people of God; which had not obtained mercy, but now have obtained
mercy." The fall made a fearful breach betwixt God and man. Sin,
like a thick cloud, intercepted all the beams of divine favour from
us; the satisfaction of Christ dissolves that cloud, Isa 44: 22. "I
have blotted out, as a thick cloud, thy transgressions, and, as a
cloud, thy sins." This dark cloud thus dissolved, the face of God
shines forth again with cheerful beams of favour and love upon all,
who, by faith, are interested in Jesus Christ.
    Secondly, It includes the removing of guilt from the persons of
believers, by the imputation of Christ's righteousness to them, Rom.
5: 1, 2. "Being justified by faith, we have peace with God, through
our Lord Jesus Christ: by whom also we have access by faith into
this grace wherein we stand:" for the face of God cannot shine upon
the wicked; the person must be first made righteous, before he can
be made accepted.
    Thirdly, It includes the offering up, or tendering of our
persons and duties to God by Jesus Christ. Accepting implies
presenting or tendering: believers indeed do present themselves to
God, Rom. 12: 50: But Christ's presenting them makes their tender of
themselves acceptable to the Lord; Col. 1: 22. "In the body of his
flesh through death to present you holy, and unblameable, and
unreproveable, in his sight." Christ leads every believer, as it
were, by the hand, into the gracious presence of God; after this
manner bespeaking acceptance for him: "Father, here is a poor soul
that was born in sin, has lived in rebellion against thee all his
days; he has broken all thy laws, and deserved all thy wrath; yet he
is one of that number which thou gavest me before the world was. I
have made full payment by my blood for all his sins: I have opened
his eyes to see the sinfulness and misery of his condition: broken
his heart for his rebellions against thee, bowed his will in
obedience unto thy will; united him to myself by faith, as a living
member of my body: and now, Lord, since he is become mine by
regeneration, let him be thine also by special acceptation: let the
same love with which thou lovest me embrace him also, who is now
become mine." And so much for the first particular, viz. What
acceptation with God is.
    Secondly, In the next place I must shew you how it appears that
believers are thus ingratiated, or brought into the special favour
of God by Jesus Christ. And this will be evinced divers ways.
    First, By the titles of love and endearedness, with which the
Lord graceth and honoureth believers, who are sometimes called, the
household of God, Eph. 2: 19. The friends of God, James 2: 23. the
dear children of God, Eph. 5: 1. the peculiar people of God, 1 Pet.
2: 9. a crown of glory, and a royal diadem in the hand of their God,
Isa 63: 3. The object of his delight and pleasure, Psal. 147: 10,11.
0 what terms of endearedness doth God use towards his people! Does
not all this speak them to be in special favour with him? Which of
all these alone doth not signify a person highly in favour with God.
    Secondly, The gracious manner in which he treats them upon
the throne of grace, to which he allows them to come with boldness,
Heb. 4: 16. This also speaks them in the special favour of God; he
allows them to come to him in prayer, with the liberty, confidence
and filial boldness of children to a father; Gal. 4: 6. "Because ye
are sons, God has sent forth the Spirit of his Son into your hearts,
crying Abba, Father;" the familiar voice of a dear child: yea, which
is a wonderful condescension of the great God to poor worms of the
earth, he saith, Isa. 14: 11. "Thus saith the Lord, the holy One of
Israel, and his Maker, Ask me of things to come concerning my sons;
and concerning the work of my hands command ye me:" an expression so
full of grace and special favour to believers, that it needs great
caution in reading and understanding such an high and astonishing
expression: the meaning is, that God has, as it were, subjected the
works of his hands to the prayers of his saints; and it is as if he
had said, if my glory, and your necessity shall require it, do but
ask me in prayer, and whatever my Almighty Power can do, I will do
it for you. However, let no favourite of heaven forget the infinite
distance betwixt himself and God. Abraham was a great favourite of
heaven, and was called the friend of God; yet see with what humility
of spirit and reverential awe he addresseth God, Gen. 18:27. "Behold
now I have taken upon me to speak unto the Lord, which am but dust
and ashes." So that you see the titles of favour above-mentioned are
no empty titles.
    Thirdly, God's readiness to grant, as well as their liberty to
ask, speaks them the special favourites of God. The heart of God is
so propense, and ready to grant the desires of believers, that it is
but ask and have, Matth. 7: 7. The door of grace is opened by the
key of prayer. That is a favourite indeed, to whom the king gives a
blank to insert what request he will: "If ye abide in me, and my
words abide in you, ye shall ask what ye will, and it shall be done
unto you," John 15: 7. O blessed liberty of the sons of God! David
did but say, "Lord, turn the counsel of Ahithophel into
foolishness," and it was done as soon as asked, 2 Sam. 15: 31.
Joshua did but say, Thou sun stand still in Gibeon," and a
miraculous stop was presently put to its swift motion in the
heavens; nay, which is wonderful to consider, a prayer, yet unborn,
I mean conceived in the heart, and not yet uttered by the lips of
believers, is often anticipated by the propensiveness of free grace,
Isa. 65: 24. "And it shall come to pass, that before they call I
will answer, and whilst they are yet speaking I will hear." The
prayers of others are rejected as an abomination, Prov. 15: 8. God
casts them back into their faces, Mal. 2: 3. But free grace signs
the petitions of the saints more readily than they are presented; we
have not that freedom to ask that God has to give: it is true, the
answer of a believer's prayers may be a long time suspended from his
sense and knowledge; but every prayer, according to the will of God,
is presently granted in heaven, though, for wise and holy ends, they
may be held in a doubtful suspense about them upon earth.
    Fourthly, The free discoveries of the secrets of God's heart to
believers, speak them to be his special favourites: men open not the
counsels and secrets of their own hearts to enemies or strangers but
to their most inward and intimate friends: "The secret of the Lord
is with them that fear him, and he will shew them his covenant,"
Psal 25: 14. When God was about to destroy Sodom, he would do
nothing in that work of judgement until he had acquainted Abraham
his friend, with his purpose therein, Gen 18: 17. "And the Lord
said, Shall I hide from Abraham that thing which I do? For I know
him," &c. So when a king was to be elected for Israel, and the
person whom God had chosen was yet unknown to the people, God, as it
were, whispered that secret unto Samuel the day before, 1 Sam. 9:15.
"Now the Lord had told Samuel in his ear a day before Saul came:"
according to the manner of princes with some special favourite.
    Fifthly, The Lord's receiving every small thing that comes from
them with grace and favour, when he rejects the greatest things
offered by others, doth certainly bespeak believers the special
favourites of God. There was but one good word in a whole sentence
from Sarah, and that very word is noted and commended by God, 1 Pet.
3: 6. "She called him Lord." There were but some small beginnings or
buddings of grace in young Abijah, and the Lord took special notice
thereof, 1 Kings 14: 13. "Because in him there is found some good
thing toward the Lord God of Israel, in the house of Jeroboam." Let
this be an encouragement to young ones, in whom there are found any
breathing desires after Christ; God will not reject them if any
sincerity be found in them; a secret groan, uttered to God in
sincerity, shall not be despised, Rom. 8: 26. The very bent of a
believer's will when he had no more to offer unto God, is an
acceptable present 2 Cor. 8: 11. The very intent and purpose that
lie secretly in the heart of a believer, not yet executed, are
accepted with him, 1 Kings 8: 18. "Whereas it was in thine heart to
build an house to my name, thou didst well that it was in thine
heart." Thus small things offered to God by believers find
acceptance with him, whilst the greatest presents, even solemn
assemblies, sabbaths, and prayers from others are rejected: "They
are a trouble unto me; (saith God) I am weary to bear them", Isa 1:
14, 15. "Incense from Sheba, the sweet cane from a far country" are
not acceptable, nor sacrifices sweet from other hands, Jer. 6: 20.
From all which it appears beyond doubt, that the persons and duties
of believers are accepted in the special favour of God by Jesus
Christ; which was the second thing to be spoken to, and brings us to
the third general, viz.
    Thirdly, How Christ, the beloved, procures this benefit for
believers? And this he doth four ways.
    First, By the satisfaction of his blood, Rom. 5: 10. "When we
were enemies, we were reconciled to God by the death of his Son." No
friendship without reconciliation, no reconciliation but by the
blood of Christ: therefore the new and living way, by which
believers come unto God with acceptance, is said to be consecrated
for us through the veil of Christ's flesh; and hence believers have
boldness to enter into the holiest by the blood of Jesus, Heb. 10:
19, 20.
    Secondly, The favour of God is procured for believers, by their
mystical union with Christ, whereby they are made "members of his
body, of his flesh, and of his bones", Eph. 5: 30. So that as Adam's
posterity stood upon the same terms that he their natural head did,
so believers, Christ's mystical members, stand in the favour of God,
by the favour which Christ their spiritual head has, John 17: 33. "I
in them, and thou in me, that they may be made perfect in one, and
that the world may know that thou hast sent me, and hast loved them
as thou hast loved me.
    Thirdly, Believers are brought into favour with God by Christ's
becoming their altar, upon which their persons and duties are all
offered up to God: The altar sanctifies the gift, Heb. 13: 10. And
this was typified by the legal rite mentioned Luke 1: 9,10. Christ
is that golden altar from whence all the prayers of the saints
ascend to the throne of God, perfumed with the odours and incense of
his merits, Rev. 8: 34. "And another angel came and stood at the
altar, having a golden censer, and there was given unto him much
incense that he should offer it, with the prayers of all the saints
upon the golden altar which was before the throne; and the smoke of
the incense which came with the prayers of the saints ascended up
before God out of the angel's hand." And thus you see how the
persons and duties of believers are brought into favour and
acceptance with God by Jesus Christ. The uses follow.
    Inf. 1. If all believers be in favour with God, how great a
mercy is it to have the prayers of such engaged on our behalf. Would
we have our business speed in heaven, let us get into the favour of
God ourselves, and engage the prayers of his people, the favourites
of heaven for us. Vis unita fortior, one believer can do much, many
can do more: When Daniel designed to get the knowledge of that
secret, hinted in the obscure dream of the king, which none but the
God of heaven could make known, it is said, Dan. 2: 17. "Then Daniel
went to his house, and made the thing known unto Hananiah, Mishael,
and Azariah, his companions; that they would desire mercies of the
God of heaven concerning this secret." The benefit of such
assistance in prayer by the help of other favourites with God, is
plainly intimated by Jesus Christ to us, Mat. 18: 19. "If two of you
shall agree on earth as touching any thing that they shall ask, it
shall be done for them of my Father which is in heaven." God
sometimes stands upon a number of voices, for the carrying of some
public mercy, because he delighteth in the harmony of many praying
souls, and also loves to oblige and gratify many in the answer and
return of the same prayer. I know this usage is grown too formal and
complemental among professors; but certainly it is a great advantage
to be sincere with them who are so with God. St. Bernard,
prescribing rules for effectual prayer, closes them up with this
wish, et cum talis fueris, momento mei, when thy heart is in this
frame, then remember me.
    Inf. 2. If believers be such favourites in heaven, in what a
desperate condition is that cause and those persons, against whom
the generality of believers are daily engaged in prayers and cries
to heaven?
    Certainly Rome shall feel the dint and force of the many
millions of prayers that are gone up to heaven from the saints for
many generations; the cries of the blood of the martyrs of Jesus,
joined with the cries of thousands of believers, will bring down
vengeance at last upon the man of sin. It is said, Rev. 8: 4, 5, 6.
"That the smoke of the incense which came with the prayers of the
saints, ascended up before God out of the angel's hand:" And
immediately it is added, ver. 5. "And the angel took the censer and
filled it with fire of the altar, and cast it into the earth, and
there were voices, and thunderings, and lightnings, and earthquakes;
and the seven angels, which had the seven trumpets, prepared
themselves to sound." The prayer of a single saint is sometimes
followed with wonderful effects Psal. 18: 6, 7. "In my distress I
called upon the Lord, and I cried unto my God: he heard my voice out
of his temple, and my cry came before him, even into his ears: then
the earth shook and trembled; the foundation also of the hills moved
and were shaken, because he was wroth:" what then can a thundering
legion of such praying souls do? It was said of Luther, Iste vir
potuit cum Deo quicquid voluit, that man could have of God what he
would; his enemies felt the weight of his prayers, and the church of
God reaped the benefit thereof. The queen of Scots professed she was
more afraid of the prayers of Mr. Knox, than of an army of ten
thousand men: these were mighty wrestlers with God, however
contemned and vilified among their enemies. There will a time come,
when God will hear the prayers of his people, who are continually
crying in his ears, How long? Lord, how long?
    Inf. 3. Let no believer be dejected at the contempts and
slightings of men, so long as they stand in the grace and favour of
God. It is the lot of the best men to have the worst usage in the
world: those of whom the world was not worthy, were not thought
worthy to live in the world, Heb. 11: 38. Paul and his companions
were men of choice and excellent spirits; yet, saith he, 1 Cor. 4:
12. "Being defamed, we intreat; we are made as the filth of the
world, and are the offscouring of all things unto this day." They
are words signifying the basest, most contemptible, and abhorred
things among men. How are heaven and earth divided in their
judgements and estimations of the saints? Those whom men call filth
and dirt, God calls a peculiar treasure, a crown of glory, a royal
diadem. But trouble not thyself, believer, for the unjust censures
of the blind world, they speak evil of the things they know not: "He
that is spiritual judgeth all things, yet he himself is judged of no
man," 1 Cor. 2: 14. You can discern the earthliness and baseness of
their spirits: they want a faculty to discern the excellency and
choiceness of your spirits: he that carries a dark lantern in the
night can discern him that comes against him, and yet is not
discerned by him. A courtier regards not a slight in the country, so
long as he has the ear and favour of his prince.
    Inf. 4. Never let believers fear the want of any good thing
necessary for them in this world. The favour of God is the fountain
of all blessings, provisions, protections, even of all that you
need. He has promised that he will withhold no good thing from them
that walk uprightly, Psal. 84: 11. He that is bountiful to his
enemies will not withhold what is good from his friends. The favour
of God will not only supply your needs, but protect your persons,
Psal. 5: 12. "Thou wilt bless the righteous, with favour wilt thou
compass him as with a shield."
    Inf. 5. Hence also it follows, that the sins of believers are
very piercing things to the heart of God. The unkindness of those
whom he has received into his very bosom, upon whom he has set his
special favour and delight, who are more obliged to him than all the
people of the earth beside, O this wounds the very heart of God.
What a melting expostulation was that which the Lord used with
David, 2 Sam. 12: 7, 8. "I anointed thee king over Israel, and I
delivered thee out of the hand of Saul, and I gave thee thy master's
house, and thy master's wives into thy bosom, and gave thee the
house of Israel and Judah, and if that had been too little, I would
moreover have given unto thee such and such things: wherefore hast
thou despised the commandment of the Lord?" But reader, if thou be a
reconciled person, a favourite with God, and hast grieved him by any
eminent transgression, how should it melt thy heart to hear the Lord
thus expostulating with thee: I delivered thee out of the hand of
Satan; I gave thee into the bosom of Christ; I have pardoned unto
thee millions of sins; I have bestowed upon thee the riches of
mercy; my favour has made thee great: and, as if all this were too
little, I have prepared heaven for thee: for which of all these
favours cost thou thus requite me?"
    Inf. 6. How precious should Jesus Christ be to believers, by
whose blood they are ingratiated with God, and by whose intercession
they are, and shall for ever be continued in his favour? When the
apostle mentions the believer's translation, from the sad state of
nature to the blessed privileged state of grace, see what a title he
bestows upon Jesus Christ, the purchaser of that privilege, calling
him the dear Son, Col. 1: 13. Not only dear to God, but exceeding
dear to believers also. Christ is the favourite in heaven, to him
you owe all the preferment there: Take away Christ, and you have no
ground on which to stand one minute in the favour of God. O then let
Jesus Christ, the fountain of your honour, be also the object of
your love and praise.
    Inf. 7. Estimate by this the state and condition of a deserted
saint, upon whom the favour of God is eclipsed. If the favour of God
be better than life, the hiding of it from a gracious soul must be
more bitter than death: Deserted saints have reason to take the
first place among all the mourners in the world: The darkness before
conversion had indeed more danger, but this has more of trouble.
Darkness after light is dismal darkness. Since therefore the case is
so sad, let your preventing care be the more; grieve not the good
Spirit of God; you prepare but for your own grief in so doing.
    Inf. 8. Lastly, Let this persuade all men to accept Jesus
Christ, as ever they expect to be accepted with the Lord themselves.
It is a fearful case, for a man's person and duties to be rejected
of God; to cry and not be heard: And much more terrible to be denied
audience in the great and terrible day. Yea, as sure as the
scriptures are the sealed and faithful sayings of God, this is no
more than what every christless person must expect in that day, Mat.
7: 22. Luke 13: 26. trace the history of all times, even as high as
Abel, and you shall find that none but believers did ever find
acceptance with God; all experience confirms this great truth, that
they that are in the flesh cannot please God. Reader, if this be thy
condition, let me beg thee to ponder the misery of it in a few sad
thoughts.
    Consider how sad it is to be rejected of God, and forsaken by
all creatures at once; what a day of straits thy dying day is like
to be, when heaven and earth shall cast thee out together. Be
assured whatever thy vain hopes for the present quiet thee withal,
this must be thy case, the door of mercy will be shut against thee;
no man cometh to the Father but by Christ. Sad was the case of Saul,
when he told Samuel, "the Philistines make war against me, and God
is departed from me," 1 Sam. 28: 15. The saints will have boldness
in the day of judgement, 1 John 4: 17. But thou wilt be a confounded
man; there is yet, blessed be the God of mercy, a capacity and
opportunity for reconciliation, 2 Cor. 5: 19. Isa. 27: 5. But this
can be of no long continuance. O therefore, by all the regard and
love you have for the everlasting welfare of your own souls, come to
Christ; embrace Christ in the offers of the gospel, that you may be
made accepted in the beloved.
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
Sermon 18.


The Liberty of Believers opened and stated.
    
    
John 8: 36.
    
If the Son therefore shall make you free, ye shall be free indeed.



    From the 30th verse of this chapter unto my text, you have an
account of the different effects which the words of Christ had upon
the hearts of his hearers: Some believed, ver. 30. These he
encourageth to continue in his word, ver. 31. giving them this
encouragement, ver. 32. "Ye shall know the truth, and the truth
shall make you free." Hereat the unbelieving Jews take offence, and
commence a quarrel with him, ver. 33. "We be Abraham's seed, and
were never in bondage to any man." We are of no slavish extraction;
the blood of Abraham runs in our veins. This scornful boast of the
proud Jews, Christ confutes, ver. 34. where he distinguisheth on a
two fold bondage; one to men, another to sin; one civil, another
spiritual: Whosoever committeth sin is the servant of sin, then
tells them, ver. 36. "The servant abideth not in the house for ever,
but the Son abideth for ever." Wherein he intimateth two great
truths, viz. That the servants and slaves of sin may for a time
enjoy the external privileges of the house or church of God; but it
would not be long before the master of the house would turn them out
of doors: But if they were once the adopted children of God, then
they should abide in the house for ever. And this privilege is only
to be had by their believing in, and union with the natural Son of
God, Jesus Christ: which brings us fairly to the text; "If the Son
therefore shall make you free, ye shall be free indeed." In which
words we have two parts; viz.
    1. A supposition.
    2. A concession.
    First, A supposition, "If the Son therefore shall make you
free," q. d. The womb of nature cast you forth into the world in a
state of bondage! in that state you have lived all your days;
servants to sin; slaves to your lusts; yet freedom is to be
obtained: And this freedom is the prerogative belonging to the Son
of God to bestow: "If the Son shall make you free."
    Secondly, Christ's concession upon this supposition, "Then
shall ye be free indeed," i.e. you shall have a real freedom, an
excellent and everlasting freedom: No conceit only, as that which
you now boast of is: If ever therefore you will be free men indeed,
believe in me. Hence note,
    
    Doct. That interest in Christ sets the soul at liberty from all
         that bondage whereunto it was subjected in its natural
         state.
    
    Believers are the children of the new covenant, the denizens of
Jerusalem which is above, which is free, and the mother of them all,
Gal. 4: 26. The glorious liberty, viz. that which is spiritual and
eternal, is the liberty of the children of God, Rom. 8: 21. Christ,
and none but Christ, delivers his people out of the hand of their
enemies, Luke 1: 74.
    In the doctrinal part of this point, I must shew you,
    First, What believers are not freed from by Jesus Christ in
this world.
    Secondly, What that bondage is from which every believer is
freed by Christ.
    Thirdly, What kind of freedom that is which commences upon
believing.
    Fourthly, Open the excellency of this state of spiritual
freedom.
    
    First, what those things are from which believers are not made
free in this world: We must not think that our spiritual liberty by
Christ, presently brings us into an absolute liberty, in all
respects, For,
    First, Christ does not free believers from obedience to the
moral law: It is true we are no more under it as a covenant for our
justification; but we are, and must still be under it, as a rule for
our direction. The matter of the moral law is unchangeable, as the
nature of good and evil is, and cannot be abolished except that
distinction could be destroyed, Mat. 5: 17,18. The precepts of the
law are still urged under the gospel to enforce duties upon us, Eph.
6: 12. It is therefore a vain distinction, invented by Libertines,
to say it binds us as creatures, not as Christians: or that it binds
the unregenerate part, but not the regenerate: but this is a sure
truth, that they who are freed from its penalties are still under
its precepts. Though believers are no more under its curse, yet they
are still under its conduct: The law sends us to Christ to be
justified, and Christ sends us to the law to be regulated. Let the
heart of every Christian join therefore with David's in that holy
wish, Psal. 119: 4, 5. "Thou hast commanded us to keep thy precepts
diligently; O that my heart were directed to keep thy statutes." It
is excellent when Christians begin to obey the law from life, which
others obey for life; because they are justified, not that they may
be justified. It is also excellent when duties are done in the
strength, and for the honour of Christ, which is evangelical; and
not in our own strength, and for our own ends, which is servile and
legal obedience: Had Christ freed us from obedience, such a liberty
had been to our loss.
    Secondly, Christ has not freed believers, in this world, from
the temptations and assaults of Satan: even those that are freed
from his dominion are not free from his molestation. It is said
indeed, Rom. 16: 20. "God shall shortly bruise Satan under your
feet:" But mean time he has power to bruise and buffet us by his
injections, 2 Cor. 12: 7. He now bruiseth Christ's heel, Gen. 3: 10.
i. e. bruiseth him in his tempted and afflicted members: Though he
cannot kill them, yet he can and doth afflict and fright them, by
shooting his fiery darts of temptation among them, Eph. 6: 16. It is
true, when the saints are got safe into heaven they are out of
gunshot; there is perfect freedom from all temptation. A believer
may then say, O thou enemy, temptations are come to a perpetual end.
I am now arrived there, where none of thy fiery darts can reach me:
But this freedom is not yet.
    Thirdly, Christ has not yet freed believers, in this world,
from the motions of indwelling sin; these are continually acting,
and infesting the holiest of men, Rom. 7:. 21, 23,24. Corruptions,
like Canaanites, are still left in the land to be thorns in your
eyes, and goads in your sides. Those that boast most of freedom from
the motions of sin, have most cause to suspect themselves still
under the dominion of sin. All Christ's freemen are troubled with
the same complaint: who among them complains not as the apostle did,
Rom. 7: 24. "Oh wretched man that I am! who shall deliver me from
the body of this death?"
    Fourthly, Jesus Christ doth not free believers, in this world,
from inward troubles and exercises of soul, upon the account of sin.
God may let loose Satan, and conscience too, in the way of terrible
accusations, which may greatly distress the soul of a believer, and
woefully eclipse the light of God's countenance, and break the peace
of their souls. Job, Heman, and David were all made free by Christ,
yet each of them has left upon record his bitter complaint upon this
account, Job 7: 19, 20. Psal. 88: 14, 15,16. Psal. 38 unto ver. 11.
    Fifthly, Christ has not freed believers, in this world, from
the rods of affliction. God, in giving us our liberty, does not
abridge his own liberty, Psal. 89: 32. All the children of God are
made free, yet what son is there whom the father chasteneth not?
Heb. 12: 8. Exemption from affliction is so far from being the mark
of a free man, that the apostle there makes it the mark of a slave.
Bastards, not sons, want the discipline and blessing of the rod: To
be free from affliction would be no benefit to believers, who
receive so many benefits by it.
    Sixthly, No believer is freed by Christ from the stroke of
death, though they are all freed from the sting of death, Rom. 8:
10. The bodies of believers are under the same law of mortality with
other men, Heb. 9: 27. We must come to the grave as well as others;
yea, we must come to it through the same agonies, pangs, and dolours
that other men do: The foot of death treads as heavy upon the bodies
of the redeemed, as of other men. Believers, indeed, are
distinguished by mercy from others, but the distinguishing mercy
lies not here. Thus you see what believers are not freed from in
this world: If you shall now say, what advantage then has a
believer, or what profit is there in regeneration? I answer,
    Secondly, That believers are freed from many great and sad
miseries and evils by Jesus Christ, notwithstanding all that has
been said. For,
    First, All believers are freed from the rigour and curse of the
law: The rigorous yoke of the law is broken off from their necks,
and the sweet and easy yoke of Jesus Christ put on, Matth. 9: 28.
The law required perfect working, under the pain of a curse, Gal.
3:10. accepted of no short endeavours; admitted no repentance; gave
no strength: It is not so now; proportionable strength is given,
Phil. 4: 13. Evangelical sincerity is reckoned perfection, Job 1: 1.
Transgression brings not under condemnation, Rom. 8: 1. 0 blessed
freedom! when duty becomes light, and failings hinder not
acceptance! This is one part of the blessed freedom of believers.
    Secondly, All believers are freed from the guilt of sin; it may
trouble, but it cannot condemn them, Rom. 8: 33. The hand writing
which was against us is cancelled by Christ, nailed to his cross,
Col. 2: 14. When the seal and hand-writing are torn off from the
bond, the debtor is made free thereby: Believers are totally freed,
Acts 13: 89. "Justified from all things:" And finally freed, John 5:
24. "They shall never come into condemnation." O blessed freedom!
How sweet is it to lie down in our beds, yea, in our graves, when
guilt shall neither be our bed-fellow, nor grave-fellow!
    Thirdly, Jesus Christ frees all believers from the dominion as
well as the guilt of sin. "Sin shall not have dominion over you, for
ye are not under the law, but under grace," Rom. 6: 14. "The law of
the Spirit of life which is in Christ Jesus, has made me free from
the law of sin and death," Rom. 8: 2. Now, who can estimate such a
liberty as this? What slavery, what an intolerable drudgery is the
service of divers lusts, from all which believers are freed by
Christ; not from the residence, but from the reign of sin. It is
with sin in believers as it was with those beasts mentioned Dan. 7:
12. "They had their dominion taken away, yet their lives were
prolonged for a season and a time."
    Fourthly, Jesus Christ sets all believers free from the power
of Satan, in whose right they were by nature, Col. 1: 13. they are
translated from the power of darkness into the kingdom of Christ.
Satan had the possession of them, as a man of his own goods; but
Christ dispossesseth that strong man armed, alters the property, and
recovers them out of his hand, Luke 11: 21, 22. There are two ways
by which Christ frees believers out of Satan's power and possession;
namely,
    1. By price.
    2. By power.
    First, By price. The blood of Christ purchaseth believers out
of the hands of justice, by satisfying the law for them, which being
done, Satan's authority over them falls of course, as the power of a
gaoler over the prisoner does, when he has a legal discharge, Heb.
2: 14. "Forasmuch then as the children are partakers of flesh and
blood; he also himself took part of the same, that through death he
might destroy him that had the power of death, that is, the devil."
The cruel tyrant beats and burdens the poor captive no more after
the ransom is once paid, and he actually freed; and therefore Christ
delivers his,
    Secondly, By power. Satan is exceeding unwilling to let go his
prey: He is a strong, and malicious enemy; every rescue and
deliverance out of his hand is a glorious effect of the Almighty
Power of Christ, Acts 26: 18. 2 Cor. 10: 5. How did our Lord Jesus
Christ grapple with Satan at his death, and triumph over him, Col.
2: 15. 0 glorious salvation! blessed liberty of the children of God!
    Fifthly, Christ frees believers from the poisonous sting and
hurt of death: Kill us it can, but hurt us it cannot, 1 Cor. 15: 55,
56. "O death! where is thy sting? O grave! where is thy victory? The
sting of death is sin, and the strength of sin is the law: but
thanks be to God which giveth us the victory through our Lord Jesus
Christ." If there be no hurt, there should be no horror in death: It
is guilt that arms death, both with its hurting and terrifying
power. To die in our sins, John 8: 24. To have our bones full of the
sins of our youth, which shall lie down with us in the dust, Job 20:
11. To have death, like a dragon, pulling a poor guilty creature as
a prey into its dreadful den, Psal. 49: 14. In this lies the danger
and horror of death: But from death, as a curse, and from the grave,
as a prison, Christ has set believers at liberty, by submitting to
death in their room; and by his victorious resurrection from the
grave, as the firstborn of the dead, death is disarmed of its
hurting power. The death of believers is but a sleep in Jesus.
    Thirdly, The nest thing to be briefly spoken to, is the kind
and nature of that freedom and liberty purchased and procured by
Christ for believers.
    Now liberty may be considered two ways; viz.
    1. As civil.
    2. As sacred.
    As to civil freedom, or liberty, it belongs not to our present
business: Believers, as to their civil capacity, are not freed from,
the duties they owe to their superiors. Servants, though believers,
are still to be subject to their masters, according to the flesh,
with fear and trembling, Eph. 6: 5. nor from obedience to lawful
magistrates, whom we are to obey in the Lord, Rom. 12: 1, 4.
Religion dissolves not the bonds of civil relations; nor is it to be
used as an occasion to the flesh, 1 Pet. 2: 16. It is not a carnal,
but a spiritual freedom Christ has purchased for us: And this
spiritual freedom is again to be considered, either as,
    1. Inchoate.
    2. Consummate.
    The liberty believers have at present is but a beginning
liberty; they are freed but in part from their spiritual enemies;
but it is a growing liberty every day, and will be consummate and
complete at last.
    To conclude, Christian liberty is either;
    1. Privative, or,
    2. Positive.
    The liberty believers are invested with is of both kinds: They
are not only freed from many miseries, burdens and dangers, but also
invested by Jesus Christ with many royal privileges and invaluable
immunities.
    Fourthly, And this brings us to the fourth and last thing,
namely, the properties of this blessed freedom which the saints
enjoy by Jesus Christ; and, if we consider it duly, it will be found
to be,
    First, A wonderful liberty, never enough to be admired. How
could it be imagined that ever those who owed unto God more than
ever they could pay by their own eternal sufferings; those that were
under the dreadful curse and condemnation of the law, in the power
and possession of Satan the strong man armed; those that were bound
with so many chains in their spiritual prison; their understanding
bound with ignorance, their wills with obstinacy, their hearts with
impenetrable hardness, their affections with a thousand bewitching
vanities, that slight their state of slavery so much, as
industriously to oppose all instruments and means of deliverance;
for such persons to be set at liberty, notwithstanding all this, is
the wonder of wonders, and will be deservedly marvellous in the eyes
of believers for ever.
    Secondly, The freedom of believers is a peculiar freedom; a
liberty which few obtain; the generality abiding still in bondage to
Satan, who, from the multitude of his subjects, is stiled the god of
this world, 2 Cor. 4: 4. Believers in scripture are often called a
remnant, which is but a small part of the whole piece: The more
cause have the people of God to admire distinguishing mercy. How
many nobles and great ones of the world are but royal slaves to
Satan, and their own lusts! Thirdly, The liberty of believers is a
liberty dearly purchased by the blood of Christ. What that captain
said, Acts 22: 28. "With a great sum obtained I this freedom," may
be much more said of the believers' freedom: It was not silver or
gold, but the precious blood of Christ that purchased it, 1 Pet. 1:
18.
    Fourthly, The freedom and liberty of believers is a growing and
increasing liberty; they get more and more out of the power of sin,
and nearer still to their complete salvation every day, Rom. 13: 11.
The body of sin dies daily in them: they are said to be crucified
with Christ: the strength of sin abates continually in them, after
the manner of crucified persons, who die a slow, but sure death: And
look in what degree the power of sin abates, proportionably their
spiritual liberty increases upon them.
    Fifthly, The freedom of believers is a comfortable freedom: the
apostle comforts Christians of the lowest rank, poor servants, with
this consideration, 1 Cor. 7: 25!. "He that is called in the Lord,
being a servant, is the Lord's freeman," q. d. Let not the meanness
of your outward condition, which is a state of subjection and
dependence, a state of poverty and contempt, at all trouble you: you
are the Lord's freemen, of precious account in his eyes. O it is a
comfortable liberty!
    Sixthly, and Lastly, It is a perpetual and final freedom; they
that are once freed by Christ, have their manumission and final
discharge from that state of bondage they were in before: sin shall
never have dominion over them any more: it may tempt them and
trouble them, but shall never more rule and govern them, Acts 26:
18. And thus you see what a glorious liberty the liberty of
believers is.
    The improvement whereof will be in the following inferences.
    Inf. 1. How rational is the joy of Christians, above the joy of
all others in the world? Shall not the captive rejoice in his
recovered liberty? the very birds of the air (as one observes) had
rather be at liberty in the woods, though lean and hungry, than in a
golden cage with the richest fare: every creature naturally prizes
it; none more than believers, who have felt the burden and bondage
of corruption, who in the days of their first illumination and
conviction have poured out many groans and tears for this mercy.
What was said of the captive people of God in Babylon, excellently
shadows forth the state of God's people under spiritual bondage,
with the way and manner of their deliverance from it, Zech. 9: 11.
"By the blood of the covenant I have sent forth thy prisoners out of
the pit, wherein is no water." Believers are delivered by the blood
of Christ, out of a worse pit than that of Babylon; and look, as the
tribes in their return from thence were overwhelmed with joy and
astonishment, Psal 126: 1, 2. "When the Lord turned again the
captivity of Sion, we are like them that dream: then was our mouth
filled with laughter, and our tongue with singing."
    They were overwhelmed with the sense of the mercy: So should it
be with the people of God. It is said, Luke 15: 24. when the
prodigal son (there made the emblem of a returning, converting
sinner) was returned again to his father's house, that there was
heard music and dancing, mirth and feasting in that house. The
angels in heaven rejoice when a soul is recovered out of the power
of Satan: And shall not the recovered soul, immediately concerned in
the mercy, greatly rejoice? Yea, let them rejoice in the Lord, and
let no earthly trouble or affliction ever have power to interrupt
their joy for a moment, after such a deliverance as this.
    Inf. 2. How unreasonable and wholly inexcusable is the sin of
apostasy from Jesus Christ? What is it but for a delivered captive
to put his feet again into the shackles; his hands into the
manacles; his neck into the iron yoke, from which he has been
delivered? It is said, Mat. 12: 44, 45. "When the unclean spirit is
gone out of a man, he walketh through dry places, seeking rest and
findeth none: Then he saith, I will return into mine house from
whence I came out; and when he is come, he findeth it empty, swept,
and garnished; then goes he, and taketh with him seven other spirits
more wicked than himself, and they enter in and dwell there, and the
last state of that man is worse than the first." Even as a prisoner
that has escaped, and is again recovered, is loaded with double
irons. Let the people of God be content to run any hazard, endure
any difficulties in the way of religion, rather than return again
into their former bondage, to sin and Satan. O Christian! if ever
God gave thee a sight and a sense of the misery and danger of thy
natural state, if ever thou hast felt the pangs of labouring and
distressed conscience, and, after all this, tasted the unspeakable
sweetness of the peace and rest that are in Christ, thou wilt rather
chuse to die ten thousand deaths, shall to forsake Christ, and go
back again into that sad condition.
    Inf. 3. How suitable and well-becoming is a free spirit in
believers to their state of liberty and freedom? Christ has made
your condition free, O let the temper and frame of your hearts be
free also; do all that you do for God with a spirit of freedom; not
by constraint, but willingly. Methinks, Christians, the new nature
that is in you should stand for a command, and be instead of all
arguments that use to work upon the hopes and fears of other men.
See how all creatures work according to the principle of their
natures. You need not command a mother to draw forth her breasts to
a sucking child; nature itself teaches and prompts to that. You need
not bid the sea ebb and flow at the stated hours. O Christian! why
should thy heart need any other argument, than its own spiritual
inclination, to keep its stated times and seasons of communion with
God? Let none of God's commandments be grievous to you: let not
thine heart need dragging and forcing to its own benefit and
advantage. Whatever you do for God, do it cheerfully; and whatever
you suffer for God suffer it cheerfully. It was a brave spirit which
actuated holy Paul, "I am ready (saith he) not only to be bound, but
also to die at Jerusalem for the name of the Lord Jesus," Acts 21:
13.
    Inf. 4. Let no man wonder at the enmity and opposition of Satan
to the preaching of the gospel: for by the gospel it is that souls
are recovered out of his power, Acts 26: 18. It is the express work
of ministers "to turn men from darkness to light, and from the power
of Satan unto God." Satan (as one saith) is a great and jealous
prince: he will never endure to have liberty proclaimed by the
ministers of Christ within his dominions. And, indeed, what is it
less, when the gospel is preached in power, but as it were by beat
of drum, and sound of trumpet, to proclaim liberty, spiritual,
sweet, and everlasting liberty, to every soul sensible of the
bondage of corruption and the cruel servitude of Satan, and will now
come over to Jesus Christ? And O what numbers and multitudes of
prisoners have broken loose from Satan at one proclamation of
Christ, Acts 2: 41. But Satan owes the servants of Christ a spite
for this, and will be sure to pay them if ever they come within his
reach; persecution is the evil genius of the gospel, and follows it
as the shadow does the body.
    Inf. 5. How careful should Christians be to maintain their
spiritual liberty in all and every point thereof! "Stand fast (saith
Paul) in the liberty wherewith Christ has made us free, and be not
again entangled in the yoke of bondage," Gal. 5: 1. And again, Ye
are bought with a price, be not ye the servants of men." It is
Christ's prerogative to prescribe the rules of his own house; he has
given no man dominion over your faith, 2 Cor. 1: 24. One man is no
rule to another, but the word of Christ is a rule to all: follow not
the holiest of men one step farther than they follow Christ, 1 Cor.
11: 4. Man is an ambitious creature, naturally affecting dominion;
and dominion over the mind rather than over the body. To give law to
others, feeds pride in himself; so far as any man brings the word of
Christ to warrant his injunctions, so far we are to obey, and no
farther; Christ is your Lord and Lawgiver.
    Inf. 6. Lastly, Let this encourage and persuade sinners to come
to Christ; for with him is sweet liberty to poor captives. Oh that
you did but know what a blessed state Jesus Christ would bring you
into! "Come unto me (saith he) ye that labour and are heavy laden:"
and what encouragement does he give to comers? Why this, "My yoke is
easy, and my burden is light." The devil persuades you, that the
ways of obedience and strict godliness are a perfect bondage; but if
ever God regenerate you, you will find his ways, "ways of
pleasantness, and all his paths peace: you will rejoice in the way
of his commandments as much as in all riches:" you will find the
worst work Christ puts you about, even suffering work, sweeter than
all the pleasures that ever you found in sin. O therefore open your
hearts at the call of the gospel: Come unto Christ, then shall you
be free indeed.
    
    
    
    
Sermon 19.

    
The Saints coming home to GOD by Reconciliation and Glorification,
opened and applied.


1 Pet. 3: 18.

For Christ has once suffered for sins, the just for the unjust, that
he might bring us to God.
    
    
    The scope of the apostle in this place is to prepare and
fortify Christians for a day of suffering. In order to their
cheerful sustaining whereof, he prescribeth two excellent rules of
mighty use for all suffering Christians.
    First, To get a good conscience within them, ver. 16,17. Hic
murus aheneus esto.
    Secondly, To set the example of Christ's sufferings before
them, ver. 18. "For Christ has once suffered for sinners;" the
sufferings of Christ for us, is the great motive engaging Christians
to suffer cheerfully for him.
    In the words before us we have,
    First, The sufficiency and fulness of Christ's sufferings
intimated in that particle [once]; Christ needs to suffer no more,
having finished and completed that whole work at once.
    Secondly, The meritorious cause of the sufferings of Christ,
and that is sin, Christ once suffered for sins; not his own sins,
but ours; as it follows in the next clause, which is the third thing
here observable, viz.
    Thirdly, The admirable grace and unexampled love of Christ to
us sinners, the just for the unjust; in which words the substitution
of Christ in the room and place of sinners, the vicegerence of his
death is plainly expressed. Christ died not only nostro bono, for
our good, but also nostro loco, in our stead.
    Fourthly, Here is also the final cause or design and scope of
the sufferings of Christ, which was to bring us to God.
    Fifthly, Here is also the issue of the sufferings of Christ,
which was the death of Christ in the flesh, and the quickening of
Christ after death by the Spirit. Many excellent observations are
lodged in the bosom of this scripture; all which I must pass over in
silence at this time, and confine my discourse to the final cause of
the sufferings of Christ, namely, that he might bring us to God:
where the observation will be plainly and briefly this.
    
    Doct. That the end of Christ's cursed death, and bitter
         sufferings, was to bring all those for whom he died unto
         God.
    
    In the explication and preparation of this point for use, two
things must be spoken unto, viz.
    1. What Christ's bringing us to God imports?
    2. What influence the death of Christ has upon this design of
bringing us to God?
    First, What Christ's bringing us to God imports? And certainly
there be many great and excellent things contained in this
expression: more generally it notes our state of reconciliation, and
our state of glorification. By reconciliation we are brought nigh to
God, Eph. 2: 18. "Ye are made nigh," i.e. reconciled, "by the blood
of Christ," Heb. 12: 22, 23. we are said "to come to God the Judge
of all." By reconciliation we are brought nigh unto God now; by
glorification we shall be brought home to God hereafter, 1 Thes. 55:
17. "We shall be ever with the Lord." But more particularly this
phrase, "that he might bring us to God," imports,
    First, That the chief happiness of man consisteth in the
enjoyment of God: that the creature has as necessary dependence upon
God for happiness, as the stream has upon the fountain, or the image
in the glass upon the face of him that looks into it. For as the sum
of the creature's misery lies in this, depart from me; separation
from God being the principal part of damnation, so, on the contrary,
the chief happiness of the creature consisteth in the enjoyment and
blessed vision of God, 1 John 3: 2. Psal. 17: 15. "I shall be
satisfied when I awake with thy likeness".
    Secondly, It implies man's revolt and apostasy from God, Eph.
2: 12. "But now in Christ Jesus, ye who were some time afar off; are
made nigh by the blood of Christ." Those whom Christ bringeth unto
God were before afar off from him, both in state and condition, and
in temper and disposition: we were lost creatures, and had no desire
to return to God. The prodigal was said to go into a far country,
Luke 15: 80.
    Thirdly, Christ's bringing us to God, implies our inability to
re turn to God of ourselves; we must be brought back by Christ, or
perish for ever in a state of separation from God: the lost sheep is
made the emblem of the lost sinner, Luke 15: 5. The sheep returns
not to the fold of itself, but the shepherd seeks it, finds it, and
carries it back upon his shoulders. And the apostle plainly tells
us, Rom. 5: 6. That when we were without strength, i.e. any ability
to recover, help, or save ourselves, in due time Christ died for the
ungodly.
    Fourthly, Christ bringing us to God evidently implies this,
that God's unsatisfied justice was once the great bar betwixt him
and man. Man can have no access to God but by Christ: Christ brings
us to God by no other way but the way of satisfaction by his blood:
"He has suffered for sins, the just for the unjust, that he might
bring us to God." Better ten thousand worlds should perish for ever,
than that God should lose the honour of his justice. This great
obex, or bar to our enjoyment of God, is effectually removed by the
death of Christ, whereby God's justice is not only fully satisfied,
but highly honoured and glorified, Rom. 3: 24. And so the way by
which we are brought to God is again opened (to the wonder and joy
of all believers) by the blood and sufferings of Christ.
    Fifthly, and lastly, It shews us the peculiar happiness and
privilege of believers above all people in the world: these only are
they which shall be brought to God by Jesus Christ in a reconciled
state: others, indeed, shall be brought to God as a Judge, to be
condemned by him: believers only are brought to God in the
Mediator's hand, as a reconciled Father, to be made blessed for ever
in the enjoyment of him: every believer is brought singly to God at
his death, Luke 16: 22. And all believers shall be jointly and
solemnly presented to God in the great day, Col. 1: 22. Jude, ver.
24. They shall be all presented faultless before the presence of his
glory with exceeding joy. Now the privilege of believers in that day
will lie in divers things.
    First, That they shall be all brought to God together. This
will be the general assembly mentioned, Heb. 12: 22. There shall be
a collection of all believers, in all ages of the world, into one
blessed assembly; they shall come from the east, and west, and
north, and south, and shall sit down in the kingdom of God, Luke 13:
29. 0 what a glorious train will be seen following the Redeemer in
that day!
    Secondly, As all the saints shall be collected into one body;
so they shall be all brought or presented unto God, faultless and
with out blemish, Jude, ver. 24. "A glorious church, without spot or
wrinkle, or any such thing," Eph. 5: 27. For this is the general
assembly of the spirits of just men that are made perfect, Heb. 12:
23. All sin was perfectly separated from them when death had
separated their souls and bodies.
    Thirdly, In this lies the privilege of believers, that as they
shall be all brought together, and that in a state of absolute
purity, and perfection, so they shall be all brought to God: they
shall see his face, in the vision whereof is "fulness of joy, and at
whose right-hand are pleasures for evermore," Psal. 16: 11. The
objective blessedness of the saints consisteth in their fruition of
God, Psal. 72: 25. To see God in his word and works, is the
happiness of the saints on earth; but to see him face to face, will
be the fulness of their blessedness in heaven, 1 John 3: 2. This is
that intuitive, transforming, and sanctifying vision, of which the
scriptures frequently speaks, Psal. 17: 15. 1 Cor. 15: 28. Rev. 7:
17.
    Fourthly, To be brought unto God, must needs imply a state of
perfect joy and highest delight. So speaks the apostle, Jude 14.
Christ shall present, or bring them to God with exceeding joy. And
more fully the joy of this day is expressed, Psal. 45: 15 "With joy
and rejoicing shall they be brought; they shall enter into the
king's palace." It will be a day of universal joy, when all the
saints are brought home to God in a perfected state. For,
    1. God the Father will rejoice when Christ brings home that
precious number of his elect, whom he redeemed by his blood: he
rejoiceth in them now, though imperfect, and under many distasteful
corruptions and weaknesses, Zeph. 3: 17. How much more will he
rejoice in them when Christ presents them without spot or wrinkle to
him, Eph. 5: 27.
    2. Jesus Christ will exceedingly rejoice; it will be the day of
the gladness and satisfaction of his heart; for now, and not till
now, he receives his mystical fulness, Col. 1: 24. beholds all the
blessed issues of his death, which cannot but give him unspeakable
contentment, Isa 53: 11. "He shall see of the travail of his soul,
and shall be satisfied."
    3. The day in which believers are brought home to God, will be
a day of unspeakable joy to the Holy Spirit of God himself. For unto
this all his sanctifying designs in this world had respect: to this
day he sealed them: towards this day he stirred up desires, and
groanings in their hearts that cannot be uttered, Eph. 4: 30. Rom.
8: 28. Thus the great and blessed persons, Father, Son, and Spirit,
will rejoice in the bringing home of the elect to God. For as it is
the greatest joy to a man to see the designs which his heart has
been long projecting, and intently set upon, by an orderly conduct,
at last brought to the happy issue he first aimed at; much more will
it be so here; the counsel and hand of each person being deeply
concerned in this blessed design.
    4. The angels of God will rejoice at the bringing home of
believers to him: the spirits of just men made perfect, will be
united in one general assembly, with an innumerable company of
angels, Heb. 2: 22 Great is the affection and love of angels to
redeemed ones; they greatly rejoiced at the incarnation of Christ
for them, Luke 2: 13. They greatly delighted to pry into the mystery
of their redemption, 1 Pet. 1. 12 They were marvellously delighted
at their conversion, which was the day of their espousals to Christ,
Luke 15: 10. They have been tender and careful over them, and very
serviceable to them in this world, Heb. 1: 14. and therefore cannot
but rejoice exceedingly, to see them all brought home in safety to
their father's house.
    5. To conclude, Christ's bringing home all believers unto God,
will be matter of unspeakable joy to themselves; for, whatever
knowledge and acquaintance they had with God here, whatever sights
of faith they had of heaven and the glory to come in this world, yet
the sight of God and Christ the Redeemer will be an unspeakable
surprise to them in that day. This will be the day of relieving all
their wants, the day of satisfaction to all their desires; for now
they are come where they would be, arrived at the very desires of
their souls.
    Secondly, In the last place, let it be considered, what
influence the death of Christ has upon this design, and you shall
find it much every way. In two things especially, the death of
Christ has a blessed casualty and influence in this matter, viz.
    1. It effectually removes all obstacles to it.
    2. It purchaseth (as a price) their title to it.
    First, The death of Christ removes all obstacles out of the way
of this mercy: such were the bars hindering our access to God as
nothing but the death of Christ could remove, and thereby open a way
for believers to come to God. The guilt of sin barred us from his
gracious presence, Rom. 1: 2, 3. Hos. 14: 2. The filth of sin
excluded us from God, Hab. 1: 23. Heb. 12: 14. The enmity of our
nature perfectly stopped up our way to God, Col. 1: 21. Rom. 8: 7.
by reason hereof fallen man has no desire to come unto God, Job 21:
14. The justice of God, like a flaming sword turning every way, kept
all men from access to God. And Lastly, Satan, that malicious and
armed adversary, lay as a lion in the way to God, 2 Pet. 5: 8. 0,
with what strong bars were the gates of heaven shut against our
souls! The way of God was chained up with such difficulties, as none
but Christ was able to remove; and he by death has effectually
removed them all: The way is now open, even the new and the living
way, consecrated for us by his blood. The death of Christ
effectually removes the guilt of sin, 1 Pet. 2: 21. washes off the
filth of sin, 1 John 5: 6. takes away the enmity of nature, Col. 1:
20, 21. satisfies all the demands of justice, Rom. 3: 25, 26. has
broken all the power of Satan, Col. 2: 15. Heb. 2: 14. and
consequently the way to God is effectually and fully opened to
believers by the blood of Jesus, Heb. 10: 20.
    Secondly, The blood of Christ purchased for believers their
right and title to this privilege, Gal. 4: 4, 5. "But when the
fulness of time was come, God sent forth his Son, made of a woman,
made under the law; to redeem them that were under the law, that we
might receive the adoption of sons," i.e. both the relation and
inheritance of sons. There was value and worth enough in the
precious blood of Christ, not only to pay all our debts to justice,
but over and above the payment of our debts, to purchase for us this
invaluable privilege. We must put this unspeakable mercy of being
brought to God, as my text puts it, upon the account, and to the
score of the death of Christ: no believer had ever tasted the
sweetness of such a mercy, if Christ had not tasted the bitterness
of death for him. The use of all you will have in the following
deductions of truth.
    Deduction 1. Great is the preciousness and worth of souls, that
the life of Christ should be given to redeem and recover them to
God. As God laid out his thoughts and counsel from eternity, upon
them, to project the way and method of their salvation, so the Lord
Jesus, in pursuance of that blessed design, came from the bosom of
the Father, and spilt his invaluable blood to bring them to God. No
wise man expends vast sums to bring home trifling commodities: how
cheap soever our souls are in our estimation, it is evident by this
they are of precious esteem in the eyes of Christ.
    Deduct. 2. Redeemed souls must expect no rest or satisfaction
on this side heaven, and the full enjoyment of God. The life of a
believer in this world, is a life of motion and expectation: they
are now coming to God, 1 Pet. 2: 4. God, you see, is the centre and
rest of their souls, Heb. 4: 9. As the rivers cannot rest till they
pour themselves into the bosom of the sea, so neither can renewed
souls find rest till they come into the bosom of God. There are four
things which do and will break the rest, and disturb the souls of
believers in this world; afflictions, temptations, corruptions, and
absence from God. If the three former causes of disquietness were
totally removed, so that a believer were placed in such a condition
upon earth, where no affliction could disturb him, no temptation
trouble him, no corruption defile or grieve him, yet his very
absence from God must still keep him restless and unsatisfied, 2
Cor. 5: 6. "Whilst we are at home in the body, we are absent from
the Lord."
    Deduct. 3. What sweet and pleasant thoughts should all
believers have of death! When they die, and never till they die,
shall they be fully brought home to God. Death to the saints, is the
door by which they enter into the enjoyment of God: the dying
Christian is almost at home, yet a few pangs and agonies more, and
then he is come to God, in whose presence is the fulness of joy. "I
desire (saith Paul) to depart, and to be with Christ, which is far
better," Phil. 1: 23. It should not affright us to be brought to
death, the king of terrors, so long as it is the office of death to
bring us to God. That dreaming opinion of the soul sleeping after
death, is as ungrounded, as it is uncomfortable: the same day we
loose from this shore, we shall be landed upon the blessed shore;
where we shall see and enjoy God for ever. O, if the friends of dead
believers did but understand where, and with whom their souls are,
whilst they are mourning over their bodies, certainly a few
believing thoughts of this would quickly dry up their tears. and
fill the house of mourning with voices of praise and thanksgiving!
    Deduct. 4. How comfortable and sweet should the converses and
communication of Christians be one with another, in this world!
Christ is bringing them all to God through this vale of tears: they
are now in the way to him; all bound for heaven; going home to God,
their everlasting rest in glory: every day, every hour, every duty
brings them nearer and nearer to their journey's end, Rom. 13: 11.
"Now (saith the apostle) is our salvation nearer than when we
believed." O, what manner of heavenly communications and ravishing
discourses should believers have with each other as they walk by the
way! O, what pleasant and delightful converse should they have with
one another about the place and state whither Christ is bringing
them, and where they shall shortly be! What ravishing, transporting,
transforming visions they shall have that day they are brought home
to God! How surprisingly glorious to them the sight of Jesus Christ
will be, who died for them to bring them unto God! how should such
discourses as these, shorten and sweeten their passage through this
world, strengthen and encourage the dejected and feeble-minded, and
exceedingly honour and adorn their profession? Thus lived the
believers of old, Heb. 11: 9, 10. "By faith he sojourned in the land
of promise, as in a strange country, dwelling in tabernacles with
Isaac and Jacob, the heirs with him of the same promise; for he
looked for a city which has foundations, whose builder and maker is
God." But, alas! most Christians are either so entangled in the
cares and troubles, or so ensnared by the delights and pleasures
which almost continually divert and take up their thoughts by the
way, that there is but little room for any discourses of Christ and
heaven, among many of them: but certainly this would be as much your
interest as your duty. When the apostle had entertained the
Thessalonians with a lovely discourse of their meeting the Lord in
the air, and being ever with the Lord, he charges it upon them as
their great duty, to comfort one another with these words, 1 Thes.
4: 17,18.
    Deduct. 5; How unreasonable are the dejections of believers
upon the account of those troubles which they meet with in this
world! It is true, afflictions of all kinds do attend believers in
their way to God; through many tribulations we must enter into that
kingdom. But what then? must we despond and droop under them as
other men? Surely no; If afflictions be the way through which you
must come to God, then never be discouraged at affliction; troubles
and afflictions are of excellent use, under the blessings of the
Spirit, to further Christ's great design in bringing you to God. How
often would you turn out of that way which leads to God, if he did
not hedge up your way with thorns, Hos. 2: 6. Doubtless when you
come home to God, you shall find you have been much beholden (it may
be a great deal more) to your troubles than to your comforts, for
bringing you thither: however, the sweetness of the end will
infinitely more then recompense the sorrows and troubles of the way:
nor are they worthy to be compared with the glory that shall be
revealed in you, Rom. 8: 18.
    Deduct 6. How much are all believers obliged, in point of
interest, to follow Jesus Christ whithersoever he goes! Thus are the
saints described, Rev. 14: 4. "These are they which follow the Lamb
whithersoever be goeth: these were redeemed from among men, being
the first fruits unto God, and to the Lamb." If it be the design of
Christ to bring us to God, then certainly it is our duty to follow
Christ in all the paths of active and passive obedience through
which he now leads us, as ever we expect to be brought home to God
at last: "We are made partakers of Christ, if we hold the beginning
of our confidence stedfast unto the end," Heb. 3: 14. If we have
followed him through many sufferings and troubles, and shall turn
away from him at last, we lose all that we have wrought and suffered
in religion, and shall never reach home to God at last. The crown of
life belongs only to them who are faithful to the death.
    Deduct. 7. Let all that desire, or expect to come to God
hereafter, come to Christ by faith now. There is no other way to the
Father, but by Christ, no other way to Christ but faith. How vain
therefore are the hopes and expectations of all unbelievers? Be
assured of this great truth, Death shall bring you to God as an
avenging Judge, if Christ do not bring you now to God as a
reconciled Father: without holiness no man shall see God: the door
of hope is shut against all christless persons, John 14: 6. "No man
cometh unto the Father but by me." O what a sweet voice comes down
from heaven to your souls this day, saying, As ever you expect or
hope to come to God, and enjoy the blessing that is here, come unto
Christ, obey his calls, give up yourselves to his conduct and
government, and you shall certainly be brought to God! As sure as
you shall now be brought to Jesus Christ by spiritual union, so sure
shall you be brought to God in full fruition.
    Blessed be God for Jesus Christ, the new and living way to the
Father.
    And thus I have finished the motives drawn from the titles and
benefits of Christ, serving to enforce and quicken the great gospel
exhortation of coming to, and effectually applying the Lord Jesus
Christ in the way of faith. O that the blessings of the Spirit might
follow these calls, and fix these considerations as nails in sure
places! But seeing the great hindrance and obstruction to faith is
the false opinion and persuasion of most unregenerate men, that they
are already in Christ; my next work therefore shall be, in a second
use of conviction, to undeceive men in that matter; and that, by
shewing them the undoubted certainty of these two things:
    First, That there is no coming ordinarily to Christ without the
application of the law to our consciences, in a way of effectual
conviction.
    Secondly, Nor by that neither, without the teachings of God, in
the way of spiritual illumination. The first of these will be fully
confirmed and opened in the following sermon.
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
Sermon 20.
    
    
    
The great usefulness of the Law or Word of GOD, in order to the
Application of CHRIST.
    
Rom. 7: 9.
    
For I was alive without the law once, but when the commandment came,
sin revived, and I died.
    
