SERMONS PREACHED BY THAT EMINENT DIVINE, Henry Hammond, D. D.

PUBLISHED According to the AƲTHORS own Copies.

‘How shall they hear, without a Preacher? And how shall they Preach, except they be sent?’ Rom. x. 14, 15. ‘Go ye into all the world, and preach the Gospel to every creature.’ St. Mark xvi. 15.

LONDON, Printed for ROBERT PAWLET, at the Bible in Chancery-Lane near Fleet-street. MDCLXXV.

A TABLE OF THE SERMONS.

  • A Sermon on Ezek. 16. 30. The work of an Imperious Whorish Woman. Pag. 1
  • A Sermon on Philip. 4. 13. I can do all things through Christ that strengthens me. p. 19
  • A Sermon on Prov. 1. 21. How long ye simple ones will ye love simplicity? p. 33
  • A Sermon on Matt. 1. 23. Emmanuel, which is by Interpretation, God with us, p. 48
  • A Sermon on Luke 9. 55. Yo know not what manner of spirit ye are of. p. 61
  • A Sermon on Ezek. 18. 31. For why will ye die? p. 76
  • A Sermon on Jer. 5. 2. Though they say, The Lord liveth, surely they swear falsly. p. 91
  • A Sermon on Luke 18. 11. God I thank thee, that I am not as other men, &c. p. 105
  • A Sermon on Matth. 3. 3. Prepare ye the way of the Lord. p. 130
  • A Sermon on John 7. 48. Have any of the Pharisees believed on him? p. 147
  • [Page] A Sermon on Matt. 10. 15. It shall be more tolerable for the Land of Sodom and Gomorrah, &c. p. 165
  • Two Sermons on Acts 17. 30. And the times of this ignorance God winked at, &c. p. 180. & p. 196
  • A Sermon on Rom. 1. 26. For this cause God gave them up unto vile affections. p. 213
  • A Sermon on Gal. 6. 15. But a new Creature. p. 237
  • Two Sermons on 2 Pet. 3. 3. Scoffers, walking after their own lusts. p. 244. & 258
  • Two Sermons on 1 Tim. 1. 15. Of whom I am chief. p. 271. & p. 284

Imprimatur,

GEO. STRADLING, S. T. P. Rev. in Christo Patr. Dom. GILB. Episc. Lond. à Sac. Domest.

The I. Sermon.

EZEK. XVI. 30.‘The Work of an imperious Whorish Woman.’

NOt to chill your ears by keeping you long at the doors; not to detain you one minute with a cold unprofitable Preface: This Chapter is the exactest History of the Spiritual estate of the Jews, i. e. The elect of God, and the powerfullest exprobration D of their sins, that all the Writings under Heaven can present to our eyes. From the first time I could think I understood any part of it I have been confident, that never any thing was set down more rhetorically, never more [...] and [...], more affection and sublimity of speech, ever concurred in any one writing of this quantity, either sacred or prophane. 'Twere a work for the solidst Artist to observe distinctly every part of Logick and Rhetorick that lies concealed in this one Chapter, and yet there E is enough in the surface and outward dress of it, to affect the mean­est understanding that will but read it. For our present purpose it will suffice to have observ'd, 1. That the natural sinful estate of the Jews, being premised in the five first Verses: 2. The calling of them in this condition, in their pollutions, in their blood, and bestowing all manner of spiritual ornaments upon them, following in the next ten Verses; the remainder is most what spent in the upbraiding and ag­gravating their sins to them in a most elevated strain of reproof; and E the [...] or highest pitch of it, is in the words of my Text, The work of an imperious Whorish Woman.

For the handling of which words, I first beg two postulata to be granted and supposed, before my discourse, because I would not trou­ble you to hear them proved.

[Page 2] I. That the elect chosen people of God, the Jews, were degenerate A into heathen, desperate, devillish sinners.

II. That what is literally spoken in aggravation of the Jews sin, is as fully applicable to any other sinful people, with whom God hath entred Covenant, as he did with the Jews.

And then the subject of my present discourse, shall be this, That Indulgence to sin, in a Christian, is the Work of an imperious Whorish Woman. And that 1. Of a Woman noting a great deal of weakness; and that not simple natural weakness, through a privation of all B strength, but an acquired, sluggish weakness, by effeminate neg­lecting to make use of it. 2. Of a Whore, noting unfaithfulness and falseness to the Husband. 3. Of an imperious Whore, noting insolency and an high pitch of contempt.

And of these, briefly and plainly; not to encrease your know­ledge, but to enliven and enflame the practical part of your souls; not to enrich your brains with new store, but to sink that which you have already down into your hearts.C

And first of the first, That Indulgence to sin, in a Christian, is the work of a Woman; an effect and argument of an infinite deal of weakness, together with the nature and grounds of that weakness: The work, &c.

And this very thing, that it may be the more heeded, is empha­tically 1 noted three several times in this one Verse. 1. The work of a Woman, in my Text, a poor, cowardly, pusillanimous part that any body else, any one that had but the least spark of valor or manhood in D him, would scorn to be guilty of, an argument of one that hath suffer­ed all his parts and gifts to lie sluggish & unprofitable, and at last, even quite perished by difusing. As the weakness of Women, below Men, proceeds not only from their constitution and temper, but from their course of life; not from want of natural strength, but of civil manlike exercise, which might stir up and discipline, and ripen that strength they have: For if their education were as warlike, and their strength by valiant undertaking, so set out; Virago's and Amazons, would be E well-nigh as ordinary as soldiers. And so will the comparison hold of those womanish, sluggish, abusers of Gods graces. Then in the first 2 words of this Verse, How weak is thy heart?] noting it to be a degree of weakness below ordinary; as we call one a weak man, that hath done any thing rashly or unadvisedly, which, if he had but thought on, he could never have been so sottish, his ordinary reason would have prompted him to safer counsels. In brief, Any frequent, indiscreet actions, argue a weak fellow: Not that he wants strength of discretion F 3 to do better, but that he makes no use of it in his actions. Thirdly, How weak is thy heart?] Thy heart, i. e. The principal part of the Man, (as the Brain is the speculative) the fountain of good and evil actions, and performances. Now the word [...] in the Original, signi­fying the heart; being naturally of the Masculine Gender, is here set in [Page 3] A the feminine, out of order, perhaps emphatically, to note an unman-like impotent, effeminate heart; all its actions are mixt with so much passion and weakness, they are so raw and womanish, that it would grieve one to behold a fair, comely, man-like Christian in shew, be­traying so much impotency in his behaviour, (even like the Empe­rour a spinning) one who had undertaken to be a Champion for Christ, led away, and abused and baffled by every pelting paul­try lust. 'Tis lamentable to observe what a poor, cowardly, B degenerous spirit is in most Christians; with how slender as­saults and petty stratagems, they are either taken captive, or put to flight; how easily in their most resolute undertakings of piety or vertue, they are either vanquisht, or caught. The ordinariest, coursest, had-favouredst temptation that they can see, affects and smites them suddenly; they are entangled, before they are wooed; and the least appearance of any difficulty, the vizard or picture of the easiest danger is enough to fright them for ever from any thought C of Religion, or hope of Heaven.

For a meer natural man that hath nothing but original sin, or worse in him, that hath received nothing from God and his parents, but a talent in a broken Vessel, a soul infected by a crazy body, diseas'd as soon as born; for an Heathen that hath nothing to subsist on but a poor pittance of natural reason, but one eye to see by, and that a dim one; for a meer Barbarian or Gentile to be thus triumphed over by every Devil, (as an Owl by the smallest Bird in the air) might be D matter of pity rather than wonder: And yet few of them were such cowards; those very weapons that Nature had furnished them with, being rightly put on, and fitted to them, stood many of them in ve­ry good stead. There were few passions, few sins of an ordinary size, but a Philosopher, and meer Stoick would be able to meet and van­quish: And therefore 'tis not so much natural, as affected weakness, not so much want of strength, as sluggishness and want of care; not so much impotency, as numbness and stupidity of our parts, which hath E so extremely dis-abled those that take themselves to be the weak­est of us.

The truth is, we are willing to conceive that our natural abilities are quite perisht and annihilate, and that God hath no ways repaired them by Christ, because we will not be put to the trouble of making use of them: We would spare our pains, and therefore would fain count our selves impotent, as sluggards that personate and act diseases because they would not work; or the old Tragedians which could call F a god down upon the Stage at any time, to consummate the impos­siblest Plot, and therefore would not put their brains to the toil of concluding it fairly.

Certainly the decrepitest man under Heaven (if he be but a degree above a Carcass) is able to defend himself from an ordinary Flie; 'Tis one of the Devils titles to be Beelzebub the Prince of Flies; and such [Page 4] are many of his temptations; He that hath but life in him, may keep A himself from any harm of one of them; but the matter is, they come in flocks, & being driven once away, they return again. Muscaest animal insolens, and the Devil is frequent in these temptations, & though you could repel them as fast as they come, yet 'twould be a troublesome piece of work; it will be more for your ease to lye still under them, to let them work their will: So in time Fly-blows beget noysomness and vermine in the soul; and then the life and death of that man be­comes like that of the Egyptians, or Herod, and no plague more fi­nally B desperate, than those two of Flies and Lice. I am resolv'd there be many temptations which foil many jolly Christians, which yet a meer natural man that never dream't of Scripture, or Gods Spirit, might, if he did but bethink himself, resist, and many times overcome. Many acts of uncleanness, of intemperance, of contempt of supe­riours, of murther, of false-dealing, of swearing and prophaning, that cheap, unprofitable, that untempting, and therefore unreasonable sin. Many acts I say, of these open, abhominable sins, which either C custome or humane Laws make men ashamed of, and the like; the very Law of Reason within us is able to affront, and check, and con­quer. That [...],In Phol. p. 915. as Methodius calls it, that Law born with us; Naturale judicatorium, Wiggers, pr. ma secundae, pag. 160. saith Austin against Pelagius; Lux no­stri intellectus, say the Schoolmen out of Damascen; Nay, [...],A [...]ian. Epict. l. 2. c. 9. saith the Stoick, the promise that every one makes to na­ture, the Obligation that he is bound in when he hath first leave to be a man, or as Hierocles on the Pythagorean Verses, [...],D That Oath that is coaetaneous, and co-essential to all reasonable natures, and engages them [...], &c. not to trans­gress the Laws that are set them. [...], [...] [...], l. 1. p. 12. & lib. 2. p. 36. [...], l. 4. p. 50. This is I say, enough to keep us in some terms or compass, to swathe and bind us in, to make us look somewhat like men, & defeat the Devil in many a skirmish. But how much more for a Christian, who if it were by nothing but his Bap­tism, hath certainly some advantages of other men: For one that, if he acknowledge any, worships the true God; never went a fooling E after Idols, which was the Original of the Heathens being given up to vile affections, Rom. I. Rom. 1. for one that lives in a civil Countrey among people that have the faces and hearts of men and Christians, made as it were,Wisd. II. to upbraid his wayes, and reprove his thoughts; for one that is within the sound of Gods Law, and Light of his Go­spel, by which he may edifie more than ever Heathen did by thun­der and lightning; for one that cannot chuse but fear and believe, and love, and hope in God, in some measure or kind, be he never so F unregenerate; for him, I say, that hath all these outward restraints, and perhaps some inward twinges of Conscience, to curb and moderate him, to be yet so stupid under all these helps, as never to be able to raise up one thought toward heaven, to have yet not the least atome of Soul to move in the ways of godliness, but to fall prostrate like a [Page 5] A Carkass, or a Statue, or that Idol Dagon with his feet stricken off, not able to stand before the slightest motion of sin; or if a lust, or a phan­sie, or a devil, be he the ugliest in Hell, any thing but God appear to him, presently to fall down and worship. This is such a sottish condi­tion, such an either Lethargy or Consumption of the Soul, such an ex­tream degree of weakness, that neither original sin, that Serpent that despoiled Adam, nor any one single Devil can be believed to have wrought in us; but that [...] (as the Platonicks call it) A popular B Government of sin, under a multitude of Tyrants, which have for so long a while, wasted and harassed the Soul; so that now it is quite crest-faln,Mark V. 3. as that legion of Devils, Mar. V. 3. which dwelt among the Tombs in a liveless, cadaverous, noisome Soul; or more truly that evil spirit, Mark I. 23. Mark I. 23. that made the man disclaim and renounce Christ and his mercies, when he came to cure; Let us alone, what have we to do with thee? By which is noted, That contentedness and acqui­escence in sin; that even stubborn, wilfulness, and resolvedness to die, C that a long sluggish custom in sin, will bring us to; and that you may resolve on, as the main discernable cause of this weakness of the heart, a habit, and long service and drudgery in sin. But then, as a ground of that, you may take notice of another, a phansie that hath crept into most mens hearts (and suffers them not to think of resisting any temptation to sin) that all their actions, as well evil as good, were long ago determined and set down by God; and now nothing left to them, but a necessity of performing what was then determined. I D would fain believe, that that old heresie of the Stoicks, revived indeed among the Turks, concerning the inevitable production of all things; that fatal necessity, even of sins, should yet never have gotten any footing or entertainment among Christians; but that by a little expe­rience in the practice of the world, I find it among many a main piece of their faith, and the only point that can yield them any comfort; that their sins, be they never so many & outragious, are but the effects, or at least, the consequents of Gods decree; that all their care, and solli­citude, E and most wary endeavors, could not have cut off any one sin from the Catalogue; that unless God be pleased [...]; to come down upon the Stage, by the irresistible power of his constraining spirit, as with a Thunderbolt from Heaven, to shake and shiver to pieces the carnal man within them, to strike them into a swoon as he did Saul, that so he may convert them; and in a word, to force and ravish them to Heaven: [...]. Unless he will even drive and carry them, they are never likely to be able to stir; to perform any the least work of reason, but F fall minutely into the most irrational, unnatural sins in the world, nay, even into the bottom of that pit of Hell, without any stop, or delay, or power of deliberating in this their precipice. This is an heresie that in some Philosopher-Christians hath sprouted above ground, hath shew­ed it self in their brains and tongues; and that more openly in some bolder Wits, but the Seeds of it are sown thick in most of our hearts, [Page 6] I fear in every habitual sinner amongst us, if we were but at leisure to A look into our selves. The Lord give us a heart to be forewarned in this behalf.

To return into the rode: Our natural inclinations and propensions to sin, are no doubt, active and prurient enough within us, somewhat of Jehu's constitution and temper, they drive very furiously. But then to perswade our selves, that there is no means on earth, besides the very hand of God, and that out of our reach, able to trash, or over­slow this furious driver; that all the ordinary clogs that God hath pro­vided B us; our reason and natural conscience, as Men; our Knowledge, as Christians; nay, his restraining, though not sanctifying graces, toge­ther with the Lungs and Bowels of his Ministers, and that energetical powerful Instrument, the Gospel of Christ, Which is the power of God unto salvation, even to every Jew, nay, and Heathen, Rom. 1. To re­solve, That all these are not able to keep us in any compass, to quell any the least sin we are inclined to; that unless God will by force make Saints of us, we must needs presently be Devils, and so leave C all to Gods omnipotent working, and never make use of those powers, with which he hath already furnished us. This is a monstrous piece of unchristian divinity; a way, by advancing the Grace of God, to de­stroy it, and by depending on the Holy Ghost, to grieve, if not to sin against him; to make the corruption of our nature equal to nay, sur­passing the punishment of the Devils; a necessary and irreversible obduration in all kinds and measures of sin.

This one practical Heresie will bring us through all the prodigies D of the old Philosophical Sects, from Stoicks to Epicurism, and all sensual Libertinism, and from thence to the [...] of the Pythagoreans. For unless the soul that is now in one of us, had been transplanted from a Swine, or some other the most stupid, sottish, degenerous sort of Beasts, it is impossible that it should thus naturally, and necessarily, and perpetually, and irrecoverably, delight & wallow in every kind of sensuality, without any check or contradiction, either of Reason, or Christianity. If I should tell you that none of you, that hath under­stood E and pondered the Will of God, wants abilities in some measure to perform it, if he would muster up all his forces, at time of need; that every Christian hath grace enough to smother lusts in the Womb, and keep them, at least, from bringing forth; to quell a temptation before it break out into an actual sin, you would think perhaps that I flattered you, and deceived my self in too good an opinion of your strength. Only thus much then, It would be somewhat for your edification to try what you could do: Certainly there is much more in a Christians F power (if he be not engaged in a habit of sin) than we imagine; though not for the performing of good, yet for the inhibiting of evil. And therefore bethinking our selves, [...], saith Arrian, That we are the sons of God, [...], Let us not have too low and degenerous an opinion of our selves. Do but endeavour resolutely [Page 7] A and couragiously to repel temptations as often as they sollicite thee; make use of all thy ordinary restraints; improve thy natural fear and shamefac'dness, thy Christian education, tender disposition to the highest pitch; do but hold sincerely as long as thou art able, and though I will not say that all thy sins shall be confin'd to those two heads of original (a branch of which are evil motions) and of omis­sion; yet I will undertake, that thou shalt have an easier burthen of actual commissions upon thy soul, and that will prove a good ease for B thee: Those are they that weigh it down into the deep, that sink it desperateliest into that double Tophet of obduration and despair. Fi­nal obduration being a just judgment of God, on one that hath fill'd up the measure of his iniquities, that hath told over all the hairs of his head, and sands of the Sea in actual sins; and a necessary consum­mation of that, despair; the first part, the Prologue and Harbinger to that worm in Hell.

'Twere easie to shew how faith might afford a Christian sufficient C guard and defence against the keenest weapon in the Devils armory, and retort every stroke upon himself: But because this is the Faith only of a Wife, not as we now consider as a woman at large, but in a nearer obligation, as a Spouse, We shall more opportunely handle that in the next Part, where we shall consider Indulgence in sin, as the work of a whorish Woman; where whoredome, noting adultery, pre­supposes wedlock, and consists in unfaithfulness to the Husband, the thing in the next place to be discovered: The Work, &c.

D That Christ is offered by his Father to all the Church for an Hus­band; that he waits, and begs, and sends presents to us all to ac­cept of the proposal, the whole Book of Canticles, that Song of spiritual love, that affectionate wooing Sonnet will demonstrate: That every Christian accepts of this Match, and is Sacramentally e­spoused to Christ at his Baptism; his being call'd by the Husbands Name imports:Isai. IV. 1. For that is the meaning of the phrase, Isai. IV. 1. Let us be called by thy Name, i. e. marry us. That Faith is the only thing E that makes up the Match, and entitles us to his Name, and Estate, is observable, both from many places of Scripture, and by the oppo­sition which is set betwixt a Christian, and all others, Jews and Infidels, betwixt the Spouse, and either the destitute Widow, or barren Virgin; the ground of which is only Faith.

So then, every Christian at his Baptism being supposed a Believer, and thereby espoused sacramentally to Christ, and so obliged to all the observances, as partaker of all the priviledges of a Wife: doth F at every unchaste thought, or adulterous motion, offend against the fidelity promised in marriage, by every actual breach of this faith, is for the present guilty of Adultery, but by indulgence in it, is down­right a whore; i. e. either one that came to Christ with an unchaste, adulterous love to gain somewhat, not for any sincere affection to his person, but insidious to his estate; and having got that, is soon [Page 8] weary of his person: or else one that came to him with pure vir­gin A thoughts, resolving her self a perpetual captive to his love, and never to be tyred with those beloved fetters of his embraces; but in time meets with a more flattering amiable piece of beauty, and is soon hurried after that, and so forgetteth both her vows and love.