    
    
    The scope of the apostle in this epistle, and more particularly
in this chapter, is to state the due use and excellency of the law,
which he does accordingly.
    First, By denying to it a power to justify us, which is the
peculiar honour of Christ.
    Secondly, By ascribing to it a power to convince us, and so
prepare us for Christ.
    Neither attributing to it more honour than belongeth to it, nor
yet detracting from it that honour and usefulness which God has
given it. It cannot make us righteous, but it can convince us that
we are unrighteous; it cannot heal, but it can open and discover the
wounds that sin has given us; which he proves in this place by an
argument drawn from his own experience, confirmed also by the
general experience of believers, in whose persons and names we must
here understand him to speak; "For I was alive without the law once;
but when the commandment came, sin revived, and I died." Wherein
three particulars are very observable.
    First, The opinion Paul had, and all unregenerate men have of
themselves before conversion: I was alive once. By life, understand
here liveliness, cheerfulness, and confidence of his good estate and
condition: he was full of vain hope, false joy, and presumptuous
confidence; a very brisk and jovial man.
    Secondly, The sense and opinion he had, and all others will
have of themselves, if ever they come under the regenerating work of
the Spirit in his ordinary method of working: I died. The death he
here speaks of, stands opposed to that life before mentioned; and
signifies the sorrows, fears, and tremblings that seized upon his
soul, when his state and temper were upon the change: the
apprehensions he then had of his condition struck him home to the
heart, and damped all his carnal mirth: I died.
    Thirdly, The ground and reason of this wonderful alteration and
change of his judgement, and apprehension of his own condition; the
commandment came, and sin revived: The commandment came, i.e. it
came home to my conscience, it was fixed with a divine and mighty
efficacy upon my heart: the commandment was come before by way of
promulgation, and the literal knowledge of it; but it never came
till now in its spiritual sense and convincing power to his soul;
though he had often read, and heard the law before, yet he never
clearly understood the meaning and extent, he never felt the mighty
efficacy thereof upon his heart before; it so came at this time, as
it never came before. From hence the observations are,
    
    Doct. 1. That unregenerate persons are generally full of
groundless confidence and cheerfulness, though their condition be
sad and miserable.
    
    Doct. 2. That there is a mighty efficacy in the word or law of
God, to kill vain confidence, and quench carnal mirth in the hearts
of men, when God sets it home upon their consciences.
    
    We shall take both these points under consideration, and
improve them to the design in hand.
    
    Doct. 1. That unregenerate persons are full of groundless
confidence and cheerfulness, though their condition be sad and
miserable; Rev. 3: 17. Because thou sayest I am rich, and increased
with goods, and have need of nothing; and knowest not that thou art
wretched, and miserable, and poor, and blind, and naked; This is the
very life that unregenerate men do live.
    
    In opening whereof, I shall shew you,
    1. What is the life of the unregenerate.
    2. What maintains that life.
    3. How it appears that this is the life the generality of the
world do live.
    4. The danger of living such a life as this: and then apply it.
    First, What is the life of the unregenerate, and wherein it
consists? Now there being, among others, three things in which the
life of the unregenerate does principally consist, viz.
    Carnal security,
    Presumptuous hope, and false joy,
    Of these briefly in their order.
    First, There is in unregenerate men a great deal of carnal
security; they dread no danger; Luke 11: 21. "When a strong man
armed keepeth his palace, his goods are at peace:" There is
generally a great stillness and silence in the consciences of such
men; when others, in a better condition, are watching and trembling,
they sleep securely: so they live, and so ofttimes they die, Psal.
123: 4. "They have no bonds in their death," [Hebrew, on knots], no
difficulties that puzzle them. It is true, the consciences of few
men are so perfectly stupefied, but that some time or other they
twang and gird them; but it seldom works to that height, or
continues with them so long as to give any considerable interruption
to their carnal peace and quietness.
    Secondly, The life of the unregenerate consisteth in
presumptuous hope: this is the very foundation of their carnal
security. So Christ tells the Jews, John 8: 54, 53. "Of whom ye say
that he is your God, and yet ye have not known him." The world is
full of hope without a promise, which is but as a spider's web, when
a stress comes to be laid upon it, John 27: 8. Unregenerate men are
said indeed to be without hope, Ephes. 2: 12. but the meaning is,
they are without any solid, well-grounded hope; for in scripture-
account, vain hope is no hope, except it be a lively hope, 1 Pet. 1:
5. A hope flowing from union with Christ, Col. 1: 27. A hope
nourished by experience, Rom. 5: 4. A hope for which a man can give
a reason, 1 Pet. 3: 15. a hope that puts men upon heart-purifying
endeavours, 1 John 3: 5. It is in the account of God a cipher, a
vanity, not deserving the name of hope; and yet such a groundless,
dead, christless, irrational, idle hope is that which the
unregenerate live upon.
    Thirdly, The life of the unregenerate consisteth in false joy,
the immediate offspring of ungrounded hope, Mat. 13: 28. The stony
ground receive the word with joy.
    There are two sorts of joy upon which the unregenerate live,
viz.
    1. A sensitive joy in things carnal.
    2. A delusive joy in things spiritual.
    They rejoice in corn, wine, and oil, in their estates and
children, in the pleasant fruitions of the creature; yea, and they
rejoice also in Christ and the promises, in heaven and in glory:
with all which they have just such a kind of communion as a man has
in a dream with a full feast and curious music; and just so their
joy will vanish when they awake. Now these three, security, hope,
and joy, make up the livelihood of the carnal world.
    Secondly, Next it concerns us to enquire what are the things
that maintain and support this security, hope and joy in the hearts
of unregenerate men; and if we consider duly, we shall find that
church privileges, natural ignorance, false evidences of the love of
God, slight workings of the gospel, self love, comparing themselves
with the more profane, and Satan's policy managing all these in
order to their eternal ruin, are so many springs to feed and
maintain this life of delusion in the unregenerate.
    1. First, Church privileges lay the foundation to this strong
delusion. Thus the Jews deceived themselves, saying in their hearts,
"We have Abraham for our father," Mat. 3: 9. This props up the vain
hopes that Abraham's blood ran in their veins, though Abraham's
faith and obedience never wrought in their hearts.
    2. Secondly, Natural ignorance; this keeps all in peace: they
that see not, fear not. There are but two ways to quiet the hearts
of men about their spiritual and eternal concernments, viz. the way
of assurance and faith, or the way of ignorance and self-deceit; by
the one we are put beyond danger, by the other beyond fear, though
the danger be greater. Satan could never quiet men, if he did not
first blind them.
    3. Thirdly, False evidences of the love of God is another
spring feeding this security, vain hope, and false joy in the hearts
of men: see the power of it to hush and still the conscience, Mat.
7: 92. "Many will say to me in that day, Lord, Lord, have we not
prophesied in thy name?" &c. The things upon which they built their
evidence and confidence, were external things in religion; yet they
had a quieting power upon them, as if they had been the best
evidences in the world.
    4. Fourthly, Slight workings of the gospel; such are transient
motions of the affections under the word, Heb. 6: 8. the working of
their desires about spiritual objects. John 6: 34. Math. 12: 43. the
external change and reformation of their ways, Mat. 12: 43. all
which serve to nourish the vain hopes of the unregenerate.
    5. Fifthly, Self-love is an apparent reason and ground of
security and false hope, Mat. 7: 3. It makes a man to overlook great
evils in himself, whilst he is sharp-sighted to discover and censure
lesser evils in others: self love takes away the sight of sin, by
bringing it too near the eye.
    6. Sixthly, Men's comparing themselves with those that are more
profane and grossly wicked than themselves, serves notably to quiet
and hush the conscience asleep; "God, I thank thee, (said the
Pharisee), I am not as other men, or as this publican." O what a
saint did he seem to himself, when he stood by those that were
externally more wicked.
    7. Seventhly, and lastly, The policy of Satan to manage all
these things to the blinding and ruining of the souls of men, is
another great reason they live so securely and pleasantly as they
do, in a state of so much danger and misery, 2 Cor. 4: 3, 4. "The
god of this world has blinded the minds of them that believe not.
    Thirdly, You have seen what the life of the unregenerate is,
and what maintains that life. In the next place, I shall give you
evidence that this is the life the generality of the world do live;
a life of carnal security, vain hope, and false joy; this will
evidently appear, if we consider,
    First, The activity and liveliness of men's spirits in pursuit
of the world. O how lively and vigorous are their hearts in the
management of earthly designs! Psal. 6: 4. "Who will shew us any
good?" The world eats up their hearts, time, and strength. Now this
could never be, if their eyes were but opened to see the danger and
misery their souls are in. How few designs for the world run in the
thoughts of a condemned man? O if God had ever made the light of
conviction to shine into their consciences, certainly the
temptations would lie the quite contrary way, even in too great a
neglect of things of this life! But this briskness and liveliness
plainly shew the great security which is upon most men.
    Secondly, The marvellous quietness and stillness that is in the
thoughts and consciences of men, about their everlasting
concernments, plainly shews this to be the life of the unregenerate:
How few scruples, doubts, or fears shall you hear from them? How
many years may a man live in carnal families, before he shall hear
such a question as this seriously propounded, "What shall I do to be
saved?" There are no questions in their lips, because no fear or
sense of danger in their hearts.
    Thirdly, The general contentedness, and professed willingness
of carnal men to die, give clear evidence that such a life of
security and vain hope is the life they live; "Like sheep they are
laid in the grave," Psal. 49: 14. O how quiet and still are their
consciences, when there are but a few breaths more between them and
everlasting burnings! Had God opened their eyes to apprehend the
consequences of death, and what follows the pale horse, Rev. 6: 8.
it were impossible but that every unregenerate man should make that
bed on which he dies shake and tremble under him.
    Fourthly, and lastly, The low esteem men have for Christ, and
the total neglect of, at least the mere biding with, those duties in
which he is to be found, plainly discover this stupid secure life to
be the life that the generality of the world do live, for were men
sensible of the disease of sin, there could be no quieting them
without "Christ the physician," Phil. 3: 8. All the business they
have to do in this world could never keep them from their knees, or
make them strangers to their closets; all which, and much more that
might be said of the like nature, gives too full and clear proof of
this sad assertion, that this is the life the unregenerate world
generally lives.
    Fourthly, In the last place, I would speak a few words to
discover the danger of such a life as has been described; to which
purpose let the following brief hints be seriously minded.
    First, By these things souls are inevitably betrayed into hell
and eternal ruin; this blinding is in order to damning, 2 Cor. 4: 3,
4. "If our gospel be hid, it is hid to them that are lost, whose
eyes the god of this world has blinded." Those that are turned over
into eternal death are thus generally hoodwinked and blinded in
order thereunto, Isa 6: 9, 10. "And he said go and tell this people,
hear ye indeed, but understand not: and see ye indeed, but perceive
not. Make the hearts of this people fat, and make their ears heavy,
and shut their eyes, lest they see with their eyes, and hear with
their ears, and understand with their hearts, and convert, and be
healed.
    Secondly, As damning is the event of blinding, so nothing makes
hell a more terrible surprise to the soul than this does. By this
means the wrath of God is felt before its danger be apprehended; a
man is past all hope, before he begins to have any fear: his eternal
ruin, like a breach ready to fall, swelling out in a high wall,
cometh suddenly at an instant, Isa. 30: 13. and as it damns surely
and surprisingly, so,
    Thirdly, Nothing more aggravates a man's damnation than to sink
suddenly into it, from amidst so many hopes, and high confidence of
safety: For a man to find himself in hell, when he thought and
concluded himself within a step of heaven O what a hell will it be
to such men! The higher vain hopes lifted them up, the more dreadful
must their fall be, Matth. 7: 22. And as it damns surely,
surprisingly, and with highest aggravations, so,
    Fourthly, This life of security and vain hope frustrates all
the means of recovery and salvation, in the only season wherein they
can be useful and beneficial to us: By reason of these things the
word has no power to convince men's consciences, nothing can bring
them to a sight and sense of their condition: Therefore Christ told
the self-confident and blind Jews, Matth. 21: 21. "That the
publicans and harlots go into the kingdom of God before them:" And
the reason is, because their hearts lie more open and fair to the
strokes of conviction and compunction for sin than those do, who are
blinded by vain hopes and confidences.
    Inference 1. Is this the life that the unregenerate world
lives? Then it is not to be wondered at that the preaching of the
gospel has so little success: "Who has believed our report? (saith
the prophet) and to whom is the arm of the Lord revealed?" Isa. 53:
1. Ministers study for truths apt to awaken and convince the
consciences of them that hear them, but their words return again to
them: They turn to God, and mourn over the matter; we have laboured
in vain, and spent our strength for nought: And this security is the
cause of all, vain hopes bar fast the doors of men's hearts against
all the convictions and persuasions of the word. The greater cause
have they to admire the grace of God, who have found, or shall find
the convictions of the word sharper than any two edged sword,
piercing to the dividing asunder of the soul and spirit; to whose
hearts God brings home the commandment by an effectual application.
    Inf. 2. If this be the life of the unregenerate world, what
deadly enemies are they that nourish and strengthen the groundless
confidences and vain hopes of salvation in men. This the scripture
calls the healing of the hurt of souls slightly, by crying, "Peace,
peace, when there is no peace," Jer. 6: 14. The sewing of pillows
under their arm-holes, Ezek. 13: 18. That they may lie soft and easy
under the ministry; and this is the doctrine which the people love:
but oh, what wilt the end of these things be! And what an account
have those men to give to God for the blood of those souls by them
betrayed to the everlasting burnings! Such flattery is the greatest
cruelty: Those whom you bless upon earth, will curse you in hell,
and the day in which they trusted their souls to your conduct.
    Inf. 3. How great a mercy is it to be awakened out of that
general sleep and security which is fallen upon the world! You
cannot estimate the value of that mercy, for it is a peculiar mercy.
O that ever the Spirit of the Lord should touch thy soul under the
ministry of the word, startle and rouse thy conscience, whilst
others are left in the dead sleep of security round about thee! When
the Lord dealt with thy soul much after the same manner he did with
Paul in the way to Damascus, who not only saw a light shining from
heaven, which those that travelled with him saw as well as he, but
heard that voice from heaven which did the work upon his heart,
though his companions heard it not. Besides, it is not only a
peculiar mercy, but it is a leading introductive mercy, to all other
spiritual mercies that follow it to all eternity. If God had not
done this for thee, thou hadst never been brought to faith, to
Christ, or heaven. From this act of the Spirit all other saving acts
take their rise; so that you have cause for ever to admire the
goodness of God in such a favour as this is.
    Inf. 4. Lastly, Hence it follows that the generality of the
world are in the direct way to eternal ruin; and whatever their vain
confidences are, that cannot be saved "Narrow is the way, and strait
is the gate that leadeth unto life, and few there be that find it."
Hear me all you that live this dangerous life of carnal security and
vain hope, whatever your persuasions and confidences are, except you
give them up, and get better grounds for your hope, you cannot be
saved. For,
    First, Such hopes and confidences as yours are directly
contradictory to the established order of the gospel, which requires
repentance, Acts 5: 31. faith, Acts 13: 39. and regeneration, Joh
    3: 3. in all that shall be saved. And this order shall never be
altered for any man's sake.
    Secondly, If such as you be saved, all the threatenings in
scripture must be reversed, which lie in full opposition to your
vain hopes, Mark 16: 16. John 3: 16. Rom. 3: 8, 9. Either the truth
of God, in these threatenings must fail, or your vain hopes must
fail.
    Thirdly, If ever such as you be saved, new conditions must be
set to all the promises; for there is no condition of any special
promise found in any unregenerate person. Compare your hearts with
these scriptures, Matth. 5: 3, 4, 5, 6. Psal. 24: 4. Psal. 84: 11.
Gen. 17: 1, 2.
    Fourthly, If ever such a hope as yours bring you to heaven,
then the saving hope of God's elect is not rightly described to us
in the scriptures. Scripture-hope is the effect of regeneration, 1
Pet. 1: 3. And purity of heart is the effect of that hope, 1 John 3:
3. Nay.
    Fourthly, The very nature of heaven is mistaken in scripture,
if such as you be subjects qualified for its enjoyment: For
assimilation, or the conformity of the soul to God in holiness, is,
in the scripture account, a principal ingredient of that
blessedness: By all which it manifestly appears that the hopes of
most men are in vain, and will never bring them to heaven.
    
    
    
    
    Sermon 21.
    
    
    Rom 7:9
    
    For I was alive without the law once: But when the commandment
came, sin revived, and I died.
    
    
    
    Doct. 2. THAT there is a mighty efficacy in the word or law of
God, to kill vain confidence, and quench carnal mirth in the hearts
of men, when God sets it home upon their consciences. "The weapons
of the word are not carnal, but mighty through God; to the pulling
down of strong holds, casting down imaginations, and every thing
that exalteth itself against the knowledge of God, and bringing into
captivity every thought to the obedience of Christ," 2 Cor. 10: 4,
5.
    In the opening of this point I shall,
    1. Demonstrate the efficacy of the word or law of God.
    2. Shew wherein the efficacy thereof lies.
    3. From whence it has all this mighty power and efficacy.
    First, I shall give you some demonstrations of the mighty power
and efficacy that there are in the word or law of God; which will
appear with the fullest evidence,
    First, From the various subjects upon whom it works: The hearts
and consciences of men of all orders and qualities, have been
reached and wounded to the quick by the two-edged sword of God's
law. Some, among the great and honourable of the earth, (though
indeed the fewest of that rank) have been made to stoop and tremble
under the word, Acts 24: 16. Mark 6: 20. 1 Sam. 15: 24. The wise and
learned of the world have felt its power, and been brought over to
embrace the humbling and self-denying ways of Christ, Acts 17: 31.
Thus Origen, Hierom, Tertullian, Bradwardine, and many more, came
into Canaan laden with the Egyptian gold, as one speaks, i.e. they
came into the church of God abundantly enriched and furnished with
the learned arts and sciences, devoting them all to the service of
Christ. Yea, and which is as strange, the most simple, weak, and
illiterate have been wonderfully changed, and wrought upon by the
power of the word: "The testimonies of the Lord make wise the
simple:" Men
    of weak understandings, in all other matters, have been made
wise to salvation by the power of the word, Matth. 11: 25. 1 Cor. 1:
27. Nay the most malicious and obstinate enemies of Christ have been
wounded and converted by the word, 1 Tim. 1: 13. Acts 16: 25. Those
that have been under the prejudice of the worst and most idolatrous
education, have been the subjects of its mighty power, Acts 19: 26.
To conclude, men of the most profligate and debauched lives have
been wonderfully changed and altered by the power of the word, 1
Cor. 6: 10, 11.
    Secondly, The mighty efficacy of the law of God appears in the
manner of its operation; it works suddenly; strikes like a dart
through the hearts and consciences of men, Acts 2: 37. A wonderful
change is made in a short time: And, as it works quickly and
suddenly, so it works irresistibly, with an uncontrolled power upon
the spirits of men, 1 Thes. 1: 5. Rom. 1: 16. Let the soul be armed
against conviction with the thickest ignorance, strongest prejudice,
or most obstinate resolution, the word of God will wound the breast
even of such a man, when God sends it forth in his authority and
power.
    Thirdly, The wonderful power of the law or word of God is
evidently seen in the strange effects which are produced by it in
the hearts and lives of men. For,
    First, It changes and alters the frame and temper of the mind:
It moulds a man into a quite contrary temper, Gal. 1: 3. "He which
persecuted us in times past, now preacheth the faith, which once he
destroyed:" Thus a tiger is transformed into a lamb, by the power of
the word of God.
    Secondly, It makes the soul, upon which it works, to forego and
quit the dearest interests it has in this world for Jesus Christ,
Phil. 3: 7, 8, 9. Riches, honours, self-righteousness, dearest
relations, are denied and forsaken. Reproach, poverty, and death
itself, are willingly embraced for Christ's sake, when once the
efficacy of the word has been upon the hearts of men, 1 Thes. 1: 6.
Those that were their companions in sin, are declined, renounced,
and cast of F with abhorrence, 1 Pet. 4: 8, 4. In such things as
these the mighty power of the word discovers itself.
    First, It has an awakening efficacy upon secure and sleepy
sinners: It rouses the conscience, and brings a man to a sense and
feeling apprehension, Eph. 5: 13, 14. The first effectual touch of
the word startles the drowsy conscience. A poor sinner lies in his
sins, as Peter did in his chains, fast asleep, though a warrant was
signed for his execution the next day: but the Spirit in the word
awakens him as the angel did Peter: And this awakening power of the
word is in order, both of time and nature, antecedent to all its
operations and effects.
    Secondly, The law of God has an enlightening efficacy upon the
minds of men: It is eye-salve to the blinded eye, Rev. 3: 18. A
light shining in a dark place, 2 Pet. 1: 19. A light shining into
the very heart of man, 2 Cor. 4: 6. When the word comes in power,
all things appear with another face: The sins that were hid from our
eyes, and the danger which was concealed by the policy of Satan from
our souls, now lie clear and open before us, Eph. 5: 8.
    Thirdly, The word of God has a convincing efficacy: It sets sin
in order before the soul, Psal. 50: 21. As an army is drawn up in an
exact order, so are the sins of nature and practice, the sins of
youth and age, even a great and terrible army is drawn up before the
eye of the conscience; the convictions of the word are clear and
full, 1 Cor. 14: 24, 25. The very secrets of a sinner's heart are
made manifest; his mouth is stopped; his pleas are silenced; his
conscience yields to the charge of guilt, and to the equity of the
sentence of the law, so that the soul stands mute, and self-
condemned at the bar of conscience: It has got nothing to say why
the wrath of God should not come upon it to the uttermost, Rom. 3:
19.
    Fourthly, The law of God has a soul-wounding, an heart-cut tiny
efficacy: It pierces into the very soul and spirit of man, Acts 2:
37. "When they heard this, they were pricked at their hearts, and
said unto Peter, and to the rest of tile apostles; men and brethren,
what shall we do?" A dreadful sound is in the sinner's ears; his
soul is in deep distress; he knows not which way to turn for ease;
no plaister but the blood of Christ can heal these wounds which the
word makes: No outward trouble, affliction, disgrace, or loss, ever
touched the quick as the word of God does.
    Fifthly, The word has a heart-turning, a soul converting
efficacy in it: It is a regenerating, as well as a convincing word,
1 Pet. 1: 23. 1 Thes. 1: 9. The law wounds, the gospel cures; the
law discovers the evil that is in sin, and the misery that follows
it; and the Spirit of God, working in fellowship with the word,
effectually turns the heart from sin. And thus we see in what
glorious acts the efficacy of the word discovers itself upon the
hearts of men; and all these acts lie in order to each other: For,
until the soul be awakened, it cannot be enlightened, Eph. 5: 14.
Till it be enlightened, it cannot be convinced, Eph. 5: 13.
Conviction being nothing else but the application of the light that
shines in the mind to the conscience of a sinner: Till it be
convinced, it cannot be wounded for sin, Acts 2: 37. And until it be
wounded for sin, it will never be converted from sin, and brought
effectually to Jesus Christ. And thus you see what the power of the
word is.
    Thirdly, In the last place, it will concern us to enquire
whence the word of God has all this power? And it is most certain,
that it is not a power inherent in itself, nor derived from the
instrument by which it is managed, but from the Spirit of the Lord,
who communicates to it all that power and efficacy which it has upon
our souls.
    1. Its power is not in, or from itself: It works not in a
physical way, as natural agents do; for then the effect would always
follow, except it were miraculously hindered: But this spiritual
efficacy is in the word, as the healing virtue was in the waters of
Bethesda, John 5: 4. "An angel went down at a certain season into
the pool, and troubled the water: Whosoever then first, after the
troubling of the water, steps in, was made whole of whatsoever
disease he had." It is not a power naturally inherent in it at all
times, but communicated to it at some special seasons. How often is
the word preached, and no man awaked or convinced by it!
    2. The power of the word is not communicated to it by the
instrument that manageth it, 1 Cor. 3: 7. "Neither is he that
planteth any thing, neither be that watereth." Ministers are nothing
to such an effect and purpose as this is; he does not mean that they
are useless and altogether unnecessary, but insufficient of
themselves to produce such mighty effects: It works not as it is the
word of man, 2 Thess. 2: 13. Ministers may say of the ordinary, as
Peter said of the extraordinary effects of the Spirit, Acts 3: 12.
"Ye men of Israel, why marvel ye at this? or why look ye so
earnestly on us, as though by our own power or holiness we had made
this man to walk?" If the effects of the word were in the power, and
at the command of him that preacheth it, then the blood of all the
souls that perish under our ministry must lie at our door, as was
formerly noted.
    3. If you say, whence then has the word all this power? Our
answer is, It derives it all from the Spirit of God, 1 Thes. 2: 13,
"For this cause thank we God without ceasing, because when ye
received the word of God which ye heard of us, ye received it not as
the word of man, but (as it is in truth) the word of God, which
effectually worketh also in you that believe." It is a successful
instrument only when it is in the hand of the Spirit, with out whose
influence it never did, nor can convince, convert, or save any soul.
Now, the Spirit of God has a sovereignty over three things in order
to the conversion of sinners.
    1. Over the word which works.
    9. Over the soul wrought upon.
    S. Over the time and season of working.
    First, The Spirit has a glorious sovereignty over the word
itself whose instrument it is to make it successful or not, as it
pleaseth him, Isa. 4: 10, 11. "For as the rain cometh down, and the
snow from heaven, &c. so shall my word be that goeth out of my
mouth:" as the clouds, so the word is carried and directed by divine
pleasure. It is the Lord that makes them both give down their
blessings, or to pass away fruitless and empty: yea, it is from the
Spirit that this part of the word works, and not another. Those
things upon which ministers bestow greatest labour in their
preparation, and from which accordingly they have the greatest
expectation; these do nothing, when, mean time, sometime, that
dropped occasionally from them, like a chosen shaft, strikes the
mark and does the work.
    Secondly, The Spirit of the Lord has a glorious sovereignty
over the souls wrought upon: it is his peculiar work "to take away
the stony heart out of our flesh, and to give us an heart of flesh,"
Ezel. 36:26. We may reason, exhort, and reprove, but no thing will
abide till the Lord set it home. The Lord opened the heart of Lydia
under Paul's ministry: he opens every heart that is effectually
opened to receive Christ in the word: if the word can get no
entrance, if your hearts remain dead under it still, we may say
concerning such souls, as Martha did concerning her brother Lazarus:
"Lord, if thou hadst been here, my brother had not died." So, Lord,
if thou hadst been in this sermon, in this prayer, or in that
counsel, these souls had not remained dead under them.
    Thirdly, The Spirit has dominion over the times and seasons of
conviction and conversion. Therefore the day in which souls are
wrought upon is called "the day of his power," Psal. 110: 3. That
shall work at one time, which had no efficacy at all at another
time; because this, and not that, was the time appointed. And thus
you see whence the word derives that mighty power it has.
    Now this word of God, when it is set home by the Spirit, is
mighty to convince, humble, and break the hearts of sinners, Joh 16:
9. "The Spirit when it comes shall convince the world of sin." The
word signifies conviction by such clear demonstration as compelleth
assent: it not only convinces men in general that they are sinners,
but it convinces men particularly of their own sins, and the
aggravations of them. So in the text, Sin revived, that is, the Lord
revived his sins, the very circumstances and aggravations with which
they were committed; and so it will be with us when the commandment
comes; sins that we had forgotten, committed so far back as our
youth or childhood; sins that lay slighted in our consciences, shall
now be roused up as so many sleepy lions to affright and terrify us:
for now the soul hears the voice of God in the word, as Adam heard
it in the cool of the day and was afraid, and hides itself; but all
will not do, for the Lord is come in the word; sin is held up before
the eyes of the conscience in its dreadful aggravations and fearful
consequences, as committed against the holy law, clear light,
warnings of conscience, manifold mercies, God's long-suffering,
Christ's precious blood, many warnings of judgement, the wages and
demerit whereof, by the verdict of a man's own conscience, is death,
eternal death, Rom. 6: 23. Rom. 1: 32. Rom. 2: 9. Thus the
commandment comes, sin revives, and vain hope gives up the ghost.
    Inf. 1. Is there such a mighty power in the word? then
certainly the word is of divine authority. There cannot be a more
clear and satisfying proof that it is no human invention, than the
common sense that all believers have of the Almighty power in which
it works upon their hearts. So speaks the apostle, 1 Thes. 2: 13.
"When ye received the word of God which ye heard of us, ye received
it not as the word of man, but (as it is in truth) the word of God,
which effectually worketh also in you that believe." Can the power
of any creature, the word of a mere man, so convince the conscience,
so terrify the heart, so discover the very secret thoughts of the
soul, as to put a man into such tremblings? No, a greater than man
must needs be here; none but a God can so open the eyes of the
blind, so open the graves of the dead, so quicken and enliven the
conscience that was seared, so bind over the soul of a sinner to the
judgement to come, so change and alter the frame and temper of a
man's spirit, or so powerfully raise, refresh and comfort a drooping
dying soul; certainly the power of God is in all this; and, If there
were no more, yet this alone were sufficient to make full proof of
the divine authority of the scriptures.
    Inf. 2. Judge from hence what an invaluable mercy the preaching
of the word is to the world: It is a blessing far above our
estimation of it; little do we know what a treasure God committeth
to us in the ordinances, Acts 13: 25. "To you is the word of this
salvation sent." It is the very power of God to salvation, Rom. 1:
16. And salvation is ordinarily denied to whom the preaching of the
word is denied, Rom. 10: 14. It is called the Word of life, Phil. 2:
16. and deserves to be valued by every one of us as our life. The
eternal decree of God's election is executed by it upon our souls;
as many as he ordained to eternal life shall believe by the
preaching of it. Great is the ingratitude of this generation, which
so slights and undervalues this invaluable treasure; which is a sad
presage of the most terrible judgement, even in the removing our
candlestick out of its place, except we repent.
    Inf. 3. How sore and terrible a judgement lies upon the souls
of those men to whom no word of God is made powerful enough to
convince and awaken them! Yet so stands the case with thousands, who
constantly sit under the preaching of the word; many arrows are shot
at their consciences, but none goes home to the mark, all fall short
of the end; the commandment has come unto them many thousand times,
by way of promulgation and ministerial inculcation, but yet never
came home to their souls by the Spirit's effectual application. O
friends! you have often beard the voice of man, but you never yet
heard the voice of God; your understandings have been instructed,
but your consciences to this day were never thoroughly convinced.
"We have mourned unto you, but ye have not lamented," Matth. 11: 17.
"Who has believed our report? And unto whom is the arm of the Lord
revealed?" Alas! we have laboured in vain, we have spent our
strength for nought; our word returns unto us empty; but O what a
stupendous judgement is here! Heb. 6: 7, 8. "The earth which
drinketh in the rain that cometh oft upon it, and bringeth forth
herbs meet for them by whom it is dressed, receiveth blessing from
God; but that which beareth thorns and briars is rejected, and is
nigh unto cursing, whose end is to be burned." What a sore judgement
and sign of God's displeasure would you account it, if your fields
were cursed; if you should manure, dress, prow, and sow them, but
never reap the fruit of your labour; the increase being still
blasted? And yet this were nothing, compared with the blessing of
the word to your souls: that which is a savour of life unto life
unto some, becomes the savour of death unto death to others, 2 Cor.
2: 16. The Lord affect our hearts with the terrible strokes of God
upon the souls of men!

                         Use of Exhortation.
                                  
    I shall conclude this point with a few words of exhortation to
three sorts of men, viz.
    1. To those that never felt the power of the word.
    2. To those that have only felt some slight and common effects
thereof.
    3. To those unto whose very hearts the commandment is come, in
its effectual and saving power.
    First, You that never felt any power in the word at all, I beg
you in the name of him that made you, and by all the regard and
value you have for those precious souls within you, that now at last
such considerations as these may find place in your souls, and that
you will bethink yourselves.
    
                          Consideration 1.
    
    Whose word is that which cannot gain entrance into your hearts?
Is it not the word of God which you despise and slight? "Thou
casteth my word behind thy back," Psal. 50: 17. 0 what an affront
and provocation to God is this! You despise not man, but God; the
great and terrible God, in whose hand your breath and soul are: This
contempt runs higher than you imagine.
    
                          Consideration 2.
                                  
    Consider, that however the word has no power upon you, the
commandment cannot come home to your hearts; yet it does work, and
comes home with power to the hearts of others: Whilst you are
hardened, others are melted under it; whilst you sleep, others
tremble; whilst your hearts are fast locked up, others are opened.
How can you choose but reflect with fear and trembling upon these
contrary effects of the word; especially when you consider that the
eternal decrees, both of election and reprobation, are now executed
upon the souls of men, by the preaching of the word; some believe,
and others are hardened.
    
                          Consideration 3.
    
    That no judgement of God, on this side hell, is greater than a
hard heart and stupid conscience under the word; it were much better
that the providence of God should blast thy estate, take away thy
children, or destroy thy health, than harden thy heart, and sear thy
conscience under the word: So much as thy soul is better than thy
body, so much as eternity is more valuable than time, so much is
this spiritual judgement more dreadful than all temporal ones. God
does not inflict a more terrible stroke than this upon any man in
this world.
    O therefore, as you love your own souls, and are loth to ruin
them to all eternity, attend upon every opportunity that God affords
you; for you know not in which of them the Lord may work upon your
hearts. Lay aside your prejudices against the word or the weaknesses
and infirmities of them that preach it; for the word works not as it
is the word of man, as it is thus neat and elegant, but as it is the
word of God. Pray for the blessing of God upon the word; for except
his word of blessing go forth with it, it can never come home to thy
soul. Meditate upon what you hear; for, without meditation, it is
not like to have any effectual operation upon you. Search your souls
by it, and consider whether that be not your very case and state
which it describes; your very danger whereof it gives warning. Take
heed, lest after you have heard it, the cares of the world choke
what you have heard, and cause those budding convictions which begin
to put forth, to blast and wither. Carefully attend to all those
items and memorandums your consciences give you under the word, and
conclude that the Lord is then come nigh unto you.
    Secondly, Let this be matter of serious consideration and
caution to all such; as have only felt some slight, transient, and
ineffectual operations of the gospel upon their souls: The Lord has
come nigh to some of our souls; we have felt a strange power in the
ordinances, sometimes terrifying, and sometimes transporting our
hearts; but, alas! it proves but a morning-dew, or an early cloud,
Hos. 6: 4. We rejoice in the word, but it is but for a season, John
3: 25. Gal. 4: 14, 15. They are vanishing motions, and come to
nothing. Look, as in nature there are many abortives, as well as
perfect children, so it is in religion; yea, where the new creature
is perfectly formed in one soul, there be many abortives and
miscarriages in others; and there may be three reasons assigned for
it, viz.
    First, The subtilty and deep policy of Satan, who never more
effectually deceives and destroys the souls of men, than in such a
method, and by such an artifice as this; for when men have once felt
their consciences terrified under the word, and their hearts at
other times ravished with the joys and comforts of it, they now seem
to have attained all that is necessary to conversion, and
constitutive of the new creature; these things look so well like the
regenerating effects of the Spirit, that many are easily deceived by
them. The devil beguiles the hearts of the unwary by such false
appearances: for it is not every man that can distinguish betwixt
the natural and spiritual motions of the affections under the word:
It is very frequently seen that even carnal and unrenewed hearts
have their meltings and transports, as well as spiritual hearts. The
subject-matter upon which the word treats, are the weighty things of
the world to come; heaven and hell are very awful and affecting
things, and an unrenewed heart is apt to thaw and melt at them: Now
here is the cheat of Satan, to persuade a man that these must needs
be spiritual affections, because the objects about which they are
conversant are spiritual; whereas it is certain the objects of the
affections may be very spiritual and heavenly, and yet the workings
of man's affections about them may be in a mere natural way.
    Secondly, The dampening efficacy of the world is a true and
proper cause of these abortions and miscarriages under the word,
Luke 8: 12, 18, 14. There are hopeful and promising beginnings and
buddings of affections in some persons, especially in their youth;
but when once they come to be engaged in the world, how soon are
they damped and quenched! As the cares of a family grow on, so does
the care of salvation wear off. It is not as it was wont to be, What
shall I do to be saved? How shall I get interest in Christ? But what
shall I eat, and drink, and wherewith shall I, and mine, be
maintained? Thus earth justles out heaven, and the present world
drowns all thoughts of that to come. Good had it been for many men,
they had never been engaged so deep in the world as they are; their
life is but a constant hurry of business, and a perpetual diversion
from Christ, and things that are eternal.
    Thirdly, and lastly, The deceitfulness and treachery of the
heart, which too easily gives way to the designs of Satan, suffers
itself to be imposed upon by him, is not the least cause why so many
hopeful beginnings come to nothing, and the effects of the word
vanish. Pride and self-love are very apt to over-rule every little
good, and slight or undervalue every ill that is in us; and so
quickly choke those convictions that begin to work in our souls.
    But oh! that such men would consider, that the dying away of
their convictions is that which threatens the life of their souls
for ever; now is the bud withered, the blossom blasted: and what
expectation is there of fruit after this, except the Lord revive
them again? The Lord open men's eyes to discern the danger of such
things as these are! Jude 12. Heb. 10: 58. Yet I deny not but there
are many stands and pauses in the work of conversion; it seems to
die away, and then revives again; and revive it must, or we are
lost. But how many are there who never recover it more! This is a
sore judgement of a most terrible consequence to the souls of men!
    Thirdly, In the last place, let it be a word of counsel and
advice to them, upon whom the word works effectually and powerfully;
to whose hearts the commandment is come home to revive sin, and kill
their vain hopes; and these are of two sorts.
    1. Embryos under the first workings of the Spirit.
    2. Complete births of the Spirit, regenerated souls.
    First, Embryos that are under the first workings of the Spirit
in the word. O let it not seem a misery, or unhappiness to you, that
the commandment is come, and sin revived, and your former hopes
overthrown. It must be thus, if ever God intend mercy for you. Had
you gone on in that dangerous security you were in before, you had
certainly been lost for ever: God has stopt you in that path that
leads down to hell, and none that go in there do ever return again,
or take hold of the paths of life. O! it is better to weep, tremble,
and be distressed now, than to mourn without hope for ever. Let it
not trouble you that sin has found you out; you could never have
found out the remedy in Christ, if you had not found out the disease
and danger, by the coming of the commandment. And I beseech you
carefully to observe, whether the effects and operations of the word
upon your hearts be deeper and more powerful than they are found to
be in such souls as miscarry under it: the commandment comes to
them, and shews them this or that more gross and startling sin. Does
it come to you, and shew you not only this or that particular sin,
but all the evils of your heart and life; the corruption of your
natures, as well as the transgressions of your lives? If so, it
promises well, and looks hopefully and comfortably to you. The
commandment comes to others, and startles them with the fears of
damnation for their sin: it puts them into a grievous fright at
hell, and the everlasting burnings: but does it come to thee and
discover the infinite evil that is in thy sin, as it is committed
against the great, holy, righteous, and good God, and so melts thy
heart into tears for the wrong that thou hast done him, as well as
the danger into which thou hast brought thyself? This is a hopeful
work, and may encourage thee. It comes to others, and greatly
shakes, but never destroys and razes the foundation of their vain
hopes: if it so revive sin as to kill all vain hopes in thee, and
send thee to Christ alone, as thy only door of hope, fear not; these
troubles will prove the greatest mercies that ever befel thee in
this world, if thus they work, and continue to work upon thy soul.
    Secondly, Others there are upon whom the word has had its full
effect as to conversion. 0 bless God for ever for this mercy; you
cannot sufficiently value it! God has not only made it a convincing
and wounding, but a converting and healing word to your souls; he
has not only revived your sins, and killed your vain hopes, but
begotten you again to a lively hope; see that you be thankful for
this mercy. How many have sate under the same word, but never felt
such effects of it? As Christ said in another case, there were many
widows in Israel in the time of Elijah, but unto none of them was
the prophet sent, save unto Sarepta, a city of Sidon, to a certain
widow there, Luke 4: 96. So I may say, in this case, there were many
souls in the same congregation, at the same time, but unto none of
them was the word sent with a commission to convince and save, but
such a one as thyself; one as improbable to be wrought upon as any
soul there. O let this beget thankfulness in your souls; and let it
make you love the word as long as you live: "I will never forget thy
precepts, for by them thou hast quickened me," Psal. 119: 98.
    But above all, I beseech you make it appear that the
commandment has come home to your hearts, with power to convince you
of the evil of sin, by your tenderness and care to shun it as long
as you live. If ever you have seen the face of sin, in the glass of
the law of God; if your hearts have been humbled and broken for it
in the days of your trouble and distress, certainly you will choose
the worst affliction rather than sin: It would be the greatest folly
in the world to return again to iniquity, Psal 85: 8. You that have
seen so much of the evil that is in it, and the danger that follows
it; you that have had such inward terrors and fears of spirit about
it, when that terrible representation was made you, will he loth to
feel those gripes and distresses of conscience again, for the best
enjoyment in this world.
    Blessed be God if any word has been brought home to our hearts,
which has been instrumental to bring us to Christ!
    
    
    
    
    
Sermon 22.

The Teachings of God opened, in their Nature and Necessity.
    
    
John 6: 45.
    
It is written in the prophets, And they shall be all taught of God.
    Every man therefore that has heard, and has learned of the
    Father, cometh unto me.
    
    
    How necessary to our union with Jesus Christ, the application
of the law, or coming home of the commandment to the heart of a
sinner is, we have heard in the last discourse; and how impossible
it is, either for the commandment to come to us, or for us to come
to Christ without illumination and instruction from above, you shall
hear in this.
    This scripture has much of the mind of God in it; and he that
is to open it, had need himself to be taught of God. In the
foregoing verses, Christ offers himself as the bread of life unto
the souls of men: against this doctrine they oppose their carnal
reason, ver. 41, 42. Christ strikes at the root of all their cavils
and objections in his reply, ver. 43, 44. "Murmur not among
yourselves: no man can come to me, except the Father which has sent
me draw him;" q. d. you slight me because you do not know me; you do
not know me because you are not taught of God; of these divine
teachings, the prophets of old have spoken, and what they foretold
is at this day fulfilled in our sight; so many as are taught of God,
and no more, come unto me in the way of faith: it is impossible to
come without the teachings of God, ver. 44. It is as impossible not
to come, or to miscarry in their coming unto me, under the influence
of these divine teachings, ver. 45.
    The words read, consist of two parts, viz.
    1. An allegation out of the prophets.
    2. The application thereof made by Christ.
    First, An allegation out af the prophets: "It is written in the
prophets, And they shall be all taught of God." The places in the
prophets to which Christ seems here to refer, are, Isa. 54: 13. "And
all thy children shall be taught of the Lord;" and, Jer. 31: 34.
"And they shall teach no more every man his neighbour, and every man
his brother, saying, know the Lord; for they shall all know me, from
the least of them unto the greatest of them, saith the Lord." These
promises contain the great blessings of the new covenant, viz.
Divine instruction and heavenly illumination, without which no man
can obtain an interest in the new covenant.
    Secondly, We have here the application of these testimonies out
of the prophets, made by Christ himself; "Every man therefore that
has heard, and learned of the Father, come unto me.
    In which words we have both the necessity and the efficacy of
these divine teachings; without them no man can come, and under them
no man can miscarry. The words being fitly rendered, and the sense
obvious,
    
                           The notes are,
    Doct. 1. That the teachings of God are absolutely necessary to
         every man that cometh unto Christ, in the way of faith.
    
    Doct. 2. No man can miss of Christ, or miscarry in the way of
         faith, that is under the special instructions and teachings
         of the Father.
    
    Doct. 1. That the teachings of God are absolutely necessary to
         every man that cometh unto Christ, in the way of faith.
    
    Of the necessity of divine teaching, in order to believing, the
apostle speaks, in Eph. 4: 20, 21. "But ye have not so learned
Christ; if so be that you have heard him, and been taught by him, as
the truth is in Jesus;" i.e. Your faith must needs be effectual,
both to the reformation of your lives, and your perseverance in the
ways of holiness, if it be such a faith as is begotten and
introduced into your hearts by divine teaching. Now, in the
explication of this point, I shall speak distinctly to the following
enquiries.
    1. How does God teach men, or what is imported in our being
taught of God?
    2. What those special lessons are, which all believers do hear,
and are taught of God?
    3. In what manner does God teach these things to men in the day
of their conversion to Christ?
    4. What influence God's teaching has upon our believing?
    5. Why it is impossible for any man to believe, or come to
Christ without the Father's teachings
    First, How does God teach men, or what is imported in our being
taught of God? To this I will speak both negatively and positively,
for your clearer apprehension of the sense and meaning of the Spirit
of God in this phrase.
    First, The teaching of God, and our hearing and learning of
him, is not to be understood of any extraordinary visional
appearances, or oraculous and immediate voice of God to men: God
indeed has so appeared unto some, Numb. 12: 8. Such voices have been
heard from heaven, but now these extraordinary ways are ceased, Heb.
1: 1, 2. and we are no more to expect them; we may sooner meet with
satanical delusions than divine illuminations in this way. I
remember, the learned Gerson tells us that the devil once appeared
to an holy man in prayer, personating Christ, and saying, I am come
in person to visit thee, for thou art worthy. But he with both hands
shut his eyes, saying, Nolo hic Christum videre, satis est ipsum in
gloria videre; i.e. I will not see Christ here; it is enough for me
to see him in glory. We are now to attend only to the voice of the
Spirit in the scriptures: this is a more sure word than any voice
from heaven, 2 Pet. 1: 19.
    Secondly, The teachings of God are not to be understood as
opposite unto, or exclusive of the teachings of men. Divine
teachings do not render ministerial teachings in vain or useless.
Paul was taught of God, Gal. 1: 12. and his conversion had something
extraordinary in it, yet the ministry of Ananias was used and
honoured in that work, Acts 9: 4, 17. compared. Divine teachings do
indeed excel, but not exclude human teachings. I know that
scripture, Jer. 31: 24. to which Christ here refers, is objected
against the necessity of a standing ministry in the church, "They
shall teach no more every man his neighbour, and every man his
brother," &c. But if those words should be understood absolutely,
they would not only overthrow all public ordinances of God's own
institution, 1 Cor. 12: 28. and deprive us of a principal fruit of
Christ's ascension, Eph. 4: 11. 12. but, for the same reason, would
destroy all private instructions and fraternal admonitions also.
Such a sense would make the prophet to contradict the apostle, and
spoil the consent and harmony of the scriptures: the sense thereof
cannot be negative, but comparative; it shews the excellency of
divine, but does not destroy the usefulness of human teachings;
Subordinata non pugnant. The teachings of men are made effectual by
the teachings of the Spirit; and the Spirit in his teachings will
use and honour the ministry of man.
    Thirdly, But to speak positively, the teachings of God are
nothing else but that spiritual and heavenly light, by which the
Spirit of God shineth into the hearts of men, to give them "the
light of the knowledge of the glory of God in the face of Jesus
Christ," as the apostle speaks, 2 Cor. 4: 6. And though this be the
proper work of the Spirit, yet it is called the teachings of the
Father, because the Spirit who enlightens us is commissioned and
sent by the Father so to do, John 14: 26. Now these teachings of the
Spirit of God, consist in two things, viz. in his,
    1. Sanctifying impressions.
    2. Gracious assistances.
    First, In his sanctifying impressions or regenerating work upon
the soul, by virtue whereof it receives marvellous light and insight
into spiritual things; and that not only as illumination is the
first act of the Spirit in our conversion, Col. 3: 10. but as his
whole work of sanctification is illuminative and instructive to the
converted soul, 1 John 2: 27. "The anointing which you have received
of him abideth in you, and ye need not that any man teach you, but
as the same anointing teacheth you." The meaning is that
sanctification gives the soul experience of those mysterious things
which are contained in the scriptures, and that experience is the
most excellent key to unlock and open those deep scripture
mysteries; no knowledge is so distinct, so clear, so sweet, as that
which the heart communicates to the head, John 7: 17. "If any man do
his will, he shall know of the doctrine." A man that never read the
nature of love in books of philosophy, nor the transports and
ecstasies thereof in history, may yet truly describe and express it
by the sensible motions of that passion in his own soul; yea, he
that has felt, much better understands, than he that has only read
or heard. O what a light does spiritual sense and experience cast
upon a great part of the scriptures! for indeed sanctification is
the very copy or transcript of the word of God upon the heart of
man; Jer. 31: 83. "I will write my law in their hearts:" so that the
scriptures and the experiences of believers, by this means answer to
each other, as the lines and letters in the press answer to the
impressions made upon the paper; or the figures in the wax, to the
engravings in the seal. When a sanctified man reads David's psalms,
or Paul's epistles, how is he surprised with wonder to find the very
workings of his own heart so exactly deciphered and fully expressed
there! O, saith he, this is my very case, these holy men speak what
my heart has felt.
    Secondly, The Spirit of God teacheth us, as by his sanctifying
impressions, so by his gracious assistances, which he gives us pro
re nata, as our need requires, Mat. 10: 19. "It shall be given you
in that same hour what ye shall speak;" John 14: 26. "He shall bring
all things to your remembrance: he assisteth both the understanding
in due apprehensions of truth, and the heart in the spiritual
improvements of truth. And so much briefly of the first particular.
    Secondly, In the next place we are to enquire what those
special truths are which believers hear and learn of the Father,
when they come to Christ.
    And there are divers great and necessary truths, wherein the
Spirit enlightens men in that day. I cannot say they are all taught
every believer in the same degree and order; but it is certain they
are taught of God such lessons as these are, which they never so
understood before.
    Lesson 1. First, They are taught of God that there is
abundantly more evil in their sinful natures and actions, than ever
they discerned or understood before: "the Spirit when he cometh
shall convince the world of sin," John 16: 8, 9. Men had a general
notion of sin before; so had Paul, when a Pharisee: but how vastly
different were his apprehensions of sin, from all that ever he had
in his natural state, when God brought home the commandment to his
very heart? There is a threefold knowledge of sin, viz. traditional,
discursive, and intuitive. The first is the more rude and illiterate
multitude. The second is more rational and knowing men. The third is
only found in those that are enlightened and taught of God. And
there is as great a difference betwixt this intuitive knowledge of
sin, whereby God makes a soul to discern the nature and evil of it
in a spiritual light, and the two former, as there is betwixt the
sight of a painted lion upon the wall, and the sight of a living
lion that meets us roaring in the way. The intuitive sight of sin is
another thing than men imagine it to be: it is such a sight as
wounds a man to the very heart, Acts 2: 37. for God does not only
shew a man this or that particular sin, but in the day of
conviction, he sets all his sins in order before him, Psal. 50: 21.
yea, the Lord shews him the sinfulness of his nature as well as
practice. Conviction digs to the root, shews and lays open that
original corruption, from whence the innumerable evils of the life
do spring, James 1: 14, 15. and which is yet more, the Lord shews
the man whom he is bringing to Christ the sinful and miserable
estate which he is in by reason of both, John 16: 9. And now all
excuses, pleas and defences of sin are gone, he shews him "how their
iniquities have exceeded," Job 36: 8, 9. exceeded in number, and in
aggravations of sinfulness; exceeding many, and exceeding vile; no
such sinner in the world as I; can such sins as mine be pardoned?
The greatness of God greatens my sin; the holiness of God makes it
beyond measure vile; the goodness of God puts inconceivable weight
into my guilt. O, can there be mercy for such a wretch as I! If
there be, then there will not be a greater example of the riches of
free grace in all the world than I am. Thus God teacheth the evil of
sin.
    Lesson 2. Secondly, God teacheth the soul whom he is bringing
to Christ, what that wrath and misery are which hang over it in the
threatenings because of sin. Scripture-threatenings were formerly
slighted, now the soul trembles at them: They once apprehended
themselves safe enough, Isa. 28: 15. Psal. 50: 21. They thought,
because they heard no more of their sins after the commission of
them, that therefore they should never hear more; that the effect
had been as transient a thing as the act of sin was; or if trouble
must follow sin, they should speed no worse than others, the
generality of the world being in the same case; and besides, they
hoped to find God more merciful than sour and precise preachers
represented him. But when a light from God enters into the soul, to
discover the nature of God, and of sin, then it sees that whatever
wrath is treasured up for sinners in the dreadful threatenings of
the law, is but the just demerit of sin, the recompence that is
meet: "The wages of sin is death," Rom. 6: 23. The penal evil of
damnation is but equal to the moral evil of sin: So that in the
whole ocean of God's eternal wrath, there is not one drop of
injustice; yea, the soul does not only see the justice of God in its
eternal damnation, but the wonderful mercy of God in the suspension
thereof so long. O, what is it that has withheld God from damning me
all this while! How is it that I am not in hell! Now do the fears
and awful apprehensions of eternity seize the soul, and the worst of
sensitive creatures is supposed to be in a better condition than
such a soul. Never do men tremble at the threatenings of God, nor
rightly apprehend the danger of their condition, until sin, and
wrath, and the wages of sin be discovered to them by a light from
heaven.
    Lesson 3. Thirdly, God teaches the soul whom he brings to
Christ that deliverance from sin, and wrath to come, is the greatest
and most important business it has to do in this world. Acts 16: 30.
"What must I do to be saved?" q. d. O direct me to some effectual
way (if there be any) to secure my poor wretched soul from the wrath
of God. Sin, and the wrath that follows it, are things that swallow
up the souls, and drink up the very spirits of men: Their thoughts
never conversed with things of more confessed truth and awful
solemnity: These things float not upon their fancies as matters of
mere speculation, but settle upon their hearts day and night, as the
deepest concernment in all the world: They now know much better than
any mere scholar, the deep sense of that text, Matth. 16: 26. "What
is a man profited, if he should gain the whole world, and lose his
own soul? or what shall a man give in exchange for his soul?"
    Five things shew how weighty the thoughts and cares of
salvation are upon their hearts.
    First, Their continual thoughtfulness and solicitude about
these things: if earthly affairs divert them for a while, yet they
are still returning again to this solemn business.
    Secondly, Their careful redeeming of time, and saving the very
moments thereof to employ about this work: Those that were prodigal
of hours and days before, look upon every moment of time as a
precious and valuable thing now.
    Thirdly, Their fears and tremblings lest they should miscarry,
and come short at last, shew how much their hearts are set upon this
work.
    Fourthly, Their inquisitiveness and readiness to embrace all
the help and assistance that they can act from others, evidently
discover this to be their great design.
    Fifthly, and lastly, The little notice they take of all other
troubles and afflictions, tells you their hearts are taken up about
greater things. This is the third lesson they are taught of God.
    Lesson 4. Fourthly, The Lord teaches the soul that is coming to
Christ, that though it be their duty to strive to the uttermost for
salvation; yet all strivings, in their own strength, are
insufficient to obtain it. This work is quite above the power of
nature: "It is not of him that willeth, nor of him that runneth, but
of God that sheweth mercy." The soul is brought to a full conviction
of this, by the discovery of the heinous nature of sin, and of the
rigour and severity of the law of God. No repentance nor reformation
can possibly amount unto a just satisfaction, nor are they within
the compass and power of our will. It was a saying that Dr. Hill
often used to his friends, speaking about the power of man's will;
he would lay his hand upon his breast, and say, "Every man has
something here to confute the Arminian doctrine." This fully takes
off the soul from all expectations of deliverance that way; it
cannot but strive, that is its duty; but to expect deliverance, as
the purchase of its own strivings, that would be its sin.
    Lesson 5. Fifthly, The soul that is coming to Christ by faith,
is taught of God, that though the case it is in be sad, yet it is
not desperate and remediless: There is a door of hope, a way of
escape for poor sinners, how black and fearful soever their own
thoughts and apprehensions are; there is usually at this time a
dawning light of hope in the soul that is under the Father's
teachings; and this commonly arises from the general and indefinite
encouragements and promises of the gospel, which, though they do not
presently secure the soul from danger, yet they prop and mightily
support it against despair: For though they be not certain that
deliverance shall be the event of their trouble; yet the
possibilities, and much more the probabilities of deliverance are a
great stay to a sinning soul. The troubled soul cannot but
acknowledge itself to be in a far better case than the damned are,
whose hopes are perished from the Lord, and a death pang of despair
has seized their consciences. And herein the merciful and
compassionate nature of God is eminently discovered, in hasting to
open the door of hope, almost as soon as the evil of sin is opened.
It was not long after Adam's eyes were opened to see his misery,
that God opened Christ, his remedy, in that first promise, Gen. 3:
15. And the same method of grace is still continued to his elect
offspring, Gal. 3: 21, 22. Rom. 3: 21, 22. These supporting hopes
the Lord sees necessary to encourage industry in the use of means;
it is hope that sets all the world a work; if all hope were cut off,
every soul would sit down in a sullen despair, yielding itself for
hell.
    Lesson 6. Sixthly, The Lord teaches those that come to Christ,
that there is a fulness of saving power in him, whereby any soul
that duly receives him, may be perfectly delivered from all its sin
and misery, Heb. 7: 25. Col. 1: 19. Matth. 28: 18. This is a great
and necessary point for every believer to learn and hear from the
Father; for unless the soul be satisfied of the fulness of Christ's
saving, power, it will never move forward towards him; and herein
also the goodness of God is most sweetly and seasonably manifested;
for, at this time, it is the great design of Satan to fill the soul
with despairing thoughts of a pardon; but all those black and heart
sinking thoughts vanish before the discovery of Christ's all
sufficiency. Now the sin-sick soul saith with that woman, Matth. 9:
21. "If I may but touch the hem of his garment, I shall be healed."
How deep soever the guilt and stain of sin be, yet the soul which
acknowledges the infinite dignity of the blood of Christ, the
offering it up to God in our room, and God's declared satisfaction
in it, must needs be satisfied that Christ is "able to save, to the
uttermost, all that come unto God by him;" which is the sixth lesson
believers are taught of God.
    Lesson 7. Seventhly, Every man that comes to Christ is taught
of God, that he can never reap any benefit by the blood of Christ,
except he have union with the person of Christ, 1 John 5: 12. Eph.
4: 16. Time was when men fondly thought nothing was necessary to
their salvation but the death of Christ; but now the Lord shows them
that their union with Christ by faith is as necessary, in the place
of an applying cause, as the death of Christ is, in the place of a
meritorious cause: The purchase of salvation is an act of Christ
without us, whilst we are yet sinners; the application thereof is by
a work wrought within us, when we are believers, Col. 1: 27. In the
purchase all the elect are redeemed together by way of price; in the
application they are actually redeemed, each person, by way of
power. Look, as the sin of the first Adam could never hurt us,
unless he had been our head by way of generation; so the
righteousness of Christ can never benefit us, unless he be our head
by way of regeneration. In teaching this lesson, the Lord, in mercy,
unteaches and blots out that dangerous principle, by which the
greatest part of the christianised world do perish, viz. that the
death of Christ is, in itself, effectual to salvation, though a man
be never regenerated or united to him by saving faith
    Lesson 8. Eighthly, God teaches the soul, whom he is bringing
to Christ, that whatever is necessary to be wrought in us, or done
by us, in order to our union with Christ, is to be obtained from him
in the way of prayer, Ezek. 36: 37. And it is observable, that the
soul no sooner comes under the effectual teachings of God, but the
Spirit of prayer begins to breathe in it, Acts 9: 8. "Behold, he
prayeth." Those that were taught to pray by men before, are now
taught of the Lord to pray: To pray did I say? yea, and to pray
fervently too, as men concerned for their eternal happiness; to pray
not only with others, but to pour out our souls before the Lord in
secret; for their hearts are as bottles full of new wine, which must
vent or break. Now the soul returns upon its God often in the same
day; now it can express its burdens and wants, in words and groans
which the Spirit teacheth. They pray, and will not give over
praying, till Christ come with complete salvation.
    Lesson 9. Ninthly, All that come to Christ are taught of God to
abandon their former ways and companions in sin, as ever they expect
to be received unto mercy, Isa. 55: 7. 2 Cor. 5: 17. Sins that were
profitable and pleasant, that were as the right hand, and right eye,
must now be cut off. Companions in sin, who were once the delight of
their lives, must now be cast off. Christ saith to the soul
concerning these, as he said in another case, John 18: 8. "If
therefore ye seek me, let these go their way." And the soul saith
unto Christ, as it is, Psal. 119: 115. "Depart from me, ye evil-
doers, for I will keep the commandments of my God." And now pleasant
sins and companions in sin, become the very burden and shame of a
man's soul. Objects of delight are become objects of pity and
compassion: No endearments, no union of blood, no earthly interests
whatsoever, are found strong enough to hold the soul any longer from
Christ: Nothing but the effectual teachings of God are found
sufficient to dissolve such bonds of iniquity as these.
    Lesson 10. Tenthly, All that come unto Christ are taught of
God, that there is such a beauty and excellency in the ways and
people of God, as is not to be equalled in the whole world, Psa. 16:
3. When the eyes of strangers to Christ begin to be opened, and
enlightened in his knowledge, you may see what a change of judgement
is wrought in them, with respect to the people of God: and towards
them especially, whom God has any way made instrumental for the good
of their souls, Cant. 5: 9. they then call the spouse of Christ, the
fairest among women. The convincing holiness of the bride then began
to enamour and affect them, with a desire of nearer conjunction and
communion: We will seek him with thee; with thee that hast so
charged us, that hast taken so much pains for the good of our souls;
now, and never before, the righteous appeareth more excellent than
his neighbour. Change of heart is always accompanied with change of
judgement, with respect to the people of God: thus the gaoler, Acts
16: 33. washed the apostle's stripes, to whom he had been so cruel
before. The godly now seem to be the glory of the places where they
live; and the glory of any place seems to be darkened by their
removal; as one said of holy Mr. Barrington, "Methinks the town is
not at home when Mr. Barrington is out of town." They esteem it a
choice mercy to be in their company and acquaintance; Zech. 8: 23.
"We will go with you, for we have heard that God is with you." No
people like the people of God now; as one said, when he heard of two
faithful friends, Utinam tertius essem! O that I might make the
third! Whatever vile or low thoughts they had of the people of God
before, to be sure now they are the excellent of the earth, in whom
is all their delight: The holiness of the saints might have some
interest in their consciences before, but they never had such an
interest in their estimation and affections, till this lesson was
taught them by the Father.
    Lesson 11. Eleventhly, An that come to Christ are taught of
God, that whatever difficulties they apprehend in religion, yet they
must not, upon pain of damnation, be discouraged thereby, or return
again to sin, Luke 9: 62. "No man having put his hand to the plough,
and looking back, is fit for the kingdom of God. Ploughing work is
hard work; a strong and steady hand is required for it: he that
ploughs must keep on, and make no balks of the hardest and toughest
ground he meets with. Religion also is the running of a race. 1 Cor.
9: 24. there is no standing still, much less turning back, if ever
we hope to win the prize.
    The devil, indeed, labours every way to discourage and daunt
the soul, by representing the insuperable difficulties of religion
to it; and young beginners are but too apt to be discouraged, and
fall under despondency; but the teachings of the Father are
encouraging teachings; they are carried on from strength to strength
against all the oppositions they meet with from without them, and
the many discouragements they find within them. To this conclusion
they are brought by the teaching of God, We must have Christ, we
must get a pardon, we must strive for salvation, let the
difficulties, troubles, and sufferings in the way be never so great
or many. As he said, Necesse est ut eam, non ut vivam; it is
necessary that I go on, it is not necessary that I live: So saith
the soul that is taught of God; it is easier for me to dispense with
ease, honour, relations, yea, with life itself, than to part with
Christ, and the hopes of eternal life.
    Lesson 12. Twelfthly, They that come to Christ, are taught of
God, that whatever guilt and unworthiness they discover in
themselves, and whatever fears and doubts are upon their hearts, as
to pardon and acceptance; yet as the case stands, it is their wisdom
and great interest to venture themselves in the way of faith, upon
Jesus Christ, whatever the issue thereof be.
    Three great discouragements are usually found upon the hearts
of those that come to Christ in the way of faith.
    First, The sensible greatness of guilt and sin. How can I go to
Christ that am in such a case, that have been so vile a wretch? And
here measuring the grace and mercy of Christ, by what it finds in
itself, or in other creatures, 1 Sam. 24: 19. the soul is ready to
sink under the weight of its own discouraging and mist giving
thoughts.
    Secondly, The sense they have of their own weakness and
inability to do what God requires, and must of necessity be done, if
ever they be saved. My heart is harder than adamant, how can I break
it? My will is stubborn, and exceeding obstinate, I am no way able
to bow it; the frame and temper of my spirit is altogether carnal,
and earthly; and it is not in the power of my hand to alter and
change it; alas! I cannot subdue any one corruption, nor perform one
spiritual duty, nor bear one of those sufferings and burdens which
religion lays upon all that follow Christ: this also proves a great
discouragement in the way of faith.
    Thirdly, And, which is more than all, the soul that is coming
to Jesus Christ, has no assurance of acceptance with him, if it
should adventure itself upon him: it is a great hazard, a great
adventure; it is much more probable, if I look to myself, that
Christ will shut the door of mercy against me.
    But under all these discouragements the soul learns this lesson
from God, That, as ungodly as it is, nevertheless it is every way
its great duty and concernment to go on in the way of faith, and
make that great adventure of itself upon Jesus Christ: and of this
the Lord convinceth the soul by two things, viz.
    1. From the absolute necessity of coming.
    2. From the encouraging probabilities of speeding
    First, The soul seeth an absolute necessity of coming:
necessity is laid upon it, there is no other way, Acts 4: 12. God
has shut it up by a blessed necessity to this only door of escape,
Gal. 3: 23. Damnation lies in the neglect of Christ, Heb. 2:3. The
soul has no choice in this case; angels, ministers, duties,
repentance, reformation cannot save me; Christ, and none but Christ
can deliver me from present guilt, and the wrath to come. Why do I
dispute, demur, delay, when certain ruin must inevitably follow the
neglect or refusal of gospel offers?
    Secondly, The Lord sheweth those that are under his teaching,
the probabilities of mercy, for their encouragement in the way of
believing. And these probabilities the soul is enabled to gather
from the general and free invitations of the gospel, Isa. 55: 1, 7.
Rev. 22: 17. from the conditional promises of the gospel, John 6:
37. Mat. 11: 28. Isa. 1: 18. from the vast extent of grace, beyond
all the thoughts and hopes of the creatures, Isa 55: 8, 9. Heb. 7:.
25. from the encouraging examples of other sinners, who have found
mercy in as bad a condition as they, 1 Tim. 1: 13. 2 Chron. 23:3. 2
Cor. 6: 10, 11. from the command of God, which warrants the action,
and answers all the objections of unworthiness and presumption in
them that come to Christ, 1 John 3: 23. and lastly, from the
sensible changes already made upon the temper and frame of the
heart. Time was, when I had no sense of sin, nor sorrow for sin; no
desire after Christ, no heart to duties. But it is not so with me
now; I now see the evil of sin, so as I never saw it before; my
heart is now broken in the sense of that evil; my desires begin to
be enflamed after Jesus Christ; I am not at rest, nor where I would
be, till I am in secret mourning after the Lord Jesus; surely these
are the dawnings of the day of mercy; let me go on in this way. It
saith, as the lepers at the siege of Samaria, 2 Kings 7: 8, 4. "If I
stay here, I perish:" If I go to Christ I can but perish. Hence
believers bear up against all objected discouragements, certum
exitium commutemus incerto; it is the dictate of wisdom, the vote of
reason, to exchange a certain for an uncertain ruin. And thus you
have here what those excellent lessons are, which all that come to
Christ are taught by the Father.
    
    
    
Sermon 23.


John 6: 45.
    
It is written in the Prophets, And they shall be all taught of God.
    Every man therefore that has heard, and has learned of the
    Father, cometh unto me.
    
    
    In the former sermon, you have been taught this great truth;
    
    Doct. That the teachings of God are absolutely necessary to
         every soul that cometh unto Christ, in the way of faith.
    
    What the teachings of God import, has been formerly opened; and
what those special lessons are, which all believers hear and learn
of the Father, was the last thing discoursed: that which remains to
he further cleared about this subject, before I come to the
application of the whole, will be to shew you,
    1. What are the properties of divine teachings.
    2. What influence they have in bringing souls to Christ.
    3. Why it is impossible for any man to come to Christ without
these teachings of the Father.
    First, What are the properties of divine teachings? Concerning
the teachings of God, we affirm in general, that, though they
exclude not, yet they vastly differ from all human teachings: as the
power of God in effecting transcends all human power, so the wisdom
of God in teaching transcends all human wisdom. For,
    1. God teacheth powerfully; he speaketh to the soul with a
strong hand; when the word cometh accompanied with the Spirit, it is
"mighty through God, to cast down all imaginations," 2 Cor. 10: 4.
Now the gospel "comes not in word only, (as it was wont to do,) but
in power," 1 Thes. 1: 4, 5. a power that makes the soul fall down
before it, and acknowledge that God is in that word, 1 Cor. 14: 25.
    2. The teachings of God are sweet teachings. Men never relish
the sweetness of a truth, till they learn it from God, Cant. 1: 8.
"His name is as ointment poured forth." Cant. 5: 16. "His mouth is
most sweet." O how powerfully and how sweetly does the voice of God
slide into the hearts of poor melting sinners! how jejune, dry, and
tasteless are the discourses of men, compared with the teachings of
the Father!
    3. God teacheth plainly and clearly: He not only opens truths
to the understanding, but he openeth the understanding also to
perceive them, 2 Cor. 3: 16 In that day the vail is taken away from
the heart; a light shineth into the soul; a clear beam from heaven
is darted into the mind, Luke 24: 45. Divine teachings are fully
satisfying; the soul doubts no more, staggers and hesitates no more,
but acquiesces in that which God teaches; it is so satisfied, that
it can venture all upon the truth of what it has learned from God;
as that martyr said, I cannot dispute, but I can die for Christ. See
Prov. 8: 8, 9.
    Fourthly, The teachings of God are infallible teachings. The
wisest and holiest of men may mistake, and lead others into the same
mistakes with themselves; but it is not so in the teachings of God.
If we can be sure that God teacheth us, we may be as sure of the
truth of what he teacheth; for his Spirit guideth us into all truth,
John 16: 3. and into nothing but truth.
    Fifthly, The teachings of God are abiding teachings; they make
everlasting impressions upon the soul, Psal. 119: 98. they are ever
wish it: The words of men vanish from us; but the words of God abide
by us: what God teacheth, he writeth upon the heart, Jer. 31:33. and
that will abide; litera scripta manet. It is usual with souls, whose
understandings have been opened by the Lord, many years afterward to
say, I shall never forget such a scripture that once convinced, such
a promise that once encouraged me.
    Sixthly, The teachings of God are saving teachings; they make
the soul wise unto salvation, 2 Tim. 3: 15. There is a great deal of
other knowledge that goes to hell with men: The pavement of hell (as
one speaks) is pitched with the skulls of many great scholars, but
eternal life is the teachings of God, John 17::3. "This is the
eternal life, to know thee the only true God, and Jesus Christ, whom
thou hast sent." This is deservedly stiled the light of this life,
John 8: 12. "In this light we shall see light," Psal. 36: 9.
    Seventhly, The teachings of God make their own way into the
dullest and weakest capacities, Isa. 32: 4. "The heart also of the
rash shall understand knowledge, and the tongue of the stammerers
shall be ready to speak plainly." Upon this account Christ said,
Matth. 11: 25. "I thank thee, O Father, Lord of heaven and earth,
because thou hast hid these things from the wise and prudent, and
hast revealed them unto babes." It is admirable to see what clear
illuminations some poor illiterate Christians have in the mysteries
of Christ and salvation, which others, of great abilities, deep and
searching heads, can never discover with all their learning and
study.
    Eighthly, To conclude, The teachings of God are transforming
teachings; 2 Cor. 3: 18. they change the soul into the same image;
God casts them, whom he teacheth, into the very mould of those
truths which they learn of him, Rom. 6: 17. These are the teachings
of God, and thus he instructeth those that come to Christ.
    Secondly, Next let us see what influence divine teachings have
upon souls, in bringing them to Christ; and we shall find a
threefold influence in them.
    1. They have an influence upon the external means, by which
they come to Christ.
    2. They have an influence upon the mind, to remove what
hindered it from Christ.
    3. They have an influence upon the will, to allure and draw it
to Christ.
    First, They have an influence upon the means by which we come
to Christ; the best ordinances are but a dead letter except the
Spirit, the teaching and quickening Spirit of God, work in
fellowship with them, 2 Cor. 3: 6. The best ministers, like the
disciples, cast forth the net, but take nothing, win not one soul to
God, till God teach as well as they. Paul is nothing, and Apollos
nothing, but God that giveth the increase, 1 Cor. 3: 7. Let the most
learned, eloquent, and powerful orator be in the pulpit, Yet no
man's heart is persuaded till it hear the voice of God, Cathedram in
coelis habet, qui corda docet.
    Secondly, They have influence upon the mind, to remove what
hindered it from Christ. Except the minds of men be first untaught
those errors, by which they are prejudiced against Christ, they will
never be persuaded to come unto him; and nothing but the Father's
teachings can unteach those errors, and cure those evils of the
mind. The natural mind of man slights the truths of God, until God
teach them; and then they tremble with an awful reverence of them.
Sin is but a trifle, till God shews us the face of it in the glass
of the law, and then it appears exceeding sinful, Rom. 7: 13. We
think God to be such a one as ourselves, Psal. 1. 21. until he
discover himself unto us in his infinite greatness, awful holiness,
and severe justice; and then we cry, who can stand before this great
and dreadful God! We thought it was time enough hereafter, to mind
the concernments of another world, until the Lord open our eyes, to
see in what danger we stand upon the very brink of eternity; and
then nothing alarms us more, than the fears that our time will be
finished before the great work of salvation be finished. We thought
ourselves in a converted state before, till God made us to see the
necessity of another manner of conversion, upon pain of eternal
damnation. We readily caught hold upon the promises before, when we
had no right to them; but the teachings of God make the presumptuous
sinner let go his hold, that he may take a better and surer hold of
them in Christ. We once thought that the death of Christ, in itself,
had been enough to secure our salvation; but, under the teachings of
God, we discern plainly the necessity of a change of heart and
state; or else the blood of Christ can never profit us. Thus the
teachings of God remove the errors of the mind, by which men are
withheld from Christ.
    Thirdly, The teachings of God powerfully attract and allure the
will of a sinner to Christ, Hos. 2: 14. But of these drawings of the
Father I have largely spoken before, and therefore shall say no more
of them in this place, but hasten to the last thing propounded, viz.
    Thirdly, Why it is impossible for any man to come to Christ
without the Father's teachings; and the impossibilities hereof will
appear three ways.
    1. From the power of sin.
    2. From the indisposition of man.
    B. From the nature of faith.
    By all which, the last point designed to be spoken to from this
scripture, will be fully cleared, and the whole prepared for
application.
    First, The impossibility of coming to Christ without the
teachings of the Father, will appear from the power of sin, which
has so strong an holdfast upon the hearts and affections of all
unregenerate men, that no human arguments or persuasions whatsoever
can divorce or separate them; for,
    First, Sin is connatural with the soul, it is born and bred
with a man; Psal. 2: 4. Isa. 48: 8. It is as natural for fallen man
to sin, as it is to breathe.
    Secondly, The power of sin has been strengthening itself from
the beginning, by long continued custom, which gives it the force of
a second nature, and makes regeneration and mortification naturally
impossible, Jer. 15: 28. "Can the Ethiopian change his skin, or the
leopard his spots? Then may he also do good that is accustomed to do
evil."
    Thirdly, Sin is the delight of a sinner: "It is sport to a fool
to do mischief," Prov. 10: 23. Carnal men have no other pleasure in
this world, but what arises from their lusts; to cut off their
corruptions by mortification, were at once to deprive them of all
the pleasure of their lives.
    Fourthly, Sin being connatural, customary, and delightful, does
therefore bewitch their affections and inchant their hearts, to that
degree of madness and fascination, that they rather chuse damnation
by God, than separation from sin: "Their hearts are fully set in
them to do evil," Eccles. 8: 11. they rush into sin, as the horse
rusheth into the battle," Jer. 8: 6. And now, what think you can
separate a man from his beloved lust, except the powerful and
effectual teachings of God? Nothing but a light from heaven can
rectify and reduce the inchanted mind; no power, but that of God,
can change and alter the sinful bent and inclination of the will; it
is a task above all the power of the creature.
    Secondly, The impossibility of coming to Christ, without the
Father's teachings, evidently appears from the indisposedness of
man, the subject of this change; "The natural man receives not the
things which are of God," 1 Cor. 2: 14. Three things must be wrought
upon man, before he can come to Christ: His blind understanding must
be enlightened; his hard and rocky heart must be broken and melted;
his stiff, fixed, and obstinate will must be conquered and subdued:
but all these are effects of a supernatural power. The illumination
of the mind is the peculiar work of God, 2 Cor. 4: 6. Rev. 3: 17.
Eph. 5: 8. The breaking and melting of the heart is the Lord's own
work; it is he that giveth repentance, Acts 5: 31. It is the Lord
that "takes away the heart of stone, and giveth an heart of flesh,
Ezek. 36: 26. It is he that poureth out the spirit of contrition
upon man, Zech. 12: 10. The changing of the natural bent and
inclination of the will, is the Lord's sole prerogative, Phil. 2:
13. All these things are effectually done in the soul of man, when
God teacheth it, and never till then.
    Thirdly, The nature of faith, by which we come to Christ,
plainly shews the impossibility of coming without the Father's
teaching. Every thing in faith is supernatural; the implantation of
the habit of faith is so, Eph 2: 8. It is not of ourselves, but the
gift of God; it is not an habit acquired by industry, but infused by
grace, Phil 1: 29. The light of faith, by which spiritual things are
discerned, is supernatural, Heb. 11: 1, 27. It seeth things that are
invisible. The adventures of faith are supernatural; for "against
hope, a man believeth in hope, giving glory to God," Rom. 4: 18. By
faith a man goeth unto Christ, against all the dictates and
discouragements of natural sense and reason. The self-denial of
faith is supernatural; the cutting off the right hand, and plucking
out of right eye sins, must needs be so, Matt. 5: 29. The victories
and conquests of faith do all speak it to be supernatural; it
overcomes the strongest oppositions from without, Heb. 11: 33, 34.
It subdueth and purgeth the most obstinate and deep rooted
corruptions within, Acts 15: 9. It overcometh all the blandishments
and charming allurements of the bewitching world, 1 John 5: 4. All
which considered, how evident is the conclusion, that none can come
to Christ without the Father's teachings? The uses follow.
    
                     First use for information.
    Inference 1. How notoriously false and absurd is that doctrine
which asserteth the possibility of believing without the efficacy of
supernatural grace, The desire of self-sufficiency was the ruin of
Adam, and the conceit of self-sufficiency is the ruin of multitudes
of his posterity. This doctrine is not only contradictory to the
current stream of scripture, Phil. 2: 13. 1 John 1: 13. with many
other scriptures; but it is also contradictory to the common sense
and experience of believers; yet the pride of nature will strive to
maintain what scripture and experience plainly contradict and
overthrow.
    Inf. 2. Hence we may also inform ourselves, how it cometh to
pass that so many rational, wise and learned men miss Christ, whilst
the simple and illiterate, even babes in natural knowledge, obtain
interest in him, and salvation by him. The reason hereof is plainly
given us by Christ, in Matth. 13: 11. "To you it is given to know
the mysteries of the kingdom of heaven, but to them it is not
given." It is the dropping and dews of divine teaching upon one, and
not upon another, that dryeth up the green tree, and maketh the dry
tree to flourish. Many natural men have very fine brains, searching
wits, solid judgements, nimble fancies, tenacious memories; they can
search out the mysteries of nature, solve the phaenomena, satisfy
the enquiries of the most curious; they can measure the earth,
discover the motions of the heavens; but after all take up their
place in hell, when, in the mean time, the statutes of the Lord (by
the help of his teachings) make wise the simple, Psal 19: 17. It is
no matter how dull and incapable the scholar be, if God undertake to
be the teacher. I remember, Austin speaks of one who was commonly
reputed a fool, and yet he could not but judge him to be truly
godly, and that by two signs of grace which appeared in him; one
was, his seriousness when he heard any discourses of Christ; the
other was, his indignation manifested against sin. It was truly said
by those two Cardinals, (who, riding to the council of Constance,
overheard a poor shepherd in the fields with tears bewailing his
sins) Surgent indocti et rapient coelum; The unlearned will rise and
take heaven, whilst we with all our learning shall descend into
hell.
    Inf. 3. This also informs us of the true reason of the strange
and various successes of the gospel upon the souls of men. Here we
see why the ministry of one man becomes fruitful, and another's
barren; yea why the labours of the same poor man prosper exceedingly
at one time, and not at another; these things are according as the
teachings of God do accompany our teachings. We often see a weaker
and plainer discourse blessed with success, whilst that which is
more artificial, neat and laboured, comes to nothing. St. Austin has
a pretty similitude to illustrate this; Suppose, saith he, two
conduits, the one very plain, the other curiously carved and adorned
with images of lions, eagles, &c. the water does not refresh and
nourish as it cometh from such a curious conduit, but as it is
water. Where we find most of man, we frequently find least of God. I
speak not this to encourage carelessness and laziness, but to
provoke the dispensers of the gospel to more earnestness and
frequent prayer for the assistance and blessing of the Spirit upon
their labours, and to make men less fond of their own gifts and
abilities; blear-eyed Leah may bear children, when beautiful Rachel
proves barren.
    Inf. 4. Learn hence the transcendent excellency of saving,
spiritual knowledge, above that which is merely literal and natural.
One drop of knowledge taught by God, is more excellent than the
whole ocean of human knowledge and acquired gifts, Phil. 3: 8. John
17: 3. 1 Cor. 2: 2. Let no man therefore be dejected at the want of
those gifts with which unsanctified men are adorned. If God have
taught thee the evil of sin, the worth of Christ, the necessity of
regeneration, the mystery of faith, the way of communion with God in
duties; trouble not thyself because of thine ignorance in natural or
moral things: thou hast that, reader, which will bring thee to
heaven; and he is a truly wise man that knows the way of salvation,
though he be ignorant and unskilful in other things: thou knowest
those things which all the learned doctors and libraries in the
world could never teach thee, but God has revealed them to thee;
others have more science, thou hast more savour and sweetness; bless
God, and be not discouraged.
    
                     Second use for examination.
    If there be no coming to Christ without the teachings of the
Father: then it greatly concerns us to examine our own hearts,
whether ever we have been under the saving teachings of God, during
the many years we have sat under the preaching of the gospel. Let
not the question be mistaken; I do not ask what books you have read,
what ministers you have heard, what stock of natural or speculative
knowledge you have acquired; but the question is, whether ever God
spake to your hearts, and has effectually taught you such lessons,
as were mentioned in our last discourse? O there is a vast
difference betwixt that notional, speculative, and traditional
knowledge which man learneth from men, and that spiritual,
operative, and transforming knowledge which a man learneth from God.
If you ask how the teachings of God may be discerned from all other
mere human teachings; I answer, they may be discerned, and
distinguished by these six signs.
    Sign 1. The teachings of God are very humbling to the soul that
is taught. Human knowledge puffeth up, 1 Cor. 8: 1. but the
teachings of God do greatly abase the soul, Job 13: 5. "I have heard
of thee by the hearing of the ear, but now mine eye seeth thee;
wherefore I abhor myself, and repent in dust and ashes:" the same
light which discovers to us the holiness, justice, greatness, and
goodness of God, discovereth also the vileness, baseness, emptiness,
and total unworthiness of men; yea, of the best and holiest of men,
Isa. 6: 5.
    Sign 2. The teachings of God are deeply affecting and
impressive teachings; they fully reach the heart of man, Hos. 2: 14.
"I will allure her, and bring her into the wilderness, and speak
comfortably unto her;" or, as it is in the Hebrew, I will speak to
her heart. When God sheweth unto man the evil of sin, he so
convinceth the soul, that no creature-comforts have any pleasure or
sweetness in them; and when he sheweth unto man his righteousness,
pardon, and peace in Christ, he so comforteth and refresheth the
heart, that no outward afflictions have any weight or bitterness in
them: one drop of consolation from heaven, sweetens a sea of trouble
upon earth, Psal. 94: 19. "In the multitude of my thoughts within
me, thy comforts delight my soul."
    Sign 3. The teachings of God are sanctifying and renewing
teachings; they reform and change the heart, Eph. 4: 21, 22, 23. "If
so be that you have heard him, and been taught by him, as the truth
is in Jesus; that ye put off concerning the former conversation the
old man, which is corrupt, according to the deceitful lusts: and be
renewed in the spirit of your mind," &c. See here what holiness and
purity are the effect of divine teaching! Holiness, both external
and internal, negative and positive: holiness of every kind follows
the Father's teachings: all the discoveries God makes to us of
himself in Christ, have an assimilating quality, and change the soul
into their own likeness, 2 Cor. 3: 18.
    Sign 4. All God's teachings are practical, producing obedience.
Idle notions and useless speculations are not learned from God. As
God's creating words, so his teaching words are with effect: as when
he said, "Let there be light, and there was light:" so when he saith
to the soul, Be comforted, be humbled; it is effectually comforted,
Isa. 66: 18. it is humbled, Job 40: 4, 5. As God has in nature made
no creature in vain, so he speaks no word in vain: every thing which
men hear, or learn from the Father, is for use, practice, and
benefit to the soul.
    Sign 5. All teachings of God are agreeable with the written
word: The Spirit of God, and the word of God do never jar, John 14:
26. "He shall take of mine, and shew it unto you." When God speaketh
unto the heart of man, whether in a way of conviction, consolation,
or instruction in duty, he always either maketh use of the express
words of scripture, or speaks to the heart in language every way
consentaneous and agreeable to scripture: So that the written word
becomes the standard to weigh and try all divine teachings, Isa 8:
20. "To the law, and to the testimony: If they speak not according
to this word, it is because there is no light (or morning) in them."
Whatever is disagreeing or jarring with the scripture must not pass
for an inspiration of God, but a deluding sophism, and insinuation
of Satan.
    Sign 6. The teachings of God are very satisfying teachings to
the soul of man: The understanding faculty, like a dial, is
enlightened with the beams of divine truth shining upon it: this no
man's teachings can do: Men can only teach objectively, by
propounding truth to the understanding; but they cannot enlighten
the faculty itself, as God does, 1 John 5: 20. He giveth man
understanding as well as instructions, to be understood; he opens
the eyes of the understanding, as well as propoundeth the object,
Eph. 1: 18. And thus we may discern and distinguish the teachings of
God from all other teachings.
    
                      Third use of exhortation.
    The last use I shall make of this point, shall be a word of
exhortation, both to them that never were yet effectually taught of
God, and to them also that have heard his voice, and are come to
Christ.
    First, To those that never yet heard the voice of God speaking
to their hearts; and truly this is the general case of most men and
women, in the professing world: They have heard the sound of the
gospel, but it has been a confused, empty, and ineffectual sound in
their ears; they have heard the voice of man, but have never yet
heard the voice of God. The gifts and abilities of preachers have,
in a notional and mere human way, improved their understandings, and
sometimes slightly touched their affections: All this is but the
effect of man upon man. O that you would look for something which is
beyond all this: satisfy not yourselves with what is merely natural
and human in ordinances; come to the word with higher ends and more
spiritual designs, than to get some notions of truth which you had
not before, or to judge the gifts and abilities of the speaker: If
God speak not to your hearts, all the ordinances in the world can do
you no good, 1 Cor. 3: 7. O remember what a solemn and awful thing
it is to come to those ordinances, and attend upon that
ministration, in and by which the eternal decrees of heaven are to
be executed upon your souls, which must be to you the "savour of
life unto life, or of death unto death;" Wrestle with God by prayer
for a blessing upon the ordinances. Say, "Lord, speak thyself to my
heart, let me hear thy voice, and feel thy power in this prayer, or
in this sermon: Others have heard thy voice, cause me to hear it: It
had been much better for me if I had never heard the voice of
preachers, except I hear thy voice in them."
    Secondly, Let all those that have heard the voice of God, and
are come to Christ in the virtue of his teachings, admire the
wonderful condescension of God to them. O that God should speak to
thy soul, and be silent to others! There be many thousands living at
this day under ordinances, to whom the Lord has not given an ear to
hear, nor an heart to obey, Deut. 29: 4. "To you it is given to know
the mysteries of the kingdom of heaven, but to them it is not
given," Mat. 13: 11. And I beseech you, walk as men and women that
have been taught of God. When Satan and your corruptions tempt you
to sin, and to walk in the ways of the carnal and careless world;
remember then that scripture, Eph. 4:!30, 21. "But ye have not so
learned Christ, if so be that you have heard him, and have been
taught by him, as the truth is in Jesus." To conclude, see that you
be exceeding humble, and lowly in spirit. Humility qualifies you for
divine teachings, Psal. 25: 9. The meek he will teach; and the more
ye are taught of God, the more humble you will still be.
    And thus you see, that no man can come to Christ without the
application of the law, and the teachings of the Father; which being
considered, may be very useful to convince us, (which indeed is the
design of it) that among the multitudes of men and women, living
under the ordinances of God, and the general profession of religion,
there are but few, very few to be found, who have effectually
received the Lord Jesus Christ by saving faith.
    And now, reader, I suppose by this time thou art desirous to
know by what signs and evidences thy union with Christ by faith may
be cleared up, and made evident to thee; and how that great
question, whether thou hast yet effectually applied Christ to thy
soul or no, may be clearly decided; which brings me to the third
general use of the whole, viz.
    
            The examination of our interest in Christ, by
    
    1. The donation of the Spirit, from 1 John 3: 24.
    2. The new creation, from 2 Cor. 5: 17.
    S. The mortification of sin, from Gal. 5: 24.
    4. The imitation of Christ, from 1 John 2: 6.
    Of each of these trials of our interest in Christ I shall speak
in their order: And, first, of the donation of the Spirit.
    
    
    
    
    
Sermon 24.



Of the Manner and Importance of the Spirit's Indwelling.
    
    
1 John 3: 24.
    
-- And hereby we know that he abideth in us, by the Spirit which he
has given us.
    
    
    THE apostle in this chapter is engaged in a very trying
discourse; his scope is to discriminate the spirits and states of
sincere believers, from merely nominal and pretended Christians;
which he attempts not to do by any thing that is external, but by
the internal effects and operations of the Spirit of God upon their
hearts. His enquiry is not into those things which men profess, or
about the duties which they perform, but about the frames and
tempers of their hearts, and the principles by which they are acted
in religion. According to this test, he puts believers upon the
search and study of their own hearts; calls them to reflect upon the
effects and operations of the Spirit of God, wrought within their
own souls, assuring them, that these gracious effects, and the
fruits of the Spirit in their hearts, will be a solid evidence unto
them of their union with Jesus Christ, amounting to much more than a
general, conjectural ground of hope, under which it is possible
there may subesse falsum, lurk a dangerous and fatal mistake: But
the gracious effects of the Spirit of God within them, are a
foundation upon which they may build the certainty and assurance of
their union with Christ: Hereby we know that he abideth in us, by
the Spirit which he has given us. In which words we have three
things to consider, viz.
    1. The thing to be tried, our union with Christ.
    2. The trial of it, by the giving of his Spirit to us.
    3. The certainty of the trial this way: Hereby we know,
    First, The thing to be tried; which is indeed the greatest and
weightiest matter that can be brought to trial in this world, or in
that to come, namely, our union with Christ, expressed here by his
abiding in us; a phrase clearly expressing the difference betwixt
those who, by profession and common estimation, pass for Christians
among men, though they have no other union with Christ, but by an
external adhesion to him in the external duties of religion, and
those whose union with Christ is real, vital, and permanent, by the
indwelling of the Spirit of Christ in their souls. John 15: 5, 6.
opens the force and importance of this phrase, "I am the vine, ye
are the branches; he that abideth In me and I in him, the same
bringeth forth much fruit: If a man abide not in me, he is cast
forth as a branch, and is withered." The thing then to be tried is,
Whether we stand in Christ as dead branches in a living stock, which
are only bound to it by external ligatures or bonds that hold them
for a while together; or whether our souls have a vital union and
coalition with Christ, by the participation of the living sap of
that blessed root?
    Secondly, The trial of this union, which is by the giving of
the Spirit to us: The Spirit of Christ is the very bond of union
betwixt him and our souls. I mean not that the very person of the
Spirit dwelleth in us, imparting his essential properties to us; it
were a rude blasphemy so to speak; but his saving influences are
communicated to us in the way of sanctifying operations; as the sun
is said to come into the house, when his beams and comforting
influence come there. Nor yet must we think that the graces or
influences of the Spirit abide in us in the self-same measure and
manner they do in Christ; "for God giveth not the Spirit to him by
measure;" in him all fulness dwells. He is anointed with the Spirit
above his fellows; but there are measures and proportions of grace
differently communicated to believers by the same Spirit; and these
communicated graces, and real operations of the Spirit of grace in
our hearts, do undoubtedly prove the reality of our union with
Christ; as the communication of the self-same vital juice or sap of
the stock, to the branch whereby it lives, and brings forth fruit of
the same kind, certainly proves it to be a real part or a member of
the same tree.
    Thirdly, Which brings us to a third thing; namely, the
certainty of the trial this way, "en toutoi ginoskomen", in this, or
by this we know: We so know that we cannot be deceived. To clear
this, let us consider two things in grace, viz.
    1. Somewhat constitutive of its being.
    2. Somewhat manifestative of its being.
    There is something in grace which is essential, and
constitutive of its being; and somewhat that flows from grace, and
is manifestative of such a being: We cannot immediately and
intuitively discern the essence of grace, as it is in its simple
nature. So God only discerns it, who is the author of it; but we may
discern it mediately and secondarily, by the effects and operations
of it. Could we see the simple essence of grace, or intuitively
discern our union with Christ, our knowledge would be demonstrative,
a priori ad posterius, by seeing effects, as they are lodged in the
cause: But we come to know the being of grace, and the reality of
our union with Christ, a posteriori, by ascending in our knowledge
from the effects and operations, to their true cause and being.
    And, accordingly, God has furnished us with a power of self-
intuition and reflection; whereby we are able to turn it upon our
own hearts, and make a judgement upon ourselves, and upon our own
acts. The soul has not only power to project, but a power also to
reflect upon its own actions; not only to put forth a direct act of
faith upon Jesus Christ, but to judge and discern that act also, 2
Tim. 1: 12. I know whom I have believed: And this is the way in
which believers attain their certainty and knowledge of their union
with Christ: from hence the observation will be,
    
    Doct. That interest in Christ may be certainly gathered and
concluded from the gift of the Spirit to us: "No man (saith the
apostle) has seen God at any time; if we love one another, God
dwelleth in us, and his love is perfected in us: Hereby know we that
we dwell in him, and he in us, because he has given us of his
Spirit," 1 John 4: 12, 18. The being of God is invisible, but the
operations of his Spirit in believers, are sensible and discernible.
The soul's union with Christ is a supernatural mystery, yet it is
discoverable by the effects thereof, which are very perceptible in
and by believers.
    Two things require explication and confirmation in the
doctrinal part of this point.
    1. What the giving of the Spirit imports and signifies.
    2. How it evidences the soul's interest in Jesus Christ.
    First, As to the import of this phrase, we are to enquire what
is meant by the Spirit, and what by the giving of the Spirit.
    Now the Spirit is taken in scripture two ways, viz.
    Essentially, or personally.
    In the first sense it is put for the Godhead, 1 Tim. 3: 16.
Justified in the Spirit, i.e. By the power of his divine nature,
which raised him from the dead. In the second sense it denotes the
third person, or subsistence in the glorious and blessed Trinity;
and to him this word Spirit is attributed, sometimes properly in the
sense before mentioned, as denoting his personality; at other times
metonymically, and then it is put for the effects, fruits, graces,
and gifts of the Spirit communicated by him unto men, Eph. 5: 11 Be
ye filled with the Spirit. Now the fruits or gifts of the Spirit are
either,
    1. Common and assisting gifts: Or,
    2. Special and sanctifying gifts.
    In the last sense and signification, it must be taken in this
place; for, as to the common assisting and ministering gifts of the
Spirit, they are bestowed promiscuously upon one as well as another;
such gifts in an excellent degree and a large measure, are found in
the unregenerate, and therefore can never amount to a solid evidence
of the soul s union with Christ: but his special sanctifying gifts,
being the proper effect and consequent of that union, must needs
strongly prove and confirm it. In this sense therefore we are to
understand the Spirit in this place; and by giving the Spirit to us,
we are to understand more then the coming of the Spirit upon us: The
Spirit of God is said to come upon men in a transient way, for their
present assistance in some particular service, though in themselves
they be unsanctified persons: Thus the Spirit of God came upon
Balaam, Num. 24: 2. enabling him to prophesy of things to come: And,
although those extraordinary gifts of the Spirit be now ceased, yet
the Spirit ceaseth not to give his ordinary assistances unto men,
both regenerate and unregenerate, 1 Cor. 12: 8, 9, 10, 31. compared:
But, whatever gifts he gives to others, he is said to be given, to
dwell, and to abide only in believers, 1 Cor. 3: 6. "Know ye not
that ye are the temple of God, and that the Spirit of God dwelleth
in you?" An expression denoting both his special property in them,
and gracious familiarity with them. There is a great difference
betwixt the assisting and the indwelling of the Spirit; the one is
transient, the other permanent. That is a good rule the schoolmen
give us, Illa tantum dicuntur inesse, quae insunt per modum quietis:
those things are only said to be in a man, which were in him by way
of rest and permanency, and so the Spirit is in believers: Therefore
they are said to live in the Spirit, Gal. 5: 26. to be led by the
Spirit, ver. 18. to be in the Spirit, and the Spirit to dwell in
them, Rom. 8: 9. And so much of the first thing to be opened, viz.
What we ale to understand by the giving of the Spirit.
    Secondly, In the next place we are to enquire and satisfy
ourselves, how this giving of the Spirit evidently proves and
strongly concludes that soul's interest in Christ unto whom he is
given: and this will evidently appear by the consideration of these
five particulars.
    1. The Spirit of God in believers is the very bond by which
they are united unto Christ: If therefore we find in ourselves the
bond of union, we may warrantably conclude, that we have union with
Jesus Christ: This is evidently held forth in those words of Christ,
John 17: 22, 23. "The glory which thou gavest me, have I given them,
that they may be one, even ns we are one. I in them and thou in me,
that they may be made perfect in one, and that the world may know
that thou hast sent me, and hast loved them as thou hast loved me."
It is the glory of Christ's human nature to be united to the
Godhead: "This (said Christ) thou gavest me, and the glory thou
gayest me, I have given them," i.e. By me they are united unto thee.
And how this is done, he sheweth us more particularly, I in them;
there is Christ in us, viz. mystically: And thou in me; there is God
in Christ, viz. hypostatically: So that in Christ, God and believers
meet in a blessed union: It is Christ's glory to be one with God; it
is our glory to be one with Christ, and with God by him: But how is
this done? Certainly no other way but by the giving of his Spirit
unto us; for so much the phrase, I in them, must needs import:
Christ is in us by the sanctifying Spirit, which is the bound of our
union with him.
    Secondly, The scripture every where makes this giving, or
indwelling of the Spirit, the great mark and trial of our interest
in Christ; concluding from the presence of it in us, positively, as
in the text; and from the absence of it, negatively, as in Rom. 8:
9. "Now if any man have not the Spirit of Christ, the same is none
of his," Jude, ver. 19. "Sensual, not having the Spirit." This mark
therefore agreeing to all believers, and to none but believers, and
that always, and at all times, it must needs clearly infer the
soul's union with Christ, in whomsoever it is found.
    Thirdly, That which is a certain mark of our freedom from the
covenant of works, and our title to the privileges of the covenant
of grace, must needs also infer our union with Christ, and special
interest in him; but the giving or indwelling of the sanctifying
Spirit in us, is a certain mark of our freedom from the first
covenant, under which all Christless persons still stand, and our
title to the special privileges of the second covenant, in which
none but the members are interested; and, consequently, it fully
proves our union with the Lord Jesus. This is plain from the
apostle's reasoning Gal. 4: 6, 7. "And because ye are sons, God has
sent forth the spirit of his Son into your hearts, crying, Abba
Father: Wherefore thou art no more a servant, but a son: and if a
son, then an heir of God, through Christ." The spirit of the first
covenant was a servile spirit, a spirit of fear and bondage, and
they that were under that covenant were not sons, but servants; but
the spirit of the new covenant is a free, ingenuous spirit, acting
in the strength of God, and those that do so, are the children of
God; and children inherit the blessed privileges and royal
immunities contained in that great charter, the covenant of grace:
they are heirs of God, and the evidence of this their inheritance,
by virtue of the second covenant, and of freedom from the servitude
and bondage of the first covenant, is the Spirit of Christ in their
hearts, crying, Abba Father; So Gal. 5: 18. "If ye be led by the
Spirit, ye are not under the law."
    Fourthly, If the eternal decree of God's electing love be
executed, and the virtues and benefits of the death of Christ
applied by the Spirit, unto every soul in whom he dwelleth, as a
spirit of sanctification; then such a giving of the Spirit unto us
must needs be a certain mark and proof of our special interest in
Christ; but the decree of God's electing love is executed, and the
benefits of the blood of Christ are applied to every soul in whom he
dwelleth, as a spirit of sanctification. This is plain from 1 Pet.
1: 2. "Elect according to the foreknowledge of God the Father,
through sanctification of the Spirit unto obedience, and sprinkling
of the blood of Jesus Christ:" Where you see both God's election
executed, and the blood of Jesus sprinkled or applied unto us by the
Spirit, which is given to us as a Spirit of sanctification. There is
a blessed order of working observed as proper to each person in the
Godhead; the Father electeth, the Son redeemeth, the Spirit
sanctifieth. The Spirit is the last efficient in the work of our
salvation; what the Father decreed, and the Son purchased, that the
Spirit applieth; and so puts the last hand to the complete salvation
of believers. And this some divines give as the reason why the sin
against the Spirit is unpardonable, because he being the last agent,
in order of working, if the heart of a man be filled with enmity
against the Spirit, there can be no remedy for such a sin; there is
no looking back to the death of Christ, or to the love of God for
remedy. This sin against the Spirit is that obex infernalis, the
deadly stop and bar to the whole work of salvation; Oppositely,
where the Spirit is received, obeyed, and dwelleth in the way of
sanctification; into that soul the eternal love of God, the
inestimable benefits of the blood of Christ run freely, without any
interruption; and, consequently, the interest of such a soul in
Jesus Christ is beyond all dispute.
    Fifthly, The giving of the Spirit to us, or his residing in us,
as a sanctifying Spirit, is everywhere in scripture made the pledge
and earnest of eternal salvation, and consequently must abundantly
confirm and prove the soul's interest in Christ, Eph. 1: 13, 14. "In
whom also after that ye believed, ye were sealed with that holy
Spirit of promise; which is the earnest of our inheritance," &c. So,
2 Cor. 1: 22. "who has also sealed us, and given the earnest of the
Spirit in our hearts." And thus you have the point opened and
confirmed. The use of all followeth:
    Use. Now the only use I make of this point shall be that which
lieth directly, both in the view of the text, and of the design for
which it was chosen; namely, by it to try and examine the truth of
our interest in, and the validity of our claim to Jesus Christ. In
pursuance of which design, I shall first lay down some general
rules, and then propose some particular trials.
    First, I shall lay down some general rules for the due
information of our minds in this point, upon which so much depends.
    Rule 1. Though the Spirit of God be given to us, and worketh in
us, yet he worketh not as a natural and necessary, but as a free and
arbitrary agent: He neither assists, nor sanctifies, as the fire
burneth, ad ultimuam sui posse, as much as he can assist or
sanctify, but as much as he pleaseth: dividing to every man
severally as he will," 1 Cor. 12: 11. Bestowing greater measures of
gifts and graces upon some than upon others; and assisting the same
person more at one season than another; and all this variety of
operation floweth from his own good pleasure. His grace is his own,
he may give it as he pleaseth.
    Rule 2. There is a great difference in the manner of the
Spirit's working before and after the work of regeneration. Whilst
we are unregenerate, he works upon us as upon dead creatures that
work not at all with him; and what motion there is in our souls, is
a counter-motion to the Spirit; but after regeneration it is not so,
he then works upon a complying and willing mind; we work, and he
assists, Rom. 8: 26. Our conscience witnesseth, and he beareth
witness with it, Rom. 8: 16. It is therefore an error of dangerous
consequence to think that sanctified persons are not bound to stir
and strive in the way of duty, without a sensible impulse, or
preventing motion of the Spirit, Isa. 64: 7.
    Rule 3. Though the Spirit of God be given to believers, and
worketh in them, yet believers themselves may do or omit such things
as may obstruct the working, and obscure the very being of the
Spirit of God in them. Ita notis tractat, ut a nobis tractatus: He
dealeth with us in his evidencing and comforting work, as we deal
with him in point of tenderness and obedience to his dictates; there
is a grieving, yea, there is a quenching of the Spirit by the lusts
and corruptions of those hearts in which he dwelleth; and though he
will not forsake his habitation, as a Spirit of sanctification, yet
he may for a time desert it as a Spirit of consolation, Psa]. 2: 11.
    Rule 4. Those things which discover the indwelling of the
Spirit in believers are not so much the matter of their duties, or
substance of their actions, as the more secret springs, holy aims,
and spiritual manner of their doing or performing of them. It is not
so much the matter of a prayer, the neat and orderly expressions in
which it is uttered, as the inward sense and spiritual design of the
soul; it is not the choice of elegant words, whereby our conceptions
are clothed, or the copiousness of the matter with which we are
furnished, for even a poor stammering tongue, and broken language,
may have much of the Spirit of God in it. This made Luther say, he
saw more excellency in the duty of a plain rustic Christian, than in
all the triumphs of Caesar and Alexander. The beauty and excellency
of spiritual duties is an inward hidden thing.
    Rule 5. All the motions and operations of the Spirit are always
harmonious, and suitable to the written word, Isa. 8: 20. "To the
law and to the testimony, if they speak not according to this word,
it is because there is no light in them." The scriptures are by the
inspiration of the Spirit, therefore this inspiration into the
hearts of believers must either substantially agree with the
scriptures, or the inspiration of the Spirit be self repugnant, and
contradictory to itself. It is very observable, that the works of
grace wrought by the Spirit in the hearts of believers, are
represented to us in scripture, as a transcript, or copy of the
written word, Jer. 31: 33. "I will write my law in their hearts."
Now, as a true copy answers the original, word for word, letter for
letter, point for point; so do the works of the Spirit in our souls
harmonise with the dictates of the Spirit in the scriptures;
whatsoever motion therefore shall be found repugnant thereto, must
not be fathered upon the Spirit of God, but laid at the door of its
proper parents, the spirit of error and corrupt nature.
    Rule 6. Although the works of the Spirit, in all sanctified
persons, do substantially agree, both with the written word, and
with one another, (as ten thousand copies, penned from one original,
must needs agree within themselves;) yet as to the manner of
infusion and operation, there are found many circumstantial
differences. The Spirit of God does not hold one and the same method
of working upon all hearts: The work of grace is introduced into
some souls with more terror and trouble for sin, than it is in
others; he wrought upon Paul one way, upon Lydia in another way; he
holds some much longer under terrors and troubles than he does
others; inveterate and more profane sinners find stronger troubles
for sin, and are held longer under them, than those are, into whose
heart grace is more early and insensibly infused by the Spirit's
blessing upon religious education; but as these have less trouble
than the other at first, so commonly they have less clearness, and
more doubts and fears about the work of the Spirit afterwards.
    Rule 7. There is a great difference found betwixt the
sanctifying and the comforting influences of the Spirit upon
believers, in respect of constancy and permanency. His sanctifying
influences abide for ever in the soul, they never depart; but his
comforting influences come and go, and abide not long upon the
hearts of believers. Sanctification belongs to the being of a
Christian, consolation only to his well-being: The first is fixed
and abiding, the latter various and inconstant. Sanctification
brings us to heaven hereafter, consolation brings heaven unto us
here; our safety lies in the former, our cheerfulness only in the
latter. There are times and seasons, in the lives of believers,
wherein the Spirit of God does more signally and eminently seal
their spirits, and ravish their hearts with joy unspeakable. But
what Bernard speaketh is certainly true in the experience of
Christians: "It is a sweet hour, and it is but an hour; a thing of
short continuance: the relish of it is exceeding sweet, but it is
not often that Christians taste it." And so much may suffice for the
general rules about the inbeing and workings of the Spirit in
believers, for the better information of our understandings, and
prevention of mistakes in this matter: I shall next, according to
promise, lay down the particular marks and trials by which we may
discern whether God has given us his Spirit or no, by which grown
Christians, when they are in a due composed frame, may, by the
assistance of the Spirit of God, (for which therefore they are bound
to pray), discern his indwelling and working in themselves.
    Evidence 1. In whomsoever the Spirit of Christ is a Spirit of
sanctification, to that man or woman he has been, more or less, a
Spirit of conviction and humiliation. This is the order which the
Spirit constantly observes in adult or grown converts, John 16: 8,
9. "And when he is come, he will reprove the world of sin, and of
righteousness, and of judgement: of sin because they believe not on
me." This, you see, is the method he observes all the world over; he
shall reprove or convince the world of sin. Conviction of sin has
the same respect unto sanctification, as the blossoms of trees have
to the fruits that follow them: A blossom is but fructus
imperfectus, et ordinabilis; an imperfect fruit in itself, and in
order to a more perfect and noble fruit. Where there are no
blossoms, we can expect no fruit; and where we see no conviction of
sin, we can expect no conversion to Christ. Has then the Spirit of
God been a Spirit of conviction to thee? Hath he more particularly
convinced thee of sin, because thou hast not believed on him? i. e.
has he shown thee thy sin and misery, as an unbeliever? Not only
terrified and affrighted thy conscience with this or that more
notorious act of sin, but fully convinced thee of the state of sin
that thou art in by reason of thy unbelief, which, holding thee from
Christ, must needs also hold thee under the guilt of all thy other
sins. This gives, at least, a strong probability that God hath given
thee his Spirit, especially when this conviction remains day and
night upon thy soul, so that nothing but Christ can give it rest,
and consequently the great enquiry of thy soul is after Christ, and
none but Christ.
    Evidence 2. As the Spirit of God has been a convincing, so he
is a quickening Spirit, to all those to whom he is given; Rom. 8: 2.
"The law of the Spirit of life in Christ Jesus has made me free from
the law of sin and death:"  He is the Spirit of life, i. e. the
principle of spiritual life in the souls whom he inhabiteth; for,
uniting them to Christ, he unites them to the fountain of life, and
this spiritual life, in believers, manifests itself as the natural
life does in vital actions and operations. When the Spirit of God
comes into the Soul of a man that was dead and senseless under sin,
"O (saith he) now I begin to feel the weight and load of sin, Rom.
7: 24. now I begin to hunger and thirst after Christ and his
ordinances, 1 Pet. 2: 2. now I begin to breathe after God in
spiritual prayer",  Acts 9: 11. Spiritual life has its spiritual
senses, and suitable operations. O think upon this you that cannot
feel any burden in sin, you that have no hungerings or thirstings
after Christ; how can the Spirit of God be in you? I do not deny but
there may, at some times, be much deadness and senselessness upon
the hearts of Christians, but this is their disease, not their
nature; it is but at some times, not always, and when it is so with
them, they are burdened with it, and complain of it as their
greatest affliction in this world; their spirits are not easy and at
rest, in such a condition as yours are; their spirits are as a bone
out of joint, an arm dislocated, which cannot move any way without
pain.
    Evidence 3. Those to whom God giveth his Spirit bare a tender
sympathy with all the interests and concernments of Christ. This
must needs be so, if the same Spirit which is in Christ dwelleth
also in thy heart; if thou be a partaker of his Spirit, then what he
loves, thou lovest, and what he hates, thou hatest. This is a very
plain case; even in nature itself, we find that the many members of
the same natural body being animated by one and the same spirit of
life, "whether one member suffer, all the members suffer with it; or
one member be honoured, all the members rejoice with it: Now ye are
the body of Christ, and members in particular," 1 Cor. 12: 26, 27.
For look, as Christ, the head of that body is touched with a tender
sense and feeling of the miseries and troubles of his people, he is
persecuted when they are persecuted, Acts 9: 4. so they that have
the Spirit of Christ in them, cannot be without a deep and tender
sense of the reproach and dishonours that are done to Christ: This
is as it were a sword in their bones," Psal. 42: 3. If his public
worship cease, or the assemblies of his people are scattered; it
cannot but go to the hearts of all, in whom the Spirit of Christ is:
"They will be sorrowful for the solemn assemblies; the reproach of
them will be a burden," Zeph. 3: 18. Those that have the Spirit of
Christ do not more earnestly long after any one thing in this world,
than the advancement of Christ's interest by conversion and
resonation in the kingdoms of the earth, Psal. 14: 8, 4. Paul could
rejoice that Christ was preached, though his own afflictions were
increased, Phil. 1: 16, 18. and John could rejoice that Christ
increased, though he himself decreased; yet therein was his joy
fulfilled, John 3:!!9. So certainly the concernments of Christ must
and will touch that heart which is the habitation of his Spirit. I
cannot deny, but even a good Baruch may be under a temptation to
seek great things for himself, and be too much swallowed up in his
own concernments, when God is plucking up and breaking down, Jer.
14: 4, 5. But this is only the influence of a temptation: the true
temper and spirit of a believer inclines him to sorrow and mourning,
when things are in this sad posture: Ezek. 9: 4. "Go through the
midst of the city, through the midst of Jerusalem, and set a mark
upon the foreheads of the men that sigh, and that cry for all the
abominations that be done in the midst thereof."
    O reader, lay thine hand upon thine heart: Is it thus with
thee? Dost thou sympathise with the affairs and concernments of
Christ in the world? or, carest thou not which way things go with
the people of God, and gospel of Christ, so long as thine own
affairs prosper, and all things are well with thee?
    Evidence 4. Wherever the Spirit of God dwelleth, he does in
some degree, mortify and subdue the evils and corruptions of the
soul in which he resides. This Spirit lusteth against the flesh,
Gal. 5: 7. and believers, "through the Spirit, do mortify the deeds
of the body," Rom. 8: 13. This is one special part of his
sanctifying work. I do not say he kills and subdues sin in
believers, as that it shall never trouble or defile them any more:
No; that freedom be longs to the perfect state in heaven, but its
dominion is taken away, though its life be prolonged for a season.
It lives in believers still, but not upon the provision they
willingly make to fulfil the lust of it, Rom. 13: 27. The design of
every true believer, is co-incident with the design of the Spirit,
to destroy and mortify corruption: They long after the extirpation
of it, and are daily in the use of all sanctified means and
instruments, to subdue and destroy it; the workings of their
corruption are the afflictions of their souls, Mom. 7: 21. "O
wretched man that I am, who shall deliver me from the body of this
death?" And there is no one thing that sweetens the thoughts of
death to believers (except the sight and full enjoyment of God) more
than their expected deliverance from sin does.
    Evidence 5. Wherever the spirit of God dwelleth in the way of
sanctification, in all such he is the Spirit of prayer and
supplication, Rom. 8: 26. "Likewise the Spirit also helpeth our
infirmities, for we know not what we should pray for as we ought,
but the Spirit itself maketh intercession for us, with groanings
which cannot be uttered:" Wherever he is poured out as the Spirit of
grace, he is also poured out as the Spirit of supplication, Zech.
12: 10. His praying and his sanctifying influences are undivided.
There is a threefold assistance that the Spirit gives unto
sanctified persons in prayer. He helps them before they pray, by
setting an edge upon their desires and affections: He helps them in
prayer, by supplying matters of request to then, teaching them what
they should ask of God: He assisteth them in the manner of prayer,
supplying them with suitable affections, and helping them to be
sincere in all their desires to God. It is he that humbles the pride
of their hearts, dissolves, and breaks the hardness of their hearts;
Out of deadness makes them lively; out of weakness makes them
strong. He assisteth the spirits of believers after prayer, helping
them to faith and patience, to believe, and wait for the returns and
answers of their prayers. O reader, reflect upon thy duties,
consider what spirituality, sincerity, humility, broken-heartedness,
and melting affections after God, are to be found in thy duties: Is
it so with thee? Or dost thou hurry over thy duties as all
interruption to thy business and pleasures? Are they an ungrateful
task, imposed upon thee by God, and thy own conscience? Are there no
hungerings and thirstings after God in thy soul? Or, if there be any
pleasure arising to thee out of prayer, is it not from the
ostentation of thy gifts? If it be so, reject sadly upon the carnal
state of thy heart; these things do not speak the Spirit of grace
and supplication to be given thee.
    Evidence 6. Wherever the Spirit of grace inhabits, there is an
heavenly, spiritual frame of fining accompanying, and evidencing the
indwelling of the Spirit, Rom. 8: 5, 6. "For they that are after the
flesh, do mind the things of the flesh; but they that are after the
Spirit, the things of the Spirit: for to be carnally minded is
death: but to be spiritually minded is life and peace. By the mind,
understand the musings, reasonings, yea, and the cares, fears,
delights and pleasures of the soul, which follow the workings and
meditations of the mind. As these are, so are we; if these be
ordinarily and habitually taken up, and exercised about earthly
things, then is the frame and state of the man carnal, and earthly:
The workings of every creature follow the being and nature of it. If
God, Christ, heaven, and the world to come, engage the thoughts and
affections of the soul, and the temper of such a soul is spiritual,
and the Spirit of God dwelleth there; this is the life of the
regenerate, Phil. 3: 20. "Our conversation is in heaven;" and such a
frame of heart is life and peace: A serene, placid, and most
comfortable life. No pleasures upon earth, no gratifications of the
senses, do relish and savour, as spiritual things do. Consider,
therefore, which way thy heart ordinarily works, especially in thy
solitudes and hours of retirement. These things will be a great
evidence for, or against thy soul. David could say "How precious are
thy thoughts unto me, O God! How great is the sum of them: if I
should count them, they, are more in number than the sand; when I
awake, I was still with thee," Psal. 139: 17, 18. Yet it must be
acknowledged, for the relief of weaker Christians, that there is a
great difference and variety found in this matter, among the people
of God: For the strength, steadiness, and constancy of a spiritual
mind, result from the depth and improvement of sanctification: The
more grace, still the more evenness, spirituality, and constancy
there is in the motions of the heart after God. The minds of weak
Christians are more easily entangled in earthly vanities, and more
frequently diverted by inward corruptions; yet still there is a
spiritual Pondus, inclination and bent of their hearts towards God;
and the vanity and corruption which hinders their communion with him
are their greatest grief and burthen under which they groan in this
world.
    Evidence 7. Those to whom the Spirit of grace is given, are led
by the Spirit, Rom. 8: 11. "As many as are led by the Spirit of God,
they are the sons of God:" Sanctified souls give themselves up to
the government and conduct of the Spirit; they obey his voice, beg
his direction, follow his motions, deny the solicitations of flesh
and blood, in obedience to him, Gal. 1: 16. And they that do so,
they are the sons of God. It is the office of the Spirit to guide us
into all truth; and it is our great duty to follow his guidance.
Hence it is, that in all enterprises and undertakings, the people of
God so earnestly beg direction and counsel from him. "Lead me, O
Lord, in thy righteousness, (saith David) make thy way straight
before my face," Psal. 5: 8. They dare not, in doubtful cases, lean
to their own understandings; yea, in points of duty, and in points
of sin, they dare not neglect the one, or commit the other, against
the convictions and persuasions of their own consciences; though
troubles and sufferings be unavoidable in that path of duty, when
they have balanced duties with sufferings, in their most serious
thoughts, the conclusion and result wily still be, it is better to
obey God, than man, the dictates of the Spirit, rather than the
counsels of flesh and blood.
    But, before I leave this point, I reckon myself a debtor unto
weak Christians, and shall endeavour to give satisfaction to some
special doubts and fears, with which their minds are ordinarily
entangled in this matter; for it is a very plain case, that many
souls have the presence and sanctification of the Spirit without the
evidence and comfort thereof. Divers thing are found in believers,
which are so many fountains of fears and doubts to them. And,
    Objection 1. First, I greatly doubt the Spirit of God is not in
me, (saith a poor Christian) because of the great darkness and
ignorance which clouds my soul; for I read, 1 John 2: 27. that he
enlighteneth the soul which he inhabiteth. "The anointing which ye
have received of him abideth in you, and ye need not that any man
teach you, but as the same anointing teacheth you of all things,"
&c. but alas, my understanding is weak and cloudy, I have need to
learn of the meanest of God's people: This only I know, that I know
nothing as I ought to know.
    Sol. Two things are to be regarded in spiritual knowledge; viz.
the quantity, and the efficacy thereof. Your condition does not so
much depend upon the measures of knowledge; for, haply, you are
under many natural disadvantages, and want those helps and means of
increasing knowledge, which others plentifully enjoy. It may be you
have wanted the helps of education, or have been incumbered by the
necessities and cares of the world, which have allowed you but
little leisure for the improvement of your minds: But if that which
you do know, be turned into practice and obedience, Col. 1: 9, 10.
If it have influence upon your hearts, and transform your affections
into a spiritual frame and temper, 2 Cor. 3: 17, 18. If your
ignorance humble you, and drive you to God daily for the increase of
knowledge, one drop of such knowledge of Christ, and yourselves as
this, is more worth than a sea of human, moral, unsanctified, and
speculative knowledge. Though you know but little, yet that little,
being sanctified, is of great value: Though you know but little,
time was when you knew nothing of Jesus Christ, or the state of your
own souls. In a word, though you know but little, that little you do
know will be still increasing, "like the morning light, which
shineth more and more unto the perfect day," Prov. 4: 18. If thou
knowest so much as brings thee to Christ, thou shalt shortly be
where thy knowledge shall be as the light at noon day.
    Object. 2. I sometimes find my heart raised, and my affections
melted in duties, but I doubt it is in a natural way, and not from
the Spirit of God: could I be assured those motions of my heart were
from the Spirit of grace, and not merely a natural thing, it would
be a singular comfort and satisfaction to me.
    Sol. First, Consider whether this be not the ground of your
fear and doubting, because you are fain to take pains in the way of
meditation, prayer, and other duties, to bring your hearts to relish
and savour the things of God; whereas, it may be, you expect your
spiritual enlargements and comforts should flow in upon you
spontaneously, and drop from heaven immediately of their own accord,
without any pains or industry of yours. Here may be, (and probably
is) a great mistake in this matter; for the Spirit of God works in
the natural method, wherein affections use to be raised, and makes
use of such duties as meditation and prayer, as instruments to do
that work by, Ezek. 36: 57. So David was forced to reason with, and
chide his own heart, Psal. 42: 5. Thy comfort and enlargement may
nevertheless be the fruit of the Spirit, because God makes it spring
up, and grow upon thy duties.
    Secondly, Take this as a sure rule, Whatsoever rises from self,
always aims at, and terminates in self. This stream cannot be
carried higher than the fountain; if therefore thy aim, and end in
striving for affections and enlargements in duty, be only to win
applause from men, and appear to be what in reality thou art not,
this, indeed, is the fruit of nature, and a very corrupt and
hypocritical nature; but if thy heart be melted, or desire to be
melted in the sense of the evil of sin, in order to the further
mortification of it; and, under the apprehensions of the free grace
and mercy of God in the pardon of sin. in order to the engaging of
thy soul more firmly to him; if these, or such like, be thy ends and
designs, or be promoted and furthered by thine enlargements and
spiritual comforts, never reject them as the mere fruits of nature:
A carnal root cannot bring forth such fruits as these.
    Object. 3. Upon the contrary, spiritual deadness, and
indisposedness to duties, and to those especially which are more
secret, spiritual, and self-denying than others, is the ground upon
which many spiritual souls, who are yet truly gracious, do doubt the
indwelling of the Spirit in them. 0, saith such a soul, if the
Spirit of God be in me, Why is it thus? Could my heart be so dead,
so backward and averse to spiritual duties? No; these things would
be my meat and my drink, the delights and pleasures of my life.
    Sol. First, These things indeed are very sad, and argue thy
heart to be out of frame, as the body is, when it cannot relish the
most desirable meats or drinks: But the question will be, how thy
soul behaves itself in such a condition as this is? whether this be
easy or burdensome to he borne by thee? and if thou complain under
it as a burden; then what pains thou takest to ease thyself, and get
rid of it?
    Secondly, Know also, that there is a great difference betwixt
ritual death, and spiritual deadness; the former is the state of the
unregenerate, the latter is the disease and complaint of many
thousand regenerate souls: If David had not felt it as well as thee,
he would never have cried out nine times in the compass of one
Psalm, Quicken me, quicken me. Besides,
    Thirdly, Though it be of ten, it is not so always with thee;
there are seasons wherein the Lord breaks in upon thy heart,
enlarges thy affections, and sets thy soul at liberty; to which
times thou wilt do well to have an eye, in these dark and cloudy
days.
    Object. 4. But the Spirit of God is the comforter, as well as a
sanctifier: He does not only enable men to believe, but after they
believe, he also seals them, Eph 1: 13. But I walk in darkness, and
am a stranger to the sealing and comforting work of the Spirit: How
therefore can I imagine the Spirit of God should dwell in me, who go
from day to day in the bitterness of my soul, mourning as without
the sun?
    Sol. There is a twofold sealing, and a two-fold comfort: The
Spirit sealeth both objectively, in the work of sanctification; and
formally, in giving clear evidence of that work. Thou mayest be
sealed in the first, whilst thou art not yet sealed in the second
sense: If so, thy condition is safe, although it be at present
uncomfortable. And, as to comfort, that also is of two sorts, viz.
seminal, or actual: in the root, or in the fruit; Light is sown for
the righteous, Psal 97: 11. though the harvest to reap and gather in
that joy and comfort be not yet come. And there are many other ways
beside that of joy and comfort, whereby the indwelling of the Spirit
may evidence itself in thy soul: If he do not enable thee to
rejoice, yet if he enable thee sincerely to mourn for sin; if he do
not enlarge thy heart in comfort, yet if he humble and purge thy
heart by sorrows: if he deny thee the assurance of faith, and yet
give thee the dependence of faith, thou hast no reason to call in
question, or deny the indwelling of the Spirit in thee for that
cause.
    Object. 5. But the apostle saith, "They that walk in the
Spirit, do not fulfil the lusts of the flesh," Gal. 5: 16. but I
find myself entangled, and frequently overcome by them: Therefore I
doubt the Spirit of God is not in me.
    Sol. It is possible the ground of your doubting may be your
mistake of the true sense and meaning of that scripture: It is not
the apostle's meaning in that place, that sin in believers does not
work, tempt, and oftentimes overcome, and captivate them; for then
he wound contradict himself in Rom. 7: 28. where he thus complains,
But I see another law in my members, warring against the law of my
mind, and bringing me into captivity to the law of sin which is in
my members." But two things are meant by that expression, "Ye shall
not fulfil the lusts of the flesh."
    First, That the principle of grace will give a check to sin in
its first motions, and cause it to miscarry in the womb, like an
untimely birth, before it come to its full maturity; it shall never
be able to gain the full consent of the will, as it does in the
unregenerate.
    Secondly, If, notwithstanding all the opposition grace makes to
hinder the birth or commission of it, it does yet prevail, and break
forth into act; yet such acts of sin, as they are not committed
without regret, so they are followed with shame, sorrow, and true
repentance: And those very surprisals, and captivities of sin at one
time, are made cautions and warnings to prevent it at another time
If it be so with thee, thou cost not fulfil the lusts of the flesh.
    And now, reader, upon the whole, if upon examination of thy
heart by these rules, the Lord shall help thee to discern the saving
work of the Spirit upon thy soul, and thereby thine interest in
Christ, What a happy man or woman art thou! what pleasure will arise
to thy soul from such a discovery! look upon the frame of thine
heart absolutely as it is in itself at present, or comparatively,
with what once it was, and others still are, and thou wilt find
enough to transport and melt thy heart within thee: Certainly this
is the most glorious piece of workmanship that ever God wrought in
the world upon any man, Eph. 2: 10. The Spirit of God is come down
from heaven, and has hallowed thy soul to be a temple for him self
to dwell in; as he has said, "I will dwell in them, and walk in
them, and I will be their God, and they shall be my people," 2 Cor.
7: 16. Moreover, this gift of the Spirit is a sure pledge and
earnest of thy future glory: Time was, when there was no such work
upon thy soul. And, considering the frame and temper of it, the
total aversation, strong opposition, and rooted enmity that was in
it; it is the wonder of wonders, that ever such a work as this
should be wrought upon such a heart as thine: that ever the Spirit
of God, whose nature is pure and perfect holiness, should chuse such
an unclean, polluted, abominable heart to frame an habitation for
himself there to dwell in; to say of thy soul (now his spiritual
temple) as he once said of the material temple at Jerusalem, Psal.
132: 13, 14. &c. The Lord has chosen it, he has desired it for his
habitation. This is my rest for ever: Here will I dwell; for I have
desired it." O what has God done for thy soul!
    Think, reader, and think again: Are there not many thousands in
the world of more ingenuous, sweet, and amiable dispositions than
thyself, whom yet the Spirit of God passeth by, and leaveth them as
tabernacles for Satan to dwell in? Such a one thou lately wast, and
hadst still remained, if God had not wrought for thee, beyond all
the expectations and desires of thine own heart. O bless God that
you have received not the spirit of the world, but the Spirit which
is of God; that ye might know the things which are freely given unto
you of God.
    