Thus shall you see an handsome, modest, maidenly Christian, espou­sed to Christ at the Font, and fully wedded by his Ring at Confirma­tion: Nay, come nearer yet to him, and upon many solemn expressi­ons B of fidelity, and obedience, vouchsafed the seal of his very heart in the Sacrament of his Blood: Another that hath liv'd with him a long while in uniform, constant loyalty, noted by all the neighbor­hood for an absolute Wife; a grave solemn, matronly Christian: yet either upon the allurements of some fresh sprightful sin, or the sol­licitations of an old-acquaintance lust, the insinuations of some wily intruder, or a specious shew of a glorious glittering temptation; or when these are all wanting, upon the breaking out of an evil heart C of unbelief (which some outward restraints formerly kept in) depart­ing from the living God, profess open neglect and despight against the Husband which before they so wooed, and flattered and made love to. 'Twere long to number out to you, and give you by tale a Catalogue of those defections and adulterous practices which Christi­ans are ordinarily observed to be guilty of, (which whether they go so far as to make a divorce betwixt the soul and Christ, or whether only to provoke him to jealousie, whether by an intercision of Grace D and Faith, or by an interruption and suspension of the acts, I will not now examine) I will go no farther than the Text, which censures it here as a piece of spiritual whoredom, of treacherous unfaithful dealing, to be light, unconstant, and false to Christ; whose Spouse they are esteemed, whose Name they bear, and Estate they pretend title to. And so indeed it is, for what greater degree of unfaithful­ness can be imagined? What fouler breach of Matrimonial Cove­nants, than to value every ordinary prostitute sin, before the preci­ous E chastest embraces of an Husband, and a Saviour? to be caught and captivate with the meanest vanity upon earth, when it appears in competition with all the treasures in Heaven? Besides, that spi­ritual Armor which Faith bestows on a Christian, Eph. vi. 16. suffici­ent to quench all the fiery darts of the wicked, Eph. vi. 16. or, as the Greek hath it, [...] that wicked one, the Devil, methinks there is a kind of moral influence from Faith on any wise & prudent heart, enough to enliven, and animate, and give it spirit, against the force or threat­nings F of any the strongest temptation, and to encourage him in the most crabbed, uncooth, disconsolate undertakings of godly obedience. For what sin didst thou ever look upon with the fullest delight of all thy senses, in the enjoying of which, thy most covetous, trouble­some, importunate lusts would all rest satisfied, but one minute of [Page 9] A Heaven, truly represented to thy heart, would infinitely out-weigh? A Turk is so affected with the expectation of his carnal Paradise, those Catholick everlasting Stews, which he fancies to himself for heaven, that he will scarce taste any wine all his life-time, for fear of disabling and depriving him of his lust; he will be very stanch from sin, that he may merit and be sure to have his fill of it. And then certainly one clear single apprehension of that infinite bliss which the Eye of Faith represents to us, were enough to ravish a world of B souls, to preponderate all other delights, which the most poetical fan­cy of man or Devil could possess us with. Were but the love of Christ to us, ever suffered to come into our hearts, (as Species to the Eye by introreception) had we but come to the least taste and relish of it, what would we not do to recompence, and answer, and entertain that love? what difficulty would it not ingratiate to us? what exquisite pleasure, or carnal rival, would not be cheap and contemptible in its presence? If thou hast but faith to the size of a grain of Mustard-seed, C speak to this mountain, and it shall be removed, the tallest, cum­bersome, unweildy temptation which all the giants in Hell can mould together, (as once they are feign'd to do the Hills to get up to Heaven, Pelion Ossae, &c.) if thou dost but live, or breath by Faith, shall vanish at the least blast of thy nostrils. The clear representati­on of more valuable pleasures, and more horrid dangers than any the flesh can propose, certainly attending the performances, or breach of our Vow of Wedlock, is enough to charm and force us to perpetual cha­stity; D to fright or scoff all other wooers out of our sights; to re­probate and damn them as soon as they appear: There is on this husband of ours a confluence of all infinite imaginable delights, which whosoever hath but once tasted, but from a kiss of his mouth, he is not unconstant, but sottish, if he ever be brought to any new embraces. But then openly to contemn, to profess neglects, to go a wooing again, to tempt and sollicite even temptations, to give gifts to all thy lovers, to hire them that they may come unto thee on every E side for thy whoredoms, Vers. 33. vers. 33. of this Chapter; This is a degree of stupidity and insolence, of insatiable pride and lust, that neither the iniquity of Sodom, nor stubbornness of Capernaum, nor the Rhetori­call'st Phrase almost in the very Scripture can express, but only this in my Text, which comes in the last place with a marvellous Em­phasis, Imperious.] The work, &c.

In which one Epithet many of the highest degrees of sin are con­tein'd. 1. Confidence and shamelesness in sinning, an imperious Whore, mu­lier F impudicae libidinis, one that is better acquainted with lust, than to blush when she meets with it; modesty and coyness are but infirmities rather than good qualities of youth; effects of ignorance and tender­ness and unexperience in sin, a little more conversation in the world, will season men to a bolder temper, & in time instruct them, that this modesty is the only thing they ought to be asham'd of. 'Tis not ingenuity [Page 10] but cowardise, a poor degenerous, pusillanimous humour, to go fear­fully A about a vice, to sin tremblingly and with regrets: This country disposition, or soft temper, when we come abroad into the world, amongst men, 'tis quite out-dated: Thus is impudence and a forehead of steel, grown not the armour only, but even the complexion of eve­ry man-like spirit. He is not fit for the Devils war, that is so poorly appointed either with courage or munition, as to be discomfited by a look; 'tis part of his honour not to fear disgrace, and his reputation, not to stand upon so poor a thing as reputation. B

2. Imperious,] taking all authority into her own hands, scorning to be afraid either of God or Devil, quae regno posita neminem timeat, having fancied her self in a throne, never thinks either of enemy to endanger, or of superiour to quell her; but sins confidently, & in Cathedrâ, Psal, I. 1. in state, in security, and at ease,Psal. I. 1. and never doubts or fears to be removed.

And this is most primarily observable in the Jews, depending on their carnal Prerogatives, as being of Abrahams seed; and yet thus C also may we suspect do many among us, some tying Gods decree of Election to their persons, and individual entities, without any refe­rence to their qualifications, or demeanors; others by a premature perswasion that they are in Christ, and so in such an irreversible estate, that all the temptations, all the Devils, nay, all the sins in Hell, shall never dispossess them: Others resolv'd, That God can see no sin in his children, in imitation of Marcus in Irenaeus, whose Heresie, or rather Fancie it was [...],D that by the redemption they were become invisible: Upon these I say, and other grounds (how true, I will not now examine) do many rash presumers abuse the grace of God unto wantonness; never fear to sin, because they need not fear to be punished; never cease to pro­voke God, because they are sure he is their friend; and being resol­ved of him as a Saviour, contemn him as a Judge. Multiad sapien­tiam pervenissent, &c. saith he, Many had come to learning enough, had they not believed too soon they had attain'd it. No such hindrance to E proficiency, as too timely a conceit of knowledge: Thus might we ordinarily guess some men to have been in good towardly estates, had they not made too much hast to conceive so; and having once possest themselves of heaven on such slight grounds, such as not a solemn ex­amination of themselves, but some gleams of their fancy had bestow­ed upon them; 'tis no wonder if all the effects of their assurance be spiritual security, and supine confidence in sinning: they have hid their heads in heaven by their vain speculation, and then think their whole F body must needs be safe, be it never so open and naked, and bare to all temptations. Nay, be they up to the shoulders in carnality, nay, earth, nay, hell, yet seeing caput inter nubila] their head is in the clouds, there is no danger or fear of drowning, be it never so deep or myrie. This was Laodice as estate,Rev. III. 17. Rev. III. 17. She fancied her self great store [Page 11] A of spiritual riches & brought in an Inventory of a very fair estate, I am rich and am encreased in goods, and have need of nothing: any more acces­sion, even of the graces of God, would be but superfluousand burthen­some, not knowing all this while, That she was wretched, and miserable, and poor, and blind, and naked. There is not a blessing upon earth, that can any way hope or seem to parallel a sober wellgrounded assu­rance here, that in time we shall be Saints in Heaven; 'tis such a Para­dise upon Earth, that Heaven it self seems but a second part of it, diffe­ring B from it rather in degrees, and external accomplishments, than in any distinct specifical kind of happiness: (The Lord of Heaven by his mighty working, when it shall please him, begin and consum­mate it in us.) But then to make use of this Patent of Heaven to en­gage us further in the deep, to keep us not from the Devils works, but from his attachments; only as a protection to secure our misdemeanors, not to defend our innocence: for a man thus appointed to venture on a Precipice, as the Turks, saith Busbequius, Ep. 3. are wont to try the good­ness C of an horse, by riding him post down the steepest hill; to out­dare the Devil in his own territories, (as Christ is said to descend thither to triumph over him) to besiege and set upon Hell, presuming of our interest in Heaven, as of a Magical Charm, and [...] to keep us safe from death or maims in the midst of enemies, nay of friends; this is a piece of spiritual pride of Lucifer's own inscribing, an imperious majestick garb of impiety, a triumphant or processionary pomp, an affected stately gate in sin; that nothing but a violent rend­ing D power of the Spirit, or a boisterous tempestuous judgment can force us out of. Such a prophane Fiduciary as this, which hath even defiled Heaven by possessing it, such an Hellish Saint is like to be torn out of the third Heaven into which his speculation hath rapt him, and after a long dream of Paradise, find himself awake in Hell. And from this degree of religious prophaneness, this confidence in sinning on presumption that we are under grace; from this premature reso­lution, that no sin, no Devil can endanger us; from this imperious E whoredom, as from the danger of Hell, Good Lord deliver us.

3. Imperious] signifies more distinctly a tyrannical Lording be­haviour, usurping and exercising authority over all. And this the A­postate Jew and Christian Libertine doth: 1. By tyrannizing over himself, i. e. his faculties and estate: 2. Over all that come near him. Over himself, by urging and driving on in a carnal course; not patient of any regrets and resistances that a tender disposition, moti­ons of Gods Spirit, or gripes of Conscience can make against it, goad­ing F and spurring on any of his faculties, as being too dull, & unactive, and slothful in the ways of death, even forcing them (if they be any time foreslowed and trashed by either outward or inward re­straints) to sin even in sight of them, and hastening them to a kind of unvoluntary disobedience. Thus will a stone when 'tis kept vio­lently from the ground, being held in a mans hand, or the like, press [Page 12] and weigh towards the Earth incessantly, as if it were naturally re­solved A to be revenged on any one; to tire him out, that thus detained it from its place; nay, when it is let down, you may see it yet press lower, make its print in the Earth, as if it would never be satisfied, till it could rest in Hell. The sinner is never at quiet with himself, Instat & imperat; He is urgent and importunate upon himself, to satisfie every craving lust. Not the beggarliest affection, or laziest, unworthiest desire of the flesh, but shall have its alms and dole, rather than starve, though it be an atome of his very soul, to the utter undoing and B bankrupting of him that gives it.

And for his tyranny over his estate, whether Temporal or Spiritual, his goods of Fortune, or gifts of Grace, they must all do homage to this carnal Idol. All his treasures on Earth are richly sold, if they can but yield him the fruition of one beloved sin. And for Spiritual Illu­minations, or any Seeds of Grace, he will lose them all; and even shut himself for ever into the darkness of Hell, rather than ever be directed by their light, out of those pleasing paths of death. C

A restraining grace was but a burthensome, needless encumbrance; and a gleam of the Spirit, but a means to set Conscience a working, to actuate her malice and execution on sin; and it were an happy ex­change, to get but one loving delight or companion for them both. Let but a sin be coy and stanch, not to be gain'd at the first woing, and all these together, like Jacob's present out of all his goods, shall be all little enough for a sacrifice or bribe, to sollicite, or hire it. And this the Prophet notes here distinctly, Vers. 33. and 34. Thou art contrary to D all the Whores in the World. Vers. 33. & 34. In other places Men give gifts to all Whores, but thou givest gifts to all thy lovers. None follow or bribe thee to com­mit whoredoms: Thou givest a reward, and no reward is given to thee; therefore thou art contrary.

The sinner in my Text, scorns to set so low a value on sin, as that profit or advantage should ingratiate it to him; it is so amiable in his eyes of it self, he will prize it so high, that any other treasure shall not be considerable in respect of it: It is part of his loyalty and expression E of his special service to the Devil, to become a bankrupt in his cause, to sell all that he hath, both God, and fortunes to follow him. It is the art and cunning of common Whores, to raise mens desires of them, by be­ing coy, Difficultate augere libidinis pretium, to hold off, that they may be followed. Vers. 34. But this sin is not at so artificial, her affections are boysterous and impatient of delay; she is not at so much leisure as to windlace, or use craft to satisfie them; she goes downright a woing, and if there be any difficulty in compassing, all that she hath is ready F for a dowry, and prostitute before her idol, Lust.

Lastly, Imperious over all that come near him, either men or sins: Everyman must serve him,Psal. I. 1. either as his pander or companion, to further or associate him. I told you he sinned in Cathedrâ, Psal. I. 1. that is also doctorally and magisterially; every spectator must learn of him, it [Page 13] A is his profession, he sets up school for it, his practises are so command­ingly exemplary, that they do even force and ravish the most maidenly tender conscience. And then, for all inferiors, they are required to pro­vide him means and opportunities of sinning, to find him out some game; and no such injury can be done, as to rouze or spring a sin, that would otherwise have lodged in his walk. It was part of the Heathen­ish Romans quarrel against the Primitive Christians, saith Tertullian, that they drove away their Devils: These Exorcist-Christians had B banished all their old familiars out of the Kingdom, which they were impatient to be deprived of. And thus careful and chary are men of their helps of opportunities to sin; it is all the joy they have in the world, sometimes to have a temptation, and to be able to make use of it; to have the Devil continue strong with them, in an old Courtier's phrase, It is their very life; and he that deprives them of it, is a murtherer.

And for the sins themselves, Lord, how they tyrannize over them; C how they will rack, and torture, and stretch every limb of a sin, that they may multiply it into infinites, and sin as often at once, as is possi­ble? Adam in the bare eating of an Apple, committed a multitude of sins.Leo, Epist. 86. August. lib. 21. Leo in his 86 Epist. August. de Civit. Dei. and other of the Fathers, will number them out to you.

And thus far this tyrant over Impiety and Lust, will be a Pelagian, as to order all his deviation by imitation of Adam's. Every breach of one single Law shall contain a brood or nest, into which it may be sub­divided; D and every circumstance in the Action shall furnish him with fresh matter for variety of sin.

Again, How imperious is he in triumphing over a sin, which he hath once atchieved? If he have once got the better of good nature and Religion; broke in upon a stubborn, sullen vice, that was formerly too hard for him; how often doth he reiterate and repeat, that he may perfect his conquest, that it may lie prostrate and tame before him, never daring to resist him? And if there be any Virgin modest sins, E which are ashamed of the light, either of the Sun, or Nature, not com­ing abroad but under a veil, (as some sins being too horrid and abo­minable, are fain to appear in other shapes, and so keep us company under the name of amiable or innocent qualities) then will this violent imperious sinner, call them out into the Court or Market place; tear a­way the veil, that he may commit them openly; and, as if the Devil were too modest for him, bring him upon the stage against his will, and even take Hell by violence and force.

F Thus are men come at last to a glorying in the highest impieties, and expect some renown & credit, as a reward for the pains they take about it; and then certainly, honour is grown very cheap, when it is bestowed upon sins, and the man very tyrannical over his spectators thoughts, that requires to be worshipped for them. This was a piece of the Devils old tyranny in the times of Heathenism (which I would [Page 14] fain Christianity hath out-dated) to build Temples, and offer sacrifice A to sins under the name of Venus, Priapus, and the like; that men that were naturally [...], superstitious adorers of Devils, or anything that was called God, might account Incontinence Religion, and all impieties in the World a kind of adoration. Thus to profess whoredoms, and set up trophies in our eyes, to build their eminent place in the head of every way, in the verse next to my Text, was then the imputation of the Jews, (and pray God it prove not the guilt of Christians) from whence the whole Church of them is here B styled, An imperious, &c.

Thus hath the Apostate Jew been represented to you, in his pi­cture and resemblance, the Libertine Christian; and Ezekiel become an Historian as well as Prophet. Thus hath indulgence in vice among Professors of Christianity been aggravated against you, 1. By the weak Womanish condition of it; nature it self, and ordinary man-like reason is ashamed of it. 2. By the Adulterous Unfaithfulness, 1. Want of Faith, 2. Of Fidelity bewray'd in it, 3. By the imperiousness of C the behaviour, 1. In shamelesness, 2. In confidence and spiritual security, 3. In tyrannizing over himself and faculties, by force com­pelling, and then insulting over his goods and graces, prodigally mispending them in the prosecution of his lusts, and Lording over all that come near him, men, or sins; first pressing, then leading the one, and both ravishing and tormenting the other, to perform him the better service.

Now that this discourse may not have been sent into the air un­profitably; D that all these prophetical censures of sin may not be like Xerxes his stripes on the Sea, on inanimate senseless bodies; 'tis now time that every tender open guilty heart begin to retire into it self; every one consider whether he be not the man that the parable aims at, that you be not content to have your ears affected, or the suburbs of the Soul filled with the sound, unless also the heart of the City be taken with its efficacy. Think and consider whether, 1. This effeminacy and womanishness of heart, and not weakness, but torpor E and stupidity, 2. This unfaithfulness and falseness unto Christ ex­prest by the spiritual incontinence and whoredoms of our souls and actions, 3. That Confidence and magnanimous stately garb in sin, a­rising in some from Spiritual Pride, in others from Carnal Security; whether any or all of these may not be inscrib'd on our Pillars, and re­main as a [...] against us, to upbraid and aggravate the na­ture and measure of our sins also. I cannot put on so solemn a person as to act a Cato or Aristarchus amongst an Assembly that are all Judices F critici, to reprehend the learned and the aged, and to chide my teachers: You shall promise to spare that thankless task, and to do it to your selves. It will be more civility perhaps, and sink down deeper into ingenuous natures, fairly to bespeak and exhort you; and from the first part of my Text only, (because 'twould be too long [Page 15] A to bring down all) from the weakness and womanish condition of in­dulgent sinners, to put you in mind of your strength, and the use you are to make of it▪ in a word and close of Application:

We have already taken notice of the double inheritance and patri­mony of strength and graces, which we all enjoy, first, as Men; second­ly, as Christians: And ought not we, Beloved, that have spent the liveliest and sprightfullest of our age and parts, in the pursuit of Lear­ning, to set some value on that estate we have purchased so dear, and B account ourselves somewhat the more men for being Scholars? Shall not this deserve to be esteemed some advantage to us, and a rise, that being luckily taken, may further us something in our stage towards Heaven? That famous division of Rational Animals in Jamblicus out of Aristotle, into three different species, That some were Men, others Gods, others such as Pythagoras, will argue some greater priviledges of Scholars above other men: That indeed the deep Learneder sort, and especially those that had attained some insight [...] in C divine affairs, were in a kind of a more venerable species, than ordinary ignaro's.