    
    
    
    
    
Sermon 25.

    
Of the Nature and Necessity of the New Creature.
    
    
    
2 Cor. 5: 17.
    
Therefore if any man be in Christ, he is a new creature: old things
are passed away; behold, all things are become new.
    
    
    You have seen one trial of an interest in Christ, in our last
discourse, namely, by the donation of the Spirit. We have here
another trial of the same matter, from one of the greatest, and most
noble effects of the Spirit upon our souls; namely, his work of
renovation, or new creation: "If any man be in Christ, he is a new
creature." The apostle's scope in the immediate context, is to
dissuade Christians from a carnal, sinful partiality, in their
respects to men: Not to despise them after the manner of the world,
according to the external differences, but the real internal worth
and excellency that is in men. This the apostle presses by two
arguments; one drawn from the end of Christ's death, ver. 15. which
was to take off from these selfish designs and carnal ends by which
the whole world is swayed. Secondly, From the new spirit, by which
believers are actuated: they that are in Christ are to judge and
measure all things by a new rule: "If any man be in Christ, he is a
new creature: Old things are passed away;" q. d. we have done with
that low, selfish spirit of the world, which was wholly governed by
carnal interest; we are now to judge by a new rule, to be actuated
from a new principle, aim at a new and more noble end; "Behold, all
things are become new." In these words we have three general parts,
to be distinctly considered, viz.
    1. The great question to be determined, "If any man be in
Christ?"
    2. The rule by which it may be determined, viz. "he is a new
creature."
    3. This general rule more particularly explained, "Old things
are passed away; behold, all things are become new."
    First, We have here the great question to be determined,
Whether a man be in Christ? A question upon the determination
whereof, we must stand, or fall for ever. By [being in Christ] the
apostle does not here mean the general profession of Christianity,
which gives a man the reputation of an interest in him; but by being
in Christ, he means an interest in him, by vital union with his
person, and real participation of his benefits. Now this is the
question to be determined, the matter to be tried; than which,
nothing can be more solemn and important in the whole world.
    Secondly, The rule by which this great question may be
determined, viz. The new creation; "If any man be in Christ, he is a
new creature." By this rule all the titles and claims made to Christ
in the professing world, are to be examined. [If any man] be he what
he will, high or low, great or small, learned or illiterate, young
or old, if he pretend interest in Christ, this is the standard by
which he must be tried: if he be in Christ, he is a new creature;
and if he be not a new creature, he is not in Christ, let his
endowments, gifts, confidence, and reputation be what they will: [A
new creature] not new physically, he is the same person he was; but
a new creature, that is, a creature renewed by gracious principles,
newly infused into him from above, which sway him and guide him in
another manner, and to another end than ever he acted before; and
these gracious principles not being educed out of any thing which
was pre-existent in man, but infused de novo, from above, are
therefore called, in this place, a new creature: This is the rule by
which our claim to Christ must be determined.
    Thirdly, This general rule is here more particularly explained;
"Old things are passed away; behold, all things are become new." He
satisfies not himself to lay down this rule concisely, or express it
in general terms, by telling us, the man in Christ must be a new
creature; but more particularly, he shews us what this new creature
is, and what the parts thereof are, viz. Both
    1. The privative part; "Old things are passed away."
    2. The positive part thereof; "All things are become new."
    By old things, he means all those carnal principles, self-ends,
and fleshly lusts belonging to the carnal state, or the old man: all
these are passed away; "not simply, and perfectly, but only in part
at present, and wholly in hope and expectation hereafter." So much
briefly of the privative part of the new creature, "Old things are
passed away." A word or two must be spoken of the positive part;
"All things are become new. He means not that the old faculties of
the soul are abolished, and new ones created in their room; but as
our bodies may be said to be new bodies, by reason of their new
endowments and qualities super induced, and bestowed upon them in
their resurrection, so our souls are now renewed by the infusion of
new gracious principles into them, in the work of regeneration.
These two parts, viz. the privative part, the passing away of old
things; and the positive part, the renewing of all things, do,
betwixt them, comprise the whole nature of sanctification, which, in
other scriptures, is expressed by equivalent phrases; sometimes by
putting off the old, and putting on the new man, Eph. 4: 24.
sometimes by dying unto sin, and living unto righteousness, Rom. 6:
11. which is the self-same thing the apostle here intends, by the
passing away of old things, and making all things new. And because
this is the most excellent, glorious, and admirable work of the
Spirit, which is, or can be wrought upon man in this world;
therefore the apostle asserts it with an ecce, a note of special
remark and observation, "Behold, all things are become new;" q. d.
Behold and admire this surprising, marvellous change which God has
made upon men; they are come out of darkness into his marvellous
light, 1 Pet. 2: 9. out of the old, as it were, into a new world;
"Behold, all things are become new". Hence note,
    
    Doct. That Gods creating of a new supernatural work of grace in
         the soul of any mart, is that man's sure, and infallible
         evidence of a saving interest in Jesus Christ.
    
    Suitable hereunto are those words of the apostle, Eph. 4: 20,
21, 22, 23, 24. "But ye have not so learned Christ; if so be that ye
have heard him, and have been taught by him, as the truth is in
Jesus: That ye put off, concerning the former conversation, the old
man, which is corrupt, according to the deceitful lusts: and be
renewed in the Spirit of your mind: and that ye put on the new man,
which after God is created in righteousness and true holiness."
Where we have, in other words of the same importance, the very self-
same description of the man that is in Christ, which the apostle
gives us in this text. Now, for the opening and stating of this
point, it will be necessary that I shew you,
    1. Why the regenerating work of the Spirit is called a new
creation.
    2. In what respect every soul that is in Christ is renewed, or
made a new creature.
    3. What are the remarkable properties and qualities of this new
creature.
    4. The necessity of this new creation to all that are in
Christ.
    5. How this new creation evidences our interest in Christ.
    6. And then apply the whole in the proper uses of it.
    First, Why the regenerating work of the Spirit is called a new
creation. This must be our first enquiry. And, doubtless, the reason
of this appellation is the analogy, proportion, and similitude which
is found betwixt the work of regeneration, and God's work in the
first creation. And their agreement and proportion will be found in
the following particulars.
    First, The same almighty Author who created the world, createth
also this work of grace in the soul of man, 2 Cor. 4: 6. "God, who
commanded the light to thine out of darkness, has shined into our
hearts, to give the light of the knowledge of the glory of God in
the face of Jesus Christ." The same powerful word which created the
natural, createth also the spiritual light. It is equally absurd for
any man to say, I make myself to repent, or to believe, as it is to
say, I made myself to exist, and be.
    Secondly, The first thing that God created in the natural
world, was light, Gen. 1:3. and the first thing which God createth
in the new creation, is the light of spiritual knowledge, Col. 3:
10. "And have put on the new man, which is renewed in knowledge
after the image of him that created him."
    Thirdly. Creation is out of nothing; it requires no pre-
existent matter; it does not bring one thing out of another, but
something out of nothing; it gives a being to that which before had
no being: So it is also in the new creation, 1 Pet. 2: 9, 10. "Who
has called you out of darkness into his marvellous light; which in
time past were not a people, but are now the people of God; which
had not obtained mercy, but now have obtained mercy." The work of
grace is not educed out of the power and principles of nature, but
it is a pure work of creation. The Heathen philosophers could
neither understand, nor acknowledge the creation of the world,
because that notion was repugnant to this maxim of reason, en nihilo
nihil fit, out of nothing, nothing can be made. Thus did they
insanire cum ratione, befool themselves with their own reasonings;
and after the same manner some great pretenders to reason among us,
voting it an absurdity to affirm, that the work of grace is not
virtually and potentially contained in nature, the new creation in
the old.
    Fourthly, It was the virtue and efficacy of the Spirit of God,
which gave the natural world its being by creation; Gen. 1: 2. the
Spirit of God moved upon the face of the waters; it hovered over the
chaos, as the wings of a bird do over her eggs, as the same word is
rendered, Deut. 32: 11. cherishing, as it were by incubation, that
rude mass by a secret quickening influence, by which it drew all
creatures into their several forms, and particular natures: So it is
in the new creation; a quickening influence must come from the
Spirit of God, or else the new creation can never be formed in us;
John 3: 8. "So is every one that is born of the Spirit." And ver. 6.
"That which is born of the Spirit, is spirit."
    Fifthly, The word of God was the instrument of the first
creation; Psal. 33: 6, 9. "By the word of the Lord were the heavens
made, and all the host of them by the breath of his mouth: For he
spake, and it was done; he commanded, and it stood fast." The word
of God is also the instrument of the new creation, or work of grace
in man; 1 Pet. 1: 23. "Being born again, not of corruptible seed,
but of incorruptible; by the word of God, which liveth, and abideth
for ever." So James 1: 18. "Of his own will begat he us, with the
word of truth." Of his own will; that was the impulsive cause; with
the word of truth; that was the instrumental cause. Great respect
and honour, love, and delight, is due to the word upon this account,
that it is the instrument of our regeneration, or new creation.
    Sixthly, The same power which created the world, still
underprops and supports it in its being: the world owes its
conservation, as well as its existence, to the power of God, without
which it could not subsist one moment. Just so it is with the new
creation, which entirely depends upon the preserving power, which
first formed it; Jude ver. 1. "Preserved in Christ Jesus," and 1
Pet. 1: 5. "Who are kept by the power of God, through faith, unto
salvation." As in a natural way "we live, move, and have our being
in God," Acts 17: 28. so in a spiritual way, we continue believing,
repenting, loving, and delighting in God; without whose continued
influence upon our souls, we could do neither.
    Seventhly, In a word, God surveyed the first creation with
complacence and great delight; he beheld the works of his hands, and
approved them as very good, Gen. 1: 31. So this also in the second
creation; nothing pleaseth and delights God more than the works of
grace in the souls of his people. It is not an outward privilege of
nature, or gift of providence, which commends any man to God;
"Circumcision is nothing, and uncircumcision is nothing, but a new
creature," Gal. 6: 15. And thus you see upon what grounds the work
of regeneration in man is stiled a new creature; which was the first
thing to be opened.
    Secondly, Next we must enquire, in what respects every soul
that is in Christ is renewed, or made a new creature: and here we
shall find a threefold renovation of every man that is in Christ,
viz.
    1. In his state and condition.
    2. In his frame and constitution.
    3. In his practice and conversation.
    First, He is renewed in his state and condition: for he passeth
from death to life in his justification, 1 John 3: 14. He was
condemned by the law, he is now justified freely by grace, through
the redemption which is in Christ: he was under the curse of the
first covenant; he is under the blessing of the new covenant: he was
afar off, but is now made nigh unto God; an alien, a stranger once,
now of the household of God, Eph. 2: 12, 13. 0 blessed change, from
a sad to a sweet and comfortable condition! "There is therefore no
condemnation to them which are in Christ Jesus," Rom. 8: 1.
    Secondly, Every man in Christ is renewed in his frame and
constitution; all the faculties and affections of his soul are
renewed by regeneration: his understanding was dark, but now is
light in the Lord, Eph. 5: 8. his conscience was dead and secure, or
full of guilt and horror, but is now become tender, watchful, and
full of peace, Heb. 9: 11. his will was rebellious, stubborn, and
inflexible; but is now made obedient and complying with the will of
God, Psal. 110: 2. his desires did once pant and spend themselves in
the pursuit of vanities, now they are set upon God, Isa. 26: 8. his
love did fondly dote upon ensnaring earthly objects, now it is
swallowed up in the infinite excellencies of God and Christ, Psal.
119: 97. his joy was once in trifles and things of nought, now his
rejoicing is in Christ Jesus, Phil. 3: 3. his fears once were about
noxious creatures, now God is the object of the fear of reverence,
Acts 9: 31. and sin the object of the fear of caution, 2 Cor. 7: 11.
his hopes and expectations were only from the world present, but now
from that to come, Heb. 6: 19. Thus the soul in its faculties and
affections is renewed; which being done, the members and senses of
the body must needs be destinated and employed by it in new
services; no more to be the weapons of unrighteousness, but
instruments of service to Jesus Christ, Rom. 6: 19. And thus all
that are in Christ are renewed in their frame and constitution.
    Thirdly, The man in Christ is renewed in his practice and
conversation: the manner of operation always follows the nature of
beings. Now the regenerate not being what they were, cannot walk and
act as once they did; Eph. 2: 1, 2, 3. "And you has he quickened,
who were once dead in trespasses and sins, wherein ye walked
according to the course of this world." They were carried away, like
water by the strength of the tide, by the influence of their own
corrupt natures, and the customs and examples of the world; but the
case is now altered. So in 1 Cor. 6: 11. the apostle shews believers
their old companions in sin, and tells them, "Such were some of you,
but ye are washed, but ye are sanctified," &c. q. d. the world is
now well altered with you, thanks be to the grace of God for it.
This wonderful change of practice, which is so universal and
remarkable in all the regenerate, and immediately consequent upon
their conversion, sets the world a wondering at them; 1 Pet. 4: 4.
Wherein they think it strange, that you run not "with them into the
same excess of riot, speaking evil of you. They think it strange:"
The word signifies to stand and gaze, as the hen does which has
brooded, and hatched partridge eggs, when she sees the chickens
which she has brought forth, take the wing and fly away from her.
Thus do the men of the world stand amazed to see their old
companions in sin, whose language once was vain and earthly, it may
be, profane and filthy, now to be praying, speaking of God, heaven,
and things spiritual, having no more to do with them, as to sin,
except by way of reprehension and admonition: this amazes the world,
and makes them look with a strange admiring eye upon the people of
God.
    Thirdly, In the next place let us enquire into the properties
and qualities of this new creature, and shew you, as we are able,
what they are; yet, reader, expect not here an exact and accurate
account of that which is so great a mystery; for if questions may be
moved about a silly fly, which may puzzle the greatest philosopher
to resolve them; how much more may we conceive this great and
marvellous work of God, the most mysterious and admirable of all his
works, to surmount the understandings of the most illuminated
Christians? O how little do we know of the nature, properties, and
operations of this new creature! So far as God has revealed it to
our weak understandings, we may speak of it. And,
    First, The scripture speaks of it as a thing of great
difficulty to be conceived by man, John 3: 8. "The wind bloweth
where it listed, and thou hearest the sound thereof, but canst not
tell whence it cometh and whither it goeth: So is every one that is
born of the Spirit." The original of winds is a question of great
difficulty in philosophy: We hear the voice of the wind, feel its
mighty force, and behold its strange effects; but neither know
whence it comes, or whither it goes. Ask a man, Do you hear the wind
blow? Yes. Do you feel it blow? Yes, very sensibly. Do you see the
effects of it, rending and overturning the trees? Yes, very plainly.
But can you describe its nature, or declare its original? No, that
is a mystery which I do not understand. Why just so it is with him
that is born of the Spirit. The holy Spirit of God, whose nature and
operations we understand but little of, comes from heaven, quickens
and influences our souls, beats down and mortifies our lusts by his
Almighty Power: These effects of the Spirit in us we experimentally
feel, and sensibly discern: But how the Spirit of God first entered
into, and quickened our souls, and produced this new creature in
them, we understand little more of it than how the bones do grow in
the womb of her that is with child, Eccles. 11: 5. Therefore is the
life of the new creature called a hidden life, Col. 3: 3. The nature
of that life is not only hidden totally from all carnal men, but in
a very great measure it is hidden and unknown life unto spiritual
men, though themselves be the subjects of it.
    Secondly, But though this life of the new creature be a great
mystery, and secret in some respects; yet so far as it is known, and
appears unto us, the new creature is the most beautiful and lovely
creature that ever God made; for the beauty of the Lord himself is
upon it: "The new man is created after God", Eph. 4: 24. As the
picture is drawn after the man, it is a draught of God himself
delineated by the Spirit, that admirable Artist, upon the soul of
man. Holiness is the beauty and glory of God; and in holiness the
new creature is created after God's own image, Col. 3: 10. The
regenerate soul hereby becomes holy, 1 John 3: 3. not essentially
holy, as God is, nor yet efficiently holy; for the regenerate soul
can neither make itself, nor others holy: But the life of the new
creature may be said to resemble the life of God in this, that as
God lives to himself, so the new creature wholly lives to God; as
God loves holiness, and hates the contrary, so does the new
creature; it is in these things formed after the image of God that
created it. When God creates this creature in the soul of man, we
are said then to be "partakers of the divine nature," 2 Pet. 1: 4.
So that there can be nothing communicated unto men which beautifies
and adorns their souls as this new creation does: Men do not
resemble God as they are noble, and as they are rich, but as they
are holy: no gift, no endowment of nature embellishes the soul as
this new creature does: An awful Majesty sits upon the brow of the
new creature, commanding the greatest and worst of men to do homage
to it, Mark 6: 20. Yea, such is the beauty of the new creature, that
Christ, its author, is also its admirer, Cant. 4: 2. "Thou hast
ravished mine heart with one of thine eyes."
    Thirdly, This new creature is created in man, upon the highest
design that ever any work of God was wrought: the end of its
creation and infusion is high and noble: salvation to the soul in
which it is wrought; this is both the finis operis, and the finis
operantis: It is the design both of the work and of the workman that
wrought it. When we receive the end of our faith, we receive the
salvation of our souls; salvation is the end of faith: as death is
the end of sin, so life eternal is the end of grace. The new
creature does, by the instinct and steady direction of its own
nature, take its course as directly to God, and to heaven, the place
of its full enjoyment, as the rivers do to the ocean; it declares
itself to be made for God, by its restless workings after him; and
as salvation is the end of the new creature, so it is the express
design and end of him that created it. 2 Cor. 5: 5. "Now he that has
wrought us for the self same thing, is God;" by this workmanship of
his upon our souls, he is now polishing, preparing, and "making them
meet to be partakers of the inheritance of the saints in light,"
Col. 1: 12.
    Fourthly, This new creation is the most necessary work that
ever God wrought upon the soul of man: the eternal well being of his
soul depends upon it; and without it no man shall see God, Heb. 12:
14. and John 1: 3, 5. "Except ye be regenerate, and born again, you
cannot see the kingdom of God." Can you be saved without Christ? You
know you cannot. Can you have interest in Christ without the new
creature? My text expressly tells you it can never be; for, "If any
man be in Christ, he is a new creature." O reader, whatever slight
thoughts of this matter, and with what a careless and unconcerned
eye soever thou readest these lines; yet know thou must either be a
new creature, or a miserable and damned creature for ever. If
civility without the new creature could save thee, why are not the
moral Heathens saved also? If strictness of life without the new
creature could save thee, why did it not save the Scribes and
Pharisees also? If an high profession of religion without the new
creature can save thee, why did it not save Judas, Hymenaeus and
Philetus also? Nothing is more evident than this, that no
repentance, obedience, self-denial, prayers, tears, reformations or
ordinances, without the new creation, avail any thing to the
salvation of thy soul: The very blood of Christ himself, without the
new creature, never did, and never will save any man. Oh how
necessary a work is the new creation! "Circumcision avails nothing,
and uncircumcision nothing: but a new creature."
    Fifthly, The new creature is a marvellous and wonderful
creature: there are many wonders in the first creation, "The works
of the Lord are great, sought out of all them that have pleasure
therein," Psal. 111: 2. But there are no wonders in nature, like
those in grace. Is it not the greatest wonder that ever was seen in
the world, (except the incarnation of the Son of God) to see the
nature and temper of man so altered and changed as it is by grace?
to see lascivious Corinthians, and idolatrous Ephesians, become
mortified and heavenly Christians? to see a fierce and cruel
persecutor, become a glorious confessor and sufferer for Christ?
Gal. 1: 23. to see the carnal mind of man, which was lately fully
set in a strong bent to the world, to be wholly taken off from its
lusts, and set upon things that are spiritual and heavenly?
Certainly it was not a greater miracle to see dead Lazarus come out
of his sepulchre, than it is to see the dead and carnal mind coming
out of its lusts to embrace Jesus Christ; it was not a greater
wonder to see the dead and dry bones in the valley to move and come
together, than it is to see a dead soul moving after God, and moving
to Christ in the way of faith.
    Sixthly, The new creature is an immortal creature, a creature
that shall never see death, John 4: 14. it is in the soul of man, a
well of water, springing up unto eternal life. I will not adventure
to say, it is immortal in its own nature, for it is but a creature,
as my text calls it; and we know, that essential interminability is
the in communicable property of God: The new creature has both a
beginning and succession; and therefore might also have an end, as
to any thing in itself, or its own nature. Experience also shows us,
that it is capable both of increasing and decreasing, and may be
brought nigh into death, Rev. 3: 2. The work of the Spirit in
believers, may be ready to die; but though its perpetuity flow not
out of its own nature, it flows out of God's covenant and promises,
which make it an immortal creature: when all other excellencies in
man go away, as at death they will, Job 4: 21. this excellency only
remains: our gifts may leave us, our friends leave us, our estates
leave us, but our graces will never leave us; they ascend with the
soul (in which they inhere) into glory, when the stroke of death
separates it from the body.
    Seventhly, The new creature is an heavenly creature; "It is not
born of flesh, nor of blood, nor of the will of man, but of God,"
John 1: 13. its descent and original is heavenly, it is spirit born
of spirit, John 3: 6. its centre is heaven, and thither are all its
tendencies, Psal. 63: 8. its proper food, on which it lives, are
heavenly things, Psal. 4: 6, 7. It cannot feed, as other creatures
do, upon earthly things; the object of all its delight and love is
in heaven, Psal. 123: 26. "Whom have I in heaven but thee?" The
hopes and expectations of the new creature are all from heaven; it
looks for little in this world, but waits for the cooling of the
Lord. The life of the new creature upon earth, is a life of patient
waiting for Christ; his desires and longings are after heaven, Phil.
1: 93. The flesh indeed lingers, and would delay, but the new
creature hastens, and would fain be gone, 2 Cor. 5: 2. It is not at
home whilst it is here; it came from heaven, and cannot be quiet,
nor suffer the soul, in which it dwells, to be so, until it comes
thither again.
    Eighthly, The new creature is an active and laborious creature;
no sooner is it born, but it is acting in the soul. Acts 9: 6.
Behold he prayeth! Activity is its very nature. Gal. 5: 25 "If we
live in the Spirit, let us walk in the Spirit." Nor is it to be
admired, that it should be always active and stirring in the soul,
seeing activity in obedience was the very end for which it was
created. "For we are his workmanship, created in Christ Jesus unto
good works," Eph. 2: 10. and he that is acted in the duties of
religion, by this principle of the new creature, or nature, will (so
far as that principle acts him) delight to do the will of God;
rejoice in the way of his commandment, and find the sweetest
pleasure in the paths of duty.
    Ninthly, The new creature is a thriving creature, growing from
strength to strength, 1 Pet. 2: 2. and changing the soul in which it
is subjected, from glory unto glory, 2 Cor. 3: 18. The vigorous
tendencies, and constant striving of this new creature, are to
attain its just perfection and maturity, Phil. 3: 11. It can endure
no stints and limits to its desire, short of perfection; every
degree of strength it attains, does but whet and sharpen its desires
after higher degrees: Upon this account, it greatly delights in the
ordinances of God, duties of religion, and society of the saints; as
they are helps and improvements to it, in order to its great design.
    Tenthly, The new creature, is a creature of wonderful
preservations: There are many wonders of divine providence in the
preservation of our natural lives, but none like those whereby the
life of the new creature is preserved in our souls: There are
critical times of temptation and desertion, in which it is ready to
die, Rev. 3: 2. the degrees of its strength and liveliness, are
sometimes sadly abated, and its sweet and comfortable workings
intermitted, Rev. 2: 4. the evidences by which its being in us was
wont to be discovered, may be, and often are darkened, 2 Pet. 1: 9.
and the soul in which it is may draw very sad conclusions about the
issue and event; concluding its life not only to be hazarded, but
quite extinguished, Psal. 51: 10, 11, 12. but though it be ready to
die, God wonderfully preserves it from death; it has as well its
reviving, as its fainting seasons. And thus you see, what are the
lovely and eximious properties of the new creature. In the next
place,
    Fourthly, We will demonstrate the necessity of this new
creation to all that are in Christ, and by him expect to attain
salvation; and the necessity of the new creature will appear divers
ways.
    First, From the positive and express will of God, revealed in
scripture, touching this matter: Search the scriptures, and you
shall find God has laid the whole stress and weight of your eternal
happiness, by Jesus Christ, upon this work of the Spirit in your
souls. So our Saviour tells Nicodemus, John 3: 5. "Verily, verily, I
say unto thee, except a man be born of water, and of the Spirit, he
cannot enter into the kingdom of God." Agreeable whereunto are those
words of the apostle, Heb. 12: 14. "Without holiness no man shall
see the Lord." And whereas some may think, that their birth-right
privileges, enjoyment of ordinances, and profession of religion, may
commend them to God's acceptance, without this new creation; he
shews then how fond and ungrounded all such hopes are. Gal. 6: 15.
"For in Christ Jesus neither circumcision availeth any thing, nor
uncircumcision, but a new creature." Christ and heaven are the gifts
of God, and he is at liberty to bestow them, upon what terms and
conditions he pleaseth: and this is the way, the only way, and
stated method in which he will bring men, by Christ, unto glory. Men
may raze out the impressions of these things from their own hearts,
but they can never alter the settled course and method of salvation.
Either we must be new creatures, as the precept of the word command
us, or lost, and damned creatures, as the threatenings of the word
plainly tell us.
    Secondly, This new creation, is the inchoative part of that
great salvation which we expect through Christ, and therefore,
without this, all hopes and expectations of salvation must vanish.
Salvation, and renovation, are inseparably connected. Our glory in
heaven, if we rightly understand its nature, consisteth in two
things; namely, our assimilation to God, and our fruition of God:
and both these take their beginning and rise from our renovation in
this world. Here we begin to be changed into his image, in some
degree, 2 Cor. 3: 18 for the new man is created after God, as was
opened above. In the work of grace, God is said to begin that good
work, which is to be finished, or consummated, in the day of Christ,
Phil. 1: 6. Now nothing can be more irrational, than to imagine that
ever that design, or work should be finished or perfected, which
never had a beginning.
    Thirdly, So necessary is the new creation to all that expect
salvation by Christ, that without this, heaven would be no heaven,
and the glory thereof no glory to us, by reason of the
unsuitableness and aversion of our carnal minds hereunto; "The
carnal mind is enmity against God", Rom. 8: 7. and enmity is
exclusive of all complacency and delight. There is a necessity of a
suitable and agreeable frame of heart to God, in order to that
complacential rest of our souls in him: And this agreeable temper is
wrought by our new creation. 2 Cor. 5: 5. "He that has wrought us
for the self-same thing, is God." Renovation, you see, is the
working or moulding of a man's spirit into an agreeable temper, or
as it is in Col. 1: 12. the making of us meet for the inheritance of
the saints in light.
    From all which, it follows, that seeing there can be no
complacence, or delight in God, without suitableness and conformity
to him, as it is plain, from 1 John 3: 2. as well as from the reason
and nature of the thing itself; either God must become like us,
suitable to our sinful, corrupt and vain hearts, which were but a
rude blasphemy once to imagine; or else we must be made agreeable
and suitable to God, which is the very thing I am now proving the
necessity of.
    Fourthly, There is an absolute necessity of the new creature to
all that expect interest in Christ, and the glory to come, since all
the characters, marks, and signs of such an interest, are constantly
taken from the new creature wrought in us. Look over all the marks
and signs of interest in Christ, or salvation by him, which are
dispersed through the scriptures, and you shall still find purity of
heart, Mat. 5: 8. Holiness both in principle and practice, Heb. 12:
14. Mortification of sin, Rom. 8: 13. Longing for Christ's
appearance, 2 Tim. 4: 8. with multitudes more of the same nature, to
be constantly made the marks and signs of our salvation by Christ.
So that either we must have a new bible, or a new heart; for if
these scriptures be the true and faithful words of God, no unrenewed
creature can see his face; which was the fourth thing to be opened.
    Fifthly, The last thing to be opened is, how the new creation
is an infallible proof and evidence of the soul's interest in
Christ; and this will appear divers ways.
    First, Where all the saving graces of the Spirit are, there
interest in Christ must needs be certain; and where the new creature
is, there all the saving graces of the Spirit are: For what is the
new creature but the frame or system of all special saving graces?
It is not this or that particular grace, as faith, or hope, or love
to God, which constitutes the new creature; for these are but as so
many particular limbs or branches of it; but the new creature is
comprehensive of all the graces of the Spirit, Gal. 5: 22, 28. "The
fruit of the Spirit is love, peace, joy, long-suffering, gentleness,
goodness, faith, meekness, temperance," &c. Any one of the saving,
special graces of the Spirit gives proof of our interest in Christ:
how much more, then, the new creature, which is the complex frame or
system of all the graces together?
    Secondly, To conclude; Where all the causes of an interest in
Christ are found, and all the effects and fruits of an interest in
Christ do appear; there, undoubtedly, a real interest in Christ is
found: but wherever you find a new creature, you find all the causes
and all the facets of an interest in Christ: For there you shall
find,
    First, The impulsive cause, viz. The electing love of God, from
which the new creature is inseparable, 1 Pet. 1: 2. with the new
creature also, the meritorious, efficient, and final causes of
interest in Christ, and union with him, are ever found, Eph. 2: 10.
chap. 1: 4, 5, 6.
    Secondly, All the collects and fruits of interest in Christ are
found in the new creature; there are all the fruits of obedience,
for we are created in Christ Jesus unto good works, Eph. 2: 10. Rom.
7: 4. there is true spiritual opposition to sin. 1 John 5: 18. "He
that is begotten of God, keepeth himself, and that wicked one
toucheth him not." There is love to the people of God; 1 John 4: 7.
"Every one that loveth is born of God." There is a conscientious
respect to the duties of both tables; for the new creature is
created after God in righteousness and true holiness, Eph. 4: 25.
There is perseverance in the ways of God to the very end, and
victory over all temptations; for whosoever is born of God,
overcometh the world, 1 John 5: 4. It were easy to run over all
other particular fruits of our union with Christ, and shew you every
one of them in the new creature. And thus much of the doctrinal part
of this point.
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
Sermon 26.


2 Cor. 5: 17.

Therefore if any man be in Christ, he is a new creature: old things
are passed away; behold, all things are become new.
    
    
    After the explication of the sense of this scripture, we
observed,
    
    Doct. That God's creating of a new supernatural work of grace
         in the soul of any man, is that man's sure and infallible
         evidence of a saving interest in Jesus Christ.
    
    You have heard why the regenerating work of the Spirit is
called a new creation; in what respect every soul in Christ is
renewed; what the eximious properties of this new creature are; the
indispensableness and necessity thereof have been also proved; and
how it evidences our interest In Christ, was cleared in the
doctrinal part: Which we now come to improve, in the several uses
serving for our
    1.  Information.
2.  Conviction.
3.  Examination.
4.  Exhortation.
5.  Consolation.
    
                     First use, for information.
    
    Is the new creature the sure and infallible evidence of our
saving interest in Christ? From hence then we arc informed,
    Inference 1. How miserable and deplorable an estate all
unrenewed souls are in; who can lay no claim to Christ during that
state, and therefore are under an impossibility of salvation. O
reader! if this be the state of thy soul, better had it been for
thee not to have been God's natural workmanship as a man, except
thou be his spiritual workmanship also, as a new man. I know the
schoolmen determine otherwise, and say, that damnation is rather to
be chosen than annihilation: a miserable being is better than no
being: and it is very true, with respect to the glory of God, whose
justice shall triumph for ever in the damnation of the unregenerate;
but, with respect to us, it is much better never to have been his
creatures, in the way of generation, than not to be his new
creatures, in the way of regeneration. So Christ speaks of Judas,
that son of perdition, Mark 14: 21. "Good had it been for that man
if he had never been born:" For what is a being without the comfort
of it? What is life without the joy and pleasure of it? A damned
being is a being without comfort; no glimpse of light shines into
that darkness; they shall, indeed, see and understand the felicity,
light, and joy of the saints in glory; but not partake, in the least
measure, of the comfort, Luke 13: 28. "They shall see Abraham, and
Isaac, and Jacob, in the kingdom of God, but they themselves shut
out:" Such a sight is so far from giving any comfort, that it will
be the aggravation and increase of torment. O it is better to have
no being at all, than to have a being only to capacitate a man for
misery; to desire death, while death flies from him, Rev. 4: 6. The
opinion of the schoolmen will never pass for sound doctrine among
the damned. Think on it, reader, and lay it to thine heart, better
thou hadst died from the womb, better the knees kind prevented thee,
and the breasts which thou hast sucked, than that thou shouldst live
and die a stranger to the new birth, or that thy mother should bring
thee forth only to increase, and fill up the number of the damned.
    Inf. 2. And, on the contrary, we may hence learn, what cause
regenerate souls have to bless God, for the day wherein they were
born. O what a privileged state does the new birth bring men into!
It is possible, for the present, they understand it not; for many
believers are like a great heir lying in the cradle, that knows not
to what an estate and honour he is born: nevertheless, on the same
day wherein we become new creatures by regeneration, we have a firm
title and solid claim to all the privileges of the sons of God, John
1: 12, 13. God becomes our Father by a triple title, not only the
Father of our beings by nature, which was all the relation we had to
him before, but our Father by adoption, and by regeneration: which
is a much sweeter, and more comfortable relation. In that day the
image of God is restored, Eph. 4: 24. this is both the health and
beauty of the soul. In that day we are begotten again to a lively
hope, 1 Pet. 1: 3. a hope more worth than ten thousand worlds, in
the troubles of life, and in the straits of death: this is a
creature which lives for ever, and will make thy life happy for
ever. Some have kept their birth day as a festival, a day of
rejoicing; but none have more cause to rejoice that ever they were
born, than those that are new-born.
    Inf. 3. Learn frown hence, that the work of grace is wholly
supernatural; it is a creation, and a creation-work is above the
power of the creature. No power but that which gave being to the
world, can give a being to the new creature: Almighty Power goes
forth to give being to the new creature. This creature is not born
of flesh, or of blood, nor of the will of man, but of God, John 1:
13. The nature of this new creature speaks its original to be above
the power of nature; the very notion of a new creation spoils the
proud boasts of the great asserters of the power and ability of the
will of man. When God, therefore, puts the question, who maketh thee
to differ? And what hast thou that thou hast not received? Let thy
soul, reader, answer it with all humility and thankfulness. It is
thou, Lord, thou only, that madest me to differ from another; and
what I have received, I have received from thy free grace.
    Inf. 4. If the work of grace be a new creation, let not the
parents, and friends of the unregenerate utterly despair of the
conversion of their relations, how great soever their present
discouragements are. If it had been possible for a man to have seen
the rude and undigested chaos before the Spirit of God moved upon
it, would he not have said, Can such a beautiful order of beings,
such a pleasant variety of creatures, spring out of this dark lump?
Surely it would have been very hard for a man to have imagined it.
It may be, you see no dispositions or hopeful inclinations in your
friends towards God and spiritual things; nay, possibly they are
totally opposite, and filled with enmity against them; they deride
and jeer all serious piety wherever they behold it; this, indeed, is
very sad; but yet remember the work of grace is creation-work:
though there be no disposition at all in their wills, no tenderness
in their consciences, no light or knowledge in their minds; yet God,
that commanded the light to shine out of darkness, can shine into
their hearts, to give them the light of the knowledge of the glory
of God in the face of Jesus Christ: he can say to the dry bones,
live; to the proud and stubborn heart, come down and yield thyself
to the will of God; and if he command, the work is done. God can
make thee yet to rejoice over thy most uncomfortable relations; to
say with the father of the prodigal, Luke 15: 24. "This my son was
dead, and is alive again; he was lost and is found; and they began
to be merry." Difficulties are for men, but not for God: he works,
in conversion, by a power which is able to subdue all things unto
itself.
    Inf. 5. If none but new creatures be in Christ, how small a
remnant among men belong to Christ in this world! Among the
multitude of rational creatures inhabiting this world, how few, how
very few, are new creatures? It is the observation of the learned
Mr. Brerewood, that if the world be divided into thirty parts,
nineteen parts are heathenish Idolaters; six parts Mahometans, and
only five out of thirty which may be, in a large sense, called
Christians; of which the far greater part is overspread with Popish
darkness: separate from the remainder, the multitudes of profane,
merely civil, and hypocritical professors of religion; and how few
will remain for Jesus Christ in this world? Look over the cities,
towns, and parishes in this populous kingdom, and how few shall you
find that speak the language or do the works of new creatures? How
few have ever had any awakening convictions on them? And how many of
those that have been convinced have miscarried, and never come to
the new birth? The more cause have they, whom God has indeed
regenerated, to admire the riches of God's distinguishing mercy to
them.
    Inf. 6. If the change by grace be a new creation, how universal
and marvellous a change does regeneration make upon men! The new
creation speaks a marvellous and universal alteration, both upon the
state and tempers of men; they come out of darkness, gross, hellish
darkness, into light, a marvellous and heavenly light, 1 Pet. 2: 9.
Eph. 5: 8. their condition, disposition, and conversation, (as you
have heard) are all new; and yet this marvellous change, as great
and universal as it is, is not alike evident, and clearly
discernible in all new creatures: and the reasons are,
    First, Because the work of grace is wrought in divers methods
and manners in the people of God. Some are changed from a state of
notorious profaneness unto serious godliness; there the change is
conspicuous and very evident; all the neighbourhood rings ofit: but
in others it is more insensibly distilled in their tender years, by
the blessing of God, upon religious education, and there it is more
indiscernible.
    Secondly, Though a great change be wrought, yet much natural
corruption still remains for their humiliation and daily exercise;
and this is a ground of fear and doubting; they see not how such
corruptions are consistent with the new creature.
    Thirdly, In some, the new creature shews itself mostly in the
affectionate part, in desires and breathings after God; and but
little in the clearness of their understandings, and strength of
their judgements; for want of which they are entangled and kept in
darkness most of their days.
    Fourthly, Some Christians are more tried, and exercised by
temptation from Satan than others are; and these clouds darken the
work of grace in them.
    Fifthly, There is great difference and variety found in the
natural tempers and constitutions of the regenerate; some are of a
more melancholy, fearful, and suspicious temper than others are; and
are therefore much longer held under doubtings and trouble of
spirit; nevertheless, what differences soever these things make, the
change made by grace is a marvellous change.
    Inf. 7. Lastly, How incongruous are carnal ways and courses to
the spirit of Christians! who being new creatures, can never delight
or find pleasure in their former sinful companions and practices.
Alas! those things are now most unsuitable, loathsome and
detestable, how pleasant soever they once were; that which they
counted their liberty, would now be reckoned their greatest bondage;
that which was their glory, is now their shame; Rom. 6: 21. "What
fruit had ye then in those things, whereof ye are now ashamed; for
the end of those things is death:" they need not be pressed by
others, but will freely confess of themselves, what fools and mad
men they once were. None can censure their former conversation more
freely than themselves do, 1 Tim. 13, 14.
                     Second use, for conviction.
    If none be in Christ but new creatures, and the new creation
makes such a change, as has been described; this may convince us,
how many of us deceive ourselves, and run into dangerous and fatal
mistakes, in the greatest concernment we have in this world. But
before I urge this use, I desire none may make a perverse and ill
use of it; let not the wicked conclude, from hence, that there is no
such thing as true religion in the world, or that all who do profess
it, are but hypocrites; neither let the godly injure themselves by
that which is designed for their benefit: let none conclude, that
seeing there are so many mistakes committed about this near
creature, that therefore assurance must needs be impossible, as the
Papists affirm it to be. The proper use that should be made of this
doctrine, is, to undeceive false pretenders, and to awaken all to a
more deep and thorough search of their own conditions; which being
precautioned, let all men be convinced of the following truths:
    First, That the change made by civility, upon such as were lewd
and profane, is, in its whole kind and nature, a different thing
from the new creature; the power and efficacy of moral virtue is one
thing, the influence of the regenerating Spirit is quite another
thing, however some have studied to comfort them. The Heathens
excelled in moral and homolitical] virtues: Plato, Aristides,
Seneca, and multitudes more, have outvied many professed Christians,
in justice, temperance, patience, &c. yet were perfect strangers to
the new creation. A man may be very strict and temperate, free from
the pollutions of the world, and yet a perfect stranger to
regeneration all the while, John 3: 10.
    Secondly, That many strong convictions and troubles for sin may
be found where the new creature is never formed. Conviction, indeed,
is an antecedent unto, and preparative for the new creature, as the
blossoms of the tree are to the fruit that follows them; but as
fruit does not always follow where those blossoms and flowers
appear, so neither does the new creature follow all convictions and
troubles for sin. Conviction is a common work of the Spirit both
upon the elect and reprobate; but the new creature is formed only in
God's elect. Convictions may be blasted, and vanish away, and the
man that was under troubles for sin, may return again, with "the dog
to his vomit, and the sow that was washed, to her wallowing in the
mire," 2 Pet. 2: 22. but the new creature never perishes, nor can
consist with such a return to sin.
    Thirdly, That excellent gifts and abilities, fitting men for
service in the church of God, may be where the new creature is not;
for these are promiscuously dispensed by the Spirit both to the
regenerate and unregenerate: Math. 7: 22. "Many will say unto me, in
that day, Lord, Lord, have we not prophesied in thy name?" Gifts are
attainable by study; prayer and preaching are reduced to an art; but
regeneration is wholly supernatural. Sin, in dominion, is consistent
with excellent gifts, but wholly incompatible with the new creature.
In a word, these things are so different in nature from the new
creature, that they oft-times prove the greatest bars and obstacles
in the world to the regenerating work of the Spirit. Let no man,
therefore, trust to things whereby multitudes deceive and destroy
their own souls. Reader, it may cost thee many an aking head to
attain gifts, but thou wilt find an aking heart for sin if ever God
make thee a new creature.
    Fourthly, Be convinced that multitudes of religious duties may
be performed by men, in whom the new creature was never formed.
Though all new creatures perform the duties of religion, yet all
that perform the duties of religion, are not new creatures;
regeneration is not the only root from which the duties of religion
spring, Isa. 58: 2. "Yet they seek me daily, and delight to know my
ways, as a nation that did righteousness, and forsook not the
ordinances of their God, they ask of me the ordinances of justice,
they take delight in approaching to God." These are but weak and
slippery foundations for men to build their confidence and hopes
upon.
    
                   The third use, for examination.
    
    Next, therefore, let me persuade every man to try the state of
his own heart in this matter, and closely consider and weigh this
great question: Am I really and indeed a new creature? or am I an
old creature still, in a new creature's dress and habit? Some light
may be given for the discovery hereof, from the consideration of the
    1. Antecedents,  of the new creation.
    2. Concomitants, of the new creation.
    S. Consequents,  of the new creation.
    First, Weigh and consider well the antecedents of the new
creature; have those things passed upon your souls, which ordinarily
make way for the new creature, in whomsoever the Lord forms it?
    1. Has the Lord opened the eyes of your understanding in the
knowledge of sin and of Christ? Has he showed you both your disease
and remedy, by a new light shining from heaven into your souls! Thus
the Lord does wherever he forms the new creature, Acts 26: 18.
    2. Has he brought home the word with mighty power and efficacy
upon your hearts to convince and humble them? This is the method in
which the new creature is produced, Rom. 7: 9. 1 Thes. 1: 5.
    3. Have these convictions over-turned your vain confidences,
and brought you to a great concern and inward distress of soul,
making you to cry, What &hall we do to be saved? These are the ways
of the Spirit, in the formation of the new creature, Acts 16: 29.
Acts 2: 37. If no such antecedent works of the Spirit have passed
upon your hearts, you have no ground for your confidence, that the
new creature is formed in you.
    Secondly, Consider the concomitant frames and workings of
spirit which ordinarily attend the production of the new creature,
and judge impartially betwixt God and your own souls, whether they
have been the very frames and workings of your hearts.
    1. Have your vain spirits been composed to the greatest
seriousness, and most solemn consideration of things eternal, as the
hearts of all those are whom God regenerates? When the Lord is about
this great work upon the soul of man, whatever vanity, levity, and
sinful jollity was there before, it is banished from the heart at
this time; for now heaven and hell, life and death, are before a
man's eyes, and these are the most awful and solemn things that ever
our thoughts conversed with in this world. Now a man of the most
airy and pleasant constitution, when brought to the sight and sense
of those things, saith of "laughter, It is mad; and of mirth, What
does it?" Eccl. 2: 2.
    2. A lowly, meek, and humble frame of heart accompanies the new
creation; the soul is weary and heavy laden, Mat 11: 28. Convictions
of sin have plucked down the pride and loftiness of the spirit of
man, emptied him of his vain conceits; those that were of lofty,
proud, and blustering humours before, are meekened and brought down
to the very dust now: it is with them (to speak allusively) as it
was with Jerusalem, that lofty city, Isa. 29: 1, 4. "Wo to Ariel, to
Ariel, the city where David dwelt; thou shalt be brought down, and
shalt speak out of the ground, and thy speech shall be low out of
the dust" Ariel signifies the Lion of God: so Jerusalem in her
prosperity was; other cities trembled at her voice; but when God
brought her down, by humbling judgements, then she whispered out of
the dust. So it is in this case.
    3. A longing, thirsting frame of spirit accompanies the new
creation; the desires of the soul are ardent after Christ; never did
the hireling long for the shadow, as the weary soul does for Christ,
and rest in him: if no such frames have accompanied that which you
take for your new birth, you have the greatest reason in the world
to suspect yourselves under a delusion.
    Thirdly, Weigh well the effects and consequents of the new
creature, and consider whether such fruits as these are found in
your hearts and lives.
    1. Wherever the new creature is formed, there a man's course
and conversation is changed: Eph. 4: 22. "That ye put off,
concerning the former conversation the old man, which is corrupt,
according to the deceitful lusts; and be renewed in the spirit of
your mind", the new creature cannot but blush and be ashamed of the
old creature's conversation, Rom. 6: 21.
    2. The new creature continually opposes and conflicts with the
motions of sin in the heart; Gal. 5: 17. "The spirit lusteth against
the flesh". Grace can no more incorporate with sin, than oil with
water: contraries cannot consist in the same subject longer than
they are fighting with each other; if there be no conflict with sin
in thy soul, or if that conflict be only betwixt the conscience and
affections, light in the one, struggling with lust in the other;
thou wantest that fruit which should evidence thee to be a new
creature.
    S. The mind and affections of the new creature are set upon
heavenly and spiritual things, Col. 3: 1, 2. Eph. 4: 23. Rom. 8: 5.
If, therefore, thy heart and affections be habitually earthly and
wholly intent upon things below, driving eagerly after the world, as
the great business and end of thy life, deceive not thyself, this is
not the fruit of the new creature, nor consistent with it.
    5. The new creature is a praying creature, living by its daily
communion with God, which is its livelihood and subsistence, Zech.
12: 10. Acts 9: 11. If, therefore, thou be a prayerless soul, or if,
in all thy prayers, thou art a stranger to communion with God; if
there be no brokenness of heart for sin in thy confessions, no
melting affections for Christ and holiness in thy supplications;
surely Satan does but baffle and delude thy over-credulous soul, in
persuading thee that thou art a new creature.
    Fifthly, The new creature is restless, after falls into sin,
until it have recovered peace and pardon; it cannot endure itself in
a state of defilement and pollution, Psal. 51: 8, 9, 10, 11, 12. It
is with the conscience of a new creature, under sin, as it is with
the eye, when any thing offends it; it cannot leave twinkling and
watering till it have wept it out: and in the very same restless
state it is, under the hiding of God's face and divine
withdrawments, Cant. 5: 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8. If, therefore, thou
canst sin and sin again without such a burdensome sense of sin, or
restlessness, or solicitude how to recover purity and peace, with
the light of God's countenance shining, as in days past, upon thy
soul; delude not thyself, thou hast not the signs of a new creature
in thee.
    
                     Fourth use, of exhortation.
    