And for the benefits and helps that these excellencies afford us in our way to Heaven, do but consider what a great part of the world over­shaded in Barbarism, brought up in blind Idolatry, do thereby but live in a perpetual Hell, and at last, pass not into another kind, but degree of darkness; Death being but an officer to remove them from one To­phet to another; or at most, but as from a Dungeon to a Grave. Think D on this, and then think and count what a blessing divine knowledge is to be esteemed; even such a one as seems, not only the way, but the entrance; not only a preparation, but even a part of that vision which shall be for ever beatifical: And therefore it will nearly concern us to observe, what a talent is committed to our husbanding, and what in­crease that hard Master will exact at his coming. For as Dicaearchus in his Description of Greece, saith of the Chalcidians, That they were [...], born, as it were, E with one Foot in Learning, and both by the genius of the place and Lan­guage, which they spake being Greek, even suckt the arts from their Mothers Breasts, at least were prepared for, and initiated in them by nature; and therefore it would be a great shame for them, not to be Scholars. So most truly of those of us, that are learned, full, illumi­nate Christians; the very language that we speak, and air we breath in, doth naturally infuse some sacred instincts into us; doth somewhat enter us in this Spiritual, Heavenly Wisdom; will be some munition for F us, and not suffer us to be so pitifully baffled, & befooled, and triumph­ed over by that old Sophister. And if for all these advantages we prove dunces at last, it will be an increase, not only of our torments, but our shame; of our indignation at our selves, at the day of doom; and the reproach and infamy superadded to our sufferings, will scarce [Page 16] afford us leisure to weep and wail, for gnashing of our teeth. And there­fore,A as Josephus of the Jews, Cont. Ap. l. 2. That they prayed to God daily, [...], &c. not that he would bestow good things on them; for he did that already on his own accord, pouring out plenty of all in the midst of them: But [...], that they might be able to receive and keep what he bestowed. So will it concern us to pray, and labor mainly for the preserving, that we be the better for this great bounty of Gods: That neither our inobser­vance of his gifts, suffer them to pass by us unprofitably, and neglect­ed,B being either not laid hold on, or not imployed; nor the unthrifty mis-husbanding of them, cause the Lord to call in the talent entrusted to us already, because unworthy of any more.

It was a shrewd, though Atheistical speech of Hippocrates, That sure, [...]. if the Gods had any good things to bestow, they would dispense them among the rich, who would be able and ready to requite them by Sa­crifices: But all evil presents, all Pandora's Box should be divided among the poor, because they are still murmuring and repining, and never C think of making any return for favours.

The Eye of Nature, it seems, could discern thus much of God and his gifts, that they are the most plentifully bestowed, where the great­est return may be expected: And for others, from whom all the libe­rality in the world, can extort no retribution, but grumbling and complaints; it is not charity or alms, but prodigality and riot to bestow on them. These are to be fed not with bread but stripes; they are not [...], but [...] rather beggars than poor, like Pharaohs lean Kine,D after the devouring of the fat ones, still lank and very ill-favoured. And the judgment of these you shall find in the Gospel, From them shall be taken away even that which they have. And therefore, all which from God, at this time, and for ever, I shall require and beg of you, is the exercise and the improvement of your talent; that your learning may not be for ostentation, but for traffick; not to possess, but negotiate withal; not to complain any longer of the poverty of your stock, but presently to set to work to husband it. That knowledge of God which E he hath allowed you, as your portion to set up with, is ample enough to be the Foundation of the greatest estate in the World; and you need not despair, through an active, labouring, thriving course, at last to set Heaven as a Roof on that Foundation: Only it will cost you some pains to get the materials together for the building of the Walls, it is as yet but a Foundation, and the Roof will not become it, till the walls be raised; And therefore every faculty of your Souls and Bodies must turn Bezaleels and Aholiabs, Spiritual Artificers for the forwarding F and perfecting of this work.

It is not enough to have gotten an abstracted Mathematical Scheme or Diagram of this Spiritual Building in our Brain; it is the Mechanical labouring part of Religion that must make up the edifice; the work and toil, and sweat of the Soul; the business not of the Designer, but [Page 17] A the Carpenter; that which takes the rough, unpolished, though ex­cellent materials, and trims and fits them for use; which cuts and polishes the rich, but as yet deformed jewels of the Soul, and makes them shine indeed, and sparkle like stars in the Firmament. That ground or sum of Pythagorean Philosophy, as it is set down by Hie­rocles in his [...], if it were admitted into our schools or hearts, would make us Scholars and Divines indeed; that Virtue is the way to Truth: Purity of affections a necessary precursory to depth B of knowledge, [...], the only means to prepare for the uppermost form of Wisdom the speculation of God, which doth ennoble the Soul unto the condition of an [...] or [...], of an heroical, nay sacred person, is first to have been the person of a man aright, and by the practice of vertue to have cleared the eye for that glorious Vision. But the divinity and learning of these times floats and hovers too much in the brain, hath not either weight or sobriety enough in it to sink down, or settle it in the heart. We are C all for the [...], as Clemens calls it; [...]. the art of sorting out, and lay­ing in order all intellectual store in our brains, tracing the Councils of God, and observing his methods in his secrecies, but never for the [...], the refunding and pouring out any of that store in the alms, as it were, and liberality of our actions. If Gerson's definition of Theology, that it is scientia effectiva non speculativa, were taken into our consideration at the choice of our professions, we should certainly have fewer pretenders to Divinity, but 'tis withal hoped more D Divines.

The Lacedaemonians and Cretians, saith Josephus, brought up men to the practice, [...]. l. 2. p. 946. but not knowledg of good, by their example only, not by precept or law: The Athenians, and generally the rest of the Grecians used instructions of laws only, but never brought them up by practice and discipline: But of all Lawgivers, saith he, only Moses, [...], dispensed and measured both these proportionably together. And this, beloved, is that for which that policy of the Pri­mitive E Jews deserved to be called [...], by a special name, the Government of God Himself. This is it; the combination of your knowledg with your practice, your learning with your lives, which I shall, in fine, commend unto you, to take out both for your selves and others. 1. For your selves, that in your study of Divinity you will not behold Gods Attributes as a sight or spectacle, but as a Copy, not only to be admired, but to be transcribed into your hearts and lives; not to gaze upon the Sun to the dazling, nay, destroying of your eyes, F but, as it were, in a burning-glass, contract those blessed sanctifying rayes that flow from it, to the enlivening and inflaming of your hearts. And 2. In the behalf of others; so to digest and in­wardly dispense every part of sacred knowledg into each several member and vein of Body and Soul, that it may transpire through hands, and feet, and heart, and tongue; and so secretly insinuate [Page 18] it self into all about you; that both by Precept and Example,A they may see, and follow your good works, and so glorifie here your Father which is in heaven: that we may all partake of that blessed Resurrection, not of the learned and the great, but the just; and so hope and attain to be all glorified together with him hereafter.

Now to him, &c.B

The II. Sermon.

PHIL. IV. 13.‘I can do all things through Christ that strength­neth me.’

THose two contrary Heresies, that cost S. Austin and the Fathers of his time so much pains; the one all for natural strength, the other for irrecoverable weak­ness; D have had such unkindly influence on succeed­ing ages, that almost all the actions of the ordinary Christian have some tincture of one of these: Scarce any sin is sent abroad into the World, without either this, or that inscription. And therefore parallel to these, we may observe the like division in the hearts and practical faculties between pride and sloth, opinion of absolute power, and prejudice of absolute impotence: The one undertaking all upon its own credit, the other suing, as it E were, for the preferment, or rather excuse of being bankrupts upon record; that so they may come to an easie composition with God for their debt of obedience: The one so busie in contemplation of their present fortunes, that they are not at leisure to make use of them, their pride helping them to ease, and if you look nearly to poverty too,Revel. iii. 17. Revel. iii. 17. the other so fastned to this Sanctuary, this religious piece of prophaneness, that leaving the whole business to God, as the undertaker and proxy of their obedience, F their idleness shall be deemed devotion, and their best piety sitting still.

These two differences of Men, either sacrilegious or supine, impe­rious or lethargical, have so dichotomized this lower sphear of the Word, almost into two equal parts, that the practice of humble obedience, and obeying humility, the bemoaning our wants to God, [Page 20] with Petition to repair them, and the observing and making use of A those succors which God in Christ hath dispensed to us; those two foundations of all Christian duty, providing between them, that our Religion be neither [...], nor [...], Neither the vertue of the Atheist, nor the prayer of the Sluggard, are almost quite vanished out of the World: As when the Body is torn asunder, the Soul is without any farther act of violence forced out of its place, that it takes its flight home to Heaven, being thus let out at the Scissure, as at the Window; and only the two fragments of carcass remain B behind.

For the deposing of these two Tyrants, that have thus usurped the Soul between them, dividing the Live child with that false Mother, into two dead parts: For the abating this pride, and enlivening this deadness of practical faculties; for the scourging this stout Beggar, and restoring this Cripple to his Legs, the two Provisions in my Text, if the order of them only be transposed, and in Gods method the last set first, will, I may hope and pray, prove sufficient. I can do, &c. C

1. Through Christ that strengthneth me.] You have there, first, The Assertion of the necessity of grace; and secondly, that enforced from the form of the word [...], which imports the minute­ly continual supply of aids; and then, thirdly, we have not only posi­tively, but exclusively declared the person thus assisting; in Christo confortante, it is by him, not otherwise, we can do thus, or thus. Three particulars all against the natural confidence of the proud D Atheist.

2. The [...], I can do all things.] First, The [...], and secondly, the [...]. 1. The power; and 2. the extent of that power: 1. The potency; and 2. the omnipotency; and then 3. this not only originally of Christ that strengthneth, but inherently of me, being strengthned by Christ. Three particulars again, and all against the conceived or pretended impotence, either of the false spie that brought news of the Giants Anakims, Cannibals, in the way to Ca­naan,E Numb. xiii. 32.Numb. xiii. 32. Or of the Sluggard, that is alway affrighting and keeping himself at home, with the Lion in the streets, some [...] or other difficulty or impossibility, whensoever any work or travel of obedience is required of us,Prov. xxvi. 13. Prov. xxvi. 13.

It will not befit the majesty of the subject to have so many parti­culars, by being severally handled, joyntly neglected. Our best con­trivance will be to shorten the retail for the encreasing of the gross, to F make the fewer parcels, that we may carry them away the better, in these three Propositions.

  • I. The strength of Christ is the Original and Fountain of all ours; Through Christ that, &c.
  • [Page 21] A II. The strength of a Christian, from Christ derived, in a kind of Omnipotency, sufficient for the whole duty of a Christian. Can do all things, &c.
  • III. The strength and power being thus bestowed, the work is the Work of a Christian, of the suppositum, the Man strengthned by Christ. I can do, &c.

Of these in this order, for the removing only of those prejudices B out of the Brain, which may trash and encumber the practice of piety in the heart. And first of the first.

The strength of Christ is the Original and Fountain of all ours. The strength of Christ, and that peculiarly of Christ the second Person of the Trinity, who was appointed by consent to negotiate for us in the business concerning our Souls. All our tenure or plea, to grace or glory, to depend not on any absolute, respectless, though free donation, but conveyed to us in the hand of a Mediator; That Privy Seal of his an­nexed C to the Patent, or else of no value at that Court of Pleas; or that Grand Assizes of Souls. Our Natural strength is the gift of God, as God is considered in the first Article of our Creed, and by that title of Creation we have that priviledge of all created substances, to be able to perform the work of nature, or else we should be inferior, to the meanest creature in this; for the least stone in the street is able to move downwards by its own principle of nature: And therefore, all that we have need of in the performing of these, is only Gods concurrence, D whether previous or simultaneous; and in acts of choice, the govern­ment and direction of our will, by his general providence and power. However, even in this Work of Creation, Christ must not be excluded, [...] Gods in the Plural, all the Persons of the Deity, in the whole work, & peculiarly in the Faciamus hominem, are adumbrated, if not mentioned by Moses. And therefore God is said to have made all by his Word, that inward, eternal Word in his bosome, an arti­culation, and, as it were, incarnation of which, was that Fiat & E factum est, Longin. [...] which the Heathen Rhetorician so admired in Moses for a magnificent sublime expression. Yet in this Creation, and conse­quently this donation of natural strength, peculiarly imputed to the first Person of the Trinity, because no personal act of Christ, either of his satisfaction or merit, of his humiliation or exaltation, did conduce to that; though the Son were consulted about it, yet was it not [...], delivered to us in the hand of a Mediator. Our natural strength we have of God, without respect to Christ incarnate, without F the help of his Mediation, but that utterly unsufficient to bring us to Heaven, 2 Cor. iii. 5. Not that we are sufficient of our selves to think any thing, i. e. saith Parisiensis, Any thing of moment or valor, ac­cording to the Dialect of Scripture, that calls the whole man by the name of his soul, (so many souls, i. e. so many men, and so [...] the Pythagoreans word, thy soul is thou) counts of nothing, but what [Page 22] tends to the salvation of that. But then our supernatural strength, A that which is called Grace and Christian strength, that is of another date, of another tenure, of another allay; founded in the promise actually exhibited in the death and exaltation of the Messias, and con­tinually paid out to us, by the continued daily exercise of his Offices. 1. The Covenant sealed in his Blood, after the manner of Eastern Na­tions, as a counterpart of Gods, to that which Abraham had sealed to before in his Blood at his Circumcision. 2. The Benefits made over in that Covenant, were given up in numerato, with a kind of Livery and B Seisin at his Exaltation; Epes. iv. 8. which is the importance of that place, Ephes. iv. 8.Psal. lxviii. out of the lxviii. Psalm, Thou hast ascended on high] There is the date of it upon Christ's inauguration to his Regal Office: As [...] & [...] & [...], in Gr. Thou hast led captivity captive.] There is the evidence of conveyance unto him, as a reward of his victory, and part of his triumph: Thou hast given gifts] or as the Psalm received, Gifts for men.] Both importing the same thing, in divers relations, received from his Father, (All power is given to me) that he might give, dispense, convey, and steward it out to men; C and so literally still, [...], in the hand of a Mediator. And then that which is thus made over to us, is not only the gift of Grace, the habit by which we are regenerate: But above that account, daily bublings out of the same Spring, minutely rayes of this Sun of Righte­ousness, which differ from that gift of Grace, as the propagation of life from the first act of Conception, conservation from Creation; that which was there done in a minute, is here done every minute; and so the Christian is still in fieri, not in facto esse: or as a line which is an D aggregate of infinite points, from a point in suo indivisibili; the first called by the Schools, Auxilium gratiae per modum principii, the other Per modum concursus. And this is noted by the word [...], givings, Jam. i. 17.Jam. i. 17. neither [...] as the Heathen called their vertues, as habits of their own acquiring; nor again so properly [...], gifts, because that proves a kind of tenure after the receit, Data, eo tempore quo dantur fiunt accipientis, saith the Law: But properly and critically [...], givings, Christ always a giving, confirming minutely not our title,E but his own gift; or else that as minutely ready again to return to the crown. All our right and title to strength and power, is only from Gods minutely donation. And the [...] in the Present tense implies, all depending on the perpetual presence and assistance of his strength. Hence is it that Christ is called the Father of Eternity, Isai. ix. 6. i. e. of the life to come ( [...] say the LXX, the age to come) the state of Christians under the Gospel, and all that belongs to it; The Father] which doth not only beget the Child, but educate, pro­vide F for, put in a course to live, and thrive, and deserves far more, for that he doth after the birth, than for the being it self; and therefore it is Proclus his observation of Plato, that he calls God, in respect of all Creatures [...] a Maker; but [...] a Father in respect of Man. And this the peculiar title of Christ, in respect of his Offices; not to [Page 23] A be the Maker only, the Architect of that age to come, of grace and glory, but peculiarly the Father which continues his Paternal Rela­tion for ever; yea, and the exercises of Paternal Offices by the pe­dagogy of the Spirit, all the time of non-age, minutely adding and improving, and building him up to the measure and pitch of his own stature and fulness. And so again that soveraign Title of his Jesus, i. e.Mat. i. 21. [...], Matt. i. 21. This title and of­fice of Physician is peculiar to the second person, to repair the daily B decays and ruines of the Soul, and not only to implant a Principle of health, but to maintain it by a [...], and confirm it minutely into an exact habit of Soul: and therefore, That Sun of righteousness is said to have his healing in his wings; i. e. in those rayes which it mi­nutely sends out, by which as on wings, this fountain of all inherent and imputed righteousness, of sanctifying and justifying Grace, takes its flight, and rests upon the Christian Soul; and this still peculiarly, [...], not in God [...], but [...], in Christ; In C Christ that strengtheneth.

The not observing, or not acknowledging of which difference, be­tween the gifts of God, and the gifts of Christ, the endowments of that first, and this second foundation, the hand of God, and the hand of a Mediator, is I conceive the ground of all those perplexing con­troversies about the strength of nature, and patrimony of grace, Pela­gius very jealous and unwilling to part with his natural power, left any thing in the business of his Salvation should be accounted due unto D God, Lib. 1. Dial. ad Pelag. they are his own words, if Jerom may be credited, Mihi nullus auferre poterit liberi arbitrii potestatem, ne si in operibus meis Deus adjutor extiterit, non mihi debeatur merces, sed ei qui in me operatus. Socinus again denying all merit and satisfaction of Christ, making all that but a Chimaera, and so evacuating or antiquating that old te­nure by which we hold all our Spiritual Estate. The Romanists again, at least some of them,Bernard. in Sen. Serm. 61. Art. 1. c. 8. bestowing upon the blessed Virgin after Con­ception, such Jurisdiction in the temporal procession of the Holy E Ghost, that no grace is to be had but by her dispensing; that she the Mother gives him that sends the Holy Ghost, and therefore gives all gifts, quibus vult, quomodo, quando, & per manus: Ibid. & Art. 2. c. 10. That she is the neck to Christ the Head, cant. vii. 4. andVieg as in A­poc. c. 12. com. 2. sect. 2. num. 6. Sublato Virginis patrocinio, perinde ac halitu intercluso, peccator vivere diutiùs non potest: and store enough of such emasculate Theology as this. And yet others that maintain the quite contradictory to all these, acknowledging a necessity of supernatural strength to the attaining of our supernatural end, and F then ask and receive this only, as from the hands and merits of Christ, without the mediation or jurisdiction of anyother, are yet had in jealousie and suspicion as back-friends to the cause of God, and ene­mies to Grace; because they leave man any portion of that natural strength which was bestowed on him at his Creation. Whereas the limits of both these being distinctly set, there may safely be acknow­ledged, [Page 24] first a natural power; (or if you will call it natural grace, the A Fathers will bear you out in the phrase) Illius est gratiae quòd creatus est, Ep. 139. S. Jerom; Gratia Dei quâ fecit nos, In Pla. cxliv. S. Austin; and Crearis gratia, De gratiâ & lib. arbit. S. Bernard: and that properly styled, the strength of God, but not of Christ, enabling us for the works of nature.