    If the new creation be a sound evidence of our interest in
Christ, then hence let me persuade all that are in Christ, to
evidence themselves to be so, by walking as it becomes new
creatures.
    The new creature is born from above, all its tendencies are
heavenward; accordingly, Get your affections on things that are
above, and let your conversation be in heaven: if you live earthly
and sensual lives, as others do, you must cross your new nature
there in; and can those acts be pleasant unto you which are done
with so much regret? wherein you must put a force upon your own
spirits, and offer a kind of violence to your own hearts. Earthly
delights and sorrows are suitable enough to the unregenerate and
sensual men in the world, but exceedingly contrary unto that Spirit
by which you are renovated. If ever you will act becoming the
principles and nature of new creatures, then seek earthly things
with submission, enjoy them with fear and caution, resign them with
cheerfulness and readiness; and thus "let your moderation be known
unto all men," Phil. 4: 5. Let your hearts daily meditate, and your
tongues discourse about heavenly things; be exceeding tender of sin,
strict and punctual in every duty; and hereby convince the world
that you are men and women of another spirit.
    
                     Fifth use, for consolation.

    Let every new creature be cheerful and thankful: if God has
renewed your natures, and thus altered the frame and temper of your
hearts, he has bestowed the richest mercy upon you that heaven or
earth affords. This is a work of the greatest rarity; a new
creature, may be called, One among a thousand: it is also an
everlasting work, never to be destroyed, as all other natural worlds
of God (how excellent soever) must be: it is a work carried on by
Almighty Power, through unspeakable difficulties and mighty
oppositions, Eph. 1: 12. The exceeding greatness of God's power goes
forth to produce it; and indeed no less is required to enlighten the
blind mind, break the rocky heart, and bow the stubborn will of man;
and the same Almighty Power which at first created it, is necessary
to be continued every moment to preserve and continue it, 1 Pet. 1:
5. The new creature is a mercy which draws a train of innumerable
and invaluable mercies after it, Eph. 2: 13, 14. 1 Cor. 3: 20. When
God has given us a new nature, then he dignifies us with a new name,
Rev. 2: 17. brings us into a new covenant, Jer. 31: 33. begets us
again to a new hope, 1 Pet. 1: 8. entitles us to a new inheritance,
John 1: 12, 13. It is the new creature which through Christ makes
our persons and duties acceptable with God, Gal. 6: 15. In a word,
it is the wonderful work of God, of which we may say, "This is the
Lord's doing, and it is marvellous in our eyes." There are
unsearchable wonders in its generation, in its operation, and in its
preservation. Let all therefore, whom the Lord has thus renewed,
fall down at the feet of God, in an humble admiration of the
unsearchable riches of free grace, and never open their mouths to
complain under any adverse or bitter providences of God.
    
    
    
    
Sermon 27.


Of the Nature, Principle, and Necessity of Mortification.
    
    
Gal. 5: 24.
    
And they that are Christ's, have crucified the flesh, with the
affections and lusts.
    
    
    Two great trials of our interest in Christ are finished; we now
proceed to the third, namely, The mortification of sin: "They that
are Christ's have crucified the flesh." The scope of the apostle in
this context is, to heal the unchristian breaches among the
Galatians, prevailing, by the instigation of Satan, to the breach of
brotherly love. To cure this, he urges four weighty arguments.
    First, From the great commandment, to love one another; upon
which the whole law, i.e. all the duties of the second table do
depend, ver. 15.
    Secondly, He powerfully dissuades them from the consideration
of the sad events of their bitter contests, calumnies, and
detractions, viz. mutual ruin, and destruction, ver. 15.
    Thirdly, He dissuades them from the consideration of the
contrariety of these practices unto the Spirit of God, by whom they
all profess themselves to be governed, from ver. 17. to ver. 23.
    Fourthly, He powerfully dissuades them from these animosities,
from the inconsistency of these, or any other lusts of the flesh,
with an interest in Christ: "They that are Christ's, have crucified
the flesh," &c. q. d. You all profess yourselves to be members of
Christ, to be followers of him; but how incongruous are these
practices to such a profession? Is this the fruit of the dove-like
Spirit of Christ? Are these the fruits of your faith and professed
mortification? Shall the sheep of Christ snarl and fight like rabid
and furious beasts of prey? Tantaene animis caelestibus irae? So
much rage in heavenly souls? O how repugnant are these practices
with the study of mortification!, which is the great study and
endeavour of all that are in Christ! "They that are Christ's have
crucified the flesh, with the affections and lusts." So much for the
order of the words; the words themselves are a proposition wherein
we have to consider, both
    1. The subject.
    2. The predicate.
    First, The subject of the proposition, they that are Christ's,
viz. "True Christians, real members of Christ; such as truly belong
to Christ, such as have given themselves up to be governed by him,"
and are indeed acted be his Spirit. such, all such persons (for the
indefinite is equipollent to an universal) all such, and none but
such.
    Secondly, The predicate; "They have crucified the flesh, with
the affections and lusts." By flesh we are here to understand carnal
concupiscence, the workings and motions of corrupt nature; and by
the affections we are to understand, not the natural, but the
inordinate affections; for Christ does not abolish and destroy, but
correct and regulate the affections of those that are in him: And by
crucifying the flesh, we are not to understand the total extinction
or perfect subduing of corrupt nature, but only the deposing of
corruption from its regency and dominion in the soul; its dominion
is taken away, though its life be prolonged for a season; but yet,
as death surely, though slowly, follows crucifixion, (the life of
crucified persons gradually departing frown them, with their blood)
it is just so in the mortification of sin; and therefore what the
apostle in this place calls crucifying, he calls in Rom. 8: 13.
mortifying. "If ye, through the Spirit, do mortify," "tanatoute"; if
ye put to death the deeds of the body: But he chuses, in this place,
to call it crucifying, to show not only the conformity there is
betwixt the death of Christ and the death of sin, in respect of
shame, pain, and lingering slowness; but to denote also the
principal means and instruments of mortification, viz. the death, or
cross of Jesus Christ, in the virtue whereof believers do mortify
the corruptions of their flesh; the great arguments and persuasives
to mortification being drawn from the sufferings of Christ for sin.
In a word, he does not say, They that believe Christ was crucified
for sin, are Christ's; but they, and they only, are his, who feel as
well as profess the power and efficacy of the sufferings of Christ,
in the mortification and subduing of their lusts and sinful
affections. And so much, briefly, of the parts and sense of the
words.
    The observation followeth.
    
    Doct. That a saving interest in Christ may be regularly and
         strongly inferred and concluded frown the mortification of
         the flesh, with its affections and lusts.
    
    This point is fully confirmed by those words of the apostle.
Rom. 6: 5, 6, 7, 8. "For if we have been planted together in the
likeness of his death, we shall be also in the likeness of his
resurrection, knowing this, that our old man is crucified with him,
that the body of it might be destroyed, that henceforth we should
not serve sin: for he that is dead is free from sin: Now if we be
dead with Christ, we believe that we shall also live with him.
    Mark the force of the apostle's reasoning; if we have been
planted into the likeness of his death, viz. by the mortification of
sin, which resembles, or has a likeness to the kind and manner of
Christ's death (as was noted above) then we shall be also in the
likeness of his resurrection; and why so, but because the
mortification of sin is an undoubted evidence of the union of such a
soul with Christ, which is the very ground-work and principle of
that blessed and glorious resurrection: And therefore he saith, ver.
11. "Reckon ye also yourselves to be dead indeed unto sin, but alive
unto God, through Jesus Christ our Lord;" q. d. Reason thus with
yourselves, these mortifying influences of the death of Christ are
unquestionable presages of your future blessedness, God never taking
this course with any but those who are in Christ, and are designed
to be glorified with him. The death of your sin is as evidential as
any thing in the world can be of your spiritual life for the
present, and of your eternal life with God hereafter. Mortification
is the fruit and evidence of your union, and that union is the firm
ground-work and certain pledge of your glorification; and so you
ought to reckon or reason the case with yourselves, as the word
"ligidzeste" there signifies. Now for the stating and explication of
this point, I shall, in the doctrinal part, labour to open and
confirm these five things,
    1. What the mortification or crucifixion of sin imports.
    2. Why this work of the Spirit is expressed by crucifying.
    3. Why all that are in Christ must be so crucified or mortified
unto sin.
    4. What is the true evangelical principle of mortification.
    5. How the mortification of sin evinces our interest in Christ.
    And then apply the whole.
    First, What the mortification or crucifixion of sin imports.
    And, for clearness sake, I shall speak to it both negatively
and positively, showing you what is not intended, and what is
principally aimed at by the Spirit of God in this expression.
    First, "The crucifying of the flesh does not imply the total
abolition of sin in believers, or the destruction of its very being
and existence in them for the present; sanctified souls so put off
their corruptions with their dead bodies at death:" This will be the
effect of our future glorification, not of our present
sanctification. Sin does exist in the most mortified believer in the
world, Rom. 7: 17. it still acteth and lusteth in the regenerate
soul, Gal. 5: 17. yea, notwithstanding its crucifixion in believers,
it still may, in respect of single acts, surprise and captivate
them, Psal. 65: 3. Rom. 7: 23. This, therefore, is not the intention
of the Spirit of God in this expression.
    Secondly, Nor does the crucifixion of sin consist in the
suppression of the external acts of sin only: for sin may reign over
the souls of men, whilst it does not break forth into their lives in
gross and open actions, 2 Pet. 3: 20. Mat. 12: 43. Morality in the
Heathens (as Tertullian well observes) did absconders, sed non
abscindere vitia, hide them, when it could not kill them: Many a
mull shows a white, and fair hand, who yet has a very foul and black
heart.
    Thirdly, The crucifixion of the flesh does not consist in the
cessation of the external acts of sin; for, in that respect, the
lusts of men may die of their own accord, even a kind of natural
death. The members of the body are the weapons of unrighteousness,
as the apostle calls them; age or sickness may so blunt or break
those weapons, that the soul cannot use them to such sinful purposes
and services as it was wont to do in the vigorous and healthful
seasons of life; not that there is less sin in the heart, but
because there are less strength and activity in the body. Just as it
is with an old soldier, who has as much skill, policy, and delight
as ever in military actions; but age and hard services have so
enfeebled him, that he can no longer follow the camp.
    Fourthly, The crucifixion of sin does not consist in the severe
castigation of the body, and penancing it by stripes, fasting, and
tiresome pilgrimages. This may pass for mortification among Papists,
but never was any lust of the flesh destroyed by this rigour.
Christians, indeed, are bound not to indulge and pamper the body,
which is the instrument of sin; nor yet must we think that the
spiritual corruptions of the soul feel those stripes which are
inflicted upon the body: See Col. 2: 23. it is not the vanity of
superstition, but the power of true religion, which crucifies and
destroys corruption; it is faith in Christ's blood, not the spilling
of our own blood, which gives sin the mortal wound.
    Secondly, But if you enquire, what then is implied in the
mortification or crucifixion of sin, and wherein it does consist? I
answer,
    First, It necessarily implies the soul's implantation into
Christ, kind union with him: without which it is impossible that any
one corruption should be mortified: They that are [Christ's] have
crucified the flesh: The attempts and endeavours of all others are
vain and ineffectual: "When we were in the flesh, (saith the
apostle) the motions of sin which were by the law did work; in our
members, to bring forth fruit unto death," Rom. 7: 5. sin was then
in its full dominion, no abstinence, rigour, or outward severity; no
purposes, promises, or solemn vows could mortify or destroy it;
there must be an implantation into Christ before there can be any
effectual crucifixion of sin: What believer almost has not in the
days of his first convictions, tried all external methods and means
of mortifying sin, and found all in experience to be to as little
purpose as the binding of Samson with green withs or cords? But when
he has once come to act faith upon the death of Christ, then the
design of mortification has prospered and succeeded to good purpose.
    Secondly, Mortification of sin implies the agency of the Spirit
of God in that work, without whose assistances and aids, all our
endeavours must needs be fruitless: Of this work we may say as it
vas said in another case, Zech. 4: 6. "Not by might, nor by power,
but by my Spirit, saith the Lord." When the Apostle therefore would
shew by what hand this work of mortification is performed, he thus
expresseth it, Rom. 8: 50: S. "If ye through the Spirit do mortify
the deeds of the body, ye shall live:" The duty is ours, but the
power whereby we perform it is God's: The Spirit is the only
successful combatant against the lusts that war in our members, Gal
5: 17. It is true, this excludes not, but implies our endeavours;
for it is we through the Spirit who mortify the deeds of the body;
but yet all our endeavours without the Spirit's aid and influence
avail nothing.
    Thirdly, The crucifixion of sin necessarily implies the
subversion of its dominion in the soul: A mortified sin cannot be a
reigning sin, Rom. 6: 12, 13, 14. Two things constitute the dominion
of sin, viz. the fulness of its power, and the soul's subjection to
it. As to the fulness of its power, that rises from the suitableness
it has, and pleasure it gives to the corrupt heart of man: It seems
to be as necessary as the right hand, as useful and pleasant as the
right-eye, Mat. 5: 29. but the mortified heart is dead to all
pleasures and profits of sin; it has no delight or pleasure in it;
it becomes its burden and daily complaint. Mortification presupposes
the illumination of the mind and conviction of the conscience; by
reason whereof sin cannot deceive and blind the mind, or bewitch and
ensnare the will and affections as it was wont to do, and
consequently its dominion over the soul is destroyed and lost.
    Fourthly, The crucifying of the flesh implies a gradual
weakening of the power of sin in the soul. The death of the cross
was a slow and lingering death, and the crucified person grew weaker
and weaker every hour; so it is in the mortification of sin: The
soul is still "cleansing itself from all filthiness of the flesh and
spirit, and perfecting holiness in the fear of God," 2 Cor. 7: 1.
And as the body of sin is weakened more and more; so the inward man,
or the new creature, is "renewed day by day," 2 Cor. 4: 16. For
sanctification is a progressive work of the Spirit: And as holiness
increases and roots itself deeper and deeper in the soul; so the
power and interest of sin proportionately abates and sinks lower and
lower, until at length it be swallowed up in victory.
    Fifthly, The crucifying of the flesh notes to us the believers'
designed application of all spiritual means and sanctified
instruments for the destruction of it: There is nothing in this
world which a gracious heart more vehemently desires and longs for
than the death of sin and perfect deliverance from it, Rom. 7: 24.
the sincerity of which desires does accordingly manifest itself in
the daily application of all God's remedies: such are daily watching
against the occasions of sin, Job 31: 1. "I have made a covenant
with mine eyes;" more than ordinary vigilance over their special or
proper sin, Psal. 18: 23. "I kept myself from mine iniquity:"
Earnest cries to heaven for preventing grace. Psal. 19: 13. "Keep
back thy servant also from presumptuous sins, let them not have
dominion over me:" Deep humblings of soul for sins past, which is an
excellent preventive unto future sins, 2 Cor. 2: 11. "in that ye
sorrowed after a godly sort, what carefulness wrought it?" Care to
give no furtherance or advantage to the design of sin by making
provision for the flesh to fulfil the lusts thereof, as others do,
Rom. 13: I3, 14. Willingness to bear due reproofs for sin, Psal.
141: 5. "Let the righteous smite me, it shall be a kindness:" These,
and such like means of mortification, regenerate souls are daily
using and applying, in order to the death of sin. And so much of the
first particular, what the mortification of sin, or crucifying of
the flesh implies.
    Secondly, In the next place we shall examine the reasons why
this work of the Spirit is expressed under that trope, or figurative
expression of crucifying the flesh. Now the ground and reason of the
use of this expression, is the resemblance which the mortification
of sin bears unto the death of the cross: And this appears in five
particulars.
    First, The death of the cross was a pained death, and the
mortification of sin is a very painful work, Mat. 25: 29. it is as
the cutting off our right and plucking out our right eyes; it will
cost many thousand tears and groans, prayers and strong cries to
heaven, before one sin will be mortified. Upon the account of the
difficulty of this work, and mainly upon this account, the scripture
saith, "narrow is the way, and strait is the gate that leadeth unto
life, and few there be that find it," Mat. 7: 14. and that the
righteous themselves are scarcely saved.
    Secondly, The death of the cross was universally painful; every
member, every sense, every sinew, every nerve, was the seat and
subject of tormenting pain. So it is in the mortification of sin; it
is not this or that particular member or act, but the whole body of
sin that is to be destroyed, Rom. 6: 6. and accordingly the conflict
is in every faculty of the soul; for the Spirit of God, by whose
hand sin is mortified, does not combat faith this or that particular
lust only, but with sin, as sin; and for that reason with every sin,
in every faculty of the soul. So that there are conflicts and
anguish in every part.
    Third, The death of the cross was a slow, and lingering death;
denying unto them that suffered it the favour of a quick dispatch;
just so it is in the death of sin: though the Spirit of God be
mortifying it day by day, yet this is a truth sealed by the sad
experience of all believers in the world, that sin is long a dying:
And if we ask a reason of this dispensation of God, among others,
this seems to be one; corruptions in believers, like the Canaanites
in the land of Israel, are left to prove and to exercise the people
of God, to keep us watching and praying, mourning and believing;
yea, wondering and admiring at the riches of pardoning and
preserving mercy all our days.
    Fourthly, The death of the cross was a very opprobrious, or
shameful death: they that died upon the cross were loaded with
ignominy; the crimes for which they died were exposed to the public
view; after this manner dieth sin, a very shameful and ignominious
death. Every true believer draws up a charge against it in every
prayer, aggravates and condemns it in every, confession, bewails the
evil of it with multitudes of tears and groans; making sin as vile
and odious as he can find words to express it, though not so vile as
it is in its own nature. "O my God, (saith Ezra) I am ashamed, and
even blush to look up unto thee," Ezra 9: 6. So Daniel in his
confession, Dan. 9: 7. "O Lord, righteousness belongeth unto thee,
but unto us confusion of faces, as at this day." Nor  can it grieve
any believer in the world, to accuse, condemn, and shame himself for
sin, whilst he remembers and considers, that all that shame and
confusion of face which he takes to himself goes to the vindication,
glory and honour of his God. As David was content to be more vile
still for God, so it pleaseth the heart of a Christian to magnify
and advance the name and glory of God, by exposing his own shame, in
humble and broken hearted confessions of sin.
    Fifthly, In a word, the death of the cross was not a natural,
but a violent death: Such also is the death of sin: sin dies not of
its own accord, as nature dieth in old men, in whom the balsamum
radicale, or radical moisture is consumed: for if the Spirit of God
did not kill it, it would live to eternity in the souls of men; it
is not the everlasting burnings, and all the wrath of God which lies
upon the damned for ever, that can destroy sin. Sin, like a
salamander, can live to eternity in the fire of God's wrath; so that
either it must die a violent death by the hand of the Spirit, or it
never dieth at all. And thus you see, why the mortification of sin
is tropically expressed by the crucifying of the flesh.
    Thirdly, Why all that are in Christ must be so crucified, or
mortified unto sin: And the necessity of this will appear divers
ways.
    First, From the inconsistency and contrariety that there is
betwixt Christ and unmortified lust, Gal. 5: 17. "These are contrary
the one to the other." There is a threefold inconsistency betwixt
Christ and such corruptions; they are not only contrary to the
holiness of Christ, 1 John 3: 6. "Whosoever abideth in him sinneth
not; whosoever sinneth has not seen him, neither known him"; i.e.
whosoever is thus ingulphed and plunged into the lust of the flesh,
can have no communion with the pure and holy Christ; but there is
also an inconsistency betwixt such sin and the honour of Christ, 2
Tim. 2: 19. "Let every one that nameth the name of Christ, depart
from iniquity." As Alexander said to a soldier of his name,
recordare nominis Alexandri, remember thy name is Alexander, and do
nothing unworthy of that name. And unmortified lusts are also
contrary to the dominion and government of Christ, Luke 9: 23. "If
any man will come after me, let him deny himself, and take up his
cross daily, and follow me:" These are the self denying terms upon
which all men are admitted into Christ's service: And without
mortification and self-denial, he allows no man to call him Lord and
Master.
    Secondly, The necessity of mortification appears from the
necessity of conformity betwixt Christ, the Head, and all the
members of his mystical body; for how incongruous and uncomely would
it be to see a holy, heavenly Christ, leading a company of unclean,
carnal, and sensual members? Mat. 11: 29. "Take my yoke upon you,
and learn of me, for I am meek and lowly," q. d. it would be
monstrous to the world, to behold a company of lions and wolves
following a meek and harmless lamb: Men of raging and unmortified
lusts, professing and owning me for their head of government. And
again, 1 John 2: 6. "He that saith he abideth in him, ought himself
also to walk, even as he walked," q. d. either imitate Christ in
your practice, or never make pretensions to Christ in your
profession. This was what the apostle complained of, Phil. 3: 18.
for "many walk of whom I have told you often, and now tell you, even
weeping, that they are the enemies of the cross of Christ." Men
cannot study to put a greater dishonour and reproach upon Christ,
than by making his name and profession a cloke and cover to their
filthy lusts.
    Thirdly, The necessity of crucifying the flesh appears from the
method of salvation, as it is stated in the gospel. God every where
requires the practice of mortification, under pain of damnation.
Mat. 18: 8. "Wherefore if thy hand, or thy foot, offend thee, cut
them off, and cast them from thee: it is better for thee to enter
into life, halt or maimed, rather than having two hands, or two
feet, to be cast into everlasting fire." The gospel legitimates no
hopes of salvation, but such as are accompanied with serious
endeavours of mortification. 1 John 3: 3. "Every man that has this
hope in him, purifieth himself, even as he is pure." It was one
special end of Christ's coming into the world, "to save his people
from their sins," Mat. 1: 21. nor will he be a saviour unto any who
remain under the dominion of their own lusts.
    Fourthly, The whole stream and current of the gospel, puts us
under the necessity of mortification; gospel precepts have respect
unto this, Col. 3: 5. "Mortify your members, therefore, which are
upon the earth." 1 Pet. 1: 15. "Be ye holy, for I am holy." Gospel-
precedents have respect unto this, Heb. 12: 1. "Wherefore seeing we,
also, are compassed about with so great a cloud of witnesses, let us
lay aside every weight, and the sin which does so easily beset us,"
&c. Gospel-threatenings are written for this end, and do all press
mortification in a thundering dialect, Rom. 8: 13. "If ye live after
the flesh, ye shall die". Rom. 1: 18. "The wrath of God is revealed
from heaven, against all ungodliness, and unrighteousness of men."
The promises of the gospel are written designedly to promote it, 2
Cor. 7: 1. "Having therefore these promises, dearly beloved, let us
cleanse ourselves from all filthiness of flesh and spirit,
perfecting holiness in the fear of God." But in vain are all these
precepts, precedents, threatenings, and promises written in the
scriptures, except mortification be the daily study and practice of
professors.
    Fifthly, Mortification is the very scope and aim of our
regeneration, and the infusion of the principles of grace. "If we
live in the spirit, let us walk in the spirit," Gal. 5: 25. In vain
were the habits of grace planted, if the fruits of holiness and
mortification be not produced; yea, mortification is not only the
design and aim, but it is a special part, even the one half of our
sanctification.
    Sixthly, If mortification be not the daily practice and
endeavour of believers, then the way to heaven no way answers to
Christ's description of it in the gospel. He tells us, Mat. 7: 13,
14. "Wide is the gate, and broad is the way that leadeth to
destruction, and many there be that go in thereat: because strait is
the gate, and narrow is the way which leadeth unto life, and few
there be that find it." Well then, either Christ must be mistaken in
the account he gave of the way to glory, or else all unmortified
persons are out of the way; for what makes the way of salvation
narrow, but the difficulties and severities of mortification?
    Seventhly, In a word, he that denies the necessity of
mortification, confounds all discriminating marks betwixt saints and
sinners; pulls down the pale of distinction, and lets the world into
the church, and the church into the world: It is a great design of
the gospel to preserve the boundaries betwixt the one and the other,
Rom. 2: 7, 8. Rom. 8: 1, 4, 5, 6, 13. But if men may be Christians
without mortification, we may as well go into the taverns, ale-
houses, or brothel-houses, among the roaring or sottish crew of
sinners, and say, here are those that are redeemed by the blood of
Christ; here are his disciples and followers as to go to seek them
in the purest churches, or most strictly religious families: by all
which the necessity of mortification, unto all that are in Christ,
is abundantly evidenced.
    Fourthly, In the next place, we are to enquire into the true
principle of mortification it is true, there are many ways attempted
by men for the mortification of sin, and many rules laid down, to
guide men in that great work; some of which are very trifling and
impertinent things: such are those prescribed by Popish Votaries.
But I shall lay down this as a sure conclusion, that the sanctifying
Spirit is the only effectual principle of mortification; and,
without him, no resolutions, vows, abstinences, castigations of the
body, or any all or external endeavours, can ever avail to the
mortification of one sin. The moral Heathens have prescribed many
pretty rules and helps for the suppression of vice: Aristides,
Seneca, and Cato, were renowned among them upon this account:
formal. Christians have also gone far in the reformation of their
lives, but could never attain true mortification; formality pares
off the excrescences of vice, but never kills the root of it: it
usually recovers itself again, and their souls, like a body not well
purged, relapses into a worse condition than before, Mat. 12: 43,
44. 2 Pet. 2:20.
    This work of mortification is peculiar to the Spirit of God,
Rom. 8: 13. Gal. 5: 17. and the Spirit becomes a principle of
mortification in believers two ways, namely,
    1. By the implantation of contrary habits.
    2. By assisting those implanted habits in all the times of
need.
    First, The Spirit of God implants habits of a contrary nature,
which are destructive to sin, and are purgative of corruption, 1
John 5: 4. Acts 15: 9. Grace is to corruption what water is to fire;
betwixt which, there is both abnormal and selective opposition; a
contrariety both in nature and operation, Gal 5: 17. There is a
threefold remarkable advantage given us by grace, for the
destruction and mortification of sin. For,
    First, Grace gives the mind and heart of man a contrary bent
and inclination; by reason whereof spiritual and heavenly things
become connatural to the regenerate soul. Rom. 7: 22. "For I delight
in the law of God after the inner man." Sanctification is in the
soul as a living spring running with a kind of central force heaven-
ward, John 4: 14.
    Secondly, Holy principles destroy the interest that sin once
had in the love and delight of the soul; the sanctified soul cannot
take pleasure in sin, or find delight in that which grieves God, as
it was wont to do; but that which was the object of delight, hereby
becomes the object of grief and hatred. Rom. 7: 15. What I hate,
that I do.
    Thirdly, From both these follow a third advantage for the
mortification of sin, in as much as sin being contrary to the new
nature, and the object of grief and hatred, cannot possibly be
committed without reluctancy and very sensible regret of mind; and
actions done with regret are neither done frequently nor easily. The
case of a regenerate soul under the surprisals and particular
victories of temptation, being like that of a captive in war, who
marches not with delight, but by constraint among his enemies. So
the apostle expresseth himself, Rom. 7: 28. "But I see another law
in my members warring against the law of my mind; and bringing me
into captivity unto the law of sin which is in my members." Thus the
Spirit of God promotes the design of mortification, by the
implantation of contrary habits.
    Secondly, By assisting those gracious habits in all the times
of need, which he does many ways; sometimes notably awakening and
rousing grace out of the dull and sleepy habit, and drawing forth
the activity and power of it into actual and successful resistances
of temptations. As Gen. 39: 9. "How can I do this great wickedness
and sin against God?" Holy fear awakens first and raises all the
powers of grace in the soul to make a vigorous resistance of
temptation: the Spirit also strengthens weak grace in the soul. 2
Cor. 12: 9. "My grace is sufficient for thee, for my strength is
made perfect in weakness:" And, by reason of grace thus implanted
and thus assisted, he that is born of God keepeth himself, and the
wicked one toucheth him not."
    Fifthly, The last query to be satisfied is, how mortification
of sin solidly evinceth the soul's interest in Christ; and this it
does divers ways, affording the mortified soul many sound evidences
thereof. As,
    Evidence 1. Whatsoever evidences the indwelling of the Holy
Spirit of God in us, must needs be evidential of a saving interest
in Christ, as has been fully proved before; but the mortification of
sin does plainly evidence the indwelling of the Spirit of God; for,
as we proved but now, it can proceed from no other principle. There
is as strong and inseparable a connection betwixt mortification and
the Spirit, as betwixt the effect and its proper cause; and the self-
same connection betwixt the inbeing of the Spirit and union with
Christ: So that to reason from mortification to the inhabitation of
the Spirit, and from the inhabitation of the Spirit to our union
with Christ, is a strong scriptural way of reasoning.
    Evidence 2. That which proves a soul to be under the covenant
of grace, evidently proves its interest in Christ; for Christ is the
head of that covenant, and none but sound believers are under the
blessings and promises of it: but mortification of sin is a sound
evidence of the soul's being under the covenant of grace, as is
plain from those words of the apostle, Rom. 6: 12, 13, 14. "Let not
sin, therefore, reign in your mortal body, that ye should obey it in
the lust thereof; neither yield ye your members as instruments of
unrighteousness unto sin; but yield yourselves unto God, as those
that are alive from the dead, and your members as instruments of
righteousness unto God: for sin shall not have dominion over you;
for ye are not under the law, lint under grace." Where the apostle
presseth believers unto mortification by this encouragement, that it
will be a good evidence unto them of a new covenant interest; for
all legal duties and endeavours can never mortify sin: it is the
Spirit in the new covenant, which produces this. Whoever, therefore,
has corruptions mortified, has his interest in the covenant, and
consequently in Christ, so far cleared unto him.
    Evidence 3. That which is the fruit and evidence of saving
faith, must needs be a good evidence of our interest in Christ; but
mortification of sin is the fruit and evidence of saving faith. Acts
15: 9. "Purifying their hearts by faith." 1 John 5: 4. "This is the
victory whereby we overcome the world, even our faith." Faith
overcomes both the allurements of the world on the one hand, and the
terrors of the world on the other hand, by mortifying the heart and
affections to all earthly things: a mortified heart is not easily
taken with the ensnaring pleasures of the world, or much moved with
the disgraces, losses, and sufferings it meets with from the world;
and so the strength and force of its temptations are broken, and the
mortified soul becomes victorious over it; and all this by the
instrumentality of faith.
    Evidence 4. In a word, there is an intimate and indissoluble
connection betwixt the mortification of sin, and the life of grace.
Rom. 6: 11. "Reckon yourselves to be dead indeed unto sin, but alive
unto God, through Jesus Christ:" and the life of Christ must needs
involve a saving interest in Christ. By all which is fully proved
what was asserted in the observation from this text. The application
follows in the next sermon.
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
Sermon 28.
    

Gal. 5: 24.

And they that are Christ's, have crucified the flesh, with the
affections and lusts.
    
    
                   From hence our observation was,
                                  
That a saving interest in Christ, may be regularly and strong(y
inferred and concluded from the mortification of the flesh, with its
affections and lusts.
    Having opened the nature and necessity of mortification in the
former sermon, and shown how regularly a saving interest in Christ
may be concluded from it; we now proceed to apply the whole, by way
of
    1. Information.
    2. Exhortation.
    3. Direction.
    4. Examination.
    5. Consolation.
    
                     First use, for information.
    Inference 1. If they that be Christ's have crucified the flesh,
Then the life of Christians is no idle or easy life: the corruptions
of his heart continually fill his hands with work, with work of the
most difficult nature; sin-crucifying work, which the scripture
calls the cutting off the right hand, and plucking out of the right
eye: sin crucifying work is hard work, and it is constant work
throughout the life of a Christian; there is no time nor place freed
from this conflict; every occasion stirs corruption, and every
stirring of corruption calls for mortification: corruptions work in
our very best duties, Rom. 7: 23. and put the Christian upon
mortifying labours. The world and the devil are great enemies, and
fountains of many temptations to believers, but not like the
corruptions of their own hearts; they only tempt objectively and
externally, but these tempt internally, and therefore are much more
dangerous; they only tempt at times and seasons; these continually,
at all times and seasons: besides, whatever Satan or the world
attempts upon us, would be altogether ineffectual were it not for
our own corruptions, John 14: 30. So that the corruptions of our own
hearts, as they create us most danger, so they must give us more
labour; our life and this labour must end together; for sin is long
a dying in the best heart: those that have been many years exercised
in the study of mortification, may haply feel the same corruption
tempting and troubling them now, which put them into tears, and many
times brought them to their knees twenty or forty years ago. It may
be said of sin as it was said of Hannibal, that active enemy, that
it will never be quiet, whether conquering or conquered and until
sin cease working, the Christian must not cease mortifying.
    Inf. 2. If mortification be the great work of a Christian, then
certainly those that give the corruptions of Christians an occasion
to revive, must reeds do them a very ill office; they are not our
best friends that stir the pride of our hearts by the flattery of
their lips. The graces of God in others, I confess, are thankfully
to be owned, and under discouragements, and contrary temptations, to
be wisely and modestly spoken of; but the strongest Christians do
scarcely shew their own weakness in any one thing more than they do
in hearing their own praises. Christian, thou knowest thou carriest
gun-powder about thee, desire those that carry fire to keep at a
distance from thee; it is a dangerous crisis when a proud heart
meets with flattering lips; auferte ignem, &c. take away the fire,
(said a holy divine of Germany, when his friend commended him upon
his death bed) for I have yet combustible matter about me; faithful,
seasonable, discreet reproofs are much more safe to us, and
advantageous to our mortifying work: but alas, how few have the
boldness or wisdom duly to administer them? It is said of Alexander,
that he bid a philosopher (who had been long with him) to be gone;
for, said he, so long thou hast been with me, and never reproved me;
which must needs be thy fault; for either thou sawest nothing in me
worthy of reproof which argues thy ignorance, or else thou durst not
reprove me, which argues thy unfaithfulness. A wise and faithful
reprover is of singular use to him that is heartily engaged in the
design of mortification; such a faithful friend, or some malicious
enemy, must be helpful to us in that work.
    Inf. 3. Hence it follows, that manifold and successive
afflictions are no more than what is necessary for the best of
Christians: the mortification of our lusts require them all, be they
never so many, 1 Pet. 1: 5. "If need be, ye are in heaviness:" it is
no more than need, that one loss should follow another, to mortify
an earthly heart; for so intensely are our affections set upon the
world, that it is not one, or two, or many checks of providence,
that will suffice to wean and alienate them. Alas, the earthliness
of our hearts will take all this, it may be much more than this, to
purge them: the wise God sees it but necessary to permit frequent
discoveries of our own weakness, and to let loose the tongues of
many enemies upon us, and all little enough to pull down our pride,
and the vanity that is in our hearts. Christian, how difficult
soever it be for thee to bear it; yet the pride of thy heart
requires all the scoffs and jeers, all the calumnies and reproaches,
that ever the tongues or pens of thy bitterest enemies, or mistaken
friends, have at any time thrown upon thee. Such rank weeds as grow
in our hearts, will require hard frosts and very sharp weather to
rot them; the straying bullock needs a heavy clog, and so does a
Christian whom God will keep within the bounds and limits of his
commandments, Psal. 119: 67. Dan. 11: 35.
    Inf. 4. If they that be Christ's have crucified the flesh, then
the number of real Christians is very small. It is true, if all that
seem to be meek, humble, and heavenly, might pass for Christians,
the number would be great; but if no more must be accounted
Christians, than those who crucify the flesh, with its affections
and lusts, O how small is the number! For, O how many be there under
the Christian name, that pamper and indulge their lusts, that
secretly hate all who faithfully reprove them, and really affect
none but such as feed their lusts, by praising and admiring them?
How many that make provision for the flesh to fulfil its lusts, Who
cannot endure to have their corruptions crossed? How many are there
that seem very meek and humble, until an occasion be given them to
stir up their passion, and then you shall see in what degree they
are mortified: the flint is a cold stone, till it be struck, and
then it is all fiery. I know the best of Christians are mortified
but in part; and strong corruptions are oftentimes found in very
eminent Christians; but they love them not so well as to purvey for
them; to protect, defend, and countenance them; nor dare they
secretly hate such as faithfully reprove them; as many thousands
that go under the name of Christians do. Upon the account of
mortification it is said, Mat. 7: 13. "Narrow is the way, and strait
is the gate that leadeth unto life, and few there be that find it.
    Inf. 5. If they that be Christ's have crucified the flesh, i.e.
if mortification is their daily work and study; then how falsely are
Christians charged as troublers of the world and disturbers of the
civil peace and tranquillity of the times and places they live in;
Justly may they retort the charge, as Elijah did to Ahab, "It is not
I that trouble Israel, but thou and thy father's house:" It is not
holy, meek, and humble Christians that put the world into confusion,
this is done by the profane and atheistical; or by the designing and
hypocritical world, and laid at the door of innocent Christians: as
all the public calamities which from the immediate hand of God, or
by foreign or domestic enemies befel Rome, were constantly charged
upon Christians; and they condemned and punished, for what the
righteous hand of God inflicted on the working heads of the enemies
of that state without their privily contrived. The apostle James
propounds and answers a question very pertinent to this discourse,
James 4: 1. "From whence come wars and fightings among you? Come
they not hence, even of your lusts that war in your members?" O if
men did but study mortification and self denial, and live as much at
home in the constant work of their own hearts as some men do; what
tranquillity and peace, what blessed halcyon days should we quickly
see! It is true, Christians are always fighting and quarrelling, but
it is with themselves and their own corrupt hearts and affections;
they hate no enemy but sin; they thirst for the blood and ruin of
none but of that enemy; they are ambitious of no victory, but what
is over the corruptions of their own hearts; they carry no grudge
except it be against this enemy, sin; and yet these are the men who
are the most suspected and charged with disturbing the times they
live in; just as the wolf accused the lamb, which was below him, for
puddling and defiling the stream. But there will be a day when God
will clear up the innocency and integrity of his mistaken and abused
servants; and the world shall see, it was not preaching and praying,
but drinking, profaneness, and enmity unto true godliness, which
disturbed and broke the tranquillity and quietness of the times:
mean time let innocency commit itself unto God, who will protect,
and in due time vindicate the same.
    Inf. 6. If they that be Christ's have crucified the flesh, then
whatsoever religion, opinion, or doctrine does in its own nature
countenance and encourage sin, is not of Christ. The doctrine of
Christ every where teacheth mortification: the whole stream of the
gospel runs against sin; the doctrine it teacheth is holy, pure, and
heavenly; it has no tendency to extol corrupt nature, and feed its
pride, by magnifying its freedom and power, or by stamping the merit
and dignity of the blood of Christ upon its works and performances;
it never makes the death of Christ a cloke to cover sin, but an
instrument to destroy it. And whatsoever doctrine it is which
nourishes the pride of nature, to the disparagement of grace, or
encourages licentiousness and fleshly lust, is not the doctrine of
Christ, but a spurious offspring begotten by Satan upon the corrupt
nature of man.
    Inf. 7. If mortification be the great business and character of
a Christian, Then that condition is most eligible and desirable by
Christians, which is least of all exposed to temptation, Prov. 30:
8. "Give me neither poverty nor riches, but feed me with food
convenient." That holy judicious man was well aware of the danger
lurking in both extremes, and how near they border upon deadly
temptations, and approach the very precipice of ruin that stand upon
either ground: few Christians have an head strong and steady enough
to stand upon the pinnacle of wealth and honour; nor is it every one
that can grapple with poverty and contempt. A mediocrity is the
Christian's best external security, and therefore most desirable:
and yet how do the corruption, the pride and ignorance of our hearts
grasp and covet that condition which only serves to warm and nourish
our lusts, and make the work of mortification much more difficult?
It is well for us that our wise Father leaves us not to our own
choice, that he frequently dashes our earthly projects, and
disappoints our fond expectations. If children were left to carve
for themselves, how often would they cut their own fingers?
    Inf. 8. If mortification be the great business of a Christian,
then Christian fellowship and society duly managed and improved,
must needy be of singular use and special advantage to the people of
God. For thereby we have the friendly help and assistance of many
other hands to carry on our great design, and help us in our most
difficult business; if corruption be too hard for us, others this
way come in to our assistance, Gal. 6: 1. "Brethren, if a man be
overtaken in a fault, ye which are spiritual restore such an one in
the spirit of meekness." If temptations prevail, and overbear us
that we fall under sin, it is a special mercy to have the reproofs
and counsels of our brethren, who will not suffer sin to rest upon
us, Lev. 19: 17. Whilst we are sluggish and sleepy, others are
vigilant and careful for our safety: The humility of another
reproves and mortifies my pride: The activity and liveliness of
another awakens and quickens my deadness: The prudence and gravity
of another detects and cures my levity and vanity: The heavenliness
and spirituality of another may be exceeding useful, both to reprove
and heal the earthliness and sensuality of my heart. Two are better
than one, but wo unto him that is alone. The devil is well aware of
this great advantage, and therefore strikes with special malice
against embodied Christians, who are as a well disciplined army,
whom he therefore more especially endeavours to rout and scatter by
persecutions, that thereby particular Christians may be deprived of
the sweet advantages of mutual society.
    Inf. 9. How deeply has sin fixed its roots in our corrupt
nature, that it should be the constant work of a Christian's whole
life, to mortify and destroy it? God has given us many excellent
helps, his Spirit within us, variety of ordinances and duties are
also appointed as instruments of mortification: And from the very
day of regeneration unto the last moment of dissolution, the
Christian is daily at work in the use of all sanctified means,
external and internal, yet can never dig up and destroy corruption
at the root all his life long. The most eminent Christians of
longest standing in religion, who have shed millions of tears for
sin, and poured out many thousand prayers for the mortification of
it, do, after all, find the remains of their old disease, that there
is still life and strength in those corruptions which they have
given so many wounds unto in duty. O the depth and strength of sin!
which nothing can separate from us, but that which separates our
souls and bodies. And upon that account, the day of a believer's
death is better than the day of his birth. Never till then do we put
off our armour, sheath our sword, and cry, victory, victory.
    
                    Second use, for exhortation.
    If they who are Christ's have crucified the flesh, &c. Then as
ever we hope to make good our claim to Christ, let us give all
diligence to mortify sin; in vain else are all our pretences unto
union with him. This is the great work and discriminating character
of a believer. And seeing it is the main business of life, and great
evidence for heaven, I shall therefore press you to it by the
following motives and considerations.
    1 Motive. And first, methinks the comfort and sweetness
resulting from mortification should effectually persuade every
believer to more diligence about it. There is a double sweetness in
mortification, one in the nature of the work, as it is a duty, a
sweet Christian duty; another as it has respect to Christ, and is
evidential of our union with him. In the first consideration there
is a wonderful sweetness in mortification, for dost thou not feel a
blessed calmness, cheeriness, and tranquillity in thy conscience,
when thou hast faithfully repelled temptations, successfully
resisted and overcome thy corruptions? Does not God smile upon thee;
conscience encourage and approve thee? Hast thou not an heaven
within thee? whilst others feel a kind of hell in the deadly gripes
and bitter accusations of their own consciences, are covered with
shame, and filled with horrors. But then consider it also as an
evidence of the soul's interest in Christ, as my text considers it;
and what an heaven upon earth must then be found in mortification!
These endeavours of mine to subdue and mortify my corruptions,
plainly speak the Spirit of God in me, and my being in (Christ! and
O what is this! What heart has largeness and strength enough to
receive and contain the joy and comfort which flow from a cleared
interest in Jesus Christ! Certainly, Christians, the tranquillity
and comfort of your whole life depend upon it; and what is life
without the comfort of life? Rom. 8: 13. "If ye through the Spirit
do mortify the deeds of the body, ye shall live, i.e. you shall live
a serene, placid, comfortable life; for it is corruption unmortified
which clouds the face of God, and breaks the peace of his people,
and consequently imbitters the life of a Christian.
    2 Motive. As the comfort of your own lives, which is much, so
your instrumental fitness for the service of God, which is much
more, depends upon the mortification of your sins, 2 Tim. 2: 21. "If
a man therefore purge himself from these, he shall be a vessel unto
honour; sanctified and meet for the Master's use, and prepared unto
every good work." Where is the mercy of life but in the usefulness
and serviceableness of it unto God? It is not worth while to live
sixty or seventy years in the world to eat and drink, to buy and
sell, to laugh and cry, and then go down to the place of silence. So
far as any man lives to God an useful, serviceable life to his
praise and honour; so far only, and no farther, does he answer the
end of his being. But it is the purged, mortified soul which is the
vessel of honour, prepared, and meet for the Master's use. Let a
proud, or an earthly heart be employed in any service for God, and
you shall find that such an heart will both spoil the work, by
managing it for a self-end as Jehu did; and then devour the praise
of it by a proud boast: Come see my zeal. When the Lord would employ
the prophet Isaiah in his work and service, his iniquity was first
purged: and after that he was employed, Isa. 6: 6, 7, 8. Sin is the
soul's sickness, a consumption upon the inner man; and we know that
languishing consumptive persons are very unfit to be employed in
difficult and strenuous labours. Mortification, so far as it
prevails, cures the disease, recovers our strength, and enables us
for service to God in our generations.
    3 Motive. Your stability and safety in the hour of temptation,
depend upon the success of your mortifying endeavours. Is it then a
valuable mercy in your eyes to be kept upright and stedfast in the
critical season of temptation, when Satan shall be wrestling with
you for the crown, and the prize of eternal life! Then give
diligence to mortify your corruptions. Temptation is a siege, Satan
is the enemy without the walls, labouring to force an entrance;
natural corruptions are the traitors within, that hold
correspondence with the enemy without, and open the gate of the soul
to receive him. It was the covetousness of Judas' heart which
overthrew him in the hour of temptation. They are our fleshly lusts
which go over unto Satan in the day of battle, and fight against our
souls, 1 Pet. 2: 11. the corruptions (or infectious atoms which fly
up and down the world in times of temptation, as that word
"miasmata", 2 Pet. 2: 20. imports) are through lusts, 2 Pet. 1: 4.
It is the lust within, which gives a lustre to the vanities of the
world without, and thereby makes them strong temptations to us, 1
John 4. 16. Mortify therefore your corruptions, as ever you expect
to maintain your station in the day of trial: cut off those
advantages of your enemy, lest by them he cut off your souls, and
all your hopes from God.
    4 Motive. As temptations will be irresistible, so afflictions
will be unsupportable to you without mortification. My friends, you
live in a mutable work, providence daily rings the chances in all
the kingdoms, cities, and towns, all the world over. You that have
husbands or wives to-day, may be left desolate to-morrow: You that
have estates and children now, may be bereaved of both before you
are aware. Sickness will tread upon the heel of health, and death
will assuredly follow life as the night does the day. Consider with
yourselves; are you able to bear the loss of your sweet enjoyments
with patience? Can you think upon the parting hour without some
tremblings? 0 set a heart mortified to all these things, and you
will bless a taking as well as a giving God. It is the living world,
not the crucified world, that raises such tumults in our souls in
the day of affliction. How cheerful was holy Paul under all his
sufferings! and what think you gave him that peace and cheerfulness,
but his mortification to the world? Phil. 4: 12. "I know both how to
be abased, and I know how to abound; every where, and in all things
I am instructed, both to be full, and to be hungry, both to abound
and suffer need." Job was the mirror of patience, in the greatest
shock of calamity, and what made him so, but the mortifiedness of
his heart, in the fullest enjoyment of all earthly things? Job 31:
25.
    5 Motive. The reputation and honour of religion are deeply
concerned in the mortification of the professors of it: For
unmortified professors will, first or last, be the scandals and
reproaches of it. The profession of religion may give credit to you,
but to be sure you will never bring credit to it. All the scandals
and reproaches that fall upon the name of Christ in this world, flow
from the fountain of unmortified corruption. Judas and Demas,
Hymeneus, and Philetus, Ananias and Sapphira ruined themselves, and
became rocks of offence to others by this means. If ever you will
keep religion sweet, labour to keep your hearts mortified and pure.
    6 Motive. To conclude, what hard work will you have in your
dying hour, except you get a heart mortified to this world, and all
that is in it? Your parting hour is like to be a dreadful hour,
without the help of mortification. Your corruptions, like glue,
fasten your affections to the world, and how hard will it be for
such a man to be separated by death? O what a bitter and doleful
parting have carnal hearts from carnal things! whereas the mortified
soul can receive the messengers of death without trouble, and as
cheerfully put off the body at death, as a man does his clothes at
night: Death need not pull and hale; such a man goes half way to
meet it, Phil. 1: 23. "I desire to be dissolved, and to be with
Christ, which is far better." Christian, wouldst thou have thy death-
bed soft and easy; wouldst thou have an "euthanasia", as the
philosopher desired for himself, an easy death, without pain or
terror; then get a mortified heart: the Surgeon's knife is scarce
felt when it cuts off a mortified member.
    
                      Third use, for direction.
    Are you convinced, and fully satisfied of the excellency and
necessity of mortification, and inquisitive after the means, in the
use whereof it may be attained; then, for your help and
encouragement, I will in the next place, offer my best assistance in
laying down the rules for this work.
    Rule 1. If ever you will succeed and prosper in the work of
mortification, then get, and daily exercise more faith. Faith is the
great instrument of mortification; "This is the victory, (or sword
by which the victory is won, the instrument) by which you overcome
the world, even your faith," 1 John 5: 4. By faith alone eternal
things are discovered to your souls, in their reality and excelling
glory, and these are the preponderating things, for the sake
whereof, self-denial and mortification become easy to believers; by
opposing things eternal to things temporal, we resist Satan, 1 Pet.
5: 8. This is the shield by which we quench the fiery darts of the
wicked one, Eph. 6: 16.
    Rule 2. Walk in daily communion with God, if ever you will
mortify the corruptions of nature; that is the apostle's own
prescription, Gal. 1: 17. "This I say then, walk in the Spirit, and
ye shall not fulfil the lusts of the flesh." Spiritual and frequent
communion with God, gives manifold advantages for the mortification
of sin, as it is a bright glass wherein the holiness of God and the
exceeding sinfulness of sin, as it is opposite thereunto, are most
clearly and sensibly discovered, than which, scarce any thing can
set a keener edge of indignation upon the spirit of a man against
sin. Besides, all communion with God is assimilating and
transformative of the soul into his image; it leaves also a heavenly
relish and savour upon the soul; it darkens the lustre and glory of
all earthly things, by presenting to the soul a glory which
excelleth: it marvellously improves, and more deeply radicates
sanctification in the soul; by all which means it becomes singularly
useful and successful in the work of mortification.
    Rule 3. Keep your consciences under the awe and in the fear of
God continually, as ever you hope to be successful in the
mortification of sin. The fear of God is the great preservative from
sin, without which all the external rules and helps in the world
signify nothing: "By the fear of the Lord, men depart from evil,"
Prov. 16: 6. Not only from external and more open evils, which the
fear of men, as well as the fear of God, may prevent, but from the
most secret and inward evils, which is a special part of
mortification, Lev. 19: 14. It keeps men from those evils which no
eye nor ear of man can possibly discover. The fear of the Lord
breaks temptations, baited with pleasure, with profit, and with
secrecy. In a word, if ever you be cleansed from all filthiness of
flesh and spirit, it must be by the fear of God, 2 Cor. 7: 1.
    Rule 4. Study the vanity of the creature, and labour to get
true notions of the emptiness and transitoriness thereof, if ever
you will attain to the mortification of your affections towards it.
    It is the false picture and image of the world, in our fancy,
that crucifies us with so many cares, fears, and solicitudes about
it: and it is the true picture and image of the world, represented
to us in the glass of the word, which greatly helps to crucify our
affections to the world. O if we did but know and believe three
things about the world, we should never be so fond of it as we are,
viz. the fading, defiling, and destroying nature of it. The best and
sweetest enjoyments in the world, are but fading flowers and
withered grass, Isa. 14: 6. James 1: 10,11. yea, it is of a
defiling, as well as a fading nature, 1 John 5: 19. it lies in
wickedness, it spreads universal infection among all mankind, 2 Pet.
1: 4. yea, it destroys as well as defiles multitudes of souls,
drowning men in perdition, 1 Tim. 6: 9. Millions of souls will wish,
to eternity, they had never known the riches, pleasures, or honours
of it. Were this believed, how would men slacken their pace, and
cool themselves in the violent and eager pursuit of the world? This
greatly tends to promote mortification.
    Rule 5. Be careful to cut off all the occasions of sin, and
keep at the greatest distance from temptations, if ever you would
mortify the deeds of the body. The success and prevalency of sin,
mainly depend upon the wiles and stratagems it makes use of to
ensnare the incautious soul; therefore the apostle bids us keep off,
at the greatest distance. 1 Thes. 5: 22. "Abstain from all
appearance of evil. Prov. 5: 8. "Come not nigh unto the door of her
house." He that dares venture to the very brink of sin, discovers
but little light in his understanding, and less tenderness in his
conscience, he neither knows sin nor fears it as he ought to do: And
it is usual with God to chastise self-confidence by shameful lapses
into sin.
    Rule 6. If you will successfully mortify the corruptions of
your nature, never engage against them in your own single strength,
Eph. 6: 10. When the apostle draws forth Christians into the field,
against sin, he bids them "be strong in the Lord, and in the power
of his might." O remember what a mere feather thou art in the gusts
of temptation; call to mind the height of Peters confidence, "though
all men forsake thee, yet will not I;" and the depth of his fall,
shame and sorrow. A weak Christian, trembling in himself, depending
by faith upon God, and graciously assisted by him, shall be able to
stand against the shock of temptation, when the bold and confident
resolutions of others (like Pendleton in our English story) shall
melt away as wax before the flames.
    Rule 7. Set in with the mortifying design of God, in the day of
thine affliction; sanctified afflictions are ordered and prescribed
in heaven for the purging of our corruptions, Isa. 27: 9 "By this,
therefore, shall the iniquity of Jacob be purged, and this is all
the fruit to take away his sin." It is a fair glass to represent the
evil of sin, and the vanity of the creature, to imbitter the world,
and disgust thy affections towards it: Fall in, therefore with the
gracious design of God; follow every affliction will prayer, that
God would follow it with his blessing. God kills thy comforts, out
of no other design but to kill thy corruptions with them: wants are
ordained to kill wantonness, poverty is appointed to kill pride,
reproaches are permitted to pull down ambition: Happy is the man who
understands, approves, and heartily sets in with the design of God,
in such afflicting providences.
    Rule 8. Bend the strength of your duties and endeavours against
your proper and special sin; it is in vain to lop off branches,
whilst this root of bitterness remains untouched: This was David's
practice, Psal. 18: 23. "I was also upright before him, and I kept
myself from mine iniquity." We observe, in natural men, that one
faculty is more vigorous than another; we find in nature, that one
soil suits with some sorts of seeds rather than another: And every
believer may find his nature and constitution inclining him to one
sin rather than another. As graces, so corruptions exceed one
another, even in the regenerate. The power of special corruption
arises from our constitutions, education, company, custom, callings,
and such like occasions; but from whensoever it comes, this is the
sin that most endangers us, most easily besets us; and, according to
the progress of mortification in that sin, we may safely estimate
the degrees of mortification in other sins; Strike, therefore, at
the life and root of your own iniquity.
    Rule 9. Study the nature and great importance of those things
which are to be won or lost, according to the success and issue of
this conflict. Your life is a race, eternal glory is the prize,
grace and corruption are the antagonists, and accordingly as either
finally prevails, eternal life is won or lost. 1 Cor. 9: 24. "Know
ye not that they which run a race, run all, but one receiveth the
prize? So run that ye may obtain." This condition will make
mortification appear the most rational and necessary thing to you in
the whole world. Shall I lose heaven for indulging the flesh, and
humouring a wanton appetite! God forbid. "I keep under my body,
(saith Paul) and bring it into subjection; lest if that by any
means, when I have preached to others, I myself should be a cast
away," 1 Cor. 9: 28.
    Rule 10. Accustom your thoughts to such meditations as are
proper to mortify sin in your affections, else all endeavours to
mortify it will be but faint and languid: To this purpose, I shall
recommend the following meditations, as proper means to destroy the
interest of sin.
    Meditation 1. Consider the evil that is in sin, and how
terrible the appearances of God will one day be against those that
obey it, in the lusts thereof. Rom. 1: 18. "The wrath of God is
revealed from heaven against all ungodliness and unrighteousness of
men," 1 Thes. 1: 7, 8, 9. "The Lord Jesus shall be revealed from
heaven, with his mighty angels, in flaming fire, taking vengeance on
them that know not God, and that obey not the gospel of our Lord
Jesus Christ: who shall be punished with everlasting destruction
from the presence of the Lord, and from the glory of his power." Let
your thoughts dwell much upon the consideration of the fruits and
consequences of sin; it shows its fairest side to you in the hour of
temptation. O but consider how it will look upon you in the day of
affliction, Numb. 22: 23. in that day your sin will find you out:
Think what its aspect will be in a dying flour. 1 Cor. 15: 56. "The
sting of death is sin." Think what the frightful remembrances of it
will be at the bar of judgement, when Satan shall accuse, conscience
shall upbraid, God shall condemn, and everlasting burnings shall
avenge the evil of it: such thoughts as these are mortifying
thoughts.
    Meditation 2. Think what it cost the Lord Jesus to expiate the
guilt of sin by suffering the wrath of the great and terrible God
for it in our room: the meditations of a crucified Christ are very
crucifying meditations unto sin, Gal. 6: 14. he suffered unspeakable
things for sin; it was a divine wrath which lay upon his soul for
it; that wrath of which the prophet saith, Nahum 1: 5, 6. "The
mountains quake at him, and the hills melt. Who can stand before his
indignation? And who can abide in the fierceness of his anger? his
fury is poured out like fire, and the rocks are thrown down by him."
It was unmixed and unallayed wrath, poured out in the fulness of it,
even to the last drop: and shall we be so easily drawn to the
commission of those sins which put Christ under such sufferings? O
do but read such scriptures as these, Luke 22: 44. Matth. 26: 36,
37. Mark 14: 33. and see what a plight sin put the Lord of glory
into; how the wrath of God put him into a sore amazement, a bloody
sweat, and made his soul heavy unto death.
    Meditation 3. Consider what a grief and wound the sins of
believers are to the Spirit of God, Eph. 4: 80. Ezek. 16: 43. Isa.
63: 10. 0 how it grieves the Holy Spirit of God! Nothing is more
contrary to his nature. "O do not that abominable thing which I
hate," saith the Lord, Jer. 44: 4. Nothing obstructs and crosses the
sanctifying design of the Spirit, as sin does; defacing and spoiling
the most rare and admirable workmanship that ever God wrought in
this world; violating all the engagements laid upon us by the love
of the Father, by the death of his Son, by the operations of his
Spirit in all his illuminations, convictions, compunctions,
renovation, preservation, obsignation, and manifold consolations.
Lay this meditation upon thy heart, believer, and say, Sicne
rependis? dost thou thus requite the lord, O my ungrateful heart,
for all his goodness? Is this the fruit of his temporal, spiritual,
common, and peculiar mercies, which are without number?
    Meditation 4. Consider with yourselves, that no real good,
either of profit or pleasure can result from sin; you can have no
pleasure in it, whatever others may have, it being against your new
nature; and as for that brutish pleasure and evanid joy which others
have in sin, it can be but for a moment, for either they must repent
or not repent: if they do repent, the pleasure of sin will be turned
into the gall of asps here; if they do not repent, it will terminate
in everlasting howlings hereafter. That is a smart question, Rom. 6:
21. "What fruit had ye in those things whereof ye are now ashamed?
For the end of those things is death." You that are believers must
never expect any pleasure in sin; for you can neither commit it
without regret, nor reflect upon it without shame and confusion:
expect no better consequents of sin than the woundings of conscience
and the dismal cloudings of the face of God; that is all the profit
of sin. O let these things sink into your heart.
    Meditation 5. Consider what the damned suffer for those sins
which the devil now tempteth you to commit; it has deprived them of
all good, all outward good, Luke 16: 25. all spiritual good, Mat.
25: 41. and of all hope of enjoying any good for ever: and as it has
deprived them of all good, so it has remedilessly plunged them into
all positive misery: misery from without, the wrath of God being
come upon them to the uttermost; and misery from within, for their
worm dieth not, Mark 9: 44. The memory of things past, the sense of
things present, and the fearful expectations of things to come, are
the gnawings and bitings of the worm of conscience, at every bite
whereof damned souls give a dreadful shriek; crying out, O the worm!
the worm! Would any man that is not forsaken by reason, run the
hazard of those eternal miseries for the brutish pleasures of a
moment?
    Meditation 6. Bethink yourselves what inexcusable hypocrisy it
will be in you to indulge yourselves in the private satisfaction of
your lusts, under a contrary profession of religion: you are a
people that profess holiness, and professedly own yourselves to be
under the government and dominion of Christ: and must the worthy
name of Christ be only used to cloak and cover your lusts and
corruptions, which are so hateful to him? God forbid. You daily pray
against sin, you confess it to God, you bewail it, you pour out
supplications for pardoning and preventing grace; are you in jest or
earnest in these solemn duties of religion? Certainly, if all those
duties produce no mortification, you do but flatter God with your
lips, and put a dreadful cheat upon your own souls. Nay, do you not
frequently censure and condemn those things in others, and dare you
allow them in yourselves? What horrid hypocrisy is this? Christians
are dead to sin, Rom. 6: 2. dead to it by profession, dead to it by
obligation, dead to it by relation to Christ, who died for them; and
how shall they that are so many ways dead to sin, live any longer
therein? O think not that God hates sin the less in you because you
are his people, nay, that very consideration aggravates it the more,
Amos 3: 2.
    Meditation 7. Consider with yourselves what hard things some
Christians have chosen to endure and suffer rather than they would
defile themselves with guilt; and shall every small temptation
ensnare and take your souls? Read over the 11th chapter to the
Hebrews, and see what the saints have endured to escape sin; no
torments were so terrible to them as the displeasure of God, and
woundings of conscience; and did God oblige them more by his grace
and favour than he has obliged you? O Christians, how can you that
have found such mercies, mercies as free, and pardons as full as
ever any souls found, shew less care, less fear, less tenderness of
grieving the Spirit of God than others have done; certainly, if you
did see sin with the saline eyes they saw it, you would hate it as
deeply, watch against it as carefully, and resist it as vigorously
as any of the saints have done before you.
    Meditation 8. Consider with yourselves what sweet pleasure,
rational and solid comfort is to be found in the mortification of
sin. It is not the fulfilling of your lusts can give you the
thousandth part of that comfort and contentment that the resistance
of them, and victory over them will give you. Who can express the
comfort that is to be found in the cheering testimony of an
acquitting and absolving conscience? 2 Cor. 1: 12. Remember what
satisfaction and peace it was to Hezekiah upon his supposed death-
bed, when he turned to the wall, and said, "Remember now, O Lord, I
beseech thee, how I have walked before thee in truth, and with a
perfect heart; and have done that which is good in thy sight," Isa.
38: 3.
    
                    Fourth use, for examination.
    In the next place, this point naturally puts us upon the
examination and trial of our own heard, whether we, who so
confidently claim a special interest in Christ, have crucified the
flesh with its affections and lusts. And because two sorts of
persons will be concerned in this trial, viz. the weaker and the
stronger Christians; I shall therefore lay down two sorts of
evidences of mortification, one respecting the sincerity and truth,
the other respecting the strength and progress of that work in
confirmed and grown Christians, and both excluding false pretenders.
    First, There are some things that are evidential of the truth
and sincerity of mortification, even in the weakest Christians: as,
    First, True tenderness of conscience as to all known sins, one
as well as another, is a good sign sin has lost its dominion in the
soul. O it is a special mercy to have a heart that shall smite and
reprove us for those things that others make nothings of: To check
and admonish us for our secret sins, which can never turn to our
reproach among men: this is a good sign that we hate sin, however,
through the weakness of the flesh we may be ensnared by it. Rom. 7:
15. "What I hate, that I do."
    Secondly, The sincere and earnest desires of our souls to God
in prayer for heart-purging and sin-mortifying grace, is a good sign
our souls have no love for sin. Canst thou say, poor believer, in
the truth of thy heart, that if God would give thee thy choice, it
would please thee better to have sin cast out, than to have the
world cast in: that thy heart is not so earnest with God for daily
bread, as it is for heart-purging grace? This is a comfortable
evidence that sin is nailed to the cross of Christ.
    Thirdly, Do you make conscience of guarding against the
occasions of sin? Do you keep a daily watch over your hearts and
senses, according to 1 John 5: 18. Job 31: 1. This speaks a true
design and purpose of mortification also.
    Fourthly, Do you rejoice and bless God from your hearts, when
the Providence of God orders any means for the prevention of sin?
Thus did David, 1 Sam. 25: 33. "And David said to Abigail, Blessed
be the Lord God of Israel which sent thee this day to meet me, and
blessed be thy advice, and blessed be thou which hast kept me this
day from coming to shed blood, and from avenging myself with my own
hand."
    Fifthly, In a word, though the thoughts of death may be
terrible in themselves, yet if the expectation and hope of your
deliverance from sin thereby, do sweeten the thoughts of it to your
souls, it will turn unto you for a testimony, that you are not the
servants and friends of sin. And so much briefly of the first sort
of evidences.
    Secondly, There are other signs of a more deep and thorough
mortification of sin, in more grown and confirmed believers, and
such are these.
    First, The more submissive and quiet any man is under the will
of God, in smart and afflicting providences, the more that man's
heart is mortified unto sin, Psal. 119: 67, 71. Col. 1: 11.
    Secondly, The more able any one is to bear reproaches and
rebukes for his sin, the more mortification there is in that man,
Psal. 141: 5.
    Thirdly, The more easily any man can resign and give up his
dearest earthly comforts at the call and command of God, the more
progress that man has made in the work of mortification, Heb. 11:
17. 2 Sam. 10: 25.
    Fourthly, The more power any man has to resist sin in the first
motions of it, and stifle it in the birth; the greater degree of
mortification that man has attained, Rom. 7: 23, 24.
    Fifthly, If great changes, upon our outward condition, make no
change for the worse upon our spirits, but we can bear prosperous
and adverse providences with an equal mind; then mortification is
advanced far in our souls, Phil. 4: 11,12.
    Sixthly, The more fixed and steady our hearts are with God in
duty, and the less they are infested with wandering thoughts, and
earthly interpositions; the more mortification there is in that
soul. And so much briefly of the evidences of mortification.
    
                     Fifth use, for consolation.
    It only remains, that I shut up all with a few words of
consolation unto all that are under the mortifying influence of the
Spirit. Much might be said for the comfort of such. In brief,
    First, Mortified sin shall never be your ruin: It is only
reigning sin that is ruining sin, Rom. 8: 13. Mortified sins and
pardoned sins shall never lie down with us in the dust.
    Secondly? If sin be dying, your souls are living; for dying
unto sin, and living unto God, are inseparably connected, Rom. 6:
1l.
    Thirdly, If sin be dying in you, it is certain that Christ died
for you, and you cannot desire a better evidence of it, Rom. 6: 5,
6.
    Fourthly, If sin be dying under the mortifying influences of
the Spirit, and it be your daily labour to resist and overcome it,
you are then in the direct way to heaven, and eternal salvation;
which few, very few in the world shall find, Luke 13: 24.
    Fifthly, To shut up all, if you, through the Spirit, be daily
mortifying the deeds of the body, then the death of Christ is
effectually applied by the Spirit unto your souls, and your interest
in him is unquestionable: for they that are Christ's have crucified
the flesh, with the affections and lusts; and they that have so
crucified the flesh with its affections and lusts are Christ's.
    
    Blessed be God for a crucified Christ.
    
    
    
    
    
    
Sermon 29.

Of the Imitation of Christ in holiness of Life, and the necessity of
it in Believers.

I John 2: 6.
    
He that saith he abided in him, ought himself also to walk, even as
he walked.
    
    
    The express and principal design of the apostle, in this
chapter, is to propound marks and signs, both negative and positive,
for the trial and examination of men's claims to Christ; amongst
which (not to spend time about the coherence) my text is a principal
one; a trial of men's interest in Christ, by their imitation of
Christ. It is supposed by some expositors, that the apostle, in
laying down this mark, had a special design to overthrow the wicked
doctrine of the Carpocratians, who taught (as Epiphanius relates it)
that men might have as much communion with God in sin as in duty. In
full opposition to which the apostle lays down this proposition,
wherein he asserts the necessity of a Christ-like conversation in
all that claim union with him, or interest with him. The words
resolve themselves into two parts, viz.
    1. A claim to Christ supposed.
    2. The only way to have our claim warranted.
    First, We have here a claim to Christ supposed; "if any man say
he abideth in him." Abiding in Christ is an expression denoting
proper and real interest in Christ, and communion with him; for it
is put in opposition to those temporary, light, and transient
effects of the gospel, which are called a morning dew, or an early
cloud; such a receiving of Christ as that, Mat. 13: 21. which is but
a present flash, sudden and vanishing; abiding in Christ notes a
solid, durable, and effectual work of the Spirit, thoroughly and
everlastingly joining the soul to Christ. Now, if any man, whosoever
he be (for this indefinite is equivalent to an universal term) let
him never think his claim to be good and valid, except he take this
course to adjust it.
    (2.) Secondly, The only way to have this claim warranted, and
that must be by so walking even as he walked; which words carry in
them the necessity of our imitation of Christ. But it is not to be
understood indefinitely and universally of all the works or actions
of Christ, some of which were extraordinary and miraculous, some
purely mediatory, and not imitable by us: In these paths no
Christian can follow Christ; nor may so much as attempt to walk as
he walked. But the words point at the ordinary and imitable ways and
works of Christ; therein it must be the care of all to follow him,
that profess and claim interest in him; they must so walk as he
walked, this [so] is a very bearing word in this place; the emphasis
of the text seems to lie in it; however, certain it is that this so
walking, does not imply an equality with Christ in holiness and
obedience; for as he was filled with the Spirit without measure, and
anointed with that oil of gladness above his fellows; so the purity,
holiness, and obedience of his life are never to be matched, or
equalised by any of the saints. But this so walking only notes a
sincere intention, design, and endeavour to imitate and follow him
in all the paths of holiness and obedience, according to the
different measures of grace received. The life of Christ is the
believer's copy, and though the believer cannot draw one line or
letter exact as his copy is, yet his eye is still upon it, he is
looking unto Jesus, Heb. 12: 2. and labouring to draw all the lines
of his life, as agreeably as he is able, into Christ his pattern.
    
    Hence the observation is,
    
    Doct. That every man is bound to the imitation of Christ, under
         penalty of forfeiting his claim to Christ.
    
    The saints imitation of Christ is solemnly enjoined by many
great and express commands of the gospel; so you find it, 1 Pet. 1:
15. "But as he that has called you is holy, so be ye holy in all
manner of conversation:" So Eph. 5: 1, 2. "Be ye therefore followers
of God as dear children, and walk in love, as Christ also has loved
us." "Christians (saith Bernard) receive this name from Christ; and
it is very meet that as they inherit his name, so they should also
imitate his holiness." Now to state the method of this discourse, it
will be needful to discuss and open three things in the doctrinal
part.
    1. What the saints imitation of Christ supposes and comprises.
    2 In what particulars they are especially bound to imitate
Christ.
    3. Why no claim to Christ is valid without this imitation of
him.
    And then apply the whole in divers uses.
    (1.) First, What the saints imitation of Christ supposeth and
compriseth. Now there are divers great and weighty truths supposed
and implied in this imitation of Christ, or walking as he walked,
viz.
    First, It supposes, that no Christian is, or may pretend to be
a rule to himself, to act according to the dictates of his own will
and pleasure; for as no man has wisdom enough to direct and govern
himself, so if his own will were made the rule of his own actions,
it would be the highest invasion of the divine prerogative that
could be imagined: "I know, O Lord, (saith Jeremiah) that the way of
man is not in himself; it is not in him that walketh to direct his
own steps, Jer. 10: 28. We may as well pretend to be our own makers
as our own guides. It is a pretty observation of Aquinas, that if
the workman's hand were the rule of his work, it were impossible he
should ever err in working: And if the will of man were the only law
and guide of his way, we might then say no man would sin in his
walking. The apostle, indeed, saith of the Heathens, Rom. 2: 14.
"That they are a law to themselves;" but it is not his meaning, that
their will is their law, but the law of God engraven upon their
hearts; the light and dictates of their own consciences did oblige
and bind them as a law.
    Secondly, This imitation of Christ implies, that as no man is,
or may pretend to be his own guide, so no mere man, how wise or holy
soever he be, may pretend to be a rule to other men; but Christ is
the rule of every man's way and walking. It is true indeed, the
apostle saith, "We should be followers of them, who through faith
and patience, inherit the promises," Heb. 6: 12. And again, James 5:
10. "Take, my brethren, the prophets, who have spoken in the name of
the Lord, for an example of suffering affliction, and of patience.
But you must always remember, that there is a two-fold rule;
    1. Regula regulans, the rule ruling.
    2. Regula regulata, the rule ruled.
    The wisest and holiest among men, may pretend no higher than a
ruled rule. The great apostle, though filled with as great a measure
of the Spirit of wisdom and holiness, as ever was possessed by any
mere man, yet goes no higher than this, 1 Cor. 11: 1. "Be ye
followers of me, as I also am of Christ." The best of men are but
men at best; they have their errors and defects, which they freely
acknowledge; and where they differ from Christ, it is our duty to
differ from them. We may not pin our faith to any man's sleeve, for
we know not where he will carry it. It was the commendation which
Paul gave of the Thessalonians, 1 Thes. 1: 6. "And you became
followers of us and of the Lord." The noble Bereans were also
commended for searching the scriptures, and examining the apostles'
doctrine by it; and it was a good reply of the father to a clamorous
disputant, crying, Hear me, hear me; "I will neither hear thee, nor
do thou hear me; but let us both hear Christ."
    Thirdly, The imitation of Christ implies the necessity of
sanctification in all his followers; forasmuch as it is impossible
there should be a practical conformity in point of obedience, where
there is not a conformity in spirit and in principle; all external
conformity to Christ's practice, depends upon an internal conformity
to Christ in the principle and Spirit of holiness. It is very plain,
from Ezek. 11: 19, 20. that a new heart must be given us, and a new
spirit put into us, before we can walk in God's statutes; we must
first live in the Spirit, before we can walk in the Spirit, Gal. 5:
25.
    Fourthly, The imitation of Christ plainly holds forth this,
that the Christian religion is a very precise and strict religion;
no way countenancing licentiousness, or indulging men in their
lusts: it allows no man to walk loosely and inordinately, but
rejects every man's claim to Christ, who studies and labours not to
tread exactly in the footsteps of his holy and heavenly example.
Profaneness and licentiousness, therefore, can find no shelter or
protection under the wing of the gospel; this is the universal rule
laid upon all the professors of the Christian religion, "Let every
one that nameth the name of Christ, depart from iniquity," 2 Tim. 2:
19. i.e. let him either put on the life of Christ, or put off the
name of Christ; let him show the hand of a Christian, in works of
holiness and obedience, or else the tongue and language of a
Christian must gain no belief or credit.
    Fifthly, The imitation of Christ necessarily implies the
defectiveness and imperfection of the best of men in this life; for
if the life of Christ be our pattern, the best and holiest of men
must confess they come short in every thing of the rule of their
duty. Our pattern is still above us, the best of men are ashamed
when they compare their lives with the life of Christ: It is true, a
vain heart may swell with pride, when a man compares himself with
other men: thus measuring ourselves by ourselves, and comparing
ourselves among ourselves, we shew our folly and nourish our pride;
but if any man will compare his own lily with Christ's, he will find
abundant cause at every time and in every thing to be humbled. Paul
was a great proficient in holiness and obedience, be had been long
striving to come up to the top of holiness, yet when he looks up and
sees the life of Christ, and rule of duty, so far above him, hee
reckons himself still but at the foot of the hill. Phil. 3: 1. "Not
as though I kind already attained, either were already perfect, but
I follow after, if that I may apprehend that for which also I am
apprehended of Christ Jesus." q. d. Alas! I am not come up to my
duty, I am a great way behind; but I am following after, if at last
I may attain it: Perfection is in my expectation and hope, at last,
not in my attainment here.
    Sixthly, The imitation of Christ, as our general rule or
pattern, necessarily implies the transcending holiness of the Lord
Jesus; his holiness is greater than the holiness of all creatures
"For only that which is first and best in every kind, is the rule
and measure of all the rest." It is the height of saints' ambition
to be made conformable to Christ, Phil. 3: 10. Christ has a double
perfection, a perfection of being, and a perfection of working. His
life was a perfect rule, no blot or error could be found therein;
for he was "holy, harmless, undefiled, separate from sinners:" And
such an high-priest becomes us, as the apostle speaks, Heb. 7: 26.
The conformity of professors to Christ's example, is the test and
measure of all their graces; the nearer any man comes to this
pattern, the nearer he approaches towards perfection.
    Seventhly, The Christian's imitation of Christ, under penalty
of losing his claim to Christ, necessarily implies sanctification
and obedience to be the evidences of our justification and interest
in Christ: Assurance is unattainable without obedience; we can never
be comfortable Christians except we be strict and regular
Christians. Gal. 6: 16. "As many as walk according to this rule,
peace be unto them, and mercy; and upon the Israel of God." A loose
and careless conversation can never be productive of true peace and
consolation, 2 Cor. 1: 12. "This is our rejoicing, the testimony of
our conscience, that in simplicity and godly sincerity, not with
fleshly wisdom, but by the grace of God, we have had our
conversation in the world." Let men talk what they will of the
immediate sealings and comforts of the Spirit, without any regard to
holiness, or respect to obedience; sure I am, whatever delusion they
meet with in that way, true peace, and consolation is only to be
expected and found here: "The fruit of righteousness shall be peace,
and the effect of righteousness quietness, and assurance for ever."
We have it not for our holiness, but we always have it in the way of
holiness. And so much of the first particular, namely, what the
imitation of Christ implies and comprises in it.
    Secondly, In the next place we are to enquire, in what things
all who profess Christ are obliged to the imitation of him; or what
those excellent graces in the life of Christ were, which are
propounded as patterns to the saints.
    The life of Christ was a living law; all the graces and virtues
of the Spirit were represented in their glory, and brightest lustre
in his conversation upon earth: Never man spoke as he spake; never
any lived as he lived. "We beheld his glory (saith the evangelist)
as the glory of the only begotten of the Father, full of grace and
truth" John 1: 14. But to descend to the particular, imitable
excellencies in the life of Christ, which are high patterns and
excellent rules for the conversation of his people, we shall, from
among many others, single out the ten following particulars, which
we are obliged to imitate.
    Pattern 1. And first of all, the purity and holiness of the
life of Christ is proposed as a glorious pattern for the saint's
imitation. 1 Pet. 1: 15. "As he which has called you is holy, so be
ye holy in all manner of conversation;" "en pasei anastrofei", in
every point and turning of yourselves. There is a two-fold holiness
in Christ, the holiness of his nature, and the holiness of his
practice; his holy being and his holy working: This obligeth all
that profess interest in him to a two-fold holiness, viz. holiness
in actu primo, in the principles of it in their hearts, and holiness
in actu secondo, in the practice and exercise of it in their
conversations. It is very true we cannot in all respects imitate the
holiness of Christ, for he is essentially holy; proceeding, by
nature, as a pure beam of holiness from the Father; and when he was
incarnate, he came into the world immaculate, and pure from the
least stain of pollution: There it was said, Luke 1: 25. "That holy
thing which shall be born of thee shall be called the Son of God."
In this we can never be like Christ, in the way of our production;
for who can bring a clean thing out of that which is unclean? Not
one." The Lord Jesus was also efficiently holy, i.e. he makes others
holy; therefore his sufferings and blood are called a fountain
opened "for sin and for uncleanness," i.e. to cleanse other men's
souls, Zech. 13: 1. In this Christ also is inimitable; no man can
make himself or others holy. That is a great truth, though it will
hardly go down with proud nature, Minus est te fecisse hominemn,
quam sanctum; we may sooner make ourselves to be men, than to be
saints. Beside Christ is infinitely holy, as he is God; and there
are no measures set to his holiness, as Mediator. John 3: 34. "For
God giveth not the Spirit by measure unto him." But notwithstanding
these excepted respects, the holiness of Christ is propounded as a
pattern for our imitation six ways.
    First, He was truly and sincerely holy, without fiction or
simulation; and this appeared in the greatest trial of the truth of
holiness that ever was made in this world. John 14: 80. "The prince
of this world cometh, and has nothing in me:" When he was agitated
and shaken with the greatest temptations, no dregs appeared; he was
like pure fountain-water in a chrystal glass. The hypocrite makes
shew of more holiness than he has, but there was more holiness in
Christ than ever appeared to the view of men. We may say of the way
of Christ what the philosopher saith of the milky way in the
heavens; and those faint streams of light which we see there, are
nothing else but the reflection of innumerable stars which shine
there, though they are invisible to us. There was much inward beauty
in him, and so there ought to be in all his followers; our holiness,
like Christ's, must be sincere and real, Eph. 4: 24. shining with
inward beauty towards God rather than towards men.
    Secondly, Christ was uniformly holy at one time as well as an
other; in one place and company as well as another: He was still
like himself, an holy Christ; one and the same tenor of holiness ran
throughout his whole life from first to last: So must it be with all
his people, holy in all manner of conversation. Christians, look to
your copy, and be sure to imitate Christ in this; write fair after
your copy; let there not be here a word and there a blot: one part
of your life heavenly and pure, and another earthly and dreggy; or
(as one expresses it) now an heavenly rapture, and by and by a
fleshly frolic.
    Thirdly, Christ was exemplarily holy; a pattern of holiness to
all that came nigh him and conversed with him: O imitate Christ in
this. It was the commendation of the Thessalonians, that they "were
ensamples to all that believed in Macedonia and Achaia; and that in
every place their faith to God-ward was spread abroad," 1 Thes. 1:
7, 8. Let no man go out of your company without conviction or
edification. So exemplary were the primitive Christians, Phil. 3:
17.
    Fourthly, Christ was strictly and precisely holy: "Which of you
convinceth me of sin?" The most envious and observing eyes of his
greatest enemies could not pick a hole, or find a flaw in any of his
words or actions: It is our duty to imitate Christ in this. Phil. 2:
15. "That ye may be blameless and harmless, the sons of God, without
rebuke, in the midst of a crooked and perverse nation, among whom ye
shine (or, as the word may be rendered imperatively, 'faineste hos
foseres', among whom shine ye) as lights in the world." Thus it
becomes the followers of Christ to walk circumspectly, or precisely;
"for so is the will of God that with well doing ye may put to
silence the ignorance of foolish men," 1 Pet. 2: 15.
    Fifthly, Christ was perseveringly holy, holy to the last
breath; as he began, so he finished his whole life in a constant
course of holiness: in this also he is our great pattern. It becomes
not any of his people to begin in the Spirit and end in the flesh;
but on the contrary, their last works should be more than their
first: "Let him that is holy, be holy still," Rev. 22: 11.
    Sixthly, In a word, the delight of Christ was only in holy
things and holy persons: they were his chosen companions; even so it
becometh his people to have all their delights in the saints, and in
the excellent of the earth, Psal. 16: 3. Thus, Christians, be ye
followers of Christ in his holiness; God has decreed this conformity
to Christ in all that shall be saved, Rom. 8: 29. he banished all
unholy ones from his gracious presence for ever, 1 Cor. 6: 9. Heb.
12: 14. The design of Christ in dying for you was to make you pure
and holy, Eph. 5: 25, 26. 0 then, study holiness, eye your pattern,
and as dear children, be ye followers of your most holy Lord Jesus
Christ.
    Pattern 2. The obedience of Christ to his Father's will, is a
pattern for the imitation of all Christians: it is said of Christ,
Heb. 5: 8. that he "learned obedience by the things which he
suffered;" a text which labours under some difficulties; Christ
learned obedience, and yet was not ignorant before of what he
learned afterward; he was perfect in knowledge, and yet the apostle
speaks of him as a proficient in the school of wisdom. But we must
consider there are two ways of learning, viz. by
    1. The comprehension of the mind.
    2. By the experience of the sense.
    Christ, as God, was perfect in knowledge; nothing could be
added to him: but when he became man, then he came to understand, or
learn by sufferings, as the apostle here speaks; which, though it
added nothing to his knowledge, yet it was a new method and way of
knowing. Now the obedience of Christ is our pattern whereunto we are
obliged (as ever we will warrant our claim of interest in him) to
conform ourselves in the following properties of it.
    First, Christ's obedience was free and voluntary, not forced or
compulsory; it was so from the very first undertaking of the work of
our redemption, Prov. 8: 30, 31. "Then was I by him as one brought
up with him; and I was daily his delight, rejoicing always before
him: Rejoicing in the habitable part of his earth; and my delights
were with the sons of men." And when the fulness of time was come
for executing that blessed design, which had been in prospect from
all eternity, how cheerfully did the will of Christ echo to his
Father's call, Psal. 40: 7. "Then said I, lo I come, in the volume
of thy book it is written of me, I delight to do thy will, O my God,
yea, thy law is within my heart." Nor was this a flourish before he
came into the field and saw the enemy, for he laid down his life
with the greatest cheerfulness and spontaneity that could be, John
10: 17, 18. "Therefore does my Father love me, because I lay down my
life that I may take it again; no man taketh it from me, but I lay
it down of myself:" and indeed the voluntariness of Christ, in his
obedience unto death, gave his death the nature and formality of a
sacrifice; for so all sacrifices ought to be offered, Lev. 1: 3. and
so Christ's sacrifice was offered unto God, Eph. 5: 2. It was as
grateful a work to Christ to die for us, as it was to Moses' mother
to take him to nurse from the hand of Pharaoh's daughter. O
Christians, tread in the steps of Christ's example, do nothing
grudgingly for God, let not his commands be grievous, 1 John 5: 3.
If you do any thing for God willingly, you have a reward; if
otherwise, a dispensation only is committed to you, 1 Cor. 9: 7.
Obedience in Christ was an abasement to him, but in you a very great
honour and advancement: you have reason therefore to obey with
cheerfulness.
    Secondly, The obedience of Christ was universal and complete,
he was obedient to all the will of God, making no demur to the
hardest service imposed by the will of God upon him, Phil. 2: 8. "He
became obedient unto death, even the death of the cross;" and though
it is true, the humanity of Christ recoiled and staggered when that
bitter cup of the wrath of God was given him to drink; yet how soon
was that innocent aversion overcome in him by a perfect submission?
Nevertheless, "not my will, but thine be done," Matt. 26: 39.
Christians, here is your pattern: happy art thou, reader, if thou
canst say, when God calls thee to suffering and self denying work, I
am filled with the will of God. Such was Paul's obedience, Acts 21:
18. "I am ready not only to be bound, but to die at Jerusalem for
the name of the Lord Jesus".
    Thirdly, The obedience of Christ was sincere and pure, without
any base or by-end, purely aiming at the glory of God, John 17: 4.
"I have glorified thee on earth, I have finished the work thou
gavest me to do. He sought not honour of men. This was the great
desire of his soul, John 12: 28. "Father glorify thy name:" And
truly the choicest part of your obedience consists in the purity of
your ends, and in this Christ is propounded as your pattern, Phil.
2: 3, 4, 5.
    Fourthly, The streams of Christ's obedience flowed from the
spring and fountain of ardent love to God, John 14: 81. "But that
the world may know that I love the Father, and as the Father gave me
commandment, even so I do;" Thus let all your obedience to God turn
upon the hinge of love; for "love is the fulfilling of the law,"
Hom. 13: 10. Not as if no other duty but love were required in the
law, but because no act of obedience is acceptable to God, but that
which is performed in love.
    Fifthly, In a word, The obedience of Christ was constant; he
was obedient unto death, he was not weary of his work to the last.
Such a patient continuance in well doing is one part of your
conformity to Christ, Rom. 2: 7. it is laid upon you by his own
express command, and a command backed with the most encouraging
promise, Rev. 2: 10. "Be thou faithful unto the death, and I will
give thee the crown of life."
    Pattern 3. The self-denial of Christ is the pattern of
believers, and their conformity unto it is their indispensable duty,
Phil. 2: 4, 5, 6. 2 Cor. 8: 9. "For ye know the grace of our Lord
Jesus Christ, that though he was rich, yet for our sakes he became
poor, that ye through his poverty might be rich." Jesus Christ, for
the glory of God, and the love he bare to the elect, denied himself
all the delights and pleasures of this world, Matt. 20: 28. "The Son
of man came not to be ministered unto, but to minister, and to give
his life a ransom for many;" he was all his life time in the world,
"a man of sorrows and acquainted with grief," Isa. 53: 5. more
unprovided of comfortable accommodations than the birds of the air,
or beasts of the earth, Luke 9: 58. "The foxes have holes, and the
birds of the air have nests, but the Son of man has not where to lay
his head." Yet this was the least part of Christ's self denial: What
did he not deny when he left the bosom of his Father, with the
ineffable delights and pleasures he there enjoyed from eternity, and
instead thereof to drink the cup, the bitter cup of his Father's
wrath, for our sakes? O Christians, look to your pattern, and
imitate your self-denying Saviour. There is a threefold self you are
to deny for Christ.
    First, Deny your natural self, for him, Luke 14: 26. Hate your
own life, in competition with his glory, as well as your natural
lusts, Tit. 2: 12.
    Secondly, Deny your civil self for Christ; whether they be
gifts of the mind, Phil. 3: 8. or your dearest relations in the
world, Luke 14: 26.
    Thirdly, Deny your moral and religions self for Christ; your
own righteousness, Phil. 3: 10. Deny sinful self absolutely, Col. 3:
4, 5. Deny natural self conditionally, i.e. be ready to forsake its
interests at the call of God. Deny your religious self, even your
own graces, comparatively, not in the notion of duties, but in the
notion of righteousness: and to encourage you in this difficult
work, consider,
    First, What great things Christ denied for you, and what small
matters you have to deny for him.
    Secondly, How readily he denied all for your sakes, making no
objections against the difficultest commands.
    Thirdly, How incapable you are to put any obligation upon
Christ, to deny himself in the least for you, and what strong
obligations Christ has put you under, to deny yourselves in your
greatest interests upon earth for him.
    Fourthly, Remember that your self-denial is a condition
consented to, and subscribed by yourselves, if ever you received
Christ aright.
    Fifthly, In a word, consider how much your self denial for
Christ, makes for your advantage in both worlds, Luke 18: 29. O
therefore, look not every man upon his own things, but upon the
things that are of Christ; let not that be justly charged upon you,
which was charged upon them, Phil. 2: 21. "All seek their own, not
the things which are Christ's."
    Pattern 4. The activity and diligence of Christ in finishing
the work of God which was committed to him, was a pattern for all
believers to imitate. It is said of him, Acts 10: 38. "He went about
doing good." O what a great and glorious work did Christ finish in a
little time! A work to be celebrated to all eternity by the praises
of the redeemed. Six things were very remarkable in the diligence of
Christ about his Father's work.
    First, That his heart was intently set upon it, Psal. 4: 8.
"Thy law is in the midst of my heart," or bowels.
    Secondly, That he never fainted under the many great
discouragements he frequently met withal in that work, Isa. 43: 4.
"He shall not fail, nor be discouraged.
    Thirdly, That the shortness of his time provoked him to the
greatest diligence, John 9: 4. "I must work the work of him that
sent me, while it is day, for the night cometh, when no man can
work.
    Fourthly, That he improved all opportunities, companies, and
occurrences to further the great work which was under his hand, John
4: 6,10.
    Fifthly, Nothing more displeased him than when he met with
dissuasions and discouragements in his work; upon that account it
was that he gave Peter so sharp a check, Mat. 8: 83. "Get thee
behind me, Satan."
    Sixthly, Nothing rejoiced his soul more, than the prosperity
and success of his work, Luke 10: 20, 21. When the disciples made
the report of the success of their ministry, it is said, "In that
hour Jesus rejoiced in Spirit. And O what a triumphant shout was
that upon the cross at the accomplishment of his work, John 19: 30.
It is finished!
    Now, Christians, eye your parent, look unto Jesus; trifle not
away your lives in vanity. Christ was diligent, be not you slothful.
And to encourage you in your imitation of Christ in labour and
diligence, consider,
    First, How great an honour God puts upon you in employing, you
for his service: every vessel of service is a vessel of honour, 2
Tim. 2: 21. The apostle was very ambitious of that honour, Rom. 15:
20. It was the glory of Eliakim to be fastened as a nail in a sure
place, and to have many people hang upon him, Isa. 22: 23.
    Secondly, Your diligence in the work of God will be your great
security in the hour of temptation; for "the Lord is with you while
you are with him," 2 Chron. 15: 2. The schoolmen put the question,
How the saints in heaven became impeccable? and resolve it thus,
that they are therefore freed from sin, because they are continually
employed and swallowed up in the blessed visions of God.
    Thirdly, Diligence in the work of God is an excellent help to
the improvement of grace. For, though gracious habits are not
acquired, yet they are greatly improved by frequent acts; "To him
that has shall be given, Mat. 25: 29. It is a good note of Luther,
Fides pinguescit operibus, Faith improves by obedience.
    Fourthly, Diligence in the work of God is the direct way to the
assurance of the love of God, 2 Pet. 15: 10. This path leads you
into a heaven upon earth.
    Fifthly, Diligence in obedience is a great security against
backsliding: small remissions in duty, and little neglects, increase
by degrees unto great apostasies, you may see how that disease is
bred by the method prescribed for its cure, Rev. 2: 5. Do thy first
works.
    Sixthly, In a word, laborious diligence, in the day of life,
will be your singular comfort when the night of death overtakes you,
2 Pet. 1: 11. 2 Kings 20: 3.
    Pattern 5. Delight in God, and in his service, was eminently
conspicuous in the life of Christ, and is a rare pattern for
believers imitation, John 4: 32, 34. "But he said unto them, I have
meat to eat that ye know not of, my meat is to do the will of him
that sent me, and to finish his work". The delights of Christ were
all in heaven. The Son of man was in heaven, in respect of de light
in God, while he conversed here among men. And if you be Christ's,
heavenly things will be the delight of your souls also. Now
spiritual delight is nothing else but the complacency and well
pleasedness of a renewed heart, in conversing with God, and the
things of God, resulting from the agreeableness of them to the
spiritual temper of his mind. Four things are considerable about
spiritual delight.
    First, The nature of it, which consisteth in the complacency,
rest, and satisfaction of the mind in God and spiritual things. The
heart of a Christian is cantered, it is where it would be; it is
gratified in the highest, in the actings forth of faith and love
upon God; as the taste is gratified with a suitable delicious
relish, Psal. 63:5, 6. Psal. 119: 14, 24. Psal. 17: 18.
    Secondly, The object of spiritual delight, which is God
himself, and the things which relate to him. He is the blessed ocean
into which all the streams of spiritual delight do pour themselves,
Psal. 73: 25. "Whom have I in heaven but thee, and on earth there is
none that I desire in comparison of thee."
    Thirdly, The subject of spiritual delight, which is a renewed
heart, and that only so far as it is renewed, Rom. 7: 22, "I delight
in the law of God after the inward man."
    Fourthly, The principle and spring of this delight, which is
the agreeableness of spiritual things to the temper and frame of a
renewed mind. A sensitive pleasure arises from the suitableness of
the faculty and object. So it is here, no delicious sweetness can be
so pleasant to the taste, or beautiful colours to the eye, or
melodious sounds to the ear, as spiritual things to renewed souls,
because spiritual senses are delicate, and the objects more
excellent.
    But my business here is not so much to open its nature, as to
press you to the practice thereof in conformity to your great
pattern, whose life was a life of delight in God, and whose work was
performed with the greatest delight in God. "I delight to do thy
will, O my God." O Christians, strive to imitate your pattern in
this. And to encourage you, I will briefly hint a few things.
    First, Scarce any thing can be more evidential of sincerity
than a heart delighting in God, and the will of God. Hypocrites go
as far as others in the material parts of duties, but here they are
defective; they have no delight in God and things spiritual; but do
whatsoever they do in religion, from the compulsions of conscience,
or accommodations of self-ends.
    Secondly, delighting in God will be a choice help and means to
perseverance. The reason why many so easily part with religion is,
because their souls never tasted the sweetness of it; they never
delighted in it; but the Christian who delights in the law of God
will be meditating on it day and night, and shall be like a tree
planted by a river of water, whose leaf fadeth not, Psal. 1: 2, 3.
    Thirdly, This will represent religion very beautifully to such
as are yet strangers to it; you will then be able to invite them to
Christ by your example, the language whereof will be like that,
Psal. 34: 8. "O taste and see that God is good."
    Fourthly, This will make all your services to God very pleasing
and acceptable through Christ; you will now begin to do the will of
God on earth, as it is done in heaven; your duties are so far
angelical as they are performed in the strength of delight in God.
    Object. But may not a sincere Christian act in duty without
delight? Yea, may he not feel some kind of weariness in duties?
    Solut. Yes, doubtless he may; but then we must distinguish
betwixt the temper and distemper of a renewed heart; the best hearts
are not always in the right frame.
    Pattern 6 The inoffensivenss of the life of Christ upon earth
is an excellent pattern to all his people; he injured none, offended
none, but was holy end harmless, as the apostle speaks, Heb. 7: 26.
He denied his own liberty to avoid occasion of offence; as in the
case of the tribute-money, Mat. 19: 27. "The children are free,
notwithstanding, lest we should offend them, go," &c. So circumspect
was Christ, and inoffensive among all men, that though his enemies
sought occasion against him, yet could they find none, Luke 6: 7.
Look unto Jesus, O ye professors of religion, imitate him in this
gracious excellency of his life, according to his command, Phil. 2:
15. "That ye may be harmless and blameless, the sons of God, without
rebuke, in the midst of a crooked and perverse nation." You are
indeed allowed the exercise of your prudence, but not a jot farther
than will consist with your innocence. "Be ye wise as serpents, and
harmless as doves." It is the rule of Christ that you offend none, 1
Cor. 10: 32. 2 Cor. 6: 3. And to engage you to the imitation of
Christ in this, I must briefly press it with a few encouragements,
which methinks should prevail with any heart that is truly gracious.
    First, For the honour of Jesus Christ, be you inoffensive, his
name is called upon you, his honour is concerned in your deportment;
if your carriage in the world give just matter of offence, Christ's
worthy name will be blasphemed thereby, Jam. 2: 7. Your inoffensive
carriage is the only means to stop the mouths of detractors, 1 Pet.
2: 15.
    Secondly, For the sake of souls, the precious and immortal
souls of others, be wary that you give no offence: "Wo to the world,
(saith Christ,) because of offence," Matth. 13: 7. Nothing was more
commonly objected against Christ and religion by the Heathens in
Cyprian's time, than the loose and scandalous lives of professors:
"Behold, say they, these are the men who boast themselves to be
redeemed from the tyranny of Satan, to be dead to the world;
nevertheless, see how they are overcome by their own lusts." And
much after the same rate Salvian brings in the wicked of his time,
stumbling at the looseness of professors, and saying, Where is that
catholic law which they believe? Where are the examples of piety and
chastity which they have learned? &c. O Christians, draw not the
guilt of other men's eternal ruin upon your souls.
    Thirdly, In a word, answer the ends of God in your
sanctification and providential dispose in the world this way; by
the holiness and harmlessness of your lives, many may be won to
Christ, 1 Pet. 3: 1. What the Heathens said of moral virtue, (which
they called verticordia, turn-heart) that if it were but visible to
mortal eyes, all men would be enamoured with it, will be much more
true of religion when you shall represent the beauty of it ill your
conversation.
    Pattern 7. The humility and lowliness of Christ is propounded
by himself as a pattern for his people's imitation. Mat. 11: 29.
"Learn of me, for I am meek and lowly." He could abase and empty
himself of all his glory, Phil. 2: 5, 6, 7. He could stoop to the
meanest office, even to wash the disciples feet. We read but of one
triumph in all the life of Christ upon earth, when he rode to
Jerusalem, the people strewing branches in the way, and the very
children in the streets of Jerusalem, crying, "Hosanna to the son of
David, Hosanna in the highest;" and yet with what lowliness and
humility was it performed by Christ, Matth. 21: 5. "Behold thy King
cometh unto thee meek and lowly." The humility of Christ appeared in
every thing he spake or did. Humility discovered itself in his
language, Psal. 22: 6. "I am a worm, and no man." In his actions,
not refusing the meanest office, John 3: 14. In his condescensions
to the worst of men, upon which ground they called him "a friend to
publicans and sinners," Matth. 11: 19. But especially, and above
all, in stooping down from all his glory to a state of the deepest
contempt, for the glory of God and our salvation. Christians! here
is your pattern; look to your meek and humble Saviour, and tread in
his steps; be you "clothed with humility," 1 Pet. 5: 5. Whoever are
ambitious to be the world's great ones, let it be enough for you to
be Christ's little ones. Convince the world, that since you knew God
and yourselves, your pride has been dying from that day. Shew your
humility in your habits, 1 Pet. 3: 3. 1 Tim. 2: 9, 10. In your
company, not contemning the meanest and poorest that fear the Lord,
Psal. 15: 4. Rom. 12: 16. In your language; that dialect befits your
lips, Eph. 3: 8. Less than the least of all saints; but especially
in the low value and humble thoughts you have of yourselves, 1 Tim
1: 15. And to press this, I beseech you to consider,
    First, From how vile a root pride springs. Ignorance of God,
and of yourselves, gives rise and being to this sin: They that know
God will be humble, Isa. 6: 5. And they that know themselves cannot
be proud, Rom. 7: 9.
    Secondly, Consider the mischievous effects it produces; it
estrangeth the soul from God, Psal. 138: 6. It provokes God to lay
you low, Job 40: 11, 12. It goes before destruction and a dreadful
fall, Prov. 10: 18.
    Thirdly, As it is a great sin, so it is a bad sign, Hab. 2: 4.
"Behold his heart which is lifted up, is not upright in him."
    Fourthly, How unsuitable it is to the sense you have, and the
complaints you make of your own corruptions and spiritual wants; and
above all, how contrary it is to your pattern and example: Did
Christ speak, act, or think as you do! O. learn humility from Jesus
Christ, it will make you precious in the eyes of God, Isa. 57: 15.
    Pattern 8. The contentation of Christ in a low and mean
condition in the world, is an excellent pattern for his people's
imitation. His lot in this world fell upon a condition of deepest
poverty and contempt: Yet how well was he satisfied and contented
with it! hear him expressing himself about it, Psal. 16: 6. "The
lines are fallen unto me in pleasant places: yea, I have a goodly
heritage." The contentation of his heart with a suffering condition,
evidenced itself in his silence under the greatest sufferings, Isa.
53: 7. "He was oppressed, and he was afflicted; yet he opened not
his mouth: He is brought as a lamb to the slaughter, and as a sheep
before the shearers is dumb, so he opened not his mouth." O that in
this also the poorest Christians would imitate their Saviour, and
learn to manage an afflicted condition with a contented spirit: Let
there be no murmurs, complaints, or foolish charges of God heard
from you, whatever straits or troubles he brings you into: For,
    First, The meanest and most afflicted Christian is owner of
many rich, invaluable mercies, Eph. 1: 3. 1 Cor. 3: 33. Is sin
pardoned and God reconciled? then never open your mouths any more,
Ezek. 16: 63.
    Secondly, You have many precious promises that God will not
forsake you in your straits, Heb. 13: 5. Isa. 41: 17. And your whole
life has been a life of experiences of the faithfulness of God in
his promises. Which of you cannot say with the church, Lam. 3: 28.
"His mercies are new every morning, and great is his faithfulness."
    Thirdly, How useful and beneficial are all your afflictions to
you! they purge your sins, prevent your temptations, wean you from
the world, and turn to your salvation: and how unreasonable then
must your discontentedness at them be?
    Fourthly, The time of your relief and full deliverance from all
your troubles is at hand; the time is but short that you shall have
any concernment about these things, 1 Cor. 7: 26. If the candle of
your earthly comfort be blown out, yet remember it is but a little
while to the break of day, and then there will be no need of
candles. Besides,
    Earthly, Your lot falls by divine direction upon you, and as
bad as it is, it is much easier and sweeter than the condition of
Christ in this world was: Yet he was contented, and why not you? O
that we could learn contentment from Christ in every condition. And
thus I have laid before you some excellent patterns in the life of
Christ for your imitation.
    
    
    
    
    
    
Sermon 30.



1 John 11: 6.

He that saith he abideth in him, ought himself also so to walk, even
as he walked.



These words have been resolved into their parts, and their sense
opened in the former sermon: The observation was this:
    
    That every man is bound to the imitation of Christ, under
penalty of forfeiting his claim to Christ.
    
    In prosecution of this point, we have already shown what the
imitation of Christ imports, and what the imitable excellencies in
the life of Christ are: It now remains that I shew you in the next
place, why all that profess Christ are bound to imitate his example
and then apply the whole. Now the necessity of this imitation of
Christ will convincingly appear divers ways.
    First, From the established order of salvation, which is fixed
and unalterable: God that has appointed the end, has also
established the means and order by which men shall attain the
ultimate end. Now conformity to Christ is the established method in
which God will bring souls to glory, Rom. 8: 29. "For whom he did
foreknow, he also did predestinate, to be conformed to the image of
his Son; that he might be the first born among many brethren." The
same God who has predestinated men to salvation, has in order
thereunto, predestinated them unto conformity to Christ, and this
order of heaven is never to be reversed; we may as well hope to be
saved without Christ, as to be saved without conformity to Christ.
    Secondly, The nature of Christ-mystical requires this
conformity, and renders it indispensably necessary. Otherwise, the
body of Christ must be heterogeneous; of a nature different from the
head, and how monstrous and uncomely would this be? This would
represent Christ to the world in an image, or idea, much like that,
Dan. 2: 32, 33. "The head of fine gold, the breasts and arms of
silver, the thighs of brass, the legs of iron, the feet part of iron
and part of clay." Christ, the head, is pure and holy, and therefore
very unsuitable to sensual and earthly members. And therefore the
apostle in his description of Christ-mystical, describes the members
of Christ (as they ought to be) of the same nature and quality with
the head, 2 Cor. 15: 48, 49. "As is the heavenly, such are they also
that are heavenly; and as we have borne the image of the earthy, so
we shall also bear the image of the heavenly." That image or
resemblance of Christ, which shall be complete and perfect after the
resurrection, must be begun in its first draught here by the work of
regeneration.
    Thirdly, This resemblance and conformity to Christ appears
necessary from the communion which all believers have with Christ in
the same spirit of grace and holiness. Believers are called Christ's
fellows, or co-partners, Psal. 14: 7. from their participation with
him of the same spirit; as it is 1 Thes. 4: 8. God giveth the same
Spirit unto us, which he more plentifully poured out upon Christ.
Now where the same Spirit and principle is, there the same fruits
and operations must be produced, according to the proportions and
measures of the Spirit of grace communicated; and this reason is
farther enforced by the very design and end of God, in the infusion
of the Spirit of grace: For it is plain, from Ezek. 36: 27. that
practical holiness and obedience is the scope and design of that
infusion of the Spirit. The very innate property of the Spirit of
God in men, is to elevate their minds, and set their affections upon
heavenly things, to purge their hearts from earthly dross, and fit
them for a life of holiness and obedience. Its nature also is
assimilating, and changeth them in whom it is, into the same image
with Jesus Christ their heavenly head, 2 Cor. 3: 18.
    Fourthly, The necessity of this imitation of Christ may be
argued, from the design and end of Christ's exhibition to the world
in a body of flesh. For though we detest that doctrine of the
Socinians, which makes the exemplary life of Christ to be the whole
end of his incarnation; yet we must not run so far from an error, as
to lose a precious truth. We say, the satisfaction of his blood was
a main and principal end of his incarnation, according to Mat. 20:
28. We affirm also, that it was a great design and end of the
incarnation of Christ to set before us a pattern of holiness for our
imitation; for so speaks the apostle, 1 Pet. 2: 21. "He has left us
an example that we should follow his steps." And this example of
Christ greatly obliges believers to his imitation, Phil. 2: 5. "Let
this mind be in you, which also was in Christ Jesus.
    Fifthly, Our imitation of Christ, is one of those great
articles which every man is to subscribe, whom Christ will admit
into the number of his disciples, Luke 14: 27. "Whosoever does not
come after me, cannot be my disciple." And again, John 12: 26. "If
any man serve me, let him follow me." To this condition we have
submitted, if we be sincere believers; and therefore are strictly
bound to the imitation of Christ, not only by God's command, but by
our own consent. But if we profess interest in Christ, when our
hearts never consented to follow, and imitate his example, then are
we self-deceiving hypocrites, wholly disagreeing from the scripture
character of believers, Rom. 8: 1. They that are Christ's being here
described to be such as walk not after the flesh, but after the
Spirit. And Gal. 5: 25. "If we live in the Spirit, let us walk in
the Spirit."
    Sixthly, The honour of Christ necessitates the conformity of
Christians to his example, else what way is there left to stop
detracting mouths, and vindicate the name of Christ from the
reproaches of the world? How can wisdom be justified of her
children, except it be this way? By what means shall we cut off
occasion from such as desire occasion, but by regulating our lives
by Christ's example? The world has eyes to see what we practise, as
well as ears to hear what we profess. Therefore either shew the
consistency between your profession and practice, or you can never
hope to vindicate the name and honour of the Lord Jesus. The uses
follow; for
    1. Information.
    2. Exhortation.
    3. Consolation.
    
                     First use, for information.
    
    Inference 1. If all that profess interest in Christ, be
strictly bound to imitate his holy example; then it follows, that
religion is very unjustly charged by the world, with the scandals
and evils of them that profess it. Nothing can be more unjust and
irrational, if we consider,
    First, That the Christian religion severely censures loose and
scandalous actions in all professors, and therefore is not to be
censured for them. It is absurd to condemn religion for what itself
condemns: looseness no way flows from the principles of
Christianity, but is most opposite and contrary to it, Tit. 2: 11,
12. "For the grace of God that brings salvation, has appeared unto
all men; teaching us, that denying all ungodliness and worldly
lusts, we should live soberly, righteously, and godly, in this
present world."
    Secondly, It is an argument of the excellency of the Christian
religion, and that even wicked men themselves covet the name and
profession of it, though they only cloak and cover their evils under
it. I confess it is a great abuse of such an excellent thing as
religion is; but yet, if it had not an awful reverence paid it by
the consciences of all men, it would never be abused to this
purpose, by hypocrites, as it is.
    Thirdly, According to this reasoning, there can be no religion
in the world; for name me that religion which is not scandalised by
the practices of some that profess it. So that this practice has a
natural tendency to Atheism; and is, no doubt, encouraged by the
devil for that end.
    Inf. 2. If all men forfeit their claim to Christ, who endeavour
not to imitate him in the holiness of his life, then how small a
number of real Christians are there in the world? Indeed, if liberal
talking, without accurate walking: if common profession without holy
practices, were enough to constitute a Christian; then this quarter
of the world would abound with Christians: But if Christ owns none
for such but those that tread in the steps of his example; then the
number of real Christians is very small. The generality of men that
live under the Christian name, are such as walk after the flesh,
Rom. 8: 2. according to the course of this world, they yield their
members as instruments of unrighteousness unto sin, Rom. 6: 13.
Strict godliness is a mere bondage to them; narrow is the way, and
few there be that walk therein.
    Inf. 3. What blessed times should we all see, if true religion
did once generally obtain, and prevail in the world! How would it
humble the proud, meeken the passionate, and spiritualise those that
are carnal! The perverse world charges religion with all the tumults
and disturbances that are in it; whereas nothing in the world but
religion, advanced in the power of it, can heal and cure these
epidemical evils. O if men were once brought under the power of
religion indeed, to walk after Christ in holiness, obedience,
meekness, and self denial; no such miseries as these would be heard
of among us, Isa. 11: 8, 9. "The sucking child shall play upon the
hole of the asp, and a weaned child shall put his hand on the
cockatrice den; they shall not hurt nor destroy in all my holy
mountain: For the earth shall be full of the knowledge of the Lord,
as the waters cover the sea".
    Inf. 4. Hence it also follows, that real Christians are the
sweetest companions. It is a comfortable thing to walk with them
that walk after the example of Christ; the holiness, heavenliness,
humility, self-denial, and diligence in obedience, which was in
Christ, are, in some measure, to be found in all sincere Christians:
They shed forth the virtues of him that calleth them; the graces of
the Spirit do more or less thine forth in them: And O how endearing,
sweet, and engaging are these things! Upon this very account the
apostle invited others into the fellowship of the saints, 1 John 1:
3. "That ye might have fellowship with us, and truly our fellowship
is with the Father, and with his Son Christ Jesus." And is it not
sweet to have fellowship with them who have fellowship with Christ?
O let all your delights be in the saints, and in the excellent of
the earth, who excel in virtue, Psal. 16: 3. Yet, mistake not, there
is a great deal of difference betwixt one Christian and another, and
even the best of Christians are sanctified but in part. If there be
something sweet and engaging, there is also something bitter and
distasteful in the best of men. If there be something to draw forth
your delight and love, there is also something to exercise your pity
and patience. Yet this is most certain, that notwithstanding all
their infirmities and corruptions, they are the best and sweetest
company this world affords.
    Inf. 5. In a word, if no men's claim to Christ be warranted but
theirs that walk as he walked; how vain and groundless then are the
hopes and expectations of all unsanctified men, who walk after their
own lusts? None are snore forward to claim the privileges of
religion than those that reject the duties of it; multitudes hope to
be saved by Christ, who yet refuse to be governed by him: But such
hopes have no scripture warrant to support them; yea, they have many
scripture testimonies against them, 1 Cor. 6: 9. "Know ye not that
the unrighteous shall not inherit the kingdom of God?" Be not
deceived, neither fornicators, nor idolaters, nor adulterers, nor
effeminate, nor abusers of themselves with mankind; nor thieves, nor
covetous, nor drunkards, nor revilers, nor extortioners shall
inherit the kingdom of God." O how many thousand vain hopes are laid
in the dust, and how many thousand souls are sentenced to hell by
this one scripture!
    
                    Second use, for exhortation.
    
    If this be so, it naturally presses all the professors of
Christianity to strict godliness in their conversations, as ever
they expect benefit by Christ. O professors, be ye not conformed
unto this world, but be ye transformed by the renewing of your
minds: Set the example of Christ before you, and labour to tread in
his steps. This is the great business of religion, the main scope of
the gospel. Give me leave, therefore, closely to press it upon your
hearts, by the following motives.
    Motive 1. Christ has conformed himself to you by his abasing
incarnation; how reasonable therefore is it that you conform
yourselves to him in the way of obedience and sanctification? He
came as near to you as it was possible for him to do, strive you
therefore to come as near to Christ as it is possible for you to do:
he has taken your nature upon him, Heb. 2: 14. yea, and with your
nature he has taken your weaknesses and infirmities, Rom. 8: 3. and
not only your natures and your infirmities, but your condition also,
for he came under the law for your sakes, Gal. 4: 4. He conformed
himself to you, though he was infinitely above you; that was his
abasement: do you conform yourselves to him who are infinitely
beneath him: that will be your advancement: his conformity to you
emptied him of his glory, your conformity to him will fill you with
glory: he conformed himself to you, though you had no obligation
upon him; will you not conform yourselves to him, who lie under
infinite obligations so to do?
    Motive 2. You shall be conformed to Christ in glory; how
reasonable therefore is it you should now conform yourselves to him
in holiness? The apostle saith, 1 John 3: 2. "We shall be like unto
him, for we shall see him as he is:" Yea, not only your souls shall
be like him, but your very bodies, even those vile bodies of yours
shall be changed, that they may be fashioned like unto his glorious
body." How forcible a motive is this to bring men into conformity
with Christ here! especially, seeing our conformity to him in
holiness, is the evidence of our conformity to him in gory, Rom. 6:
5. 2 Pet. 3: 11. 0 professors, as ever you look to be with Christ in
glory hereafter, see that ye walk after Christ's example in holiness
and obedience here.
    Motive 3. The conformity of your lives to Christ, your pattern,
is your highest excellency in this world: The measure of your grace
is to be estimated by this rule. The excellency of every creature
rises higher and higher, according as it approaches still nearer and
nearer to its original; the more you resemble Christ in grace, the
more illustrious and resplendent will your conversations be in true
spiritual glory.
    Motive 4. So far as you imitate Christ in your lives, and no
farther, you will be beneficial in the world in which you live: so
far as God helps you to follow Christ, you will be helpful to bring
others to Christ, or build them up in Christ; for all men are
forbidden by the gospel to follow you one step farther than you
follow Christ, 1 Cor. 11: 1. and when you have finished your course
in this world, the remembrance of your ways will be no further sweet
to others, than they are ways of holiness and obedience to Christ, 1
Cor. 4: 17. If you walk according to the course of this world, the
world will not be the better for your walking.
    Motive 5. To walk as Christ walked, is a walk only worthy of a
Christian; this is to "walk worthy of the Lord," 1 Thess. 2: 12.
Col. 1: 10. By worthiness the apostle does not mean meritoriousness,
but comeliness, or that decorum which befits a Christian: as, when a
man walks suitably to his place and calling in the world, we say he
acts like himself; so, when you walk after Christ's pattern, you
then act like yourselves, like men of your character and profession;
this is consonant to your vocation, Eph. 4: 1. "I beseech you, that
you walk worthy of the vocation wherewith you are called. This
walking suits with your obligation, 2 Cor. 5: 15. for it is to live
unto him who died for us. This walking only suits with your
designation, Eph. 2: 1O. "For you are created in Christ Jesus unto
good works, which God has before ordained we should walk in them."
In a word, such walking as this, and such only becomes your
expectation, 2 Pet. 3: 11. "Wherefore [beloved! seeing that you look
for such things, be diligent, that ye may be found of him in peace,
without spot, and blameless."
    Motive 6. How comfortable will the close of your life be at
death, if you have walked after Christ's pattern and example in this
world: A comfortable death is ordinarily the close of a holy life,
Psal. 37: 37. "Mark the perfect man, and behold the upright; for the
end of that man is peace." A loose, careless life puts many terrible
stings into death. As worms in the body are bred of the putrefaction
there, so the worm of conscience is bred of the moral putrefaction
or corruption that is in our natures and conversations. O then be
prevailed with by all these considerations to imitate Christ in the
whole course and compass of your conversations.
    