And then above this, is regularly superstructed the strength of Christ, special supernatural strength made over unto us, not at our first but second birth; without which, though we are men, yet not Christians, Live, saith Clemens, [...], a kind of em­bryon,B imperfect heathen, of a child in the womb, of the gentle dark uncomfortable being, a kind of first draught, or ground colours only, and monogram of life. Though we have Souls, yet in relation to spi­ritual acts or objects, but weak consumptive cadaverous souls (as [...] the Old Testament word for the Soul, and [...] in the 72, sig­nifies, a carkass or dead body, Numb. v. 2. and otherwhere) and then by this accession of this strength of Christ, this dead Soul revives into a kind of omnipotency; the Pygmie is sprung up into a Gyant, this C languishing puling state improv'd into an [...]; he that even now was insufficient to think any thing, is now able to do all things; which brings me to my second Proposition.

The strength of a Christian, from Christ deriv'd, is a kind of Omnipotence, sufficient for the whole duty of a Chri­stian, [...], Can do all things.

The clearing of this Truth from all difficulties or prejudices, will D depend mainly on the right understanding of the predicate, [...], in my Text, or the whole duty of a Christian in the proposition: which two being of the same importance, the same hand will unravel them both. Now what is the whole duty of a Christian, but the adequate condition of the second Covenant? upon performance of which salva­tion shall certainly be had, and without which salvare nequeat ipsa si cupias salus, the very sufferings and saving mercies of Christ will avail us nothing. As for any Exercise of Gods absolute Will, or Power, in this E business of Souls under Christs Kingdom, I think we may fairly omit to take it into consideration; for sure the New Testament will acknow­ledg no such phrase, nor I think any of the Ancients that wrote in that language. Whereupon perhaps it will be worth observing, in the con­fession of the Religion of the Greek Church, subscribed by Cyril the pre­sent Patriarch of Constantinople, where having somewhat to do with this phrase, Of Gods absolute Dominion so much talked on here in the West, he is much put to it to express it in Greek, and at last fain to do it by F a word coyned on purpose, a meer Latinism for the turn, [...]; an expression I think capable of no excuse but this, that a piece of new Divinity was to be content with a barbarous phrase. Concerning this condition of the second Covenant, Three things will require to be premised to our present enquiry.

[Page 25] A 1. That there is a Condition, and that an adequate one, of the same extent as the promises of the Covenant; something exacted at our hands to be performed if we mean to be the better for the demise of that Indenture, As many as received him, to them he gave power, &c. Joh. i. 12.Joh. i. 12. to these, and to none else, positively and exclusively. To him that overcometh will I give, Rev. ii. 7. Rev. ii. 7. I have fought a good fight, 2 Tim. iv. 7. &c. 2 Tim. iv. 7. henceforth there is laid up for me a Crown; Then begins the title to the Crown, and not before: when the B fight is fought, the course finished, the faith kept, then coelum rapi­unt, God challenged on his righteousness as a Judg; not on ground of his absolute pleasure as a Lord, which will; but upon supposition of a Pact or Covenant, which limits and directs the award & process, for according unto it God the righteous Judge shall give. Mark xvi. 16. And Mark xvi. 16. in Christs farewel speech to his Disciples, where he seals their Commission of Embassage and Preaching to every creature; He that believeth not shall be damned; this believing whatever it signifies is C that condition here we speak of, and what it imports, you will best see by comparing it with the same passage set down by another Ama­nuensis in the last verse of S. Matth. To observe all things whatsoever I have commanded you: A belief not of brain or phansie, but that of heart and practice, i. e. Distinctly Evangelical or Christian obedience, the [...] in my Text, and the whole duty of a Christian in the propo­sition; which if a Christian by the help of Christ be not able to per­form, then consequently he is still uncapable of Salvation by the D second Covenant; no creature being now rescuable from Hell stante pacto, but those that perform the condition of it, that irreversible Oath of God, which is always fulfilled in kind without relaxation, or commutation, or compensation of punishment, being already gone out against them;Heb. iv. 3. I have sworn in my wrath that they shall not enter into my rest. And therefore when the end of Christs mission is described, Joh. iii. 17.Joh. iii. 17. That the world through him might be saved; there is a shrewd [But] in the next Verse, But he that believeth not is condemned E already: This was upon agreement between God and Christ, that the impenitent Infidel should be never the better for it, should die unre­scued in his old Condemnation. So that there is not only a logical possibility, but a moral necessity of the performing of this [...], or else no possibility of Salvation. And then that reason of disannulling the old, and establishing the new Covenant, because there was no justification to be had by the old,Gal. iii. 21. rendred Gal. iii. 21. would easily be retorted upon the Apostle thus, Why neither is any life or justificati­on F to be had by this second; the absurdity of which sequel being con­sidered, may serve for one proof of the Proposition.

The Second thing to be premised of this Condition is, That it is an immutable, unalterable, indispensable Condition. The 2d. Covenant standing this must also stand, that hath been proved already, because a condition adequate, and of the same latitude with the Covenant.

[Page 26] But now secondly, this second, both Covenant and Condition, A must needs stand an Everlasting Covenant, Ez. xvi. 60. Ezek. xvi. 60. No possi­bility of a change, unless upon an impossible supposition, there should remain some other fourth Person of the Deity to come into the World. The Tragick Poets, saith Tully, when they had overshot themselves in a desperate Plot, that would never come about, ad Deum confugiunt, they were fain to flie to a God, to lay that unruly spirit that their phansie had raised. Upon Adam's sin and breach of the Condition of the First Covenant, there was no possibility in the wit of man, in the B sphere of the most Poetical phansie, Fabulae exitum explicare, to come off with a fair conclusion, had not the Second Person of the Trinity, that [...], come down in his tire, and personation of flesh, not in the stage Cloaths or Livery, but substantial form of a servant upon the stage. And he again having brought things into some possi­bility of an happy conclusion (though it cost him his life in the nego­tiation) leaves it at his departure in the trust of his vicegerent, the Spirit of his power, to go thorow with his beginnings; to see that C performed (which only he left unperfected, as being our task not his) the Condition of the Second Covenant. The Spirit then enters upon the work, dispatches Officers, Ambassadors to all Nations in the World [...],Mar. xvi. 15. to every creature, Mark xvi. 15. And himself to the end of the World, goes along to back them in their Ministery: And then the next thing the Scripture tells us of, is the coming to Har­vest, after this Seeds time, and he that believeth not, shall be damned; and so that Sacred Canon is shut up.D

The Issue of this second Pracognitum, is this, That if there still remain any difficulties, any impossibilities to be overcome; so they are like to remain for ever, unless there be some other Person in the Godhead to be sent, to make up Pythagoras his [...], there is no new way imaginable to be found out; and that perhaps is the reasons of those peremptory denunciations of Christ against them that sin against the Holy Ghost, against that administration of grace entrusted to him, That there shall be never any remission for them, in E this world, or in another, i. e. Either by way of Justification here, or Glorification at that grand Manumission hereafter. And that may serve for a second proof of the Proposition, That if for all, the duty of a Christian is not feasible, it must remain so for ever; an adum­bration thereof you may see set down Heb. x.Heb. x 16, 26. comparing the 16 with the 26 Verse. In the sixteenth you have the Second Covenant de­scribed, and the condition of it in the Verses following; and then Verse 26. if after this we sin wilfully, then our estate becomes de­sperate,F There remains no more sacrifice for sin, but a certain fear­ful looking for of judgment, and fiery indignation; and he that takes not then quarter, accounted an adversary for ever: The Apostate, whether he renounce his faith, in fact or profession, must be a Cast-away.

[Page 27] A The third thing to be premised is, Wherein this condition of the second Covenant consists; and that is not in any rigor of legal perform­ance (that was the bloody purport of that old obligation, that soon concluded us all under death irreversibly) nor in any Egyptian Pha­raoh's tasks, a full tale of Bricks, without Straw, without any materi­als to make them; no Pharisaical burthen laid on heavy, and no fin­ger to help to bear it;Mat. xi. 30. but an easie yoke, a light burthen, Mat. xi. 30. and not only light, but alleviating: He that was laden before, is the B lighter for this yoke, Vers. 29. Take my yoke, and you shall find rest. And therefore Christ thinks reasonable, not to lay the yoke upon them as an injunction (as the worldly fashion is) but to commend it to them, as a thing that any prudent man would be glad to take up, in the beginning of the Verse, Take my yoke upon you.

In a word, it consists in the embracing of Christ in all his Offices, the whole Person of Christ; but especially as he is typically described in Zachary, Zac. vi. 11, 13. a crowned Jesus, a Priest upon a Throne; his Scepter joyn­ed C to his Ephod, to rule and receive tribute as well as sacrifice, and sa­tisfie and reconcile: Consilium pacis inter ambo ea, those two Offices of his reconciled in the same, our Priest become our King, That being delivered, we may serve him (in the other Zacharie's phrase, Delivered without fear, serve him) in holiness and righteousness: the performance of that duty that Christ enables to perform;Luke i. 74. the sincerity of the honest heart; the doing what our Christian strength will reach to. and hum­bly setting the rest on Christs score. And then when that which can D be done, is sure to be accepted, there is no room left for pretended impossibilities. Nay, because those things which there is a Logical possibility for us to do, and strength sufficient suppeditated, it is not yet Morally possible to do all our lives long, without any default; Be­cause, as Parisiensis saith,D [...] t [...]nt. even the habit of Grace, in the regenerate heart, is as long as a man carries flesh about him as an armed man, Positus in lubrico, set to fight in a slippery place, all his armor and valor will not secure him from a fall; or again, as the General of a E factious or fals-hearted army, a party of insidious flesh at home, which will betray to the weaker enemy that comes unanimous; or as a Warrior on a tender mouth'd horse, impatient of Discipline, or check, is fetcht over sometimes for all his strength and armor: Because, I say, there is none but offend sometimes, even against his power; there is therefore bound up in this new Volume of Ordinances, an [...], a New Testa­ment, a Codicil of Repentance, added to the Testament; that Plank for Shipwrackt souls, that City of Refuge, that Sanctuary for the Man-slayer F after sincommitted. And then, if sincere obedience be all that is required, and that exclude no Christian living, be he never so weak; but the false, faithless Hypocrite, if repentance will repair the faults of that; and that exclude none but him, that lives and dies indulgent in sin, the common prostitute, final impenitent infidel: If whatsover he want­ing, be made over in the demise of the Covenants; and whatsoever we [Page 28] are enabled to do, accepted in the condition of it; then certainly no A man that advises with these premisses, and so understands what is the meaning of the duty, can ever doubt any longer of the [...], the Omnipotence of the Christian, his sufficiency from Christ to perform his whole duty: Which is the sum of the conclusion of the second Arausican Council held against Pelagius, Vid. Vos [...]. Hist. Pel. p. 315. c. ult. Secundum sidem Catho­licam credimus, quòd acceptâ per Baptismum gratiâ omnes Baptizati Christo auxiliante & cooperante quae ad salutem pertinent possint & de­beant (si fideliter laborare voluerint) adimplere. The not observing of B which, is, I conceive, the fomenter of all that unkindly heat of those involved disputes, Whether a regenerate man in viâ, can fulfil the Law of God: Of that collision concerning merits, concerning venial and mortal sin, justification by works, or Faith, or both; all which up­on the grounds premised, will to any intelligent sober Christian, a friend of truth, and a friend of peace, be most evidently composed. To bring down this thesis to these several Hypotheses, this time or place will not permit; I shall be partial to this part of my Text, if I pass C not with full speed, to that which remains; the third Proposition.

That the strength and power being thus bestowed, the work is the work of a Christian, of the Suppositum, the Man strengthned and assisted by Christ. I can, &c.

I, not I alone, abstracted from Christ, nor I principally, and Christ only in Subsidiis, to facilitate that to me which I was not quite D able throughly to perform without help, (which deceitful considera­tion drew on Pelagius himself, that was first only for nature, at last to take in one after another, five Subsidiaries more; but only as so many horses to draw together in the Chariot with nature, being so pur­sued by the Councils and Fathers, from one hold to another, till he was at last almost deprived of all; acknowledging, saith S. Austin, Divinae gratiae adjutorium ad posse; and then had not the Devil stuck close to him at the exigence, and held out at the velle & operari, he E might have been in great danger to have lost an Heretick.) But I] ab­solutely impotent in my self to any supernatural duty, being then rapt above my self, strengthned by Christs perpetual influence, having all my strength & ability from him, am then by that strength able to do all things my self. As in the old Oracle, the God inspired and spake in the ear of the Prophet, and then the Vates spoke under from thence, called [...], ecchoed out that voice aloud which he had received by whisper, a kind of Scribe, or Cryer, or Herauld, to deliver out as he F was inspired: The principal, [...], a God, or Oracle; the Prophet [...] an inspired Enthusiast, dispensing out to his credulous clients, all that the Oracle did dictate; or as the Earth, which is cold and dry in its elementary constitution; and therefore bound up to a necessity of perpetual barrenness, having neither of those two pro­creative [Page 29] A faculties, heat or moisture, in its composition; but then by the beams of the Sun, and neighbourhood of Water, or to supply the want of that, rain from Heaven to satisfie its thirst, this cold dry Element begins to teem, carries many Mines of treasure in the Womb, many granaries of fruit in its surface, and in event, [...], contributes all that we can crave, either to our need, or luxury. Now though all this be done by those foraign aids, as principal, nay sole efficients of this fertility in the earth to conceive, & of its strength to bring forth, B yet the work of bringing forth is attributed to the Earth,Heb. vi. 7. Heb. vi. 7. as to the immediate parent of all. Thus is it God's work [...], saith Cyril, Ca. 1. p. 26. to plant and water, and that he doth mediately by Apollos and Paul: yea, and to give the encrease, that belongs to him immediately; neither to Man, nor Angel, but only ad Agricolam Trinitatem, In. Jo. tr. 80. saith S. Austin; but after all this [...], though God give the encrease, thou must bring forth the fruit. The Holy Ghost overshadowed Mary, Mat. i. 18. and she was found with child, Mat. i. 18. C [...], she was found; no more attributed to her; the Holy Ghost the principal,Indulgin. de Incarn. & gra. c. 20. nay sole agent in the work, and she a pure Virgin still: and yet Luk. i. 31. 'tis the Angels Divinity, That Mary shall conceive and bring forth a Son. All the efficiency from the Holy Ghost, and partus ventrem, the work attributed, and that truly to Mary, the sub­ject in whom it was wrought; and therefore is she call'd by the An­cients not only officina miraculorum, & [...], The shop of Miracles, and The Work-house of the Holy Ghost, (as the Rhetorick D of some have set it) but by the Councils, (that were more careful in their phrases) [...], not only the Conduit through which he past, but the Parent of whose substance he was made. And thus in the production of all spiritual Actions, the principal sole effi­cient of all is Christ, and His Spirit; all that is conceived in us, is of the Holy Ghost: The holy Principle, holy Desire, holy Action, the posse, Phil. ii. 12. & velle, & operari, all of him, Phil. ii. 12. But then being so overshadowed, the Soul it self conceives; being still assisted, carries E in the Womb, and by the same strength at fulness of time, as oppor­tunities do Midwife them out, brings forth Christian Spiritual Acti­ons; and then as Mary was the Mother of God, so the Christian Soul is the Parent of all its Divine Christian Performances; Christ the Fa­ther, that enables with his Spirit; and the Soul the Mother, that actu­ally brings forth.

And now that we may begin to draw up towards a conclusion▪ Two things we may raise from hence by way of inference to our F Practice.

1. Where all the Christians non-proficiency is to be charged, ei­ther 1. Upon the Habitual Hardness, or 2. The Sluggishness, or 3. The Rankness of his own wretchless heart.

1. Hardness, That for all the seed that is sown, the softning dew that distills, & rain that is poured down, the enlivening influen­ces [Page 30] that are dispensed among us, yet the [...], the hardness A and toughness of the Womb, [...], that dry unnutri­fying Earth in the Philosopher's, or in Christs dialect, Stony-ground, resists all manner of Conception, will not be hospitable, yield any entertainment, even to these Angelical guests, though they come as to Lot's house in Sodom, only to secure the owner from most certain de­struction. This is the reason that so much of Gods Husbandry among us, returns him so thin, so unprofitable an Harvest, ceciderunt in pe­trosa; and 'tis hard finding any better tillage now a-days; the very B Holy Land, the milk and honey of Canaan is degenerate, they say, into this Composition; and herein is a marvellous thing, that where God hath done all that any man, if it were put to his own partial judg­ment, would think reasonable for him to do for his Vineyard, gather­ed out stones, those seeds of natural hardness, and which deserves to be marked,Isa. v. 2. built a Wine-press, Isa. v. 2. a sure token that he expect­ed a vintage in earnest, not only manur'd for fashion, or to leave them without excuse; yet for all these, Labruscas, wild, juiceless C Grapes, heartless Faith, unseasoned Devotion, intemperate Zeal, blind and perverse Obedience, that under that name shall disguise and excuse Disobedience; tot genera labruscarum, so many wild unsavoury fruits, is the best return he can hear of.

One thing more let me tell you; 'Tis not the original hardness of Nature to which all this can be imputed, for, for the mollifying of that, all this gardening was bestowed; digging & gathering out, and indeed nothing more ordinary, than out of such stones to raise up chil­dren D unto Abraham. But 'tis the long habit and custom of sin which hath harrast out the Soul, congealed that natural gravel, and im­proved it into a perfect quarry or mine; and 'tis not the Preachers Charm, the Annunciation of the Gospel, that Power of God unto Salvation, unto a Jew or Heathen; 'tis not David's Harp, (that could exorcise the evil Spirit upon Saul) not the every day elo­quence, even of the Spirit of God, that can in holy Esdras his phrase, perswade them to Salvation. E

2. Sluggishness, and inobservances of God's seasons and oppor­tunities, and seed-times of Grace. God may appear a thousand times, & not once find us in case to be parlyed with: Christ comes but thrice to his Disciples from his Prayers in the Garden, and that thrice he finds them asleep,Mart. xxvi. Mat. xxvi. Christ can be awake to come, and that in a more pathetical language, Sic non potuistis horâ unâ, as the vulgar most fully out of the Greek; Were you so unable to watch one hour? The Pharisee can be awake to Plot, Judas to betray, their joint Vi­gils F and Proparasceve to that grand Passeover the slaying of the Lamb of God, and only the Disciples they are asleep, for their eyes were heavy saith the Text; and this heaviness of eyes, and heaviness of heart (whereupon [...] in the LXXII is ordinarily set for sinners) is the depriving us many times, not only of Christ, but his [Page 31] A Spirit too. So many apologies, and excuses to him when he calls, A little more sleep and slumber, and folding of the hands: Such drowsie­hearted slovenly usage when he comes, that no wonder if we grieve him out of our houses: Such contentedness in our present servile estate, that if a Jubilee should be proclaimed from Heaven, a general Manumission of all servants from these Gallies of sin, we would be ready with those servants for whom Moses makes a provision, to come and tell him plaingly, We will not go out free, Ex. xxi. 6. be bored through B the ear to be slaves for ever, Ex. xxi. 6.