                     Third use, for consolation.
                                  
    Lastly, I would leave a few words of support and comfort to
such as sincerely study and endeavour, according to the tendency of
their new nature to follow Christ's example, But being weak in
grace, and meeting with strong temptations, are frequently carried
aside from the holy purposes and designs of their honest, well-
meaning hearts, to the great grief and discouragement of their
souls. They heartily wish and aim at holiness, and say with David,
Psal. 119: 5. "O that my ways were directed to keep thy statutes."
They follow after exactness in holiness as Paul did, Phil. 3: 12.
"If by any means they might attain it." But finding how short they
come in all things of the rule and pattern, they mourn as he did,
Rom. 7: 24. "O wretched man that I am, who shall deliver me from the
body of this death?" Well, if this be thy case, be not discouraged,
but hearken to a few words of support and comfort, with which I
shall close this point.
                              Support I
    Such defects in obedience make no flaw in your justification:
for your justification is not built upon your obedience, but upon
Christ's, Rom. 3: 24. and how complete and defective soever you be
in yourselves, yet at the same instant, "you are complete in him
which is the head of all principality and power", Col. 2: 10. Wo to
Abraham, Moses, David, Paul, and the most eminent saints that ever
lived, if their justification and acceptation with God had depended
upon the perfection and completeness of their obedience.
                             Support II.
    Your deep troubles for the defectiveness of your obedience, do
not argue you to be less, but more sanctified than those who make no
such complaints; for these prove you to be better acquainted with
your own hearts than others are; to have a deeper hatred of sin than
others have; and to love God with a more fervent love than others
do; the most eminent saints have made the bitterest complaints upon
this account, Psal. 65: 3. Rom. 7: 23, 24.
                            Support III.
    The Lord makes excellent uses even of your infirmities and
failings to do you good, and makes them turn to your unexpected
advantage: for, by these defects he hides pride from your eyes; he
beats you off from self dependence; he makes you to admire the
riches of free grace: he makes you to long more ardently for heaven,
and entertain the sweeter thoughts of death; and does not the Lord
then make blessed fruits to spring up to you from such a bitter
root? O the blessed chemistry of heaven, to extract such mercies out
of such miseries!
                             Support IV.
    Your bewailed infirmities do not break the bond of the
everlasting covenant. The bond of the covenant holds firm,
notwithstanding your defects and weaknesses, Jer. 32: 40.
"Iniquities prevail against me," saith David, yet in the same breath
he adds, "as for our transgressions thou shalt purge them away,"
Psal. 65: 3. He is still thy God, thy Father for all this.
                             Support V.
    Though the defects of your obedience are grievous to God, yet
your deep sorrows for them are well-pleasing in his eyes, Psal. 51:
17. "The sacrifices of God are a broken spirit, a broken and a
contrite heart, O God, thou wilt not despise." Ephraim was never a
more pleasant child to his father, than when he bemoaned himself,
and smote upon his thigh, as thou dost, Jer. 31: 20. Your sins
grieve him, but your sorrows please him.
                             Support VI.
    Though God have left many defects to humble you, yet he has
given many things to comfort you. This is a comfort that the desire
of thy soul is to God, and to the remembrance of his name. This is a
comfort, that thy sins are not thy delight as once they were; but
thy shame and sorrow. This is a comfort, that thy case is not
singular; but more or less, the same complaints and sorrows are
found in all gracious souls through the world; and to say all in one
word, this is the comfort above all comforts, that the time is at
hand, in which all these defects, infirmities, and failings shall be
done away, 1 Cor. 13: 10. "When that which is perfect is come, then
that which is in part shall be done away."
    
    For ever blessed be God for Jews Christ.
    
    And thus I have finished the third general use of examination,
whereby every man is to try his interest in Christ, and discern
whether ever Christ has been effectually applied to his soul. That
which remains is
    
    An use of Lamentation.
    
    Wherein the miserable and most wretched state of all those to
whom Jesus Christ is not effectually applied, will be yet more
particularly discovered and bewailed.
    
    
    
Sermon 31.

Of the State of Spiritual Death, and the Misery thereof.

Eph. 5: 14.
    
Wherefore he saith, Awake thou that sleepest, and arise from the
dead, and Christ shall give thee light.
    
    
This scripture represents unto us the miserable and lamentable state
of the unregenerate, as being under the power of spiritual death,
which is the cause and inlet of all other miseries. From hence,
therefore, I shall make the first discovery of the woful and
wretched state of them that apply not Jesus Christ to their own
souls.
    The scope of the apostle in this context, is to press believers
to a circumspect and holy life; to "walk as children of light." This
exhortation is laid down in ver. 8. and pressed by divers arguments
in the following verses.
    First, From the tendency of holy principles, unto holy fruits
and practice, ver. 9, 10.
    Secondly, From the convincing efficacy of practical godliness,
upon the consciences of the wicked, ver. 11, 12, 13. It awes and
convinces their consciences.
    Thirdly, From the co-incidence of such a conversation with the
great design and drift of the scriptures, which is to awaken men by
regeneration, out of that spiritual sleep, or rather death, which
sin has cast them into; and this is the argument of the text,
Wherefore he saith, Awake thou that sleepest, &c. There is some
difficulty in the reference of these words. Some think it is to Isa
26: 19. "Awake and sing ye that dwell in the dust." Others to Isa.
60: 1: "Arise, shine, for thy light is come," &c. But most probably,
the words neither refer to this or that particularly, but to the
drift and scope of the whole scriptures, which were inspired and
written upon this great design, to awaken and quicken souls out of
the state of spiritual death. And in them we are to consider these
three things more distinctly and particularly.
    1. The miserable state of the unregenerate; they are asleep and
dead.
    2. Their duty; which is to "awake, and stand up from the dead.
    3. The power enabling them thereunto; "Christ shall give thee
light".
    First, The miserable state of the unregenerate, represented
under the motions of sleep and death: both expressions intending one
and the same thing, though with some variety of notion. The
Christless and unregenerate world is in a deep sleep; a spirit of
slumber, senselessness and security is fallen upon them, though they
lie exposed immediately to eternal wrath and misery, ready to drop
into hell every moment. Just as a man that is fast asleep in a house
on fire, and whilst the consuming flames are round about him, his
fancy is sporting itself in some pleasant dream; this is a very
lively resemblance of the unregenerate soul. But yet he that sleeps
has the principle of life entire in him, though his senses be bound,
and the actions of life suspended by sleep. Lest therefore we should
think it is only so with the unregenerate, the expression is
designedly varied, and those that were said to be asleep, are
positively affirmed to be dead; on purpose to inform us that it is
not a simple suspension of the acts and exercise, but a total
privation of the principle of spiritual life, which is the misery of
the unregenerate.
    Secondly, We have here the duty of the unregenerate, which is
to "awake out of sleep, and arise from the dead." This is their
great concernment; no duty in the world is of greater necessity and
importance to them. "Strive (saith Christ) to enter in at the strait
gate," Luke 13: 24. And the order of these duties is very natural.
First awake, then arise. Startling and rousing convictions make way
for spiritual life; till God awake us by convictions of our misery,
we will never be persuaded to arise and move towards Christ for
remedy and safety.
    Thirdly, But you will say, if unregenerate men be dead men, to
what purpose is it to persuade them to arise and stand up: The very
exhortation supposes some powers or ability in the unregenerate;
else in vain are they commanded to arise. This difficulty is solved
in this very text, though the duty is ours, yet the power is God's.
God commands that in his word, which only his grace can perform.
"Christ shall give thee light." Popish commentators would build the
tower of free will upon this scripture, by a very weak argument,
drawn from the order wherein these things are here expressed; which
is but a very weak foundation to build upon, for it is very usual in
scripture to put the effect before, and the cause after, as it is
here, so in Isa. 26: 19. "Awake and sing, ye that dwell in the
dust." But I will not here intangle my discourse with that
controversy; that which I aim at is plain in the words, viz.
    
    Doct. That all Christless souls are under the power of
         spiritual death; they are in the state of the dead.
    
    Multitudes of testimonies are given in scripture to this truth;
Eph. 2: 1, 5. "You has he quickened who were dead in trespasses and
sins." Col. 2: 13. "And you being dead in your sins, and the
uncircumcision of your flesh, has he quickened together with him;"
with many other places of the same importance. But the method in
which I shall discourse this point will be this;
    First, I will shew you in what sense Christless and
unregenerated men are said to be dead.
    Secondly, What the state of spiritual death is.
    Thirdly, How it appears that all unregenerate men are in this
sad state. And then apply it.
    First, In what sense are Christless and unregenerate men said
to be dead men.
    To open this, we must know there is a three-fold death, viz.
    1. Natural.
    2. Spiritual.
    3. Eternal.
    Natural death is nothing else but the privation of the
principle of natural life, or the separation of the soul from the
body, James 2: 26. "The body without the spirit is dead." Spiritual
death is the privation of the principle of spiritual life, or the
want and absence of the quickening Spirit of God in the soul; the
soul is the life of the body, and Christ is the life of the soul,
the absence of the soul is death to the body, and the absence or
want of Christ is death to the soul. Eternal death is the separation
both of body and soul from God, which is the misery of the damned.
Now christless and unregenerate men are not dead in the first sense;
they are naturally alive though they are dead while they live, nor
are they yet dead in the last sense, eternally separated from God by
an irrevocable sentence as the damned are; but they are dead in the
second sense; they are spiritually dead, whilst they are naturally
alive; and this spiritual death is the fore-runner of eternal death.
Now spiritual death is put in scripture in opposition to a two-fold
spiritual life, viz.
    1. The life of justification.
    2. The life of sanctification.
    Spiritual death in opposition to the life of justification, is
nothing else but the guilt of sin bringing us under the sentence of
death. Spiritual death, in opposition to the life of sanctification,
is the pollution or dominion of sin. In both these senses,
unregenerate men are dead men; but it is the last which I am
properly concerned to speak to in this place, and therefore,
    Secondly, Let us briefly consider what this spiritual death is,
which, as before was hinted, is the absence of the quickening Spirit
of Christ from the soul of any man. That soul is a dead soul, into
which the Spirit of Christ is not infused in the work of
regeneration; and all its works are dead works, as they are called,
Heb. 9: 14. For, look how it is with the damned, they live, they
have sense and motion, and an immortality in all these; yet because
they are eternally separated from God, the life which they live,
deserves not the name of life, but it is everywhere in scripture
stiled death: so the unregenerate, they are naturally alive; they
eat and drink, they buy and sell, they talk and laugh, they rejoice
in the creatures; and many of them spend their days in pleasures,
and then go down to the grave. This is the life they live, but yet
the scripture rather calls it death than life; because though they
live, yet it is without God in the world, Eph. 2: 12. though they
live, yet it is a life alienated from the life of God, Eph. 4: 18.
And therefore while they remain naturally alive, they are in
scripture said "to remain in death, 1 John 3: 14. and to be "dead
while they live," 1 Tim. 5: 6. And there is great reason why a
christless, an unregenerate state, should be represented in
scripture, under the notion of death; for there is nothing in nature
which more aptly represents that miserable state of the soul, than
natural death does. The dead see and discern nothing, and the
natural man perceiveth not the things that are of God. The dead have
no beauty or desirableness in them; "Bury my dead (saith Abraham)
out of my sight;" neither is there any spiritual loveliness in the
unregenerate. True it is, some of them have sweet natural qualities
and moral excellencies, which are engaging things, but these are so
many flowers, decking and adorning a dead corpse. The dead are
objects of pity and great lamentation: men used to mourn for the
dead, Eccl. 12: 5. "Man goeth to his long home, and the mourners go
about the streets." But unregenerate, and christless souls, are much
more the objects of pity and lamentation. How are all the people of
God (especially those that are naturally related to them) concerned
to mourn over them and for them, as Abraham did for Ishmael, Gen.
17: 18. "O that Ishmael might live before thee." Upon these, and
many other accounts, the state of unregeneracy is represented to us
in the notion of death.
    Thirdly, And that this is the state of all Christless and
unsanctified persons, will, undeniably, appear two ways.
    1. The causes of spiritual life have not wrought upon them.
    2. The effects and signs of spiritual life do not appear in
them, and therefore they are in the state, and under the power of
spiritual death.
    First, The causes of spiritual life have not wrought upon them.
There are two causes of spiritual life,
    1. Principal, and internal.
    2. Subordinate and external.
    The principal internal cause of spiritual life is the
regenerating Spirit of Christ, Rom. 8: 2. "The law of the Spirit of
life in Christ Jesus has made me free from the law of sin and
death." It is the Spirit, as a regenerating Spirit, that unites us
with Christ, in whom all spiritual life originally is, John 5: 25,
26. "Verily I say unto you, that the hour is coming, and now is,
when the dead shall hear the voice of the Son of God; and they that
hear shall live: For as the Father has life in himself, so has he
given to the Son to have life in himself." As all the members of the
natural body receive animation, sense, and motion, by their union
with their natural head; so all believers, the members of Christ,
receive spiritual life and animation by their union with their
natural head; so all believers, the members of Christ, receive
spiritual life and animation by their union with Christ their
mystical head, Eph. 4: 15, 16. Except we come to him, and be united
with him in the way of faith, we can have no life in us, John 5: 40.
"Ye will not come unto me that ye may have life." Now the Spirit of
God has yet exerted no regenerating, quickening influences, nor
begotten any special saving faith in natural, unsanctified men;
whatever he has done for them in the way of natural, or spiritual
common gifts, yet he has not quickened them with the life of Christ.
And as for the subordinate external means of life, viz. the
preaching of the gospel, which is the instrument of the Spirit in
this glorious work, and is therefore called, The word of life, Phil
2: 16. This word has not yet been made a regenerating, quickening
word to their souls. Possibly it has enlightened them, and convinced
them: it has wrought upon their minds in the way of common
illumination, and upon their consciences in the way of conviction,
but not upon their hearts and wills, by way of effectual conversion.
To this day the Lord has not given them an heart opening itself, in
the way of faith, to receive Jesus Christ.
    Secondly, The effects and signs of spiritual life do not appear
in them: For,
    First, They have no feeling, or sense of misery and danger. I
mean no such sense as thoroughly awakens them to apply Christ their
remedy. That spiritual judgement lies upon them, Isa. 6: 9, 10. "And
he said, Go and tell this people, Hear ye indeed, but understand
not; and see ye indeed but perceive not; make the heart of this
people fat, and their ears heavy, and shut their eyes."
    Secondly, They have no spiritual motions towards Christ, or
after things that are spiritual; all the arguments in the world
cannot persuade their wills to move one step towards Christ in the
way of faith, John 5: 30. Ye will not come unto me: Were there a
principle of spiritual life in their souls, they would move Christ-
ward and heaven-ward, John 4: 14. It would be in them a well of
water springing up into eternal life. The natural tendency of the
spiritual life is upward.
    Thirdly, The unregenerate have no appetite unto spiritual food;
they savour not things that are spiritual; they can go from week to
week, and from year to year, all their life-time, without any
communion betwixt God and their souls, and feel no need of it, nor
any hungerings or thirstings after it; which could never be, if a
principle of spiritual life were in them; for then they would
"esteem the words of Gods mouth more than their necessary food," Job
30: 12.
    Fourthly, They have no heat or spiritual warmth in their
affections to God, and things above; their hearts are as cold as a
stone to spiritual objects. They are heated, indeed, by their lusts
and affections to the world, and the things of the world: but O how
cold and dead are they towards Jesus Christ, and spiritual
excellencies.
    Fifthly, They breathe not spiritually, therefore they live not
spiritually: were there a spiritual principle of life in them, their
souls would breathe after God in spiritual prayer, Acts 9: 11.
"Behold he prayeth." The lips of the unregenerate may move in
prayer, but their hearts and desires do not breathe and pant after
God.
    Sixthly, They have no cares or fears for self-preservation,
which is always the effect of life; the poorest fly, or silliest
worm will shun danger. The wrath of God hangs over them in the
threatenings, but they tremble not at it: hell is but a little
before them; they are upon the very precipice of eternal ruin, yet
will use no means to avoid it. How plain, therefore, is this sad
case which I have undertaken here to demonstrate, viz. that
christless and unregenerate souls are dead souls? The uses follow.
    Inf. 1. If all Christless and unregenerate souls be dead souls,
then how little pleasure can Christians take in the society of the
unregenerate?
    Certainly, it is, no pleasure for the living to converse among
the dead. It was a cruel torment invented by Mezentius the tyrant,
to tie a dead and living man together. The pleasure of society
arises from the harmony of spirits, and the hopes of mutual
enjoyment in the world to come; neither of which can sweeten the
society of the godly with the wicked in this world. It is true,
there is a necessary civil converse which we must have with the
ungodly here; or else (as the apostle speaks) we must go out of the
world. There are also duties of relation which must be faithfully
and tenderly paid, even to the unregenerate: but certainly, where we
have our free election, we shall be much wanting both to our duty
and comfort, if we make not the people of God our chosen companions.
Excellently to this purpose speaks a modern author, "Art thou a
godly master? when thou takest a servant into thine house, chose for
God as well as thyself. - A godly servant is a greater blessing than
we think on: he can work, and set God on work also for his master's
good, Gen. 24: 12. O Lord God of my master Abraham, I pray thee send
me good speed this day, and shew kindness unto my master. And surely
he did his master as much service by his prayer, as by his prudence
in that journey. Holy David observed, while he was at Saul's court,
the mischief of having wicked and ungodly servants, (for with such
was that unhappy king so compassed, that David compares his court to
the profane and barbarous Heathens, among whom there was scarce more
wickedness to be found, Psal. 120: 6. "Wo is me, that I sojourn in
Meshech, that I dwell in the tents of Kedar; i.e. among those who
were as prodigiously wicked as any there); and no doubt, but this
made this gracious man, in his banishment, before he came to the
crown, (having seen the evil of a disordered house) to resolve what
he would do when God should make him the head of such a royal
family, Psal. 101 : 7. "He that worketh deceit, shall not dwell
within my house; he that telleth lies shall not tarry in my sight.
    Art thou godly? shew thyself so in the choice of husband or
wife. I am sure, if some, (and those godly ones) could bring no
other testimonials for their godliness than the care they have taken
in this particular, it might justly be called into question both by
themselves and others. There is no one thing that gracious persons,
(even those recorded in scripture as well as others, have sheen
their weakness, yea, given offence and scandal more in, than in this
particular, The sons of God saw that the daughters of men were fair,
Gen. 6: 2. One would have thought that the sons of God should have
looked for grace in the heart, rather than beauty in the face; but
we see, even they sometimes turn in at the fairest sign, without
much enquiring what grace is to be found dwelling within." Look to
the rule, O Christian, if thou wilt keep the power of holiness, that
is clear as the sun-beam written in the scripture, "Be not unequally
yoked together with unbelievers," 2 Cor. 6: 14.
    Inf. 2. How great and wholly supernatural, marvellous, and
wonderful is that change which regeneration makes upon the soul of
men! It is a change from death to life, Luke 15: 24. "This my son
was dead and is alive again." Regeneration is life from the dead;
the most excellent life from the most terrible death: it is the life
of God re-inspired into a soul alienated from it by the power of
sin, Eph. 4: 11. There are two stupendous changes made upon the
souls of men, which justly challenge the highest admiration, viz.
    1. That from sin to grace.
    2. From grace to glory.
    The change from grace to glory is acknowledged by all, and that
justly, to be a wonderful change for God to take a poor creature out
of the society of sinful men; yea, from under the burden of many
sinful infirmities, which made him groan from day to day in this
world; and in a moment to make him a complete and perfect soul,
shining in the beauties of holiness, and filling him as a vessel of
glory, with the unspeakable and inconceivable joys of his presence;
to turn his groanings into triumphs, his fightings into songs of
praise; this, I say, is marvellous, and yet the former change from
sin to grace is no way inferior to it, nay, in some respect, beyond
it; for the change which glory makes upon the regenerate is but a
gradual change, but the change which regeneration makes upon the
ungodly is a specifical change. Great and admirable is this work of
God; and let it for ever be marvellous in our eyes.
    Inf. 3. If unregenerate souls be dead souls, what a fatal
stroke does death give to the bodies of all unregenerate men? A soul
dead in sin, and a body dead by virtue of the curse for sin, and
both soul and body remaining for ever under the power of eternal
death, is so full and perfect a misery, as that nothing can be added
to make it more miserable: It is the comfort of a Christian that he
can say when death comes, Non omnis moriar, I shall not wholly die;
there is a life I live which death cannot touch, Rom. 8: 18. "The
body is dead, because of sin; but the spirit is life because of
righteousness." Blessed and holy is he that has part in the first
resurrection: on such the second death has no power. As death takes
the believer from amidst many sorrows and troubles, and brings him
to the vision of God, to the general assembly of all the perfected
saints, to a state of complete freedom and full satisfaction; so it
drags the unregenerate from all his sensitive delights, and
comforts, to the place of torment: it buries the dead soul out of
the presence of God for ever: it is the king of terrors, a serpent
with a deadly sting to every man that is out of Christ.
    Inf. 4. If every unregenerate soul be a dead soul, how sad is
the case of hypocrites and temporary believers, who are twice dead?
These are those cursed trees, of which the apostle Jude speaks, Jude
ver: 12. "Trees whose fruit withereth, without fruit, twice dead,
plucked up by the roots." The apostle alludes unto dying trees,
trees that are dying the first time in the spring, then they fade,
decay, and cast off their leaves, when other trees are fragrant and
flourishing: but from this first death they are sometimes recovered,
by pruning, dressing, or watering the roots; but if in autumn, they
decay again, which is the critical and climacterical times of trees,
to discover whether their disease be mortal or not; if then they
wither and decay the second time, the fault is ab intra, the root is
rotten, there is no hope of it; the husbandmen bestows no more
labour about it, except it be to root it up for fuel to the fire.
Just thus stands the case with false and hypocritical professors,
who though they were still under the power of spiritual death, yet
in the beginning of their profession, they seemed to be alive; they
showed the world the fragrant leaves of a fair profession, many
hopeful buddings of affection towards spiritual things were seen in
them, but wanting a root of regeneration, they quickly began to
wither and cast their untimely fruit. However, by the help of
ordinances, or some rousing and awakening providences, they seem to
recover themselves again; but all will not do, the fault is ab
intra, from the want of a good root, and therefore, at last, they
who were always once dead, for want of a principle of regeneration,
are now become twice dead, by the withering and decay of their vain
profession. Such trees are prepared for the severest flames in hell,
Matth. 24: 51. their portion is the saddest portion allotted for any
of the sons of death. Therefore the apostle Peter tells us, 2 Pet.
2: 20, 21. "For if, after they have escaped the pollutions of the
world, through the knowledge of the Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ,
they are again entangled therein, and overcome; the latter end is
worse with them than the beginning. For it had been better for them
not to have known the way of righteousness, than after they have
known it, to turn from the holy commandment delivered unto them."
Double measures of wrath seem to be prepared for them that die this
double death.
    Inf. 5. If this be so, then unregenerate persons deserve the
greatest lamentations. And were this truth heartily believed, we
could not but mourn over them, with the most tender compassion and
hearty sorrow. If our husbands, wives, or children are dying a
natural death, how are our hearts rent in pieces with pity and
sorrow for them? What cries, tears, and wringing of hands, discover
the deep sense we have of their misery! O Christians, is all the
love you have for your relations spent upon their bodies? Are their
souls of no value in your eyes? Is spiritual death no misery? Does
it not deserve a tear? The Lord open your eyes, and duly affect your
hearts with spiritual death and soul miseries.
    Consider, my friends, and let it move your bowels, (if there be
bowels of affection in you,) whilst they remain spiritually dead,
they are useless and wholly unserviceable unto God in the world, as
to any special and acceptable service unto him, 2 Tim. 2: 21. they
are incapable of all spiritual comforts from God; they cannot taste
the least sweetness in Christ, in duties, or in promises, Rom. 8: 6.
they have no beauty in their souls, how comely soever their bodies
are; it is grace, and nothing but grace that beautifies the inner
man, Ezek. 16: 6, 7. The dead have neither comfort nor beauty in
them: they have no hope to be with God in glory; for the life of
glory is begun in grace, Phil. 1: 6. their graves must be shortly
made, to be buried out of the sight of God for ever in the lowest
hell, the pit digged by justice for all that are spiritually dead:
the dead must be buried. Can such considerations as these draw no
pity from your souls, nor excite your endeavours for their
regeneration? then it is to be feared your souls are dead as well as
theirs. O pity them, pity them, and pray for them; in this case
only, prayers for the dead are our duty: who knows but at the last,
God may hear your cries, and you may say with comfort, as he did,
"This my son was dead, but is alive; was lost, but is found; and
they began to be merry," Luke 15: 24.
    
    
    
    
    
Sermon 32.


The Condemnation of Unbelievers, illustrated and applied.
    
    
John 3: 18.
    
-- But he that believeth not is condemned already, because he has
not believed in the name of the only begotten Son, of God.
    

    Christ having discoursed with Nicodemus in the beginning of
this chapter, about the necessity of regeneration, proceeds to shew
in this following discourse, the reason and ground why regeneration
and faith are so indispensably necessary, viz. because there is no
other way to set men free from the curse and condemnation of the
law. The curse of the law, like the fiery serpents in the
wilderness, has smitten every sinner with a deadly stroke and sting,
for which there is no cure but Christ lifted up in the gospel, "as
Moses lifted up the serpent in the wilderness," ver. 14. Neither
does Christ cure any but those that, believingly, apply him to their
own souls. The result and conclusion of all you have in my text; "He
that believeth in him is not condemned; but he that believeth not is
condemned already," &c. In this clause which I have pitched upon we
find these three parts;
    1. The sin threatened, viz. Unbelief.
    2. The punishment inflicted, viz. Condemnation.
    3. The immediate relation of the one to the other; "he is
condemned already."
    First, Let us take into consideration the sin which is here
threatened, viz. unbelief; the neglecting or refusing of an exalted
and offered Jesus. Unbelief is twofold, viz. negative or positive.
Negative unbelief is the sin of the Heathens, who never had the
gospel among them, nor the offers of Christ made to them; these
cannot believe on him of whom they have not heard. Positive unbelief
is the sin of men and women under the gospel, to whom Christ is
actually opened and offered by the preaching of the gospel; but they
make light of it, and neglect the great salvation: receive not
Christ into their hearts, nor consent to the severe and self-denying
terms upon which he is offered. This is the sin threatened.
    Secondly, The punishment inflicted, and that is condemnation: a
word of deep and dreadful signification; appearing, in this text as
the hand writing upon the plaister of the wall unto Belteshazzar,
Dan. 5: 5. a word whose deep sense and emphasis are fully understood
in hell. Condemnation is the judgement, or sentence of God,
condemning a man to bear the punishment of his eternal wrath for
sin; the most terrible of all sentences.
    Thirdly, The immediate relation or respect this punishment has
to that sin of unbelief. The unbeliever is condemned already, i.e.
he is virtually condemned by the law of God; his mittimus is already
made for hell; he is condemned, as a sinner, by the breach of the
first covenant; but that condemnation had never been his ruin except
it had been ratified by the sentence of God, condemning him, as an
unbeliever, for slighting and rejecting the grace offered in the
second covenant. So that the believer is already virtually condemned
by both, as he is a sinner, and as he is an unbeliever; as he has
transgressed the law, and as he has refused the gospel; as he has
contracted sin the moral disease, and refused Christ the only
effectual remedy. He is virtually condemned, and will be,
sententially, condemned in the judgement of the great day. Unbelief
is his great sin, and condemnation is his great misery. Hence the
observation will be this:
    
    Doct. That all unbelievers are presently, and immediately under
         the just and dreadful sentence of Godly condemnation. John
         12: 48. "He that rejecteth me, and receiveth not my words,
         has one that judgeth him. The word that I have spoken, the
         same shall judge him in the last day." John 3: 86. "He that
         believeth not the Son shall not see life, but the wrath of
         God abideth on him."
    
    Three things are to be opened in the doctrinal part of this
point:
    1. What unbelief, or the not receiving of Jesus Christ is.
    2. What condemnation, the punishment of this sin, is.
    3. Why this punishment unavoidably follows that sin.
    First, What the sin of unbelief, or not receiving Christ, is.
By unbelief, we are not here to understand the relics or remains of
that sin in the people of God, which is mixed with their imperfect
faith; for there is some unbelief still mingled with faith, in the
best of hearts: He that can say, Lord, I believe, has cause enough
to cry out with tears, help thou my unbelief. However, this does not
bring the soul under condemnation, or into the state of wrath; the
word condemns this unbelief in them, but does not condemn their
persons for this unbelief: But the unbelief here spoken of, is the
neglecting or refusing to take Christ as he is offered in the
gospel, and so is exclusive of the saving act and effects of faith.
    First, It is exclusive of the saving act of faith, which (as
has been already declared) is the due receiving of Christ offered in
the gospel, consenting to take him upon his own terms. This, the
unbeliever will by no means be persuaded to do; he will be persuaded
to accept the promises of Christ, but not to accept the person of
Christ: He is willing to accept Christ in part, a divided Christ,
but not to accept Christ entirely, in all his offices. He will
accept the righteousness of Christ in conjunction with his own
righteousness; but he will not accept the righteousness of Christ as
the sole matter of his justification, exclusive of his own
righteousness: he is willing to wear the crown of Christ, but cannot
be persuaded to bear the cross of Christ. Thus Christ and
unbelievers part upon terms; God will come down no lower, and the
unbeliever will come up no higher; God will not alter his terms, and
the unbeliever will not alter his resolution; and so Christ is
refused, salvation neglected, and in effect the unbeliever chuseth
rather to be damned, than to comply with the severe terms of self-
denial, mortification, and bearing the cross of Christ. Thus it
excludes the saving act of faith.
    Secondly, It is exclusive of the saving fruits and effects of
faith. Faith produces love to God, but the unbeliever does not truly
love him; "But I know you (saith Christ to unbelievers) that the
love of God is not in you," John 5: 42. Faith purifies the heart of
a believer, but the hearts of unbelievers are full of all impurity.
The believer overcomes the world, the world overcomes the
unbeliever: Faith makes the cross of Christ sweet and easy to the
believer, unbelief makes Christ, because of the cross, bitter and
distasteful to the unbeliever. Thus unbelief excludes both the
saving act and fruits of faith, and consequently bars the soul from
the saving benefits and privileges of faith, viz. justification and
peace with God.
    Secondly, Next let us consider the punishment of this sin,
which is condemnation. Condemnation, in the general, is the sentence
of a judge awarding a mulct, or penalty to be inflicted upon the
guilty person. There is a twofold condemnation.
    1. Respectu culpae, In respect of the fault.
    2. Respectu poenae, In respect of the punishment.
    First, Condemnation, with respect to the fault, is the casting
of the person as guilty of the crime charged upon him; condemnation,
with respect to the punishment, is the sentencing of the convicted
offender to undergo such a punishment for such a fault; to bear a
penal for a moral evil. This forensic word, condemnation, is here
applied unto the case of a guilty sinner cast at the bar of God,
where the fact is clearly proved, and the punishment righteously
awarded. Thou art an unbeliever, for this sin thou shalt die
eternally. Condemnation with respect to the fault, stands opposed to
justification, Rom. 5: 16. Condemnation with respect to the
punishment, stands opposed to salvation, Mark 16: 16. More
particularly,
    First, Condemnation is the sentence of God, the great and
terrible God, the omniscient, omnipotent, supreme, and impartial
Judge, at whose bar the guilty sinner stands. It is the law of God
that condemns him now: he has one that judgeth him, a great and
terrible one too. It is a dreadful thing to be condemned at man's
bar; but the courts of human judicature, how awful and solemn soever
they are, are but trifles to this court of heaven, and conscience,
wherein the unbeliever is arraigned and condemned.
    Secondly, It is the sentence of God adjudging the unbeliever to
eternal death, than which, nothing is more terrible. What is a
prison to hell? What is a scaffold and an ax, to "go ye cursed into
everlasting fire?" What is a gallows and a halter, to everlasting
burnings?
    Thirdly, Condemnation is the final sentence of God, the supreme
judge, from whose bar and judgement there lies no appeal for the
unbeliever, but execution certainly follows condemnation, Luke 19:
27. If man condemn, God may justify and save; but if God condemn, no
man can save or deliver. If the law cast a man, as a sinner, the
gospel may save him as a believer: but if the gospel cast him as an
unbeliever, a man that finally rejects Jesus Christ, whom it offers
to him, all the world cannot save that man. O then what a dreadful
word is condemnation! All the evils and miseries of this life are
nothing to it. Put all afflictions, calamities, sufferings, and
miseries of this world into one scale, and this sentence of God into
the other, and they will be all lighter than a feather.
    Thirdly, In the next place, I shall shew you that this
punishment, viz. condemnation, must unavoidably follow that sin of
unbelief. So many unbelieving persons as be in the world, so many
condemned persons there are in the world; and this will appear two
ways.
    1. By considering what unbelief excludes a man from.
    2. By considering what unbelief includes a man under.
    First, Let us consider what unbelief excludes a man from; and
it will be found, that it excludes him from all that may help and
save him. For,
    First, It excludes him from the pardon of sin, John 8: 21. "If
ye believe not that I am he, ye shall die in your sins." Now he that
dies under the guilt of all his sins, must needs die in a state of
wrath and condemnation for ever. "For the wages of sin is death,"
Rom. 6: 23. if a man be saved without a pardon, then may the
unbeliever hope to be saved.
    Secondly, Unbelief excludes a man from all the saving benefits
that come by the sacrifice or death of Christ. For if faith be the
only instrument that applies and brings home to the soul the
benefits of the blood of Christ, as unquestionably it is, then
unbelief must of necessity exclude a man from all those benefits,
and consequently leave him in the state of death and condemnation.
Faith is the applying cause, the instrument by which we receive the
special saving benefit of the blood of Christ, Rom. 5: 25. "Whom God
has set forth to be a propitiation through faith in his blood." Eph.
2: 8. "By grace are ye saved through faith." So then if the
unbeliever be acquitted and saved, it must be without the benefit of
Christ's death and sacrifice, which is utterly impossible.
    Thirdly, Unbelief excludes a man from the saving efficacy and
operation of the gospel, by shutting up the heart against it, and
crossing the main scope and drift of it. Which is to bring up men to
the terms of salvation. To persuade them to believe, this is its
great design, the scope of all its commands, 1 John 3: 23. Mark 1:
14, 15. John 12: 36. It is the scope of all its promises; they are
written to encourage men to believe, John 6: 35, 37. So then if the
unbeliever escape condemnation, it must be in a way unknown to us by
the gospel; yea, contrary to the established order therein. For the
unbeliever obeyeth not the great command of the gospel, 1 John 3:
28. Nor is he under any one saving promise of it, Gal. 3: 14, 22.
    Fourthly, Unbelief excludes a man from union with Christ, faith
being the bond of that union, Eph. 3: 17. The unbeliever therefore
may as reasonably expect to be saved without Christ, as to be saved
without faith. Thus you see what unbelief excludes a man from.
    Secondly, Let us next see what guilt and misery unbelief
includes men under, and certainly it will be found to be the
greatest guilt and misery in the world. For,
    First, It is a sin which reflects the greatest dishonour upon
God, 1 John 6: 10. "He that believeth on the Son of God, has the
witness in himself. He that believeth not God, has made him a liar;
because he believeth not the record that God gave of his Son."
    Secondly, Unbelief makes a man guilty of the vilest contempt of
Christ, and the whole design of redemption managed by him. All the
glorious attributes of God were finally manifested in the work of
redemption by Christ; therefore the apostle calls him "the wisdom of
God, and the power of God," 1 Cor. 1: 23, 24. But what does the
careless neglect, and wilful rejection of Christ speak, but the
weakness and folly of that design of redemption by him.
    Thirdly, Unbelief includes in it the sorest spiritual judgement
that is or can be inflicted in this world upon the soul of man; even
spiritual blindness, and the fatal darkening of the understanding by
Satan, 2 Cor. 4: 4. of which more hereafter.
    Fourthly, Unbelief includes a man under the curse, and shuts
him up under all the threatenings that are written in the book of
God; amongst which, that is an express and terrible one, Mark 16:
10. "He that believes not, shall be damned." So that nothing can be
more evident than this, that condemnation necessarily follows
unbelief. This sin and that punishment are fastened together with
chains of adamant. The uses follow:
    Inf. 1. If this be so, then how great a number of persons are
visibly in the state of condemnation! So many unbelievers, so many
condemned men and women. That is a sad complaint of the prophet, Isa
53: 1: "Who has believed our report, and to whom is the arm of the
Lord revealed?" Many there be that talk of faith, and many that
profess faith; but they only talk of and profess it: There are but
few in the world unto whom the arm of the Lord has been revealed, in
the work of faith with power. It is put among the great mysteries
and wonders of the world, 1 Tim. 3: 16. That Christ is believed on
in the world. O what a great and terrible day will the day of
Christ's coming to judgement be, when so many millions of
unbelievers shall be brought to his tribunal to be solemnly
sentenced! They are (as my text speaks) condemned already; but then
that dreadful sentence will be solemnly pronounced by Jesus Christ,
whom they have despised and rejected: Then shall that scripture be
fulfilled, Luke 19: 27. "These mine enemies that would not that I
should reign over them, bring them hither, and slay them before me.
    Inf. 2. Hence be informed how great a mercy the least measure
of saving faith is: for the least measure of true faith unites the
soul to Jesus Christ; and then "there is no condemnation to them
that are in Christ Jesus, Rom. 8: 1. Not one sentence of God against
them. So Acts 13: 39. "By him all that believe are justified from
all things." The weakest believer is as free from condemnation as
the strongest; the righteousness of Christ comes upon all believers
without any difference. Rom. 3: 22. "Even the righteousness of God,
which is by faith of Christ Jesus unto all, and upon all them that
believe; for there is no difference." It is not imputed, as it is in
inherent righteousness; one man has more holiness than another: The
faith that receives the righteousness of Christ may be different in
degrees of strength; but the received righteousness is equal upon
all believers: A piece of gold is as much worth in the hand of a
child, as it is in the hand of a man. O the exceeding preciousness
of saving faith!
    Inf. 3. How dreadful a sin is the sin of unbelief, which brings
men under the condemnation of the great God. No sin startles less,
or damns surer: It is a sin that does not affright the conscience as
some other sins do, but it kills the soul more certainly than any of
those sins could do: For, indeed, other sins could not damn us, were
it not for unbelief, which fixes the guilt of them all upon our
persons. This is the condemnation. Unbelief is the sin of sins, and
when the Spirit comes to convince men of sin, he begins with this as
the capital sin, John 16: 9. But more particularly,
    First, Estimate the evil of unbelief from its object. It is the
slighting and refusing of the most excellent and wonderful person in
heaven or earth: the vision of Christ by faith is the joy of saints
upon earth: the vision of Christ above is the happiness of saints in
heaven. It is a despising of him who is altogether lovely in
himself, who has loved us and given himself for us.
    It is a rejecting of the only Mediator betwixt God and man
after the rejecting of whom there remains no sacrifice for sin.
    Secondly, Let the evil of unbelief be valued by the offer of
Christ to our souls in the gospel: It is one part of the great
mystery of godliness that Christ should be preached to the Gentiles,
1 Tim. 3: 16. That the word of this salvation should be sent to us,
Acts 13: 26. A mercy denied to the fallen angels, and the greatest
art of mankind, which aggravates the evil of this sin beyond all
imagination. So that in refusing or neglecting Jesus Christ are
found vile ingratitude, highest contempt of the grace and wisdom of
God; and in the event, the loss of the only season and opportunity
of salvation, which is never more to be recovered to all eternity.
    Inf. 4. If this be the case of all unbelievers, it is not to be
admired, that souls under the first convictions of their miserable
condition, are plunged into such deep distresses of spirit. It is
said of them, Acts 2: 27. "That they were pricked at the heart, and
cried out, men and brethren, what shall we do?" And so the jailer,
"He came in trembling and astonished, and said, Sirs, what must I do
to be saved?" Certainly, if souls apprehend themselves under the
condemnation and sentence of the great God in all tears and
trembling, their weary days and restless nights are not without just
cause and reason. Those that never saw their own miserable condition
by the light of a clear and full conviction, may wonder to see
others so deeply distressed in spirit. They may misjudge the case,
and call it melancholy or madness: but spiritual troubles do not
exceed the cause and ground of them, let them be as deep and as
great as they will: And, indeed, it is one of the great mysteries of
grace and providence; a thing much unknown to men, how such poor
souls are supported from day to day under such fears and sorrows as
are able, in a few hours, to break the stoutest spirit in the world.
Luther was a man of great natural courage; and yet, when God let in
spiritual troubles upon his soul, it is noted of him, ut nec vox,
nec calor, nec sanguis superesset; he had neither voice, nor heat,
nor blood appearing in him.
    Inf. 5. How groundless and irrational is the mirth and jollity
of all carnal and unregenerate men? They feast in their prison, and
dance in their fetters. O the madness that is in the hearts of men!
If men did but see their mittimus made for hell, or believe they are
condemned already, it were impossible for them to live at that rate
of vanity they do: And is their condition less dangerous because it
is not understood? Surely no; but much snore dangerous for that, O
poor sinners, you have found out an effectual way to prevent your
present troubles; it were well if you could find out a way to
prevent your eternal misery: But it is easier for a man to stifle
conviction, than prevent damnation. Your mirth has a twofold
mischief in it, it prevents repentance, and increases your future
torment. O what a hell will your hell be; who drop into it, out of
all the sensitive and sinful pleasures of this world! If ever man
may say of mirth, that it is mad; and of laughter, what does it! He
may say so in this case.
    Inf. 6. Lastly, what cause have they to rejoice, admire, and
praise the Lord to eternity, who have a well-grounded confidence
that they are freed from God's condemnation? "O give thanks to the
Father, who has delivered you from the power of darkness, and
translated you into the kingdom of his dear Son," Col. 1: 13.
Rejoice, and be exceeding glad; for if you be freed from
condemnation, you are out of Satan's power, he has no more any
dominion over you. The power of Satan over men comes in by virtue of
their condemnation, as the power of the jailer, or executioner, over
the bodies of condemned prisoners does, Heb. 2: 14. If you be freed
from condemnation, the sting of death shall never touch you; for the
sting of death smites the souls of men with a deadly stroke, only by
virtue of God's condemnatory sentence, 1 Cor. 15: 55, 56. "The sting
of death is sin, and the strength of sin is the law." If you be
freed from condemnation now, you shall stand with comfort and
boldness at the judgement seat of Christ in the great day; and
verily in this thing is the love of God perfected, 1 John 4: 17. O
it is a privilege in which the grace, mercy, and love of God shine
forth as clearly as the sun when it shineth in its full strength.
And certainly you will find cause to lie at the feet of God,
astonished and overwhelmed with the sense of this mercy, when you
shall find yourselves free from the condemnation of God, whilst many
others, as good as you were, are still under condemnation. Yea,
yourselves freed, and many of your superiors in the world still
under the curse, 1 Cor. 1: 26. Yea, yourselves freed, and others
that sat under the same means of grace, and had the same external
advantages as you had, still in chains, 2 Cor. 2: 16. O brethren!
This is a marvellous deliverance; look on it which way you will,
your ransom is paid, and not a penny of it by you; it cost you
nothing to procure your pardon; your pardon is full, and not one sin
excepted out of it that you ever committed. You are freed, and Jesus
Christ condemned in your stead to procure your discharge; your
pardon is sealed in his blood, and that for ever; so that you shall
never any more cone into condemnation. "He that heareth my word, and
believeth on him that sent me, has everlasting life, and shall not
come into condemnation, but is passed from death to life," John 5:
24.
    Let them that are so delivered, spend their days on earth in
praise and cheerful obedience; and, when they die, let them not
shrink away from death, nor be afraid to take it by the cold hand,
it can do them no harm. Yea, let them close their dying lips with -
Thanks be to God for Jesus Christ.
    
    
    
SERMON 33.
    
Of the Aggravation of the Sin, and Punishment of Unbelief under the
light of the Gospel.

John 3: 19.
    
And this is the condemnation, that light is come into the world, and
men loved darkness rather than light, because their deeds were evil.
    
    
Out of the foregoing verse it was fully proved in our last sermon,
that all christless and unregenerate men are no better than dead
men, being condemned already. Our Saviour proceeds in this verse to
aggravate the misery of those that refuse and despise him; yet
farther, and to let them know, that those who remain in unbelief and
the state of unregeneracy, must expect some greater and sorer wrath
than other men; not only a simple condemnation, but an aggravated
and peculiar condemnation, "This is the condemnation, that light is
come," &c.
    In the words we find these three parts.
    1. The aggravation of sin by the abuse of gospel-light, "Light
is come," &c.
    2. The aggravation of misery, in proportion to that abuse of
light, "This is the condemnation."
    3. The cause and occasion, drawing men into this sin and misery
"Because their deeds were evil."
    First, We have here the aggravation of sin by the abuse of
gospel light, "Light is come." By light we are to understand the
knowledge, discovery, and manifestation of Christ, and redemption by
him in the gospel. He is the Sun of righteousness that arises in the
gospel upon the nations, Mal 4: 1. When he came in the flesh, then
did "the day spring from on high visit us," Luke 1: 78. And the
light may be said to come two ways; either,
    First, In the means by which it is conveyed to us; or,
Secondly, in the efficacy of it upon our minds, when it actually
shines in our souls. Light may come among a people in the means, and
yet they actually remain in darkness all the while. As it is in
nature; the sun may be up and a very glorious morning far advanced,
whilst many thousands are drowning upon their beds with their
curtains drawn about them. Light in the means, we may call potential
light. Light in the mind, we may call actual light. It is but seldom
that light comes in the means, and continues long among men, but
some light must needs actually shine into their souls also; but this
actual light is twofold.
    1. Common, and intellectual only, to conviction; or,
    2. Special and efficacious light, bringing the soul to Christ
by real conversion, called, in 1 Cor. 4: 6. - God "shining into the
heart."
    Wherever light comes, in this last sense, it is impossible that
such men should prefer darkness before it: But it may come in the
means, yea, it may actually shine into the consciences of men by
those means, and convince them of their sins, and yet men may hate
it, and chuse darkness rather than light. And this is the sense of
this place, light was come in the gospel-dispensation among them,
yea, it had shined into many of their consciences, galled and
reproved them for sin, but they hated it, and had rather be without
such a troublesome inmate. In a word, by the coming of light, we are
here to understand a more clear and open manifestation of Christ by
the gospel than ever was made to the world before: For we are not to
think that there was no light in the world till Christ came, and the
gospel was published in the world by the apostles' ministry. For
Abraham saw Christ's day, John 8: 56. and all the faithful before
Christ saw the promises, i.e. their accomplishment in Christ, afar
off, Heb. 11: 13. For it was with Christ, the Sun of righteousness,
as it is with the natural sun, "which illuminates the hemisphere
before it actually rises or shows its body above the horizon;" but
when it rises and shews itself, the light is much clearer; so it was
in this case. The greater therefore was their sin that rebelled
against it, and preferred darkness to light; this was their sin,
with its fearful aggravation.
    Secondly, In a most just proportion to this sin, we have here
the aggravated condemnation of them who sinned against such clear
gospel-light: "This is the condemnation," this is the judgement of
all judgements, the greatest sad most intolerable judgement; a
severer sentence of condemnation than ever did pass against any
others that sinned in the times of ignorance and darkness: they that
live and die impenitent and unregenerate, how few soever the means
of salvation have been which they have enjoyed, must be condemned:
yea, the Pagan world, who have no more but natural light to help
them, will be condemned by that light; but "this is the
condemnation," i.e. such sinning as this is the cause of the
greatest condemnation and sorest punishment, as it is called, Heb.
10: 19.
    Thirdly, The cause and occasion, drawing men into this sin and
misery, "because their deeds are evil," i.e. the convincing fight of
truth put a great deal of vigour and activity into their
consciences, which they could not endure. The accusations and
condemnations of conscience are very irksome and troublesome things
to men: To avoid this, They are willing to be ignorant. An
enlightened conscience gives an interruption also unto men in their
sinful courses and pleasures; they cannot sin at so easy a rate in
the light as they did in darkness; and this made them hate the light
as a very troublesome thing to them. Thus you see what was the sin,
what the punishment, and what the cause of both.
    
                      Hence the Observation is,
    Doct. That the greater and clearer the light is under which the
         impenitent and unregenerate do live in this world, by so
         much greater and heavier will their condemnation and misery
         be in the world to come.
    
    Mat. 11: 21, 22. "Wo unto thee Chorazin, wo unto thee
Bethsaida; for if the mighty works which were done in you, had been
done in Tyre and Sidon, they would have repented long ago in
sackcloth and ashes: But I say unto you, it shall be more tolerable
for Tyre and Sidon at the day of judgement than for you". Two things
require explication in the doctrinal part of this point, viz.
    1. How light puts a deeper guilt and aggravation into sin.
    2. Why sin so aggravated, makes men liable to greater
condemnation.
    First, We will enquire into the grounds and reasons why greater
lights greatens and aggravates, proportionately, the sins that are
committed under it, and it will appear that it does so, upon divers
accounts.
    First, All light (especially evangelical light) is a great
preservative from sin, and an excellent means to prevent it: It is
the property of light to inform the judgement, and rectify the
mistakes and errors of it; and thereby to give check to the
affections in the pursuit of sinful designs and courses: It is a
plain case, that many men would never do as they do, if their
understandings were better informed. 1 Cor. 2: 8. "Which none of the
princes of the world knew; for had they known it, they would not
have crucified the Lord of glory." It was want of light and better
information which drew them under that horrid and unparalleled
guilt. Our Saviour also supposes, in the place before cited, that if
Tyre and Sidon had enjoyed the same light and means of grace that
Chorazin and Bethsaida did, they would never have been so sinful as
they were: light discovers danger, and thereby overawes and stops
men from proceeding farther in those parts and courses that will run
them into it.
    Secondly, Sinning under and against the light, supposes and
involves in it a greater contempt and despite of God's authority,
than sinning in ignorance and darkness does. Every man that breaks
the law of God, does not in the same degree, despise and slight the
authority of the law maker: But when a man has light to discover the
evil and danger of what he does, and yet will dare to do it, what is
this but the treading of God's authority under foot? The casting of
his word behind our backs? Wilful sinning is a despiteful sinning
against God, Heb. 10: 26. it argues a low and vile esteem of the law
of God, which is reverend and holy; and by so much the more it
maketh sin to be exceeding sinful.
    Thirdly, Sinning under and against the light, admits not of
those excuses and pleas to extenuate the offence, which sins of pure
ignorance do. Those that live without the sound of the gospel may
say, Lord, we never heard of Christ, and the great redemption
wrought by him; if we had, we would never have lived and acted as we
did: and therefore Christ saith, John 15: 22. "If I had not come and
spoken unto them, they had not had sin, but now they have no cloak
for their sin."
    The meaning is, that if the gospel light had not shined among
them, their sin had not been of that deep guilt that now it is: For
now it is foul and heinous, by reason of the light under and against
which it is committed, that they have no pretence or excuse to
extenuate or mitigate it.
    Fourthly, Evangelical light is a very rich favour and mercy of
God to men; one of the choicest gifts bestowed upon the nations of
the world; and therefore it is said, Psal. 147: 19, 20. "He sheweth
his word unto Jacob, and his statutes and his judgements unto
Israel: He has not dealt so with any nation; and as for his
judgements they have not known them." Other nations have corn and
wine, gold and silver, abundance of earthly delights and pleasures;
but they have not a beam of heavenly light shining upon them. We may
account this mercy small; but God who is best able to value the
worth of it, accounts it great, Hos. 8: 12. "I have written unto
them the great things of my law." Christ reckoned Capernaum to be
exalted unto heaven by the ministry of the gospel in that place. Now
the greater the mercy is which the light if truth brings with it, by
so much the more horrid and heinous must the abusing and despising
of it be.
    Fifthly, Sinning against the light, argues a love to sin, as
sin; to naked sin, without any disguise or cover. It is nothing near
so bad for a man through a mistake of judgement, when he thinks that
to be lawful, which is indeed sinful; he does not now close with
sin, as sin, but he either closes with it as his duty, or at least
his liberty. It is hard for Satan to persuade many men to embrace a
naked sin; and therefore he clothes it in the habit of a duty, or
liberty, and thereby deceives and draws men to the commission of it.
But if a man have light shining into his conscience, and convincing
him that the way he is in, is the way of sin, quite contrary to the
revealed will of God, stripping the sin naked before the eye of his
conscience, so that he has no cover or excuse, and yet will persist
in it; this, I say, argues a soul to be in love with sin, as sin.
Now, as for a man to love grace as grace is a solid argument to
prove the truth of his grace; so on the contrary for a man to love
sin as sin, does not only argue him to be in the state of sin, but
to be in the fore-front, and amongst the highest rank of sinners.
    Sixthly, The greater and clearer the light is, under and
against which men continue in sin, the more must the consciences of
such sinners be supposed to be wasted and violated by such a way of
sinning: For this is a sure rule, that "the greatest violation of
conscience, is the greatest sin." Conscience is a noble and tender
part of the soul of man: it is in the soul, as the eye in the body,
very sensible of the least injury; and a wound in the conscience is
like a blow in the eye: But nothing gives a greater blow to
conscience, nothing so much wastes it and destroys it as sins
against the light do. This puts a plain force upon the conscience,
and gives a dreadful stab to that noble power, God's vicegerent in
the soul. And thus you see the first thing made good, that light
puts deep guilt and aggravation into sin.
    Secondly, In the next place, let us examine why sin so
aggravated by the light, makes men liable to the greater
condemnation: For that it does so, is beyond all debate or question;
else the apostle Peter would not have said of those sinners against
light, as he does 2 Pet. 2: 21. "that it had been better for them
not to have known the way of righteousness." Nor would Christ have
told the inhabitants of Chorazin or Bethsaida, that it should be
more tolerable for Tyre and Sidon at the day of judgement than for
them. There is a twofold reason of this.
    1. Ex parte Dei, on God's part.
    2. Ex parte peccatoris, on the sinner's part.
    First, Ex parte Dei, on God's part, who is the righteous Judge
of the whole earth; and will therefore render unto every man
according as his work shall be; For shall not the Judge of the whole
earth do right? He will judge the world in righteousness, and
righteousness requires that difference be made in the punishment of
sinners, according to the different degrees of their sins. Now that
there are different degrees of sin, is abundantly clear from what we
have lately discoursed under the former head; where we have showed,
that the light under which men sin, puts extraordinary aggravations
upon their sins, answerable whereunto will the degrees of punishment
be awarded by the righteous Judge of heaven and earth. The Gentiles
who had no other light but that dim light of nature, will be
condemned for disobeying the law of God written upon their hearts:
but yet, the greater wrath is reserved for them who sin both against
the light of nature, and the light of the gospel also: And therefore
it is said, Rom. 2: 9. "Tribulation and anguish upon every soul of
man that does evil; of the Jew first, and also of the Gentile."
Impenitent Jews and Gentiles will all be condemned at the bar of
God; but with this difference, to the Jew first, i.e. principally
and especially, because the light and mercies which he abused and
violated were far greater than those bestowed upon the Gentiles,
"because unto them were committed the oracles of God:" And God has
not dealt with any nation as with that nation. Indeed, in the
rewards of obedience, the same reason does not hold; he that came
into the vineyard the last hour of the day, may be equal in reward
with him that bare the heat and burthen of the whole day; because
the reward is of grace and bounty, not of debt and merit: But it is
not so here, justice observes an exact proportion in distributing
punishments, according to the degrees, deserts, and measures of sin:
And therefore it is said Concerning Babylon, Rev. 18: 7. "How much
she has glorified herself, and lived deliciously; so much torment
and sorrow give her."
    Secondly, En parte peccatoris, upon the account of sinners; it
must needs be, that the heaviest wrath and most intolerable torments
should be the portion of them who have sinned against the clearest
light and means of grace: For we find, in the scripture account,
that a principal and special part of the torment of the damned, will
arise from their own consciences. Mark 9: 44. "Where their worm
dieth not, and the fire is not quenched." And nothing is more
manifest than this, that if conscience be the tormentor of the
damned, then sinners against light must needs have the greatest
torment. For,
    First, The more knowledge any man had in this world, the more
was his conscience violated and abused here by sinning against it:
And O what work will these violations and abuses make for a
tormenting conscience in hell! With what rage and fury will it then
avenge itself upon the most stout, daring, and impudent sinner! The
more guilt now, the more rage and fury then.
    Secondly, The more knowledge, or means of knowledge any man has
enjoyed in this world, so much the more matter is prepared and laid
up for conscience to upbraid him with in the place of torment? And
the upbraidings of conscience are a special part of the torments of
the damned. O what a peal will conscience ring in the ears of such
sinners! "Did not I warn thee of the issue of such sins, undone
wretch? How often did I strive with thee, if it had been possible to
take thee off from thy course of sinning, and to escape this wrath?
Did not I often cry out in thy bosom, Stop thy course, sinner?
Hearken to my counsel, turn and live; but thou wouldst not hearken
to my voice! I forewarned thee of this danger, but thou slightest
all my warnings; thy lusts were too strong for my light, and now
thou seest whither thy way tended, but, alas, too late".
    Thirdly, The more knowledge, or means of knowledge any man has
abused and neglected in this world, so many fair opportunities and
great advantages he has lost for heaven; and the more opportunities
and advantages he has had for heaven, the more intolerable will hell
be to that man; as the mercy was great which was offered by them, so
the torment will be unspeakable that will arise from the loss of
them. Sinners, you have now a wide and open door, many blessed
opportunities of salvation under the gospel; it has put you in a
fair way for everlasting happiness: Many of you are not far from the
kingdom of God: there will be time enough in hell to reflect upon
this loss. What think you, will it not be sad to think there: O how
fair was I once for heaven, to have been with God, and among yonder
saints! My conscience was once convinced, and my affections melted
under the gospel. I was almost persuaded to be a Christian, indeed
the treaty was almost concluded betwixt Christ and my soul; there
were but a few points in difference betwixt us; but wretch that I
was, at those points I stuck, and there the treaty ended to my
eternal ruin: I could not deny my lusts, I could not live under the
strict yoke of Christ's government; but now I must live under the
insupportable wrath of the righteous and terrible God for ever: and
this torment will be peculiar to such as perish under the gospel.
The Heathen, who enjoyed no such means, can therefore have no such
reflections; nay, the very devils themselves, who never had such a
plank after their shipwreck, I mean, a mediator in their nature, or
such terms of reconciliation, offered them, will not reflect upon
their lost opportunities of recovery, as such sinners must and will.
This, therefore, "is the condemnation, that light is come into the
world; but men loved darkness rather than light.
    Inf. 1. Hence it follows, that neither knowledge, nor the best
means of knowledge, are in themselves sufficient to secure men from
wrath to come. Light in itself is a choice mercy, and therefore the
means that begat and increased it must be so too; but yet is a mercy
liable to the greatest abuse, and the abuse of the best mercies
brings forth the greatest miseries. Alas! Christians, your duty is
but half learnt when you know it; obedience to light makes light a
blessing indeed. John 13: 17. "If ye know these things, happy are ye
if ye do them." Happiness is not intailed upon simple knowing, but
upon doing; upon obedience to our knowledge; otherwise he that
increaseth knowledge, does but increase sorrow: "For that servant
which knew his Lord's will, and prepared not himself, nor did
according to his will, shall be beaten with many stripes", Luke 13:
47. "And to him that knoweth to do good, and does it not, to him it
is sin," James 4: 17. We are bound with all thankfulness to
acknowledge the bounty of heaven to this sinful generation, in
furnishing us with so many excellent means of light, beyond many
other nations and generations that are past, but yet we ought to
rejoice with trembling when we consider the abuses of light in this
wanton age, and what a dismal event is like to happen unto many
thousands among us. I fear the time is coming when many among us
will wish they had never set foot on English ground. God has blessed
this nation with many famous, burning and shining lights. It was
once said to the honour of this nation, that the English ministry
was the world's responder; and when a man of another nation began to
preach methodically and convincingly, they were wont to say, "We
perceive this man has been in England": The greater will our account
be for abusing such light and rebelling against it. The clearer our
light is now, the thicker will the mists of darkness be hereafter,
if we are thus wanton under it. The devils have more light than we,
and therefore the more torment: Of them it is said, James 2: 19.
"The devils also believe, and tremble;" the horror of their
consciences is answerable to their illumination, they tremble; "the
word signifies the roar of the sea," or such a murmuring, dreadful
noise as the tempestuous seas use to make when they break themselves
against the rocks.
    Inf. 2. If the abuse of light thus aggravate sin and misery,
then times of great temptations are like to be times of great guilt.
Wo to an enlightened, knowing generation, when strong temptations
befal them. How do many, in such times, imprison the known truth to
keep themselves out of prison? offer violence to their own
consciences, to avoid violence from other hands?
    Plato was convinced of the unity of God, but durst not own his
convictions; but said, "It was a truth neither easy to find, nor
safe to own." And even Seneca, the renowned moralist, was "forced by
temptation to dissemble his convictions;" of whom Augustine saith,
"He worshipped what himself reprehended, and did what himself
reproved." And even a great Papist of later times was heard to say,
as he was going to mass, Eamus ad communem errorem, Let us go to the
common error. O how hard is it to keep conscience pure and peaceable
in days of temptation! Doubtless, it is a mercy to many weak and
timorous Christians to be removed by a seasonable death out of
harm's way; to be disbanded by a merciful providence before the heat
of the battle. Christ and Antichrist seem at this day to be drawing
into the field; a fiery trial threatens the professors of this age:
but when it comes to a close engagement, indeed we may justly
tremble, to think how many thousands will break their way through
the convictions of their own consciences, to save their flesh.
Believe it, sirs, if Christ hold you to himself by no other tie than
the slender thread of a single conviction; if he have not interest
in your hearts and affections, as well as in your understandings and
consciences; if you be men of great fight and strong unmortified
lusts; if you profess Christ with your tongues, and worship the
world with your hearts; a man may say, of you, without the gift of
prophecy, what the prophet said of Hazael, I know what you will do
in the day of temptation.
    Inf. 3. If this be so, what a strong engagement lies upon an
enlightened persons to turn heartily to God, and reduce their
knowledge into practice and obedience, The more men know, the more
violence they do their own consciences in rebelling against the
light, this is to sin with an high hand, Numb. 15: 30. Believe it,
sirs, you cannot sin at so cheap a rate as others do; knowledge in a
wicked man, like high metal in a blind horse, does but the sooner
precipitate him into ruin. You may know much more than others, but
if ever you come to heaven, it must be in the same way of faith and
obedience, mortification, and self-denial, in which the weakest
Christian comes thither; whatever knowledge you have, to be sure you
have no wisdom, if you expect salvation upon any other, or easier
terms than the most illiterate Christian finds it. It was a sad
observation of the father, Surgunt indocti, et rapiunt caelum; the
unlearned rise, and take heaven. What a pity is it that men of such
excellent parts should be enslaved to their lusts! that ever it
should be said, Sapientis sapienter descendunt in Gehennam; their
learning does but hang in their light, it does but blind them in
spiritual things, and prepareth them for greater misery.
    Inf. 4. Hence also it follows, that the work of conversion is a
very difficult work; He soul is scarcely half won to Christ, when
Satan is cast out of the understanding by illumination. The devil
has deeply intrenched himself and strongly fortified every faculty
of the soul against Christ; the understanding, indeed, is the first
entrance into the soul, and out of that faculty he is oftentimes
cast by light and conviction, which seems to make a great change
upon a man: now he becomes a professor, now he takes up the duties
of religion, and passes up and down the world for a convert; but,
alas, alas! all the while Satan keeps the fort-royal, the heart and
will are in his own possession; and this is a work of more
difficulty: the weapons of that warfare must indeed be mighty
through God, which do not only cast down imaginations, but bring
every thought of the heart into captivity to the obedience of
Christ, 2 Cor. 10: 4, 5. While the heart stands out, though the
understanding be taken in, the soul remains in Satan's possession;
it is a greater work, (and we daily find it so,) to win one heart
than to convince twenty understandings.
    Inf. 5. Hence also we may learn what strength and power there
is in the lusts of men's hearts, which are able to bear down so
strong convictions of the conscience before them. That is a great
truth, though a very sad one, Eccl. 8: 11. "The heart of the sons of
men is fully set in them to do evil." O how common is it every day,
and in every place to see men hazarding their souls to satisfy their
lusts! Every man, saith the prophet, "turneth to his course, as the
horse rusheth into the battle." The horse is a very fierce and
warlike creature; and when his courage is roused by the sounds of
drums and trumpets and shouts of armies, he breaks headlong into the
ranks of armed men, though death is before him. Such boisterous and
headlong lusts are found in many enlightened persons, though their
consciences represent damnation before them; onward they will rush,
though God be lost, and a precious soul undone for ever.
    Inf. 6. To conclude, As ever you will avoid the deepest guilt,
and escape the heaviest condemnation, open your hearts to obey and
practise whatsoever God has opened your understandings and
consciences to receive of his revealed will; obey the light of the
gospel, while you have opportunity to enjoy it: this was the great
counsel given by Christ, John 12: 35, 36. "Yet a little while the
light is with you, walk while you have the light, lest darkness come
upon you." The manifestation of Christ in the gospel, is the light
of the world; all the nations of the earth that want this light are
benighted; and those upon whom this light is risen, have but a short
time under it; "Yet a little while the light is with you:" and
whatever patience God may exercise towards poor ignorant souls, yet
commonly he makes short work with the despisers of this light. The
light of the gospel is a shining lamp, fed with golden oil; God will
not be at the expense for such a light for them that do but trifle
with it. The night is coming when no man can work. There are many
sad signs upon us of a setting sun, a night of darkness approaching;
many burning and shining lights are extinguished, and many put under
a bushel; your work is great, your time short, this is the only
space you have for repentance, Rev. 2: 21. If this opportunity of
salvation be lost it will never come again, Ezek. 24: 13. How
pathetical was that lamentation which Christ made over Jerusalem,
Luke 19: 41, 42. "And when he was come near. he beheld the city, and
wept over it, saying, If thou hadst known, even thou, at least in
this thy day, the things which belong unto thy peace, but now they
are hid from thine eyes." Christ is threatening those nations with
the removal of his gospel presence; he has found but cold
entertainment among us: England has been unkind to Christ; many
thousands there are that rebel against the light, that say unto God,
"Depart from us, we desire not the knowledge of thy ways." Christ
will not tarry where he is not welcome; who would, that has any
where else to go? Obey the light therefore, lest God put it out in
obscure darkness.
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
Sermon 34.