3. Rankness, and a kind of spiritual sin of Sodom; Pride and fulness of bread, abusing the Grace of God into wantonness; either to the ostentatious setting themselves out before men, or else the feeding themselves up to that high flood of spiritual pride & confidence, that it will be sure to impostumate in the soul. Some men have been fain to be permitted to sin, for the abating this humour in them by way of phlebotomy; S. Peter, I think, is an example of that. Nebuchadnez­zar C was turned a grazing, to cure his secular Pride; and S. Paul, I am sure, had a Messenger sent to him to that purpose, by way of preven­tion, that he might not be exalted above measure; and when he thought well of it, he receives it as a present sent him from Heaven, [...], reckons of it as a gift of Grace, or if you will, a medicinal dose, or recipe, but rather a playster, or outward applica­tion, which per antiperistasin would drive in his spiritual heat, and so help his weak digestion of grace, make him the more thriving Chri­stian D for ever after.

The Issue of this first Inference is this, That 'tis not God's partial or niggardly dispencing of Grace; but either our unpreparedness to re­ceive, or preposterous giddiness in making use of it, which is the cause either of Consumption, or Aposthume in the Soul, either starving or surfeiting the Christian.

The second Inference, how all the Christians diligence is to be placed; what he hath to do in this wayfare to his home: And that is E the same that all Travellers have, first, to be alway upon his feet, ad­vancing minutely something toward his next stage. See that we be employed, or else how can God assist; we must [...], or else he cannot [...]; and see that we be employed aright, or else God must not, cannot assist. The Sluggards devotions can never get into Gods pre­sence; they want heat and spirit to lift them up, and activity to press and enfore them when they are there. It was an impression in the very Heathen, Porcius Cato in the History, That watching, and act­ing, F and advising aright, and not emasoulate womanish supplications alone, were the means, whereby Gods help is obtained, Ubi socordiae atque ignaviae tradideris, frustra Deos implores. Hier. in Aug. car. Pyth. And Jerome to the same purpose, that their sacrifice are but [...], food for the fire to devour; and their richest offerings to the Temple, but a spoil to the sacrilegious to prey on: And the sinners devotions must not be enter­tained [Page 32] there; they would even prophane that holy place. He that A was born blind,Joh. ix. 31. saw thus much, Joh. ix. 31. Now we know that God heareth not sinners; but if any be a worshipper of God, and doth his will, him doth God hear.

And then secondly, to get furnished, whatever it cost him, of all provision and directions for his way; and so this will conclude in a double Exhortation, both combined in that of David to Solomon, 1 Chron. xxii. 16.1 Chron. xxii. 16. when all materials were laid in, and Artificers pro­vided for the building of the Temple, and wanted nothing but a B chearful Leader to actuate and enliven them, Arise therefore and be doing, and the Lord be with thee.

1. To set about the business as thine own work, as the task that will not be required of the Spirit of God, of the Scripture, of the Preacher, but of thee. When it is performed, thou wouldst be loth that God should impute all to himself, crown his own Graces, Ordinan­ces, Instruments, and leave thee as a cypher unrewarded: And there­fore, whilst it is a performing, be content to believe, that somewhat C belongs to thee, that thou hast some hardship to undergo, some dili­gence to maintain, some evidences of thy good husbandry, thy wise managing of the Talent; and in a word, of faithful service to shew here, or else when the Euge bone serve is pronounced, thou will not be able, [...]. v. confidently to answer to thy name. [...], said the Milesians to Brutus. All the Weapons in the world will not defend the man, unless the man actuate, and fortifie, and defend his weapons. Thy strength consists all in the strength of Christ, D but you will never walk, or be invulnerable in the strength of that, till you be resolved, That the good use (and so the strength of that strength to thee) is a work that remains for thee. If it were not, that Exhortation of the Apostles, would never have been given in form of Exhortation to the Christian, but of Prayer only to Christ, Stand fast, quit your selves like men, 1 Cor. xvi. 13. be strong, 1 Cor. xvi. 13.

Lastly, Or indeed that which must be both first and last, com­mensurate to all our diligence, the Viaticum that you must carry with E you, is the Prayers of humble gasping Souls: Humble, in respect of what grace is received; Be sure not to be exalted with that considera­tion. Gasping for what supply may be obtained from that eternal un­exhausted Fountain; and these Prayers not only, that God will give, but, as Josephus makes mention of the Jews Liturgy, [...] That they may receive: And as Porphyry, of one kind of Sacrifice, [...], That they may use; and every of us fructifie in some proportion answerable to our irrigation.F

Now the God of all Grace, who hath called us into his eternal glory in Christ Jesus; after that you have obeyed a while, make you perfect, stablish, strengthen, settle you.

To him, be glory and dominion, for ever and ever. Amen.

The III. Sermon.

PROV. i. 22.‘How long, ye simple ones, will ye love simplicity?’

THat Christ is the best, and Satan the worst chosen Master, is one of the weightiest, and least con­sidered Aphorisms of the Gospel. Were we but so just and kind to our selves, as actually to pur­sue D what upon judgment should appear to be most for our interests, even in relation to this present life: And (without making Heaven the principle of our motion) but only think never the worse of a worldly temporary bliss, not quar­rel against it for being attended with an eternal: Were we but pa­tient of so much sobriety and consideration, as calmly to weigh and ponder what course, in all probability, were most likely to befriend and oblige us here, to make good its promise of helping us to the E richest acquisitions, the vastest possessions and treasures of this life, I am confident our Christ might carry it from all the World besides, our Saviour from all the tempters and destroyers; and (besides so many other considerable advantages) this superlative transcendent one, of giving us the only right to the reputation and title of Wisdom here in these Books, be acknowledged the Christians, i. e. the Disciples mono­poly and inclosure: And Folly, the due brand and reproach and por­tion of the ungodly.

F The wisest Man, beside Christ, that was ever in the World, you may see by the Text, had this notion of it, brings in Wisdom by a pro­sopopaeia (i. e. either Christ himself, or the saving doctrine of Heaven, in order to the regulating of our lives, or again, Wisdom in the ordinary notion of it) libelling and reproaching the folly of all the sorts of sin­ners in the World, posting from the [without in the streets] Vers. 10. [Page 34] to the Assemblies of the greatest renown [the chief place of concourse,]A i. e. Clearly their Sanhedrim, or great Council in the 21. from thence to the places of judicature; for that is [the openings of the gates] nay, to [the City] [...] the Metropolis and glory of the Nation; and crying out most passionately, and bitterly against all in the loudest language of contumely & satyr, that ever Pasquin or Marforius were taught to speak: And the short of it is, That the pious Christian is the only tolerable wise; and the World of unchristian sinners, are a company of the most wretched, simple Atheistical fools, which cannot B be thought on, without a Passion and Inculcation, How long, ye simple ones, will ye love simplicity? And ye scorners, &c.

The first part of this Verse, though it be the cleanest of three expressions, hath yet in it abundantly enough of rudeness, for an ad­dress to any civil Auditory: I shall therefore contain my discourse within those stanchest limits, How long, ye simple ones, will ye love simplicity? And in them observe only these three particulars.C

1. The character of the ungodly mans condition, contained in these two expressions, Simple ones, and simplicity; How long, ye sim­ple, &c.

2. The aggravation of the simplicity, and so heightning of the character, and that by two farther considerations.

First, From their loving of that which was so unlovely, That they should be so simple as to love simplicity.

Secondly, From their continuance in it, that they should not at D length discern their error, That they should love simplicity so long.

3. The passion that it produceth in the speaker (be it Wisdom, or be it Christ, or be it Solomon) to consider it; and that passion, whe­ther of pity, That men should be such fools; or of indignation, That they should love and delight in it so long. How long &c.

I begin first with the first, The character of sin and sinners, i. e. Of the ungodly mans condition, contained in these two expressions: Simple ones, and simplicity. How, &c. E

Four notions we may have of these words, which will all be ap­pliable to this purpose: You shall see them as they rise.

First, As the calling one simple, is a word of reproach, or con­tumely; the very same with the calling one [...], Matth. v. i. e. Empty, brainless person, the next degree to the [...], or thou fool, in the end of that and this Verse. And then the thing that we are to observe from thence, is, What a reproachful thing an unchristian life F is: what a contumelious, scandalous quality.

A reproach to Nature first, to our humane kind, which was an honorable reverend thing in Paradise, before sin came in to humble & defame it; a solemn, severe Law-giver, [...], in Clemens; the Systeme or Pandect of all Rational notions, [...], [Page 35] A that either likes or commends all that now Christ requires of us, bears witness to the Word of God that all his Commandments are righte­ous; and so is by our unnatural sins, those [...], ignoble disho­nourable affections of ours (which have coupled together Sins and Kennels, Adulterers & Dogs, Rev. xxii. 15.) put to shame and rebuke, dishonoured and degraded, as it were. Not all the ugliness and poison of the toad, hath so deformed that kind of creatures, brought it so low in genere entium, as the deformed malignantcondition of sin hath B brought down the very nature and kind of men, making them [...], the children, i. e. the objects of all the wrath, and hatred in the World.

2. A reproach to our Souls, those immortal vital Creatures in­spir'd into us by Heaven, and now raised higher, superinspir'd by the Grace of Christ; which are then as Mezentius's invention of punish­ment, bound up close with a Carcase of Sin, tormented and poisoned with its stench, buried in that noysomest Vault, or Carnel-house. C'Twas an admirable golden saying of the Pythagoreans, the [...], what a restraint of sin it would be, if a man would remember the reverence he ought unto himself, and [...], was their own explication of it; the Soul within thee is that self to whom all that dread and awe, and reverence is due. And O what an impu­dent affront, whatan irreverential prophaning of that sacred Celestial Beam within thee (that [...], as the Philosophers call it) is every paultry Oath, or Rage, or Lust, that the secure sinner is so mi­nutely D guilty of! Every sin, say the Schools, being in this respect a kind of Idolatry, an incurvation and prostitution of that Heavenly Creatute (ordain'd to have nothing but Divinity in its prospect) to the meanest, vilest Heathen Worship, the Crocodile, the Cat, the Scarabee, the Dii Stercorii, the most noysome abominations under Heaven.

3. A reproach to God, who hath owned such scandalous Crea­tures, hath placed us in a degree of Divinity next unto Angels, nay E to Christ, that by assuming that nature, and dying for it, hath made it emulate the Angelical Eminence, & been in a manner liable to the censure of partiality in so doing; in advancing us so unwor­thy, dignifying us so beyond the merit of our behaviours, honouring us so unproportionably above what our actions can own, Whilst those that are in scarlet embrace the dunghill, Lam. iiii. 5. as it is in the Lamentations, those that are honoured by God, act so dishonourably. 'Twas Plato's affirma­tion of God in respect of men, that he was a Father, when of all other F Creatures he was but a Maker; and 'tis Arrian's superstruction on that,Lib. 1. c. 3. that remembring that we are the Sons of God, we should never admit any base degenerous thought, any thing reproachful to that stock, unworthy of the grandeur of the Family from whence we are extracted: If we do, it will be more possible for us to prophane, and embase Heaven, than for the reputation of that Parentage of ours [Page 36] to ennoble us: the scandal that such a degenerous, disingenuous Pro­geny A will bring on the house from whence we came, is a kind of Sa­crilege to Heaven, a violation to those sacred mansions, a proclaim­ing to the World what colonies of polluted Creatures came down from thence, though there be a nulla retrorsum, no liberty for any such to return thither.

Lastly, 'Tis a reproach to the very Beasts, and the rest of the Creation which are designed by God, the servants and slaves of sinful Man; which may justly take up the language of the slave to his viti­ous B Master in the Satyrist, Tune mihi Dominus? Art thou my Lord, who art so far a viler Bondslave, than those over whom thou tyran­nizest? a slave to thy Passion, thy Lust, thy Fiends, who hast so far dethroned thy self, that the beast becomes more beast when it re­members thee to have any degree of soverainty over it.

Put these four Notions together, and 'twill give you a view of the first intimation of this Text, the baseness and reproachfulness of the sinners course: and unless he be the most abject, wretchless, for­lorn C sot in the whole Creation, unless he be turned all into earth, or phlegm; if he hath in his whole Composition, one spark of Ambition, of Emulation, of ordinary sense of Honour; the least warmth of Spirit; impatience of being, the only degenerous wretch of the earth now, and of Hell to all Eternity; if he be not absolutely arriv'd to Arrian's [...],L. 1. c. 5. (his practical as well as judica­tive faculty, quite quarr'd and petrifi'd within him) to that [...] in the Gospel, Mar. iii. 5. that direct ferity and brutality, in comparison of which,D the most crest-faln numness, palsie or lethargy of Soul, were Dignity and Preferment; if he be not, all that is deplorable already, & owned to be so for ever; he will certainly give one vital spring, one last plunge, to recover some part of the Honour and Dignity of his Crea­tion; break off that course that hath so debased him, precipitated him into such an abyss of filth and shame, if it be but in pity to the Nature, the Soul, the God, the whole Creation about him; that like the seven importunate Women, Isai. iv. 1. Isai. iv. 1. lay hold on this one insensate person E in the eager clamorous style of the [...] take away our reproach. And let that serve for a first part of the Sinners Character, the consideration of his reproachful, scandalous offensive state, which might in all reason work some degree of good on him, in the firstplace.

A second Notion of this Phrase, and degree of this Character, is the giddiness and unadvisedness of the Sinners Course; as simplicity ordinarily signifies senselesness, precipitousness, as Trismegistus defines it [...], a species of madness in one place, and [...], a kind of F drunkenness in another, a wild irrational acting, and this doth express it self in our furious mischieving our selves, in doing all quite con­trary unto our own ends, our own aims, our own principles of action: and this you will see most visible in the particulars, in every motion, every turn of the sinners life. As

[Page 37] A 1. In his malices, wherein he breaths forth such Aetna's of flames a­gainst others, you may generally mark it he hurts neither God nor man but only himself. In every such hellish breathing, all that malignity of his cannot reach God, he is [...], untemptable by evil in this other sence, I mean impenetrable by his malice: All that was shot up towards God, comes down immediately on the sinners own head; and for the Man against whom he is enraged, whose blood he thirsts after, whose ruine he desires, he does him the greatest cour­tesie B in the World, he is but blest by those curses; that honourable blissful estate that belongs to all poor persecuted Saints, (and conse­quently the [...], matter of joy and exultation) is hereby become his portion; and that is the reason he is advised to do good to him by way of gratitude, to make returns of all civility and ac­knowledgments, not as to an Enemy, but a benefactor, to bless and pray for him by whom he hath been thus obliged: Only this raving mad man's own Soul is that against which all these blows and ma­lices C rebound; the only true sufferer all this while: First, in the very meditating and designing the malice, all which space he lives not the life, but the Hell of a Fiend or Devil (that [...], that enemy­man, as he is called) his names-sake, and parallel: And again secondly in the executing of it; that being one of the basest, and most disho­nourable imployments; that of an [...], an Angel or Officer of Satan's, (to buffet some precious Image of God) which is to that purpose fill'd out of Satan's fulness, swoln with all the venemous hu­mour D that that fountain can afford to furnish and accommodate him for this enterprise. And then lastly, After the satiating of his wrath, a bloated, guilty, unhappy Creature, one that hath fed at the Devils table, swill'd and glutted himself in blood, and now betrays it all in his looks and complexion. And as in our malices, so, Secondly, in our loves, in our softer as well as our rougher passions, we generally drive quite contrary to our own ends and interests; and if we obtain, we find it experimentally, the enjoyment of what we pursue most ve­hemently, E proves not only unsatisfactory, but grating, hath to the va­nity, the addition of vexation also; not only the [...], no manner of fruit, then at the point of enjoying, an empty paultry no­thing, but over and above the [...], shame, and perturbation of mind (the gripings and tormina of a confounded Conscience) im­mediately consequent; and 'twould even grieve an enemy to hear the Apostle go on to the dear payment at the close, for this sad nothing, the [...], ex abundanti, and over and above the end of those F things, is death. And oh what a simplicity is this! Thus to seek out emptiness and death, when we think we are on one of our advantagi­ous pursuits, in this Errour of our ways, as the Wise man calls it, is sure a most prodigious mistake, a most unfortunate errour; and to have been guilty of it more than once, the most unpardonable simplicity.

[Page 38] From our loves proceeding to our hopes, which if it be any but A the Christian hope,1 Joh. iii. 3. than this hope on him, 1 Joh. iii. 3. i. e. hope on God, and that joyned with purifying, it is in plain terms the greatest con­trariety to it self, the perfectest desperateness; and for secular hopes the expectation of good, of advantages from this or that staff of Egypt, the depending on this, whether prophane, or but ordinary innocent auxiliary, 'tis the forfeiting all our pretensions to that great aid of Heaven (as they say the Loadstone draweth not, when the Adamant is near) 'tis the taking us off from our grand trust and dependance,B setting us up independent from God; and that must needs be the blasting of all our enterprises; that even lawful aid of the Creature, if it be looked on with any confidence as our helper, [...], Rom. i. beside, or in separation from the Creator, is (and God is en­gaged in honour, that it should be) struck presently from Heaven, eaten up with worms like Herod, when once its good qualities are deified: broken to pieces with the brazen Serpent, burnt and stampt to powder with the golden Calf: Isa. i. 31. and the strong shall be as tow, Isa. i. 31.C the fals Idol strength is but a prize for a flash of lightning to prey on. And as St. Paul and Barnabas are fain to run in a passion upon the multitude that meant to do them Worship, with a Men and Bre­thren, &c. and the very Angel to St. John, Rev. xxii. 9. in Rev. xxii. when he fell down before him; vide ne feceris, see thou do it not; for fear if he had been so mistaken by him, he might have forfeited his Angelical estate by that unluckiness; so certainly the most honourable promising earthly help, if it be once looked on with a confidence, or an adora­tion; D if it steal off our eyes and hearts one minute from that sole wait­ing and looking on God; 'tis presently to expect a being thunder­struck from Heaven, as hath been most constantly visible among us; and that is all we get by this piece of simplicity also.

And it were well when our worldly hopes have proved thus little to our advantage; our worldly fears in the next place, might bring us in more profit. But alas! that passionate perturbation of our facul­ties stands us in no stead, but to hasten and bring our fears upon us, by E precipitating them sometimes, casting our selves into that abyss which we look on with such horror, running out to meet that danger which we would avoid so vehemently; sometimes dispiriting and depriving us of all those succours which were present to our rescue;Wisd. xvii. 12. the passion most treacherosly betraying the aids which reason, if it had been al­lowed admission, was ready to have offered; but perpetually antici­pating that misery, which is the thing we fear, the terror it self being greater disease sometimes, constantly a greater reproach and con­tumely F to a Masculine Spirit, than any of the evils we are so industri­ous to avoid. 'Tis not a matter of any kind of evil report, really to have suffered, to have been squeez'd to atomes by an unremediable evil, especially if it be for well-doing; but to have been sick of the fright, to have lavish'd our constancy, courage, conscience, and all, [Page] [Page] [Page 39] A an Indian sacrifice to a Sprite or Mormo, ne noceat, to escape not a real evil, but only an apprehension, or terror; this is a piece of the most destructive wariness, the [...], the greatest simplicity that can be.

I shall not enlarge the prospect any further, as easily I might, to our Unchristian Joyes, that do so dissolve, our Unchristian Sorrows, that do so contract and shrivel up the Soul; (and then as Themison, and his old sect of Methodists resolv'd, that the laxum and strictum, the immo­derate B dissolution or constipation, were the principles and originals of all diseases in the World, so it will be likely to prove in our spiritu­al estate also:) nor again to our heathenish [...], rejoycing at the Mischiefs of other men; (which directly transform us into fiends and furies, and reak no malice on any but our selves, leave us a wasted, wounded, prostitute, harrast Conscience, to tire and gnaw upon its own bowels, and nothing else.) I have exercised you too long with so trivial a subject, such an easie every days demonstration, C the wicked mans contradictions to all his aims, his acting quite con­trary to his very designs, a second branch of his Character, a second degree and advancement of his simplicity.

The Third notion of Simplicity, is that of the Idiot, the Natural, as we call him, he that hath some eminent failing in his intellectuals, the laesum principium, the pitcher or wheel, in that 12. of Ecclesiastes, I mean the faculty of understanding, or reason broken or wounded at the fountain or cistern; and so nothing but animal, sensitive actions to be D had from him. And of this kind of imperfect Creatures, it will be perhaps worth your marking, that the principal faculty which is irre­coverably wanting in such, and by all teaching irreparable & unim­proveable, is the power of numbring; I mean not that of saying num­bers by rote, (for that is but an act of sensitive memory) but that of applying them to matter, & from thence that of intellectual numbring, i. e. of comparing and measuring, judging of proportions, pondering, weighing discerning the differences of things by the power of the ju­dicative E faculty; which two, seem much more probably the propriety and difference of a man from a beast, than (that which the Philoso­phers have fancied) the power of laughing or discoursing. To reckon and compute, is that which in men of an active clear reason, is perpe­tually in exercising per modum actus eliciti, that naturally of its own accord, without any command or appointment of the will, pours it self out upon every object. We shall oft deprehend our selves num­bring the panes in the Window, the sheep in the Field; measuring eve­ry F thing we come near with the eye, with the hand; singing Tunes, forming everything into some kind of metre (which are branchesstill of that faculty of numbring) when we have no kind of end or design in doing it. And this is of all things in the world, the most impossible for a meer Natural or Idiot. And so you have here the third, and that is the prime, most remarkable degree of simplicity, that the Un­christian [Page 40] fool, the [...], whether you render it the animal or A natural man, is guilty of; that pitious laesum principium, that want of the faculty of weighing, pondering, or numbring; that weakness, or no kind of exercise of the judicative faculty, from whence all his sim­plicity and impiety proceeds. The Hebrews have a word to signifie a wise man, which hath a near affinity with that of weighing and pon­dering [...] which hath no difference in found from that which signifies ponderavit, whence the Shecle, the known Hebrew word is deduced, to note as the Psalmist saith, that He that is wise,B will ponder things. All the folly and Unchristian Sin, comes from want of pondering; and all the Christian Wisdom, Piety, Disciple­ship, consists in the exercise of this faculty. Whatsoever is said most honourably of Faith in Scripture, that sets it out in such a grandeur, as the greatest designer and author of all the high acts of Piety,Heb. xi. Heb. xi. and as the Conqueror over the World,1 Joh. v. 1 Joh. v. 4. is clearly upon this score, as Faith is the Spiritual Wisdom, or Prudence; (for so it is best defined) and as by comparing, and proportioning, and weighing C together the Promises, or the Commands, or the Terrours of the Gospel on one side, with the Promises, the Prescriptions and Ter­rours of the World on the other, it pronounces that Hand-writing on the Wall against the latter of them, the Mene tekel upharsin. They are weighed in the balance, and found most pitifully light, in comparison of those which Christ hath to weigh against them; and so the King­dom, the usurpt Supremacy (that they have so long pretended to in the inconsiderate simple precipitous world) is by a just judgment,D torn and departed from them.

Will you begin with the Promises, and have but the patience a while to view the Scales, and when you have set the Beam Even, removed the carnal or secular prejudices (which have so possessed most of us, that we can never come to a right balancing of any thing; the beam naturally enclines still as our customary wonts & prepossessions will have it:) when, I say, you have set the beam impartially, throw but into one scale the Promises of Christ, those of his present, of his fu­ture E bliss; of present, Such as eye hath not seen, nor ear heard, nor en­tred into the heart of man to conceive, 1 Cor. ii. 9. 1 Cor. ii. 9. prepared for them that love God, and that at the very minute of loving him (the word [...], referring to the manna of old; the Hebrew deduced from [...] praeparavit, and therefore described by the Author of the Book of Wisdom, Wisd. xvi. 20. according to that literal denotation of the Hebrew, [...], bread baked, as it were, and sent down ready from heaven to the true Israelite) the gust of every Christian duty, be­ing F so pleasurable and satisfactory to the palate, as it were, of our hu­mane nature; so consonant to every rational soul, that it cannot pra­ctise, or taste, without being truly joyed and ravished with it: and so that which was the Israelites feast, the Quails and Manna, being be­come the Christians every day ordinary diet, you will allow that to [Page 41] A be of some weight or consideration, if there were nothing else but that present festival of a good conscience in the scale before you: But when to that, you have farther cast in the glory, honor, immortality, which is on arrear for that Christian in another life; that infinite, inesti­mable weight of that glory laid before us, as the reward of the Christi­an, for his having been content, that Christ should shew him the way to be happy here, and blessed eternally: And when that both present and future felicity is set off, and heightned by the contrary, by the B indignation, and anger, and wrath, that is the portion of the Atheistical fool, and which nothing could have helped us to escape, but this only Christian Sanctuary; when the bliss of this Lazarus in Abrahams bo­some, is thus improved by the news of the scorching of the Dives in that place of torments; and by all these together, the scale thus laded on one side, I shall then give the Devil leave to help you to what weight he can in the other scale, be it his totum hoc, all the riches and glory of the whole world (and not only that thousandth part of the C least point of the Map, which is all thou canst aspire to in his service) and what is it all, but the bracteata felicitas, in Seneca; [...] in Naz. Epist. 115. A little fictitious felicity, a little paultrey trash, that nothing but the opinion of men, hath made to differ from the most refuse stone, or dirt in the Kennel; the richest gems totally beholding to the simpli­city and folly of men, for their reputation and value in the World. Be­sides these, I presume the phansies expect to have liberty to throw in all the pleasures and joys, the ravishments and transportations of all the D Senses; and truly, that is soon done, all the true joy that a whole age of carnality affords any man, if you but take along with it (as you can­not chuse but do in all conscience) the satieties, & loathings, and pangs, that inseparably accompany it (the Leaven, as well as the Hony, under which, the pleasures of sin are thought to be prohibited, Levit. ii. 11.) it will make but a pitiful addition in the scales, so many pounds less than nothing, is the utmost that can be affirmed of it; and when you have fetcht out your last reserve, all the painted air, the only commo­dity E behind, that you have to throw into that scale, the reputation and honor of a gallant vain-glorious sinner, that some one fool or mad­man, may seem to look on with some reverence; you have then the utmost of the weight that that scale is capable of; and the difference so vast betwixt them, such an inconsiderable proportion of straw, stubble to such whole Mines & Rocks of Gold and Silver, and precious Stones, that no man that is but able to deal in plain numbers (no need of Logarithms or Algebra) can mistake in the judgment, or think that F there is any profit, any advantage in gaining the whole world, if ac­companied with the least hazard or possibility of losing his own soul: And therefore the running that adventure, is the greatest idiotism, the most deplorable, woful simplicity in the World.

The same proportion would certainly be acknowledged in the se­cond place, betwixt the commands of Christ on one side, high, rational, [Page 42] venerable commands, that he that thinks not himself so strictly obliged A to observe, cannot yet but revere him that brought them into the World, and deem them [...], a Royal and a gallant Law, whilst all the whole Volume or Code of the Law of the Members, hath not one ingenuous dictate, one tolerable, rational proposal in it, only a deal of savage drudgery to be performed to an impure tyrant (sin and pain being of the same date in the world, and the Hebrew [...] sig­nifying both) and the more such burthens undergone, the more mean submissions still behind; no end of the tale of Brick to one that is B once engaged under such Egyptian Kiln and Task-masters.

And for the terrors in the last place, there are none but those of the Lord, that are fit to move, or to perswade any: The utmost secular fear is so much more impendent over Satan's, than God's Clients (the killing of the body, the far more frequent effect of that which had first the honor to bring death into the world: The Devil owning the title of destroyer, Abaddon, and [...], and inflicting diseases gene­rally on those whom he possest; and Christ, that other of the [...] C and [...] the Physitian and the Saviour, that hath promises of long life annexed to some specials of his service) that if it were rea­sonable to fear those that can kill the body, and afterwards have no more that they can do, (i. e. Are able by the utmost of their malice, and Gods permission, but to land thee safe at thy fair Haven, to give thee Heaven and bliss before thy time, instead of the many lingring deaths that this life of ours is subject to) yet there were little reason to fear or suspect the fate in Gods service, far less than in those steep D precipitous paths which the Devil leads us thorow. And therefore to be thus low-bell'd with panick frights, to be thus tremblingly dis­mayed where there is no place of fear, and to ride on intrepid on the truest dangers, as the Barbarians in America do on Guns, is a mighty disproportion of mens faculties; a strange superiority of phansie over judgment: That may well be described by a defect in the power of numbring, that discerns no difference between Ciphers and Millions, but only that the noughts are a little the blacker, and the more for­midable.E And so much for the third branch of this character.

There is yet a fourth notion of simplicity, as it is contrary to com­mon ordinary prudence, that by which, the politician and thriving man of this world, expects to be valued, the great dexterity and managery of affairs & the business of this world; wherein let me not be thought to speak Paradoxes, if I tell you with some confidence, that the wicked man is this only impolitick fool, and the Christian generally the most dextrous, prudent, politick person in the world; and the safest Motto, F that of the Virtutem violenter retine, the keeping vertue with the same violence that Heaven is to be taken with: Not that the Spirit of Christ infuses into him the subtleties and crafts of the wicked, gives him any principles, or any excuse for that greater portion of the Serpentine wisdom; but because honesty is the most gainful policy, the mok thri­ving [Page] [Page] [Page 43] A thorow prudence, that will carry a man farther than any thing else. That old principle in the Mathematicks, That the right line comes speediliest to the journeys end, being in spight of Machiavel, a Maxim in Politicks also: and so will prove, till Christ shall resign and give up to Satan the oeconomy of the World. Some examples it is possible there may be of the Prosperum Scelus, the thriving of villany for a time, and so of the present advantages that may come in to us by our secular contrivances; but sure this is not the lasting course, but only B an anomaly or irregularity, that cannot be thought fit to be reckoned of, in comparison of the more constant promises, the long life in a Canaan of Milk and Honey, that the Old and New Testament both have ensured upon the meek disciple.

And I think a man might venture the experiment to the testimo­ny and tryal of these times, that have been deemed most unkind and unfavorable to such innocent Christian qualities; that those that have been most constant to the strict, stable, honest principles, have C thrived far better by the equable figure, than those that have been most dexterous in changing shapes; and so are not the most unwise [...], if there were never another state of retributions, but this. Whereas it is most scandalously frequent and observable, that the great Politicians of this world are baffled and outwitted by the Pro­vidence of Heaven; sell their most precious souls for nought, and have not the luck to get any money for them; the most unthrifty improvident Merchandise, that [...] folly, Psal. xlix. 13. which the D lxxii render [...], scandal; the most pitious offensive folly, the wretchedst simplicity in the World.

You would easily believe it should not stand in need of a far­ther aggravation, and yet now you are to be presented with one in my Text, by way of heightning of the Character, and that was my second particular, that at first I promised you, made up of two far­ther considerations; First, The loving of that which is so unlovely; secondly, The continuing in the Passion so long, How long you simple E ones, will you love, &c.

First, The degree and improvement of the Atheists folly, consists in the loving of it, that he can take a delight and complacency in his way; to be patient of such a course, gainless service; such scandalous mean submissions had been reproach enough to any that had not di­vested himself of ingenuity and innocence together, and become one of Aristotles [...], Natural slaves (which if it signifie any thing, denotes the fools & simple ones in this Text, whom nature hath mark­ed F in the head for no very honorable employments.) But from this passivity in the Mines and Gallies, to attain to a joy & voluptuousness in the employment, to dread nothing but Sabbatick years and Jubiles, and with the crest-fallen slave, to disclaim nothing but liberty & manu­mission, i. e. in effect, Innocence, and Paradise, and Bliss; to court and woo Satan for the Mansions in Hell, and the several types and prae­ludiums [Page 44] of them, the [...], the initial pangs in this life, A which he hath in his disposing, to be such a Platonick lover of stripes and chains, without intuition of any kind of reward, any present or future wages for all his patience, and as it follows, to hate knowledge and piety; hate it as the most treacherous enemy that means to under­mine their Hell; to force them out of their beloved Satan's embraces: This is certainly, a very competent aggravation of the simplicity And yet to see how perfect a character this is of the most of us, that have nothing to commend, or even excuse in the most of those ways, on B which we make no scruple to exhaust our souls, but only our kindness; irrational passionate kindness and love toward them; & then that love shall cover a multitude of sins, supersede all the exceptions and quarrels that otherwise we should not chuse but have to them. Could a man see any thing valuable or attractive in Oaths & Curses, in Drunkenness and Bestiality (the sin, that when a Turk resolves to be guilty of, he makes a fearful noise unto his Soul to retire all into his feet, or as far off as it is possible, that it may not be within ken of that bestial prospect, C as Busbequius tell us.) Could any man endure the covetous man's sad galling Mules, burthens of Gold, his Achans Wedge that cleaves and rends in sunder Nations,(so that in the Hebrew, that sin signifies wounding and incision, Joel ii. 8. Joel ii. 8. and is alluded to, by his piercing him­self thorow with divers sorrows,1 Tim. vi. 10. 1 Tim. vi. 10.) his very Purgatories, and Limbo's, nay, Hell, as devouring and perpetual as it; and the no kind of satisfaction so much as to his eye, from the vastest heaps or treasures, were he not in love with folly and ruin; had he not been D drenched with philtres and charms; had not the Necromancer plaid some of his prizes on him, and as S. Paul saith of his Galatians, even bewitched him to be a fool. would we but make a rational choice of our sins, discern somewhat that were amiable, before we let loose our passion on them, and not deal so blindly in absolute elections of the driest unsavory sin, that may but be called a sin (that hath but the ho­nor of affronting God, and damning one of Christ's redeemed) most of our wasting, sweeping sins, would have no manner of pretensions to E us; and that you will allow to be one special accumulation of the folly and madness of these simple ones, that they thus love simplicity.

The second aggravation, is the continuance and duration of this fury, a lasting chronical passion, quite contrary to the nature of passions, a flash of lightning, lengthned out a whole day together, That they should love simplicity so long.

It is the nature of acute diseases, either to have intervals and inter­missions, or else to come to speedy crises; and though these prove F mortal sometimes, yet the state is not generally so desperate, and so it is with sins: Many the sharpest and vehementest indispositions of the Soul (pure Feavers of rage and lust) prove happily but flashing short furies, are attended with an instant smiting of the heart, a hating and detesting our follies, a striking on the thigh in Jeremy, and in [Page 45] A David's penitential stile, a [So foolish was I, and ignorant; even as a beast before thee.] And it were happy if our Feavers had such cool seasons, such favorable ingenuous intermissions as these. But for the hectick continual Feavers (that like some weapons (the [...]) barbed shafts in use among the Franks in Agathias, being not mortal at the entrance, do all their slaughter by the hardness of getting out) the Vultures that so tyre and gnaw upon the Soul, the [...] that never suffer the sinner fool, to make any approach toward his wits, toward B sobriety again: This passionate love of folly, improved into an habitual, steady course of Atheisticalness, a deliberate, peremptory, final repro­bating of Heaven (the purity at once, and the bliss of it) the stanch demure covenanting with death, & resolvedness to have their part to run their fortune with Satan, through all adventures; this is that monstrous brat, That (as for the birth of the Champion in the Poet) three nights of darkness more than Egyptian, were to be crowded into one (all the simplicity and folly in a Kingdom) to help to a being in the C World: And at the birth of it, you will pardon Wisdom, if she break out into a passion and exclamation of pity first, and then of indigna­tion, How long, ye simple ones, &c. My last particular.

The first debt, that Wisdom, that Christ, that every Christian Brother ows and pays to every unchristian liver, is that of pity and compassion; which is to him of all others, the properest dole. Look upon all the sad moanful objects in the world, betwixt whom all our compassion is wont to be divided; First, the Bankrupt rotting in a Gaol; second­ly, D the direful bloody spectacle of the Soldier, wounded by the Sword of War; thirdly, the Malefactor howling under the Stone, or gasp­ing upon the Rack or Wheel; and fourthly, the gallant person on the Scaffold or Gallows ready for execution; And the secure, senseless sinner, is the brachygraphy of all these.

You have in him, 1. A rich patrimony and treasure of grace (pur­chased dear, and setled on him by Christ) most prodigally and contu­meliously mispent & exhausted. 2. A Soul streaming out whole Rivers E of blood and spirits, through every wound, even every sin it hath been guilty of; and not enduring the Water to cleanse, much less the Wine or Oyl to be poured into any one of them; the whole Soul transfigured into one wound, one [...] congelation and clod of blood. Then thirdly beyond this all the racks and pangs of a tormenting con­science, his only present exercise: And lastly, all the torments in Hell (the Officer ready hurrying him to the Judg, and the Judg deliver­ing him to the Executioner) his minutely dread and expectation, the F dream that so haunts and hounds him. And what would a man give in bowels of compassion (to Christianity? or but) to humane kind, to be able to reprieve or rescue such an unhappy creature; to be but the Lazarus with one drop of water to cool the tipof the scalding Tongue, that is engaged in such a pile of flames? If there be any Charity left in this frozen World, any Beam under this cold uninhabitable Zone, it [Page 46] will certainly work some meltings on the most obdurate heart; it A will dissolve and pour out our bowels into a seasonable advice, or ad­monition (that excellent Recipe, saith Themist. [...], That supplies the place, and does the work of the burnings and scarifyings) A cry to stop him in his precipitous course; a tear, at least, to solem­nize, if not to prevent so sad a fate. And it were well, if all our bowels were thus employed, all our kindness & most passionate love, thus converted and laid out on our poor lapsed sinner-brethrens souls, to seize upon those fugitives, as Christ is said to do, [...] B Heb. xi. 16. to catch hold and bring them back, ere it be yet too late; re­scue them out of the hands of their dearest espoused sins,Solon. and not suffer the most flattering kind of death ( [...] in Gal. de Athl. the Devil in the Angelical disguise) the sin that un­dertakes to be the prime Saint (the zeal for the Lord of Hosts) any the most venerable impiety, to lay hold on them. Could I but see such a new fashioned Charity received and entertained in the World; every man to become his brothers keeper, and every man so tame, as C to love and interpret aright, entertain and embrace this keeper, this [...], this Guardian Angel, as an Angel indeed, as the only valuable friend he hath under Heaven, I should think this a lucky omen of the worlds returning to its wits, to some degree of piety again. And till then, there is a very fit place and season for the exer­cise of the other part of the passion here, that of Indignation, the last minute of my last particular, as the how long is an expression of Indignation. D

Indignation, not at the men (for however Aristotles [...] [A man ought to have indignation at some persons] may seem to justifie it: Our Saviour calls not for any such stern passion, or indeed any but love, and bowels of pity, and charity toward the person of any, the most enormous sinner; and S. Paul only, for the [...], the re­storing, setting him in joynt again, that is thus overtaken in any fault) but Indignation, I say, at the sin, at the simplicity and the folly, that re­fuse reproachful Creature, that hath the fate to be beloved so passionate­ly,E and so long. And to this will Aristotles season of indignation be­long, the seeing favors and kindness so unworthily dispenced (the upstarts, saith he, and new men advanced and gotten into the greatest dignities) knowledge to be profestly hated, and under that title, all the prime, i. e. Practical Wisdom, and Piety, and simplicity, i. e. folly and madness, and sin, to have our whole souls laid out upon it.