The blinding Policies of Satan opened, as the cause of Unbelief, and
Forerunner of Destruction.
    
    
2 Cor. 4: 3, 4.
    
But if our gospel be hid, it is hid to them that are lost; in whom
the god of this world has blinded the minds of them which believe
not, lest the light of the glorious gospel of Christ, who is the
image of God, should shine unto them.
    
    
    The aversions of men from Jesus Christ, their only remedy, is
as much to be admired as lamented; one would think the news of
deliverance should make the hearts of captives leap for joy, the
tidings of a Saviour should transport the heart of a lost sinner. A
man would think a little rhetoric might persuade the naked soul of a
sinner to put on the rich robes of Christ's righteousness, which
will cost him nothing but acceptance; or the perishing, starving
sinner to accept the bread of God which cometh down from heaven, and
giveth life unto the world. This is the great design I have managed
in this whole discourse; the centre to which all these lines are
drawn; many arguments have been used, and many ways attempted to
prevail with men to apply and put on Christ, and I am afraid, all
too little. I have but laboured in vain, and spent my strength for
nought; all these discourses are but the beating of the air, and
few, if any, will be persuaded to come unto Christ, who is clearly
opened, and freely offered in the gospel to them. For alas! while I
am reasoning, Satan is blinding their minds with false reasonings
and contrary persuasions; the god of this world turns away the ears,
and draws away the hearts of almost the whole world from Christ;
"The god of this world "has blinded the minds of them which believe
not, lest the light of the glorious gospel of Christ, who is the
image of God, should shine unto them.* Satan is a great and jealous
prince, and is well aware, that so many of his subjects as shall be
brought to see the misery of their condition, will never endure to
abide any longer in subjection to him: it is therefore his great
policy to put out their eyes, that he may secure their souls; to
darken their understandings, that he may keep his interest firm and
entire in their wills and affections: and this makes the effectual
application of Christ so great a difficulty, that, on the contrary,
it is just matter of admiration that any soul is persuaded and
prevailed with to quit the service of Satan, and come to Christ. And
therefore in the last place, to discover the great difficulty of
conversion, and shew you where it is that all our endeavours are
obstructed, so that we can move the design no further, with all our
labouring and striving, reasoning and persuading; as also to mourn
over and bewail the misery of christless and unregenerate souls,
with whom we must part, upon the saddest terms; I have chosen this
scripture, which is of a most awakening nature, if haply the Lord,
at last, may persuade any soul to come over to Christ thereby.
    These words come into the apostle's discourse, by way of
prolepsis; he had been speaking in the former chapter, of the
transcendent excellency of the gospel above the law, and, among
other respects, he prefers it to the law in point of clearness. The
law was an obscure and cloudy dispensation; there was a vail upon
the face of Moses, and the hearts of the people, that they could not
see to the end of that which is abolished, but under the gospel we
all, with open face, behold, as in a glass, the glory of the Lord.
Against this discourse, the apostle foresaw, and obviated this
objection; If your gospel be so clear, what is the reason that many,
who live under the ministration of it, (and they none of the
meanest, neither for wisdom nor understanding) do yet see no glory,
nor excellency in it? To this he returns in the words I have read,
"If our gospel be hid, it is hid from them that are lost, whose eyes
the god of this world has blinded," &c. q. d. It is true, multitudes
there are, who see no glory in Christ or the gospel, but the fault
is not in either; but in the minds of them that believe not. The sun
shines forth in its glory, but the blind see no glory in it; the
fault is not in the sun, but in the eye. In the words themselves we
have three parts to consider:
    1. A dreadful, spiritual judgement inflicted.
    2. The wicked instrument by whom it is inflicted.
    3. The politic manner in which he does it.
    First, We have here a very dreadful, spiritual judgement
inflicted upon the souls of men, viz. the hiding of the gospel from
them: if our gospel be hid; for these words, "Ei de kai esi", are a
concession, that so it is; a very sad, but undeniable truth. Many
are there who see no beauty in Christ, nor necessity of him; though
both are so plainly and evidently revealed in our gospel, "if our
gospel be hid." It is called our gospel, not as if St. Paul and
other preachers of it, were the authors and inventors of it; but our
gospel, because we are the preachers and dispensers of it. We are
put in trust with the gospel, and though we preach it, in the
demonstration of the Spirit, and of power, using all plainness of
speech to make men understand it, yet it is hid from many under our
ministry: it is hid from their understandings, they see no glory in
it; and hid from their hearts, they see no power in it. Our gospel,
notwithstanding all our endeavours, is a hidden gospel unto some,
this is the sorest, and most dreadful judgement.
    Secondly, We have here an account of that wicked instrument by
whom this judgement is inflicted, viz. Satan, called here (by a
mimesis) the god of this world; not simply and properly, but because
he challenges to himself the honour of a god, rules over a vast
empire, and has multitudes of souls, even the greater part of the
world, in subjection and blind obedience to his government.
    Thirdly, Here, also, we have an account of the politic manner
of this government, how he maintains his dominion among men, and
keeps the world in quiet subjection to him; namely, by blinding the
minds of all them that believe not; putting out the eyes of all his
subjects, darkening that noble faculty, the mind, or understanding;
the thinking, considering, and reasoning power of the soul, which
the philosophers truly call no "to hegemonikon", the leading and
directing faculty; for it is to the soul, what eyes are to the body,
and it is therefore called, "the eyes of the understanding," Eph. 1:
18. These eyes Satan blinds, i.e. he darkens the mind and
understanding with ignorance and error; so that when men come to see
and consider spiritual things, "they see indeed, but perceive not,"
Isa. 6: 9,10. They have some general, confused notions, but no
distinct, powerful, and effectual apprehensions of those things: and
this is the way, indeed, none like it, to bar men effectually from
Jesus Christ, and hinder the application of the benefit of
redemption to their souls. It is true, the righteous God permits all
this to be done by Satan, upon the souls of men; but wheresoever he
finally prevails thus to blind them, it is as the text speaks, "en
tois apongumenois", in them. that are lost, or appointed of God unto
perdition. The elect of God are all blinded for a time, but Christ
applieth unto them his eye-salve, effectually opens the eyes of
their understandings, and recovers them thereby, out of Satan's
power and dominion; but as for those who still continue thus
blinded, the symptoms and characters of eternal death appear upon
their souls; they are a company of lost men.
    
    Doct. That the understandings of all unbelievers are blinded by
         Satan's policies, in order to their everlasting perdition.
    
    Four things must be opened in the doctrinal part of this point.
    First, What the blinding of the understanding, or hiding of the
gospel from the understanding, is.
    Secondly, I shall demonstrate, that the understandings of many
are thus blinded, and the gospel hidden from them.
    Thirdly, I shall shew what policies Satan uses to blind the
minds of men.
    Fourthly. That this blindness is the sorest judgement, and in
order to men's everlasting perdition.
    Sixthly, And then apply the whole.
    First, We shall enquire what the blinding of the mind, or
hiding the gospel from it, is. Two sorts of men are thus blinded in
the world.
    1. Those that want the means of illumination.
    2. Those that have the means, but ace denied the blessing and
efficacy of them.
    The former is the case of the Pagan world, who are in midnight
darkness for want of the gospel. The latter is the case of the
Christian world. The greatest part of them that live within the
sound of the gospel, being blinded by the god of this world, Isa. 7:
9, 10. "And he said, Go, and tell this people; hear ye indeed, but
understand not; and, see ye indeed, but perceive not: Make the heart
of this people fat, and make their ears heavy; and shut their eyes,
lest they see with their eyes, and hear with their ears, and
understand with their heart, and convert, and be healed." Thus, when
the Sun of righteousness actually arose on the world, it is said,
John 1: 5. "The light shined in darkness, but the darkness
comprehended it not." So we may say of all that light which is in
the understanding of all unbelievers, what Job speaks of the grave,
Job 10: 22. "That the light there is as darkness." But more
particularly, to open the nature of this spiritual blindness, I will
shew you,
    1. What it is not opposed unto.
    2. What it is opposed unto.
    1. Let us examine what spiritual blindness, or the hiding the
gospel from the minds of men is not opposed unto: and we shall find,
    First, That it is not opposed unto natural wisdom; a man may be
of an acute and clear understanding; eagle-eyed, to discern the
mysteries of nature, and yet the gospel may be hidden from him. Who
were more sagacious and quick sighted in natural things than the
Heathen Philosophers, renowned for wisdom in their generations; yet
unto them the gospel was but foolishness, 1 Cor. 1: 20, 21. St.
Augustin confesseth, that before his conversion he was filled with
offence and contempt of the simplicity of the gospel. Dedignabur
esse parvulus, saith he, I scorned to become a child again. And that
great Bradwardine, the profound doctor, who was learned, usque ad
stuporem, even to a wonder, professed, that when he first read
Paul's epistles, he despised them, because he found not in them,
metaphysicum ingenium, those metaphysical notions which he expected.
Upon this account it was, that Christ brake forth into the
pathetical gratulation of his Father's love to the elect, Mat. 11:
25. "At that time Jesus answered and said, I thank thee, O Father,
Lord of heaven and earth; because thou hast hid these things from
the wise and prudent, and hast revealed them unto babes.
    Secondly, It is not opposed to all light and knowledge in
spiritual truths. A man may have a true understanding of the
scriptures, give an orthodox exposition of them, and enlighten the
minds of others by them; and yet the gospel may be hidden from
himself, Mat. 7: 22. "Many will say unto me in that day, Lord, Lord,
have we not prophesied in thy name!" So Rom. 2: 19. "And art
confident that thou thyself art a guide of the blind, a light to
them that sit in darkness," &c. A man may show others the way to
Christ and salvation, whilst both are hid from himself.
    Thirdly, It is not opposed to all kind of influences upon the
affections; for, it is possible, the gospel may touch the affections
themselves, and cause some sweet motions and raptures in them; and
yet be an hidden gospel to the soul, Heb. 6: 5, 9.
    But if these three things may consist with spiritual blindness
unto what then is it opposed? To which I answer, that spiritual
blindness stands only opposed to that saving manifestation of Jesus
Christ in the gospel by the Spirit, whereby the soul is regenerated,
and effectually changed by a real conversion unto God: Where ever
the gospel thus comes in the demonstration of the Spirit, and of
power, producing such an effect as this in the soul, it is no longer
an hidden gospel to that soul, though such persons do not see
clearly all that glory which is revealed by the gospel; though they
know but in part, and see darkly as through a glass; yet the eyes of
their understandings are opened, and the things which belong to
their peace are not hidden from them.
    Secondly, But though this be the happiness of some men, yet it
is demonstrable that the eyes of many are blinded by the god of this
world, and the gospel is an hidden gospel from them; for,
    First, Many that live under the gospel are so entirely
swallowed up in the affairs of this world, that they allow
themselves no time to ponder the great concernment of their souls in
the world to come; and judge you, whatever the gifts and knowledge
of these men are, whether the god of this world has not blinded
their eyes. If it were not so, it were impossible that ever they
should thus waste the most precious opportunities of salvation upon
which their everlasting well being depends, and spend time at the
door of eternity about trifles which so little concern them. Yet
this is the case of the greatest number that go under the Christian
name. The earth has opened her mouth and swallowed up their time,
thoughts, studies, and strength, as it did the bodies of Corah and
his accomplices. The first, the freest, yea, the whole of their
time, is devoted to the service of the world, for even at that very
time when they present their bodies before the Lord, in the duties
of his worship, their hearts are wandering after vanities, and
"going after their covetousness," Ezek. 43: 31. Judge whether the
god of this world has blinded these men or no, who can see so much
beauty in the world, but none in Christ, and put an absolute
necessity upon the vanities of this world, but none upon their own
salvation. If this be not spiritual blindness, what is?
    Secondly, The great stillness and quietness of men's
consciences, under the most rousing and awakening truths of the
gospel, plainly prove that the god of this world has blinded their
eyes. For did men see and apprehend the dangerous condition they are
in as the word represents it; nothing in the world would quiet them
but Christ. As soon as men's eyes come to be opened, the next
enquiry they come to make is, "What shall we do to be saved?" It is
not impossible that a man should hang over hell, see Christ and the
hopes of salvation going, and the day of patience ending, and yet be
quiet. 1O! it cannot be, that conscience should let them be quiet in
such a case, if it were not blinded and stupified; but whilst the
god of this world, "that strong man armed keepeth the house, all his
goods are in peace," Luke 11: 21. If once your eyes were opened by
conviction, a man may then say, be quiet if you can; sit still, and
let the hopes and seasons of salvation pass quietly away if you can.
Suppose one should come into the congregation, and whisper but such
a word as this in your ears, your child is fallen into the fire, and
is a dying, since you came from home; will it be in the power of all
friends you have to quiet you, and make you sit still after such an
information? much less when a man apprehends his own soul in
immediate danger of everlasting burnings.
    Thirdly, The strong confidences and presumptuous hopes men have
of salvation, whilst they remain in the state of nature and
unregeneracy, plainly shew their minds to be blinded by the policy
of Satan. This presumption is one of those "paralogismoi", false
reasonings, by which Satan deludes the understanding, as the apostle
calls them, James 1: 22. It is the cunning sophistry of the devil,
fathered by self-love, Prov. 21: 2. "Every way of a man is right in
their own eyes," and partly by self-ignorance, Rev. 3: 17. "Thou
saidst I am rich, and have need of nothing, and knowest not that
thou art poor." You have no fears, no doubts, no ease to propound
that concerns your future state; and why so? but because you have no
sight; your consciences are quieted, because your eyes are blinded.
    Fourthly, The trifling of men with the duties of religion
plainly discovers the blinding power of Satan upon their minds and
understandings, else they would never play and dally with the
serious and solemn ordinances of God at that rate they do; if their
eyes were once opened, they would he in earnest in prayer, and apply
themselves with the closest attention of mind to hearing the gospel.
    There are two sorts of thoughts about any subject of meditation.
Some think at a distance, and others think close to the subject.
Never do thoughts of men come so close to Christ, to heaven, and to
hell, as they do immediately upon their illumination. When John's
ministry enlightened the people's minds, it is said, Matth. 11: 12.
"from the days of John the Baptist until now, the kingdom of heaven
suffereth violence, and the violent take it by force." Surely these
men were more in good earnest who would receive no repulse, take no
denial, but even force themselves through all difficulties into
heaven; and so would it be with you. If the god of this world had
not blinded your minds you would never pray with so much
unconcernedness, nor hear with so much negligence and carelessness;
pray as if you prayed not, and hear as if you heard not. It is with
many of your hearts as it was with Aristotle, who after a quaint
oration made before him, was asked how he liked it; truly, said he,
I did not hear it; for I was thinking all the while of another
matter.
    Fifthly, This also is a plain evidence that the god of this
world has blinded many men's eyes among us, for that they fear not
to commit great sins to avoid small hazards and troubles, which all
the world could never persuade them to do, if they were not hood-
winked by the god of this world. Those that have seen sin as sin, in
the glass of God's law, "will chuse as Moses did, to suffer any
affliction with the people of God, rather than enjoy the pleasures
of sin, which are but for a season," Heb. 11: 25. Those that have
seen and felt the evil of sin in the deep troubles of their spirits
for it, will account all reproaches, all losses, all sufferings from
men, to be but as nothing to the burthen of sin.
    Sixthly, The pride and self-conceitedness of many thousands who
profess Christianity, plainly shew their minds to be blinded by the
sophistry of Satan, and that they do not understand themselves, and
the woful state of their own souls. Those that see God in the
clearest light, abhor themselves in the deepest humility, Isa. 6: 5.
John 43: 5. If ever the Lord had effectually opened your eyes by a
clear discovery of your state by nature, and the course of your
life, under the efficacy and influence of continual temptations and
corruptions, how would your plumes fall? None in the world would
rate you lower than you yourselves would. By all which it appears
that multitudes are blinded by the god of this world.
    Thirdly, In the third place we are to consider what policies
Satan useth to blind the minds of them that believe not, and we
shall find there are three sorts of policies practised by the god of
this world upon the minds and understandings of men, which he
darkens, by
    1. Hindering the reception of gospel light.
    2. Obstructing the efficacy of it when received.
    3. Making misapplication of it to other purposes.
    First, It is a great policy in Satan, to blind the
understandings of men, by hindering and preventing the reception of
gospel-light, which he does especially these five ways;
    First, By tempting the dispensers of the gospel to darken the
truths thereof, in the delivering of them, to shoot over the heads
of their hearers, in lofty language and terms of art, so that common
understandings can give no account, when the sermon is done, what
the preacher would have; but, however, commend him for a good
scholar, and an excellent orator. I make no doubt but the devil is
very busy with ministers in their studies, tempting them, by the
pride of their own hearts, to gratify his designs here in; he
teaches them how to paint the glass, that he might keep out the
light.
    I acknowledge, a proper, grave, and comely stile, befits the
lips of Christ's ambassadors; they should not be rude and careless
in their language, or method. But this affectation of great swelling
words of vanity, is but too like the proud Gnostics, whom the
apostle is supposed to tax for this evil, Jude ver. 16. "This is to
darken counsel by words without knowledge, Job 31: 2. To amuse and
bemist poor ignorant souls, and nullify the design of preaching: for
every thing is accounted so far good, as it is good to the end it is
ordained for. A sword that has an hilt of gold, set thick with
diamonds, is no good sword, if it has no edge to cut, or want a good
back to follow home the stroke. O that the ministers of Christ would
chase rather sound, than great words, such as are apt to pierce the
heart, rather than such as tickle the fancy; and let people beware
of furthering the design of Satan against their own souls, in
putting a temptation upon their ministers, by despising plain
preaching. The more popular, plain, and intelligible our discourses
are, so much the more probable they are to be successful; that is
the most excellent oratory, that persuades men to Christ.
    Secondly, Satan hinders the access of light to the
understandings of men, by employing their minds about impertinent
things, while they are attending upon the ordinances of God; thus he
tempted them, in Ezek. 33: 31, 32. "And they come unto thee as the
people cometh, and they sit before thee, as my people; and they hear
thy words, but they will not do them; for with their mouth they shew
much love, but their heart goeth after their covetousness. And lo!
thou art unto them as a very lovely song of one that has a pleasant
voice." The modulation of the prophet's voice was very pleasing to
their ears, but meanwhile their fancies and thoughts were wandering
after their lusts; their hearts were full of earthly projects.
    Thirdly, Satan hinders the access of light to the
understandings of men, by raising objections, and picking quarrels
with the word, on purpose to shake its authority, and hinder the
assent of the understanding to it, and so the word makes no more
impression than a fable, or a romance would do. And never did this
design of Satan obtain more than in this atheistical age, wherein
the main pillars and foundation of religion are shaken in the minds
of multitudes. The devil has persuaded many, that the gospel is but
a cunningly-devised fable; fabula Christi, as that blaspheming pope
called it; that ministers must say something to get a living. That
heaven and hell are but fancies, or at most things of great
uncertainty, and doubtful credit. This being once obtained, the door
of the soul is shut against truth. And this design of Satan has
prospered the more in this generation, by the corrupt doctrines of
seducing spirits, "Which have overthrown the faith of some," 2 Tim.
2: 18. And partly from the scandalous lives of loose and vain
professors, the gospel has been brought into contempt; but
especially by Satan's artificial improvement of the corrupt natures
of men in an age wherein conscience has been so much debauched, and
Atheism thereby spread as a gangrene in the body politic.
    Fourthly, Satan hinders the access of light, by helping
erroneous minds to draw false conclusions and perverse inferences
from the great and precious truths of the gospel; and thereby
bringing them under prejudice and contempt: Thus he assists the
errors of men's minds about the doctrine of election: when he either
persuades them, that it is an unreasonable doctrine, and not worthy
of credit, that God should chose some, and refuse others every way
as good as those he has chosen; or, if there be any certainty in
that doctrine, then men may throw the reins upon the neck of their
lusts, and live at what rate they list; nor if God has chosen them
to salvation, their wickedness shall not hinder it, and if he have
appointed them unto wrath, their diligence and self-denial cannot
prevent it.
    Thus the doctrine of free grace is by the like sophistry of
Satan turned into lasciviousness. If grace abound, men may sin the
more freely; and the shortness of our time upon earth, which in its
own nature awakens all men to diligence, is, by the subtilty of
Satan, turned to a quite contrary purpose, "Let us eat and drink,
for tomorrow we die."
    Fifthly, Satan darkens the minds of men, and shuts them up
against the light, by blowing them up with pride and self-
conceitedness, persuading them that they know all these things
already, and causing them to contemn the most weighty and precious
truths of God, as trite and vulgar notions. The word cannot be
received without meekness and humility of mind, James 1: 21. Psal.
25: 8, 9. and pride is the nurse of ignorance, 1 Tim. 6: 4. 1 Cor.
8: 7. The devil is aware of this, and therefore blows up the pride
and conceitedness of men's hearts all that he can: And this
temptation of his generally prevails wherever it meets with a
knowing head, matched with a graceless and unsanctified heart. And
thus we see by what wiles and policies Satan keeps out the light,
and prevents the access of it to the minds of men.
    But if he miss his design here, and truth gets into the mind,
Then
    Secondly, He labours to obstruct the efficacy and operation of
the light; and though it do shine into the understanding, yet it
shall be imprisoned there, and send down no converting influences
upon the will and affections: And this design he promotes and
manages divers ways.
    First, By hastening to quench convictions betimes, and nip them
in the bud. Satan knows how dangerous a thing it is, and destructive
to his interest, to suffer convictions to continue long; and
therefore it is said of him, Matth. 13: 19. When any "one heareth
the word of the kingdom, and understandeth it not, then cometh the
wicked one, and catcheth away that which was sown in his heart."
Satan is compared in this scripture to the fowls in the air, which
pick up the seed before it take any root in the earth. The devil is
very jealous of this, and therefore labours all he can to destroy
the word before it comes to operate upon the heart; which he does
sometimes by the cares of the world, and sometimes by vain
companions, who prove mere quench coals unto the beginning
convictions. One sinner destroyeth much good.
    Secondly, No sooner does the god of this world observe the
light of truth begin to operate upon the heart, but he obstructeth
that design by procrastinations and delays, which delude and baffle
convinced souls; he persuades them if they will alter their course,
it will be time enough hereafter, when such encumbrances and
troubles in the world are over; if he prevail here, it is a thousand
to one but the work miscarries. James 1: 13, 14. If the hearer of
the word be not a doer, i.e. a present doer, while the impressions
of it are fresh upon the soul, he does but deceive himself: For it
is with the heart, as it is with melted wax; if the seal be clapped
to it presently, it will receive a fair impression; but if it be let
alone, but for a little while, you can make none at all; it was
therefore David's great care and wisdom to set about the work of
religion under the first impetus, or vigorous motion of his heart
and affections. Psal. 119: 60. "I made haste, and delayed not to
keep thy commandments." Multitudes of souls have perished by these
delays. It is a temptation incident to all that are under beginning
convictions, especially young persons, whom the devil persuades that
it were no better them madness in them to abridge and deny
themselves so much delight and pleasure, and steep their youthful
thoughts in such a melancholy subject as religion is.
    Thirdly, If all this will not do, but convictions still
continue to get ground in the conscience, then he endeavours to
scare and fright them out of their convictions, by representing to
them the inward terrors, troubles, and despairs into which they are
about to plunge themselves, and that henceforth they must never
expect a pleasant day, or comfortable hour. Thus does the god of
this world blind the minds of them that believe not, both by
hindering the access of light to the mind, and the influence of it
upon the heart.
    Thirdly, There is yet one policy of Satan to keep souls in
darkness, and that is, by the misapplication of truth; persuading
them, that whatsoever they read or hear of the misery and danger of
christless and unregenerate persons, does not in the least touch or
concern them, but the more notorious and profane part of the world;
and by this policy he blinds the minds of all civil and moral
persons. Thus the "Pharisees trusted in themselves that they were
righteous, and despised others. And so the Laodiceans thought
themselves rich, and increased with goods; that is, in a very safe
and good condition. Now there are divers things notably improved by
Satan's policy, in order to these misapplications of truth. As,
    First, The freedom of their lives from the most gross
pollutions of the world, Mat. 19: 20. "All these things have I kept
from my youth up." A civil, sober course of life is a must effectual
blind before the eyes of many n man's conscience.
    Secondly, It is the policy of Satan to prevent convictions by
conviction; I mean effectual convictions, by convictions that have
been ineffectual, and are now vanished away. Thus the troubles that
some persons have been under, must pass for their conversion, though
the temper of their heart be the same it was: Their ineffectual
troubles are made use of by the devil to blind them in the true
knowledge and apprehension of their condition. For these men and
women can speak of the troubles they have had for sin, and the many
tears they have shed for it; whereby thorough conviction is
effectually prevented.
    Thirdly, Gifts and knowledge are improved by the policy of
Satan against the true knowledge of Jesus Christ, and our own estate
by nature. As conviction is improved by Satan's policy against
conviction, so is knowledge against knowledge. This was the case of
them in Rom. 2: 17, 18. "Thou art called a Jew, and restest in the
law, and makest thy boast of God, and knowest his will, and approves
the things that are excellent; being instructed out of the law, and
art confident that thou thyself art a guide to the blind," &c. And
this is the temptation and delusion of knowing persons, who are so
far from being blind in their own account, that they account
themselves the guides of the blind: Yet who blinder than such men?
    Fourthly, External reformation is improved by the policy of
Satan against true spiritual reformation, and passes current up and
down the world for conversion; though it serve only to strengthen
Satan's interest in the soul, Matth. 12: 44. and for want of a real
change of heart, does but increase their sin and misery, 2 Pet. 2:
20. This is the generation that is pure in their own eyes, and yet
are not washed from their filthiness. The cleanness of their hands
blinds them in discovering the foulness of their hearts.
    Fifthly, The policy of Satan improves diligence in some duties,
against the convictions of neglect in other duties. The external
duties of religion, as hearing, praying, fasting, against the great
duties of repenting and believing. This was their case, Isa. 58: 2,
3. "Yet they seek me daily, and delight to know my ways, as a nation
that did righteousness, and forsook not the ordinances of their God.
They ask of me the ordinances of justice, they take delight in
approaching to God. Wherefore have we fasted, say they, and thou
seest not? Wherefore have we afflicted our souls, and thou takest no
knowledge?" Thus duty is improved against duty, the externals
against the internals of religion, and multitudes are blinded this
way.
    Sixthly, The policy of Satan improves zeal against zeal; and
thereby blinds a great part of the world: he allows men to be
zealous against a false religion, if thereby he may prevent them
from being zealous in the true religion. He diverts their zeal
against their own sins, by spending it against other men's. Thus
Paul was once blinded by his own zeal for the law, Acts 22: 3. And
many men, at this day, satisfy themselves in their own zeal against
the corruptions of God's worship, and the superstitions of others,
who never felt the power of true religion upon their own hearts; a
dangerous blind of Satan.
    Seventhly, The policy of Satan improves the esteem and respect
men have for the people of God against their great duty and interest
to become such themselves, Rev. 3: 1. "Thou hast a name that thou
livest, but thou art dead." It is enough to many men that they
obtain acceptation among the saints, though they be none of that
number; the good opinion of others begets and confirms their good
opinion of themselves.
    Eighthly, The policy of Satan improves soundness of judgement,
against soundness of heart. An orthodox head against an orthodox
heart and life; dogmatical faith, against justifying faith. This was
the case of them before-mentioned, Rom. 2: 18, 19. Men satisfy
themselves, that they have a sound understanding, though, at the
same time, they have a very rotten heart. It is enough for them that
their heads are regular, though their hearts and lives be very
irregular.
    Ninthly, The policy of Satan improves the blessings of God
against the blessings of God, blinding us by the blessings of
providence, so as not to discern the want of spiritual blessings:
persuading men that the smiles of providence in their prosperity,
success, and thriving designs in the world, are good evidences of
the love of God to their souls, not at all discerning how the
prosperity of fools deceives them, and that riches are given often
to the hurt of the owners thereof.
    Tenthly, The policy of Satan improves comfort against comfort,
false and ungrounded comforts under the word, against the real
grounds of comfort lying in the soul's interest in Christ. Thus many
men finding a great deal of comfort in the promises, are so blinded
thereby, as never to look after union with Christ, the only solid
ground of all true comfort, Heb. 6: 6, 9.
    And thus you see how the god of this world blindeth the minds
of them that believe not, and how the gospel is hid to them that are
lost.
    
    
    
    
    
Sermon 35.


2 Cor. 4: 3, 4.


But if our gospel he hid, it is hid to them that are lost; in whom
the god of this world has blinded the minds of them which believe
not, lest the light of the glorious gospel of Christ, who is the
image of God, should shine unto them.
    
    
The words have been opened, and this point observed:-
    
    Doct. That the understandings of all unbelievers are blinded by
         Satan's policies, in order to their everlasting perdition.
    
    We have shown already what the blinding the mind, or hiding of
the gospel from it is; it has also been demonstrated that the gospel
is hid, and the minds of many blinded under it; you have also seen
what policies Satan uses to blind the minds of men, even in the
clearest light of the gospel. It remains now that I open to you the
dreadful nature of this judgement of God upon the souls of men, and
then make application of the whole.
    There are many judgements of God inflicted upon the souls and
bodies of men in this world; but none of them are so dreadful as
those spiritual judgements are which God inflicts immediately upon
the soul; and among spiritual judgements few or none are of a more
dreadful nature and consequence than this of spiritual blindness;
which will appear by considering,
    First, The subject of this judgement, which is the soul, and
the principal power of the soul, which is the mind and
understandings faculty; the soul is the most precious and invaluable
part of man, and the mind is the superior and most noble power of
the soul; it is to the soul what the eye is to the body, the
directive faculty. The bodily eye is a curious, tender, and most
precious part of the body. When we would express the value of a
thing, we say, we prize it as our eyes. The loss of the eyes is a
sore loss, we lose a great part of the comfort of our souls by it.
Yet such an affliction (speaking comparatively) is but a trifle to
this. If our bodily eyes be blinded, we cannot see the sun, but if
our spiritual eye be blinded, we cannot see God, we wander in the
paths of sin, 1 John 2: 11. We are led blindfold to hell by Satan,
as the Syrians were in Samaria, 2 Kings 6: 19, 20. And then our eyes
like theirs will be opened to see our misery when it is too late.
"The light of the body is the eye, (saith Christ). If therefore
thine eye be single, thy whole body shall be full of light; but if
thine eye be evil, thy whole body shall be full of darkness. If
therefore the light that is in thee be darkness, how great is that
darkness?" Mat. 6: 22, 23. By the eye he means the practical
judgement, the understanding faculty, which is the seat for
principles, the common treasury of the rules of practice, according
unto which a man's life is formed, and his way directed. If
therefore that power of the soul be darkened, how great must that
darkness be; for now the blind lead the blind, and both fall into
the ditch. The blind judgement misguides the blind-affections, and
both fall into hell. O what a sad thing is it, that the devil should
lead that that leads thee! That he should sit at the helm, and steer
thy course to damnation! The blinding of this noble faculty
precipitates the soul into the most dangerous course; persecution,
by this means, seems to be true zeal for God, John 16: 2. "They that
persecute you shall think that they do God service.  Paul once
thought verily with himself, that he ought to do many "things
contrary to the name of Jesus of Nazareth," Acts 26: 9. i.e. He
thought he had pleased God, when he was imprisoning and persecuting
his people, as many do at this day; it will make a man to sin
conscientiously, which is a very dangerous way of sinning, and
difficult to be reclaimed.
    Secondly, It is a dreadful judgement, if we consider the object
about which the understanding is blinded, which is Jesus Christ, and
union with him; regeneration, and the nature and necessity thereof.
For this blindness is not universal, but respective and particular.
A man may have abundance of light and knowledge in things natural
and moral; but spiritual things are hidden from his eyes. Yea, a man
may know spiritual things in a natural way, which increaseth his
blindness; but he cannot discern them spiritually; this is a sore
judgement, and greatly to be bewailed. "Thou hast hid these things
(said Christ) from the wise and prudent, and hast revealed them unto
babes," Mat. 11: 21. Learned and knowing men are ignorant of those
things, which very babes in Christ understand. They are prudent in
the management of earthly affairs; but to save their own souls they
have no knowledge. They are able, with Berengarius, to dispute de
omni scibili, of every thing investigable by the light of nature;
yea, to open the scripture solidly, and defend the doctrines and
truths of Christ against his adversaries successfully; and yet
blinded in the great mystery of regeneration, Blindness in part,
(saith the apostle) is happened unto Israel? and that indeed was the
principal part of knowledge, viz. the knowledge of Jesus Christ, and
him crucified, we see farther than they. The literal knowledge of
Jesus Christ shines clearly in our understanding. We are only
blinded about those things which should give us saving interest in
him, about the effectual application of Christ to our own souls.
    Thirdly, The dreadful nature of this spiritual blindness
farther appears from the consideration of the season in which it
befalls men, which is the very time of God's patience, and the only
opportunity they have for salvation; after these opportunities are
over, their eyes will be opened to see their misery, but alas, too
late. Upon this account, Christ shed those tears over Jerusalem,
Luke 19: 42. "O that thou hadst known, at least in this thy day, the
things that belong to thy peace; but now they are hid from thine
eyes." Now the season of grace is past and gone; opportunities are
the golden spots of time, and there is much time in a short
opportunity, as there are many pieces of silver in one piece of
gold. Time signifies nothing when opportunities are gone, to be
blinded in the very season of salvation, is the judgement of all
judgements, the greatest misery incident to man; to have our eyes
opened when the seasons of salvation are past, is but an aggravation
of misery: there is a twofold opening of men's eyes to see their
danger, viz.
    ]. Graciously to prevent danger.
    2. Judicially to aggravate misery.
    They whose eves are not opened graciously in this world, to see
their disease and remedy in Christ, shall have their eyes opened
judicially in the world to come, to see their disease without any
remedy. If God open them now, it is by way of prevention; if they be
not opened till then, it will produce desperation.
    Fourthly, The horrible nature of this judgement farther appears
from the exceeding difficulty of curing it, especially in men of
excellent natural endowments and accomplishments, John 9: 40, 41.
"And some of the Pharisees which were with him, heard these words,
and said unto him, Are we blind also? Jesus said unto them, If ye
were blind, ye should have no sin: but now ye say, We see: therefore
your sin remaineth," q. d. the pride and conceitedness of your heart
and obstinacy and incurableness to your blindness; these are "the
blind people that have eyes;" Isa. 63: 8. In seeing they see not.
The conviction of such men is next to an impossibility.
    Fifthly, The design and end of this blindness under the gospel
is most dreadful; so saith my text, "The god of this world has
blinded the minds of them which believe not, lest the light of the
glorious gospel of Christ, who is the image of God, should shine
unto them." Answerable whereunto are those words, Isa. 6: 10. "Make
the heart of this people fat, and make their ears heavy, and shut
their eyes; lest they see with their eyes, and hear with their ears,
and understand with their hearts, and convert, and be healed. So
that it is plain, this blinding is a praeludium to damnation, as the
covering of Haman's face was to his destruction. When the Lord has
no purpose of grace and mercy to a man's soul, then, to bring about
the damnation of that man by a righteous permission, many occasions
of blindness befal him, which Satan improves effectually unto his
eternal ruin; among which fatal occasions, blind guides and
scandalous professors are none of the least; they shall be fitted
with ministers suitably to their humours, which shall speak smooth
things: If a man walk in the spirit and falsehood, (i. e. by an "en
dia duoin", - the spirit of falsehood) do lie, sayings I will
prophesy to thee of wine and strong drink, he shall even be the
prophet of this people: and the slips and falls of professors shall
do the devil not a little service in this his fatal design; Mat. 18:
7. "Wo to the world because of offences." This shall blind them, and
harden them to purpose. Thus you see what a dreadful judgement this
is, a stroke of God upon the soul, which cuts off all the present
comforts of Christ and religion from it, takes away the bridle of
restrains from sin, and makes way for the final ruin of the soul. A
far greater judgement it is than the greatest calamity or affliction
which can befal us in this world. If our names suffer by the
greatest reproaches, our bodies by the most painful diseases, our
estates by the greatest losses; if God strike every comfort we have
in this world dead by affliction; all this is nothing, compared with
this blinding judgement of God upon the soul; for they may come from
the tender love of God to us, Heb. 12: 6. but this is the effect of
his wrath; they may cleanse sin, Isa. 28: 9. but this increases it;
they often prove occasions of conversion, Job 36: 8, 9. but this is
the great obstruction to it. In a word, they only wound the flesh,
and that with a curable wound; but this stabs the soul, and that
with a mortal wound.
    
                     First use, of information.
    
    Inference 1. If this be the case of the unbelieving world, to
be so blinded by the god of this world; How little should we value
the censures and slanders of the blind world! Certainly they should
move no other affection but pity in our soul: if their eyes were
opened, their mouths would be shut; they would never traduce
religion, and the sincere profession of it as they do, if Satan had
not blinded their minds: they speak evil of the things they know
not; their reproaches, which they let fly so freely, are but so many
arrows shot by the blind man's bow, which only stick in our clothes,
and can do us no hurt, except we thrust them onward by our own
discontent to the wounding of our spirits. "I could almost be proud
upon it, said Luther, that I have got an ill name among the worst of
men." Beware, Christians that you give them no occasion to blaspheme
the name of your God, and then never trouble yourselves, however
they use your names. If they tread it in the dirt now, God (as one
speaks) will take it up, wash off all the dirt, and deliver it to
you again clear and shining. Should such men speak well of us, we
might justly suspect ourselves of some iniquity which administers to
them the occasions of it.
    Inf. 2. How absurd and dangerous must it be for Christians to
follow the examples of the blind world? Let the blind follow the
blind, but let not those whom God has enlightened do so. Christians,
never let those lead you, who are led blindfold by the devil
themselves. The holiness and heavenliness of Christians was wont to
set the world a wondering that they would not run with them into the
same excess of riot, 1 Pet. 4: 4. But sure, since God has opened
your eyes, and showed you the dangerous courses they walk in, it
would be the greatest wonder of all, if you should be the companions
of such men, and tread in the steps of their examples. Christian, as
humble and lowly thoughts as thou hast of thyself, yet I would have
thee understand thyself to be too good to be the associate of such
men. Discamus sanctam superbiam, et sciamus nos esse illis meliores.
If they will walk with you in the way of duty and holiness, let them
come and welcome; receive them with both arms, and be glad of their
company; but beware you walk not in their paths, lest they be a
snare unto you. Did they see the end of their way, they would never
walk in it themselves; why then will you walk with them who do see
it?
    Inf. 3. If this be so, Let Christians be exact and circumspect
in their walking, lest they lay a stumblingblock before the blind.
It is a great sin to do so in a proper sense, Lev. 19: 14. "Thou
shalt not put a stumbling-block before the blind." And a far greater
to do it in a metaphorical sense, Rom. 14: 18. It is the express
will of God, "that no man put a stumbling block, or an occasion to
fall in his brother's way." It is an argument of little regard to
the honour of Christ, or the souls of men, so to do. O professors,
look to your steps; the devil desires to make use of you for such
purposes. The sins of thousands of others, who make no profession of
godliness, will never so fit his purpose for the blinding of those
men's eyes, as the least slip or failing of yours will do. It is the
living bird that makes the best stale to draw others into the net:
the grossest wickedness of profane sinners passeth away in silence,
but all the neighbourhood shall ring with your miscarriages. "A
righteous man falling, down before the wicked, is as a troubled
fountain and a corrupt spring," Prov. 25: 26. The scandalous falls
of good men are like a bag of poison cast by Satan into the spring
from whence the whole town is supplied with water. You little know
what mischief you do, and how many blind sinners may fall into hell
by your occasion.
    Inf. 4. How dangerous a thing is zeal in a wicked man? It is
like a sharp sword in a blind man's hand, or like a high mettle in a
blind horse. How much has the church of God suffered upon this
account, and does suffer at this day: The world has ever been full
of such blind and blustering zeal, which, like a hurricane,
overturns all that stands in its way: yea, as we noted before, it
makes a man a kind of conscientious persecutor. I confess it is
better for the persecutor himself to do it ignorantly, because
ignorance leaves him in a capacity for mercy, and sets him a degree
lower than the malicious, enlightened persecutor, 1 Tim. 1: 13. else
it were the dreadful case described in Heb. 10. But yet, as it is,
John 16: 2 these are the fierce and dreadful enemies of the church
of God. Such a man was Paul, a devout persecutor, and such
persecution God afterward suffered to befal himself, Acts 13: 50.
"But the Jews stirred up the devout and honourable women, and the
chief men of that city; and raised persecution against Paul and
Barnabas, and expelled them out of their coasts." An erroneous
conscience binds, as well as an informed conscience, and wherever
God gives such men opportunity to vent the spleen and rage of their
hearts upon his people, they will be sure to do it to purpose. With
other men Gamaliel's counsel may have some influence, and they may
be afraid lest they be found fighters against God; but blind zeal
spurs on, and saith, as Jehu did, "Come, see my zeal for the Lord of
Hosts." O blind sinners, be sure of your mark before you discharge
your arrows. If you shoot at a wicked man, as you suppose him, and
God finds one of his dear children wounded or destroyed, what
account will you give of that fact to God when you shall come before
his judgement-seat?
    
                    Second use, of exportation?.
    
    This point is very improveable by way of exhortation. Both,
    1. Unto those who are blinded by the god of this world.
    2. To those that are enlightened in the knowledge of Christ, by
the true God.
    First, To those who are still blinded by the god of this world,
to whom the Lord has not given unto this day eyes to see their
misery in themselves, or their remedy in Christ, so as to make an
effectual application of him to their own souls. To all such my
counsel is,
    1. To get a sense of your own blindness.
    2. To seek out for a cure, whilst yet it may be had.
    First, Labour to get a deep sense of the misery of such a
condition; for till you be awakened by conviction, you can never be
healed. O that you did but know the true difference betwixt common
and saving light; the want of this keeps you in darkness: You think
because you know the same things that the most unsanctified men
does, that therefore there is no difference betwixt his knowledge
and yours; and are therefore ready to say to them, as Job to his
friends, "Lo, mine eye has seen all this, mine ear has heard and
understood it: what ye know, the same do I know also; I am not
inferior unto you," Job 13: 1, 2. But O that you would be convinced
that your knowledge vastly differs from the knowledge of believers.
Though you know the same things that they do, it is a knowledge of
another kind and nature. You know spiritual things in another way,
merely by the light of reason, assisted and improved by the common
light of the gospel; they know the same things by spiritual
illumination, and in an experimental way. 1 John 2: 20. "Ye have an
unction from the holy One, and ye know all things." Their knowledge
is practical, yours is idle. They are working out their salvation,
by that light which God has given them, Psal. 111: 10. Their
knowledge of God and Christ produces the fruits of faith, obedience,
and mortification, and heavenly-mindedness in them: it has no such
fruits in you; whatever light there be in your understandings, it
makes no alteration at all upon your hearts. The light brings them
to heaven, John 17: 3. Yours shall be blown out by death, 1 Cor. 13:
8. and yourselves left in the mists of eternal darkness, except your
eyes be opened seasonably by the anointing of the Holy Ghost.
Conviction is a great part of your cure.
    Secondly, Labour to act a remedy for this dangerous disease of
your minds: "Awake to righteousness, and sin not, for some have not
the knowledge of God: I speak this to your shame," 1 Cor. 15: 34.
These things speak encouragement to you, though it be a sore
judgement that lies upon you, and very difficult to be removed: yet
remember Jesus Christ is commissioned by God the Father to open the
blind eyes, Isa. 13: 6, 7. and this excellent physician be speaks
you for his patients, Rev. 3: 18. "Anoint thine eyes, (saith he)
with eye-salve that thou mayest see. Yea, the most enlightened
Christians were once as dark and blind in spiritual things as you
are, and Christ has cured them, Eph. 5: 8. "Once were you darkness,
now are ye light in the Lord." Attend therefore upon the ordinances
of the gospel diligently; that is God's enlightening instrument by
which he couches those cataracts which blind the eyes of men's
understandings, Acts 26: 28. And if ever you will have your eyes
opened, allow yourselves time to ponder and consider what you hear.
The duty of meditation is a very enlightening duty: above all, cry
to the Lord Jesus Christ, as that poor man did, "Lord, that mine
eyes may be opened, that I may receive my sight. Say, Lord, this is
my disease and danger, that in seeing I see not. Others see natural
things in a Spiritual way, whilst I see spiritual things only in a
natural way. Their light is operative upon their hearts, mine is but
an idle impractical notion of religion, which brings forth no fruit
of holiness. Their knowledge sets their hands a work in duties of
obedience; mine only sets my tongue a work in discourses of those
things which my heart never felt. Lord, open mine eyes, and make me
to see out of this obscurity: All the light that is in me is but
darkness. O Lord, enlighten my darkness, enlighten mine eyes, lest I
sleep the sleep of death.
    Secondly, Let it be a word of counsel and exhortation to such
as once were blind, but do now see.
    First, I beseech you, bless God for the least degree of
spiritual illumination. "Truly light is sweet, and it is a pleasant
thing for the eyes to behold the sun," Eccles. 11: 7. But O how
sweet is spiritual light! and what a pleasant thing to behold the
Sun of righteousness! Blessed are your eyes, for they see God has
brought you out of darkness into marvellous light. And marvellous
indeed it must needs be, when you consider how many wise and prudent
men are under the power of spiritual darkness, whilst such babes as
you are enlightened, Mat. 11: 21;. It greatly affected the heart of
Christ; O let it affect yours also.
    Secondly, Labour to get a clearer sight of spiritual things
every day. For all spiritual light is increasing light, "which
shines more and more unto the perfect day, Prov. 4: 18. O! if a
little spiritual light be so comfortable, what would more be? The
wisdom of God is a manifold wisdom, Eph. 3: 10. The best of us see
but little of it. Labour therefore to know spiritual things more
extensively, and more experimentally, Phil. 2: 8, 9. Be still
increasing in the knowledge of God.
    Thirdly, Walk as men whose eyes are opened. "Once ye were in
darkness, now are ye light in the Lord; walk as children of the
light," Eph. 5: 8. else your light will but aggravate your sin.
Remember how it displeased God, that Solomon's heart was turned from
the Lord God of Israel who appeared to him twice, 1 Kings 11: 9.
Remember how angry God was with the Heathens for abusing the dim
common light of nature, Rom. 1: 21. How much more evil is it in you
to abuse the most precious light that shineth in this world? and
what mischievous effects the abuse of your light will have upon this
blind world? It was a smart rebuke given once by an Atheist to a
good man, who being asked by him how he could satisfy his conscience
to live as he did? Nay rather, said the Atheist, I wonder how you
can satisfy yourself to live as you do; for did I believe as you do,
that there is such a Christ, and such a glory as you believe there
are, I would pray and live at another rate than you do.
    
                           The Conclusion
                                  
    And now, reader, if all my discourses of the method of Christ
in purchasing the great salvation for us, and the way of the Spirit
in applying it, and making it effectual to God's elect; thou hast
two wonders before thine eyes, either of which may astonish thy
soul, in the consideration of them, viz.
    1. This admirable grace of God in preparing this great
Salvation.
    2. The desperate wickedness of man in rejecting this great
Salvation.
    First, Behold the riches of the goodness and mercy of God in
preparing such a remedy as this for lost man. This is that which is
justly called "The great mystery of godliness," 1 Tim. 3: 16. that
mystery which the prophets inquired diligently after, yea, which the
"angels desired to look into," 1 Pet. 1: 10, 12. In this glorious
mystery of redemption, that "polutoikilos sofia", manifold wisdom of
God, or that wisdom which has such curious and admirable variety in
it, is illustriously displayed, Eph. 4: 10. Yea, the contrivance of
our redemption, this way, is the most glorious display of divine
love that ever was made, or can be made, in this world to the
children of men; for so the apostle will be understood, when he
saith, Rom. 5: 8. "Sonisesi tes heautou agapen", - God has set
forth, or presented his love to man in the most engaging manner, in
a way that commends it beyond all compare to the acceptation of men.
"This is a faithful saying, and worthy of all acceptation, that
Jesus Christ came into the world to save sinners," 1 Tim. 1: 15. It
might be justly expected, that when this glorious mystery should
come to be published by the gospel in the ears of sinners, all eyes
should be withdrawn from all other objects, and fixed with
admiration upon Christ, all hearts should be ravished with these
glad tidings; and every man pressing to Christ with the greatest
zeal and diligence. But behold, instead thereof,
    Secondly, The desperate wickedness of the world, in rejecting
the only remedy prepared for them. This was long since foretold by
the prophet, Isa. 53: 3. "He is despised and rejected of men, a man
of sorrows, and acquainted with grief; and we hid our faces from
him; he was despised, and we esteemed him not." His poor and mean
appearance, which should endear him beyond all considerations to the
souls of men, (since it was for their sakes, that he emptied himself
of all his glory) yet this lays him under contempt, he is looked on
as the very outcast of men, when his own love to man had emptied him
of all his riches, the wickedness of men loaded him with contempt,
and as it was prophesied of him, so it was, and at this day is sadly
verified all the world over; for,
    First, The Pagan world has no knowledge of him, they are lost
in darkness. "God has suffered them to walk in their own ways," Acts
14: 16.
    Secondly, The Mahometans which overspread so great a part of
the world reject him, and instead of the blessed gospel, which they
hiss at with abhorrence, embrace the blasphemous and ridiculous
Alcoran, which they confidently affirm came down from God
immediately in that Laylatto Hanzili (as they call it) the night of
demission, calling all Christians, Cafirouna, i.e. Infidels.
    Thirdly, The Jews reject him with abhorrence, and spit at his
very name, and being blind-folded by the devil, they call Jesus
Anathema, 1 Cor. 12: 3. And in a blind zeal for Moses, blaspheme him
as an impostor. "He came to his own, and his own received him not,"
John 1: 11.
    Fourthly, The far greater part of the Christianised world
reject him; those that are called after his name, will not submit to
his government. The nobles of the world think themselves dishonoured
by submitting their necks to his yoke. The sensualists of the world
will not deny their lusts, or forsake their pleasures, for all the
treasures of righteousness, life and peace, which his blood has
purchased. Worldlings of the earth prefer the dirt and dung of the
world before him; and few there be among them that profess
Christianity, who love the Lord Jesus in sincerity. The only reason
why they are called Christians is, because, by the advantageous cast
of providence, they were born and educated in a nation where
Christianity is professed and established by the laws of the
country; and if the wind should turn, and the public authority think
fit to establish another religion, they can shift their sail, and
steer a contrary course.
    But now, reader, let me tell thee, that if ever God send forth
these two grim sergeants, his law, and thine own conscience, to
arrest thee for thy sins, if thou find thyself dragged away by them
towards that prison from whence none return, that are once clapt up
therein, and that in this unspeakable distress Jesus Christ manifest
himself to thy soul, and open thy heart to receive him, and become
thy surety with God, pay all thy debts, and cancel all thy
obligations, thou wilt love him at another rate than others do; his
blood will run deeper in thine eves than it does in the shallow
apprehensions of the world; he will be altogether lovely, and thou
wilt account all things but dung and dross in comparison of the
excellency of Jesus Christ thy Lord. To work thy heart to this
frame, these things are written, which the Lord prosper upon thy
soul, by the blessing of his good Spirit upon thee.
    
                  Blessed be God for Jesus Christ!


End