O let this shrill Sarcasm of Wisdoms, the [How long, ye simple ones] be for ever a sounding in our ears. Let this indignation at our F stupid ways of sin, transplant it self to that soyl where it is likely to thrive and fructifie best, I mean, to that of our own, instead of other mens breasts, where it will appear gloriously in S. Pauls inventory, a prime part of that [...], the durable, unretracted repentance, an effect of that godly sorrow that worketh to Salvation. [Page 47] A And if it be sincere, O what indignation it produceth in us? What displeasure and rage at our folly? to think how senselesly we have moulted and crumbled away our souls; what unthristy bargains we have made? what sots and fools we shall appear to Hell, when it shall be known to the wretched, tormented Creatures, what ambitions we had, to be but as miserable as they? upon what Gotham arrants? what Wild-goose chases, we are come posting and wearied thither? O that a little of this consideration, and this passion, betimes might ease B us of that endless wo and indignation; those tears and gnashing of teeth, quit us of that sad arrear of horrors, that otherwise waits behind for us. Lord, do thou give us that view of our ways; the errors, the follies, the furies, of our extravagant Atheistical lives; that may by the very reproach and shame, recover and return us to thee. Make our faces a­shamed, O Lord, that we may seek thy Law; Give us that pity, and that indignation, to our poor perishing souls; that may at length, awake and fright us out of our Lethargies, and bring us as so many confounded, C humbled, contrite penitentiaries, to that beautiful gate of thy temple of mercies, where we may retract our follies, implore thy pardon, de­precate thy wrath; and for thy deliverance from so deep an Hell, from so infamous a vile condition, from so numerous a tale of deaths; never leave praising thee, and saying, Holy, holy, holy Lord God of Hosts; Heaven and Earth are full of thy glory; Glory be to thee, O God, most high.

To whom with the Son, and the Holy Ghost be ascribed, &c.

The IV. Sermon.

MAT. I. 23.‘Emmanuel, which is by interpretation, God with us.’

THe different measure and means of dispensing Divine Knowledge to several ages of the World, may suffi­ciently appear by the Gospels of the New, and Prophecies of the Old Testament; the sunshine D and the clearness of the one, and the twilight and dimness of the other: but in no point this more importantly concerns us, than the Incarnation of Christ. This hath been the Study and Theme, the Speculation and Sermon of all holy Men and Writers since Adam's Fall; yet never plainly disclosed,Mat. iii. 3. till John Baptist, in the third of Matth. and the third Verse, and the Angel in the next verses before my Text, under­took the Task, and then indeed was it fully performed; then were E the Writings, or rather the Riddles, of the obscure, stammering, whispering Prophets, turned into the voice of One crying in the Wilderness, Isa. xl. 3. Prepare ye the wayes of the Lord, &c. Isa. xl. 3. Then did the cry, yea, shouting of the Baptist, at once, both interpret and perform what it prophecyed; At the sound of it, Every valley was exalted, and every hill was brought low: the crooked was made straight, Vers. 4. and the rough places plain, v. 4. That is, the Hill and Groves of the Prophets were levell'd into the open champain of the Gospel; F those impediments which hindred Gods approach unto mens rebel hearts, were carefully removed; the abject mind was lifted up, the exalted was deprest, the intractable and rough was render'd plain, and even; in the same manner as a way was made unto the Roman Army marching against Jerusalem. Vers. 5.

[Page] [Page] [Page 49] A This I thought profitable to be premised to you, both that you might understand the affinity of Prophecies, and Gospel, as differing not in substance, but only in clearness of revelation, as the glorious face of the Sun, from it self, being overcast and mask'd with a cloud; and also for the clearing of my Text: For this entire passage of Scrip­ture, of which these words are a close, is the Angels message, or Gospel unto Joseph, and set down by S. Matthew, as both the interpretation, and accomplishment of a Prophecy delivered long ago by Isaiah; but B perhaps not at all understood by the Jews: to wit, That a Virgin should conceive and bear a Son, and they should call his name Emmanuel.

Where first we must examine the seeming difference in the point of Christs Name, Vers. 21. betwixt the place here cited from Isaiah, and the words here vouched of the Angel, Vers. 25. V. 21. and proved by the effect V. 25.Isa. vii. 14. For the Prophet says, he shall be called Emmanuel, but the Angel commands he should be, and the Gospel records he was named Jesus.

C And here we must resume and enlarge the ground premised in our Preface, that Prophecies being not Histories, but rude imperfect draughts of things to come, do not exactly express and delineate, but only shadow, and covertly vail those things, which only the Spirit of God, and the event must interpret. So that in the Gospel, we construe the words, but in Prophecies, the sence; i. e. we expect not the performance of every Circumstance exprest in the words of a Pro­phecy, but we acknowledge another sence beyond the literal; and in D the comparing of Isaiah with St. Matthew, we exact not the same ex­pressions, provided we find the same substance, and the same signi­ficancy. So then, the Prophets [and call his name Emmanuel] is not as humane Covenants are, to be fulfill'd in the rigour of the Letter, that he should be so named at his Circumcision, but in the agreement of sence; that this name should express his nature; that he was indeed, God with us; and that at the Circumcision he should receive a name of the same power and significancy. Whence the observation by the way E is, that Emmanuel, in effect, signifies Jesus, God with us, a Saviour; and from thence the point of Doctrine, that Gods coming to us, i. e. Christs Incarnation, brought Salvation into the World. For if there be a substantial agreement betwixt the Prophet, and the Angel; if Em­manuel signifie directly Jesus; if God with us, and a Saviour be really the same title of Christ; then was there no Saviour, and consequent­ly no Salvation, before this presence of God with us. Which posi­tion we will briefly explain, and then omitting unnecessary proofs, F apply it.

In explaining of it, we must calculate the time of Christs In­carnation, and set down how with it, and not before, came Sal­vation.

We may collect in Scripture a three-fold incarnation of Christ; 1. In the Counsel of God, 2. In the Promises of God, 3. In a Per­sonal [Page 50] open exhibiting of him unto the World; the effect and comple­ment A of both Counsel and Promises.

1. In the Counsel of God, Rev. xiii. 8. so He was as slain, so incarnate, before the foundation of the World Rev. xiii. 8. For the word slain, being not competible to the Eternal God, but only to the assumption of the humane nature, presupposes him incarnate, because slain. God then in his Prescience, surveyingbefore he created, and viewing the lapsed, miserable, sick estate of the future Creation; in his Eternal Decree, foresaw, and preordained Jesus, the Saviour, the Author and Fi­nisher B of the Worlds Salvation. So that in the Counsel of God, to whom all things to come are made present, Emmanuel and Jesus went together; and no Salvation bestowed on us, but in respect to this, God with us.

2. In the Promises of God; and then Christ was incarnate when he was promised first in Paradise, Gen. iii. 15. The seed of the Woman, &c. and so he is as old in the flesh, as the World in sin, and was then in Gods Pro­mise first born, when Adam and man-kind began to die. After­wards C he was not again, but still incarnate in Gods promise more e­vidently in Abraham's time;Gen. xii. 3. xviii. 18. xxii. 18. In thy seed, &c. and in Moses his time; when at the addition of the Passeover, a most significant representati­on of the incarnate and crucified Christ, Exod. xiii. he was more than promised, almost exhibited. Under which times, it is by some asserted, that Christ in the form of Man, and habit of Angel, appeared sundry times to the Fathers, to give them not an hope, but a possession of the Incarnate God, and to be praeludium incarnationis, a pawn unto them, that they D trusted not in vain: And here it is plain thorowout, that this Incar­nation of Christ, in the Promise of God, did perpetually accompany, or go before Salvation: not one blessing on the nations, without mention of thy seed;] not one encouragement against fear, or unto confidence, but confirm'd and back'd with an I am thy shield, &c. i. e. according to the Targum, my Word is thy shield; i. e. my Christ, who is [...], the Word, in the first of Joh. i. Not any mention of Righteousness and Salvation, but on ground and condition of E belief of that Jesus which was then in promise, Emmanuel, God with us.

3. In the Personal exhibiting of Christ in form of flesh unto the World, dated at the fulness of time, and call'd in our ordinary phrase his Incarnation; then no doubt was Emmanuel, Jesus; then was he o­penly shewed to all people in the form of God a Saviour, which Sime­on, Luke ii. 30. Luk. ii. 30. most divinely styles God's Salvation; thereby, no doubt, meaning the Incarnate Christ, which by being God with us, was Salvation. F

Thus do you see a three-fold Incarnation, a three-fold Emmanuel, and proportionably a three-fold Jesus.

1. A Saviour first decreed for the World, answerable to God, incarnate in Gods Counsel, and so no man was ever capable of Salva­tion, but through God with us.

[Page 51] A 2. A Saviour promised to the World answerable to the second God with us, to wit, incarnate in the Promise, and so there is no Cove­nant of Salvation, but in this God with us.

3. A Saviour truly exhibited and born of a Woman, answerable to the third Immanuel; and so also is there no manifestation, no pro­claiming, no preaching of Salvation, but by the birth and merits of God with us.

To these three, if we add a fourth Incarnation of Christ, the as­suming B of our Immortal Flesh, which was at his Resurrection, then sure­ly the Doctrine will be complete, and this Emmanuel incarnate in the Womb of the grave, & brought forth cloath'd upon with an incorrupti­ble seed, is now more fully than ever prov'd an Eternal Jesus; For when he had overcome the sharpness of Death, he opened the kingdom of Heaven to all believers, as it is in our Te Deum; as if all that till then ever entred into Heaven, had been admitted by some privy key; but now the very gates were wide opened to all believers: This last Incarna­tion C of Christ, being accompanied with a Catholick Salvation, that Jesus might be as Eternal as Immanuel, that he might be as Immortal a Saviour as a God with us. 'Twere but a superfluous work, further to demonstrate, that through all ages of the World, there was no sal­vation ever tendred, but in respect to this Incarnation of Christ; that the hopes, the belief, the expectation of Salvation, which the Fa­thers lived and breathed by, under the types of the Law, was only grounded upon, and referred unto these promises of the future Incar­nation; D that they which were not in some measure enlightned in this mystery, were not also partakers of this Covenant of Salvation: that all the means besides that Heaven and Earth, and which goes beyond them both, the brain of Man, or Angel could afford or invent, could not excuse, much less save any child of Adam: That every Soul which was to spring from these loins, had been without those tran­scendent mercies which were exhibited by this Incarnation of Christs, plung'd in necessary desperate damnation: Your pati­ence E shall be more profitably imployed in a brief Application of the point;

First, That you perswade, and drive your selves to a sense and feeling of your Sins, those sins which thus pluckt God out of Heaven, and for a while depriv'd him of his Majesty; which laid an engage­ment upon God, either to leave his infinite Justice unsatisfied, or else to subject his infinite Deity to the servile mortality of Flesh, or else to leave an infinite World in a common damnation.

F Secondly, To strain all the expressions of our hearts, tongues, and lives, to the highest note of gratitude which is possible, in answer to this Mystery and Treasure of this God with us; to reckon all the Miracles of either common or private preservations, as foils to this in­comparable Mercy, infinitely below the least circumstance of it; with­out which, thine Estate, thy Understanding, thy Body, thy Soul, [Page 52] thy Being, thy very Creation, were each of them as exquisite Curses A as Hell or Malice could invent for thee.

Thirdly, To observe with an ecstasie of joy and thanks the pre­cious priviledges of us Christians, beyond all that ever God profest love to, in that we have obtained a full revelation of this God with us: which all the Fathers did but see in a cloud, the Angels peep'd at, the Heathen world gap'd after, but we beheld as in a plain at mid-day: For since the veil of the Temple was rent, every man that hath eyes may see Sanctum Sanctorum, Mat. xxvii. 51. the Holy of Holies, God with us. B

Fourthly, To make a real use of this Doctrine to the profit of our Souls, that if God have designed to be Emmanuel, and Jesus an Incar­nate God, and Saviour to us; that then we will fit, and prepare, and make our selves capable of this Mercy; and by the help of our religi­ous, devout, humble endeavours, not frustrate, but further and pro­mote in our selves this end of Christs Incarnation, the saving of our Souls; and this use is effectually made to our hands in the twelfth to the Hebrews, Heb. xii. ult. at the last, Wherefore we receiving a Kingdom that cannot C be moved: i. e. being partakers of the Presence, the Reign, the Sal­vation of the Incarnate God, Let us have grace, whereby we may serve God acceptably, with reverence and godly fear. And do thou, O power­ful God, improve the truth of this Doctrine, to the best advantage of our Souls, that thy Son may not be born to us unprofitably; but that he may be God, not only with us, but in us; in us, to sanctifie and adorn us here with his effectual grace; and with us, to sustain us here, as our Emmanuel, and as our Jesus, to crown and perfect us hereafter with glory. D

And so much for this point, That Jesus and Emmanuel import the same thing, and there was no Salvation, till this presence of God with us: We now come to the substance it self, i. e. Christs Incarnation, noted by Emmanuel, which is by interpretation, &c. Where first we must explain the word, then drive forward to the matter. The Word in Isaiah, in the Hebrew, is not so much a name, as a sentence, describing unto us the mystery of the Conception of the Virgin [...] with us God, where [...] or [...] God is taken in Scripture, either absolutely for E the nature of God, as for the most part in the Old Testament; or per­sonally; and so either for the Person of the Father in many places, or else distinctly for the Person of the Son, Hos. i. 7. so Hos. i. 7. And will save them by the Lord their God, [...] their God, i. e. Christ: and so also most evidently in this place, out of Isaiah, where [...] signifies the Son Incarnate, God man, [...], and many the like; especi­ally those where the Targum paraphrases, Jehovah, or Jehovah Elohim, by [...] the Word of the Lord, i. e. Christ Jesus,F Joh. i. 1.Joh. i. 1. As for instance, Gen. iii. 22. that Word of the Lord said; and Gen. ii. 6.Gen. iii. 22. the Word created. Secondly, [...] which signifies in its extent near,Gen. ii. 6. at, with, or amongst. Thirdly, the Particle, signify­ing us; though it expresses not, yet it must note our humane nature, our abode, our being in this our great World, wherein we travel, and [Page 53] A this our little World, wherein we dwell; not as a mansion place, to re­main in, but either as an Inn to lodge, or a Tabernacle to be covered, or a Prison to suffer in: So that the words in their latitude run thus; Emmanuel: i. e. The second Person in Trinity is come down into this lower world amongst us, for a while to travel, to lodg, to sojourn, to be fetter'd in this Inn, this Tabernacle, this Prison of mans flesh; or briefly, at this time, is conceived and born God-man, [...], the same both God and Man, the Man Christ Jesus. And this is the B cause and business, the ground and theme of our present rejoycing: in this were limited and fulfilled, the expectation of the Fathers, and in this begins and is accomplished, the hope and joy of us Christians, That which was old Simeons warning to death,Luk. ii. 28. the sight and embraces of the Lords Christ, Luk. ii. 28. as the greatest happiness which an espe­cial favour could bestow on him; and therefore made him in a con­tempt of any further life, sing his own funeral, Nunc dimittis: Lord, now lettest thou, &c.

C This is to us the Prologue, and first part of a Christians life; either the life of the World, that that may be worthy to be call'd life; or that of Grace, that we be not dead whilst we live. For were it not for this assumption of flesh, you may justly curse that ever you carried flesh about you; that ever your Soul was committed to such a Prison as your Body is; nay, such a Dungeon, such a Grave: But through this Incarnation of Christ, our flesh is, or shall be cleansed into a Temple, for the Soul to worship in, and in Heaven for a robe, for it to triumph in. D For our body shall be purified by his Body.

If ye will be sufficiently instructed into a just valuation of the weight of this Mystery, you must resolve your selves to a pretty large task (and it were a notable Christmas employment, I should bless God, for any one that would be so piously valiant, as to undertake it) you must read over the whole Book of Scripture and Nature to this purpose. For when you find in the Psalmist, the news of Christs com­ing, Then said I, loe I come; you find your directions how to tract E him,Psal. xi. 7. In the volume of thy book it is written of me, &c. i. e. either in the whole book, or in every folding, every leaf of this Book: Thou shalt not find a Story, a Riddle, a Prophecy, a Ceremony, a down­right legal Constitution, but hath some manner of aspect on this glass, some way drives at this mystery, God manifest in flesh. For example, (perhaps you have not noted) wherever you read Seth's Genealogies more insisted on than Cain's, Sem's than his elder brother Ham's, A­braham's than the whole World besides, Jacob's than Esau's, Judah's F than the whole twelve Patriarchs; and the like passages which di­rectly drive down the line of Christ, & make that the whole business of the Scripture: Whensoever, I say, you read any of these, then are you to note; that Shiloh was to come; that he which was sent, was on his journey; that from the Creation, till the fulness of time, the Scripture was in travel with him; and by his leaping ever now [Page 54] and then, and as it were, springing in the Womb, gave manifest tokens A that it had conceived, and would at last bring forth the Messias. So that the whole Old Testament is a Mystical Virgin Mary, a kind of Mother of Christ; Gen. iii. 15. which by the Holy Ghost, conceived him in Genesis, Chap. iii. 15. And throughout Moses and the Prophets, carried him in the Womb, Mal. iii. 4. and was very big of him: And at last in Malachi, Chap. iii. 4. was in a manner delivered of him. For there you shall find men­tion of John Baptist, who was, as it were, the Midwife of the Old Testament, to open its Womb, and bring the Messias into the World.B Howsoever, at the least it is plain, that the Old Testament brought him to his birth, though it had not strength to bring forth; and the Prophets as Moses from Mount Nebo, came to a view of this Land of Canaan.

For the very first words of the New Testament, being, as it it were, to fill up what only was wanting in the Old, are the Book and History of his generations and birth, Matth. i. Matth. i. You would yet be better able to prize the excellency of this Work, and reach the pitch of this days re­joycing,C if you would learn how the very Heathen flutter'd about this light; what shift they made to get some inkling of this Incarnation before-hand; how the Sibyls, Heathen Women, and Virgil, and other Heathen Poets in their writings, before Christ's time, let fall many passages, which plainly referred and belonged to this Incarnation of God. It is fine sport to see in our Authors, how the Devil with his fa­mous Oracles and Prophets, foreseeing by his skill in the Scripture, that Christ was near his birth, did droop upon it, and hang the wing; did D sensibly decay in his courage; began to breath thick, and speak imper­fectly; and sometimes as men in the extremity of a Feaver, distracted­ly, wildly, without any coherence, and scarce sense; and how at last a­bout the birth of Christ, he plainly gave up the ghost, and left his Oracular Prophets, as speechless as the Caves they dwelt in, their last voice being,Plut. that their gread god Pan, i. e. The Devil was dead, and so both his Kingdom and their Prophecies at an end; as if Christ's co­ming had chased Lucifer out of the World, and the powers of Hell E were buried that minute, when a Saviour was born.

And now by way of Use, Can ye see the Devil put out of heart, and ye not put forward to get the Field? can you delay to make use of such an advantage as this? can ye be so cruel to your selves, as to shew any mercy on that now disarmed enemy? will ye see God send his Son down into the Field, to enter the Lists, and lead up a Forlorn Troop against the Prince of this World, and ye not follow at his Alarm? F will ye not accept of a conquest, which Christ so lovingly offers you? It is a most terrible exprobration in Hosea, Hos. xi. 3. Chap. xi. 3. look on it, where God objects to Ephraim, her not taking notice of his mercies; her not seconding and making use of his loving deliverances, which plainly adumbrates this deliverance by Christ's death; as may appear [Page 55] A by the first verse of the Chapter,Matth. ii. 15. compared with the second of Mat. 14. Well, saith God, I taught Ephraim to go, taking them by their arms; but they knew not that I healed them. I drew them with the cords of a man; an admirable phrase, (with all those means that use to ob­lige one man to another) with bands of love, &c. i. e. I used all means for the sustaining and strengthening of my people: I put them in a course to be able to go, and fight, and overcome all the powers of darkness, and put off the Devils yoke: I sent my son amongst them B for this purpose, Vers. 1. And all this I did by way of love, as one friend is wont to do for another, and yet they would not take notice of either the benefit or the donor, nor think themselves beholding to me for this mercy.

And this is our case, beloved, If we do not second these and the like mercies of God bestowed on us; if we do not improve them to our Souls health; if we do not fasten on this Christ incarnate; if we do not follow him with an expression of gratitude and reverence, and stick C close to him as both our Friend and Captain: Finally if we do not endeavor and pray, that this his incarnation may be seconded with an other; that as once he was born in our flesh to justifie us, so he may be also born spiritually in our Souls to sanctifie us: For there is a spiritual [...], or Mystical incarnation of Christ in every regenerate man, where the Soul of Man is the Womb wherein Christ is conceived by the Holy Ghost. The proof of which Doctrine shall entertain the remainder of this hour: For this is the Emmanuel that most nearly concerns us, D God with us, i. e. With our spirits, or Christ begotten and brought forth in our hearts. Of which briefly.

And that Christ is thus born in a regenerate mans soul, if it were denied, might directly appear by these two places of Scripture, Gal. ii. 20.Gal. ii. 20. I live, yet not I, but Christ liveth in me. Again, Ephes. iii. 17. That Christ may dwell in your hearts by faith, Ephes. iii. 17. &c.

Now that you may understand this Spiritual Incarnation of Christ E the better, we will compare it with his Real Incarnation in the Womb of the Virgin; that so we may keep close to the business of the day, and at once observe both his birth to the World, and ours to Grace; and so even possess Christ whilst we speak of him.

And first, if we look on his Mother Mary, we shall find her an entire pure Virgin, only espoused to Joseph; but before they came together, she was found with child of the Holy Ghost, Matth. i. 18. And then the Soul of Man must be this Virgin. Matth. i. 18.

F Now there is a threefold Purity or Virginity of the Soul; First, An absolute one, such as was found in Adam before his fall. Secondly, A respective, of a Soul, which like Mary, hath not yet joyned or commit­ted with the World, to whom it is espoused; which though it have its part of natural corruptions, yet either for want of ability, of age, or occasion, hath not yet broke forth into the common outrages of sin. [Page 56] Thirdly, A restored purity of a Soul formerly polluted, but now clean­sed A by repentance.

The former kind of natural and absolute purity, as it were to be wished for, so is it not to be hoped; and therefore is not to be imagined in the Virgin Mother, or expected in the Virgin Soul. The second purity, we find in all regenerate infants, who are at the same time out­wardly initiated to the Church, and inwardly to Christ; or in those whom God hath called, before they have engaged themselves in the courses of Actual, heinous sins; such are well disposed, well brought B up; and to use our Saviours words, Have so lived, as not to be far from the Kingdom of God. Such happily, as Cornelius, Acts x. 1. Acts x. 1. and such a Soul as this, is the fittest Womb, in which our Saviour delights to be incarnate; where he may enter and dwell, without either resistance or annoyance; where he shall be received at the first knock, and never be disordered or repulsed by any stench of the carcass, or violence of the Body of sin. The restared purity, is a right Spirit renewed in the Soul, Psal. li. 10. Psal. li. 10. A wound cured up by repentance, and differs only C from the former purity; as a scar from a skin never cut, wanting some­what of the beauty and outward clearness, but nothing of either the strength or health of it. Optandum esset ut in simplici Virginitate serva­retur navis, Tertul. &c. It were to be wished, that the Ship, our Souls, could be kept in its simple Virginity, & never be in danger of either leak or ship­wrack. But this perpetual integrity, being a desperate, impossible wish, there is one only remedy, which though it cannot prevent a leak, can stop it. And this is repentance after sin committed, Post naufragium ta­bula, D a means to secure one after a shipwrack, & to deliver him even in the deep Waters. And this we call a restored Virginity of the Soul, which Christ also vouchsafes to be conceived and born in. The first degree of Innocence, being not to have sinned, the second to have repented.

In the second place, The Mother of Christ in the flesh, was a Virgin, not only till the time of Christ's conception, but also till the time of his birth, Matth. i. 25. Matth. i. 25. He knew her not till she had brought forth, &c. And farther, as we may probably believe, remained a Virgin all the days of E her life after: For to her is applied by the Learned, that which is typi­cally spoken of the East-gate of the Sanctuary, Ezek. xliv. 2. This gate shall be shut, Ezek. xliv. 2. it shall not be opened, & no man shall enter in by it, because the Lord the God of Israel hath entred in by it; therefore it shall be shut. A place, if appliable, very apposite for the expression. Hence is she called by the Fathers & Councils [...], a Perpetual Virgin, against the Heresie of Helvidius. The probability of this might be farther proved, if it were needful. And ought not upon all principles of nature and of justice, F the Virgin Soul, after Christ once conceived in it, remain pure & stanch till Christ be born in it, nay, be [...], a Perpetual Virgin, never indulge to sensual pleasures, or cast away that purity which Christ either found orwrought in it? If it were a respective purity, then ought it not perpetually retain and encrease it, and never fall off to those disorders [Page 57] A that other men supinely live in? If it were a recovered purity, hold it fast, and never turn again, As a Dog to his vomit, or d Sow to her wal­lowing in the mire? For this conception and birth of Christ in the Soul, would not only wash a way the filth that the Swine was formerly mi­red in, but also take away the Swinish nature, that she shall never have any strong propension to return again to her former inordinate de­lights. Now this continuance of the Soul, in this its recovered Virginity, is not from the firm, constant, stable nature of the Soul, Euseb. Praep. lib. 13. p. 412. but as Eusebi­us B saith in another case, [...], From a more strong, able Band, the Union of Christ to the Soul, his Spiritual Incarna­tion in it: Because the Lord, the God of Israel, hath entred in by it; therefore it shall be shut, Ezek. xliv. 2. Ezek. xliv. 2. i. e. It shall not be opened ei­ther in consent or practise to the lusts and pollutions of the World or Flesh; because Christ by being born in it hath cleansed it; because he the Word of God, said the Word, therefore the leprosie is cured; in whom he enters, he dwells, and on whom he makes his real im­pression, C he seals them up to the day of redemption; unless we unbuild our selves, and change our shape, we must be his.

In the third place, if we look on the agent in this conception, we shall find it, both in Mary and in the Soul of Man, to be the Holy Ghost, that which is conceived in either of them, is of the Holy Ghost, Mat. i. 20. Nothing in this business of Christs birth with us, to be imputed to na­tural power or causes, the whole contrivance and final production of it; the preparations to, and laboring of it, is all the workmanship of the D Spirit. So that as Mary was called by an Ancient, so may the Soul without an Hyperbole by us, be styled, The Shop of Miracles, and The Work-house of the Holy Ghost; in which every operation is a miracle to nature, and no tools are used, but what the Spirit forged and moves. Mary conceived Christ, but it was above her own reach to apprehend the manner how;Luk. i. 34. for so she questions the Angel, Luk. i. 34. How shall this be, &c? So doth the Soul of Man conceive and grow big, and bring forth Christ, & yet not it self fully perceives how this work is wrought; E Christ being, for the most part, insensibly begotten in us, and to be dis­cerned only spiritually, not at his entrance, but in his fruits.

In the fourth place, That Mary was chosen and appointed among all the Families of the Earth, to be the Mother of the Christ, was no manner of desert of hers, but Gods special favor and dignation; whence the words run truly interpreted,Luk. i. 28. [...]. Luk. i. 28. Hail thou that art highly favored; not as the Vulgar read, Gratiâ plena, full of Grace. And again,V. 30. [...]. Vers. 30. Thou hast found favor with God. So is it in the F case of Mans Soul, there is no power of nature, no preparation of Morality, no art that all the Philosophy or Learning in the World can teach a man, which can deserve this grace at Christs hands, that can any way woo or allure God to be born spiritually in us; which can per­swade or entice the Holy Ghost, to conceive and beget Christ in us, but only the meer favor & good pleasure of God; which may be obtained [Page 58] by our prayers, but can never be challenged by our merits, may be A comfortably expected and hoped for, as a largess given to our necessi­ties and wants, but can never be required as a reward of our deserts: For it was no high pitch of perfection, which Mary observed in her self, as the motive to this favour; but only the meer mercy of God, which regarded the lowliness of his hand-maid, Luke i. 48. Luke i. 48.

Whence in the fifth place, This Soul in which Christ will vouch­safe to be born, must be a lowly, humble soul; or else it will not per­fectly answer Maries temper, nor fully bear a part in her Magnificat; B where in the midst of her glory, she humbly specifies the lowliness of his hand-maid. But this by the way.

In the sixth place, If we consider here with John the Baptist his forerunner, coming to prepare his way; and his Preaching repen­tance, as a necessary requisite to Christs being born, & received in the World: Then we shall drive the matter to a further issue, and find repentance, a necessary preparation for the birth of Christ in our hearts. For so the Baptist's Message set down,Isai. xl. 3. Isa. xl. 3. Prepare the ways, &c. C is here interpreted by the event,Matth. iii. 2. Mat. iii. 2. Repent, for the Kingdom of God is at hand; As if this Harbinger had no other furniture and provision to bespeak in the heart that was to receive Christ, but only repentance for sins. I will not examine here the precedence of Re­pentance before Faith in Christ; though I might seasonably here state the question, and direct you to begin with John, & proceed to Christ; first repent, then fasten on Christ: Only this for all, The promises of Salvation in Christ, are promised on condition of repentance, and D amendment, they must be weary and heavy laden, who ever come to Christ, and expect rest, Matth. xi. 28. And therefore whosoever ap­plies these benefits to himself, and thereby conceives Christ in his heart, must first resolve to undertake the condition required, to wit, Newness of life; which yet he will not be able to perform, till Christ be fully born, and dwell in him, by his enabling graces: For you may mark, that Christ and John being both about the same age, as appears by the story, Christ must needs be born before Johns Preaching: So E in the Soul there is supposed some kind of incarnation of Christ, be­fore repentance or newness of life; yet before Christ he is born, or at least, come to his full stature and perfect growth in us; this Baptist's Sermon, that is, this repentance and resolution to amendment, must be presumed in our Souls. And so repentance is both a preparation to Christs birth, and an effect of it: For so John preached, Repent for, &c. Matth. iii. 2. And so also in the same words Christ preaches, Repent, &c. Matth. iv. 17. And so these two together, John and Christ, Re­pentance F and Faith, though one began before the other was perfected; yet, I say, these two together in the fully regenerate man, Fulfil all righteousness, Matth. iii. 15.

In the seventh place, you may observe, That when Christ was born in Bethlehem, the whole Land was in an uproar. Herod the King [Page 59] A was troubled, and all Jerusalem with him, Matth. ii. 3. Which whether we apply to the lesser city, the Soul of Man, in which, or the adjoyn­ing people, amongst whom Christ is spiritually born in any man, you shall for the most acknowledge the agreement: For the man himself, if he have been any inordinate sinner, then at the birth of Christ in him, all his natural, sinful faculties are much displeased, his reigning Herod sins, and all the Jerusalem of habituate Lusts and Passions, are in great disorder, as knowing, that this new birth abodes their instant B destruction; and then they cry oft in the voice of the Devil, Mark. i. 24. What have we to do with thee, Jesus, thou Son of God? Art thou come to torment and dispossess us before our time? If it be applied to the Neighbor Worldlings which hear of this new convert; then are they also in an uproar, and consult how they shall deal with this turbulent spirit, Which is made to upbraid our ways and reprove our thoughts, Wisd. ii, Wisd. ii. Which is like to bring down all their trading and cousenage to a low ebb,Acts xix. 24. like Diana's Silver-smith in the Acts, Chap. xix. 24. which C made a solemn speech (and the Text says there was a great stir) against Paul, because the attempt of his upstart doctrine, was like to undo the Shrine-makers: Sirs, ye know that by this craft we have our wealth. And no marvel, that in both these respects, there is a great uproar, seeing the spiritual birth of Christ is most infinitely opposite to both the common people of the World, and common affections of the Soul, two the most turbulent, tumultuous, wayward, violent Nations upon Earth.

D In the eighth and last place (because I will not tyre you above the time which is allotted for the tryal of your parience) you may ob­serve the encrease and growth of Christ, and that either in himself, in Wisdom and Stature, &c. Luke ii. 52. or else in his troop and attendants, and that either of Angels to minister unto him. Matth. iv. 11. or of Di­sciples to follow & obey him; and then the harmony will still go cur­rant. Christ in the regenerate man, is first conceived, then born, then by degrees of childhood and youth, grows at last to the measure of the E stature of this fulness; and the Soul consequently from strength to strength, from vertue to vertue, is encreased to a perfect manhood in Christ Jesus. Then also where Christ is thus born, he chuses and calls a Jury at least of Disciple-graces, to judge and sit upon thee, to give in evidence unto thy Spirit, That thou art the Son of God. Then is he also ministred unto, and furnished by the Angels with a perpetual sup­ply, either to encrease the lively, or to recover decayed graces. So that now Christ doth bestow a new life upon the man, and the regene­rate F soul becomes the daughter, as well as the Mother of Christ; she conceives Christ, and Christ her; she lives, and grows, and moves in Christ, and Christ in her. So that at last she comes to that pitch, and height, and [...], that S. Paul speaks of, Gal. ii. 20. I live, yet not I, but Christ liveth in me; and the life which I live in the flesh, I live by the Faith of the Son of God, who loved me, and gave himself for me.

[Page 60] And do thou, O Holy Jesus, which hast loved us, and given thy A self for us; love us still, and give thy self to us. Thou which hast been born in the World to save sinners, vouchsafe again, to be again incarnate in our Souls, to regenerate and sanctifie sinners. Thou which art the Theme of our present rejoycing become our Author of perpetual, spiritual rejoycing; that our Souls may conceive and bring forth, and thou mayst conceive and regenerate our Souls; that we may dwell in Christ, and Christ in us: And from the Meditation of thy Mortal flesh here, we may be partakers with thee B of thine Immortal glory hereafter.

Thus have we briefly passed through these words, and in them first shewed you the real agreement betwixt Matthew and Isaiah, in the point of Christ's Name, and from thence noted, that Jesus and Em­manuel, is in effect, all one; and that Christs Incarnation brought Sal­vation into the World. Which being proved through Christs seve­ral Incarnations, were applied to our direction: 1. To humble our C selves. 2. To express our thankfulness. 3. To observe our priviledges. 4. To make our selves capable and worthy receivers of this mercy. Then we came to the Incarnation it self, where we shewed you the ex­cellency of this Mystery by the effects, which the expectation and fore­sight of it wrought in the Fathers, the Prophets, the Heathens, the Devils; and then by way of Use, what an horrible sin it was, not to apply and imploy this mercy to our Souls. Lastly, We came to an­other birth of Christ, besides that in the flesh, his Spiritual Incarnation D in Man's Soul; which we compared with the former exactly in eight chief Circumstances; and so left all to God's Spirit, and your Medita­tions to work on.

Now the God, &c.

The V. Sermon.

LUKE IX. 55.‘You know not what spirit you are of.’

OF all Errours or Ignorances, there are none so worthy our pains to cure, or caution to pre­vent, as those that have influence on practice. The prime ingredient in the making up a D a wise man, saith Aristotle in his Metaphy­sicks, is to be well advised [...], what doubts must first be made, what ignorances earliest provided for: and there is not a more remarkable spring and principle of all the Scripture folly (that is wickedness) among men, than the beginning our Christian course unluckily, with some one, or more false infu­sions, which not only are very hardly ever corrected afterward, E like the errors of the first concoction, that are never rectified in the second; but moreover have an inauspicious, poysonous pro­priety in them, turn all into nourishment of the prevailing humour: and then as the injury of filching some of that corn that was de­livered out for seed, hath a peculiar mark of aggravation upon it; is not to be measured in the garner, but in the field; not by the quantity of what was stoln, but of what it would probably have proved in the Harvest: so the damage that is consequent to this in­felicity, F is never fully aggravated, but by putting into the Bill against it, all the Sins of the whole life; yea, and all the damna­tion that attends it.

Of this kind, I must profess to believe the ignorance of Gospel-Spirit to be chief, an ignorance, that cannot chuse, but have an influence on every publick action of the life. So that as Padre Paolo [Page 62] was designed an handsome office in the Senate of Venice, to sit by, and A observe, and take care nequid contra pietatem; so it were to be wished, that every man on whom the Name of Christ is called, had some assi­stent Angel, some [...]; be it conscience, be it the re­membrance of what I now say unto him, to interpose in all, especially the visible undertakings of the life, nequid contra spiritum Evangelii, that nothing be ventured on, but what is agreeable to the spirit of the Gospel. Even Disciples themselves may it seems run into great inconveniences for want of it; James and John did so in the Text; B ignem de coelo, fire from Heaven on all that did not treat them so well as they expected; but Christ turned and reproved them, saying, You know not what spirit, [...], what kind of spirit you are of; and that with an [...] on [...], not [...], but [...], you Disci­ples, you Christians, You know not what spirit you are of.

In the words it will be very natural to observe these 3. Parti­culars; 1. That there is a peculiar Spirit that Christians are of, [...]; 2. That some prime Christians do not know the C kind of spirit, [...]; even so James and John, You know not, &c. 3. That this ignorance is apt to betray Christians to unsafe, unjusti­fiable designs and actions: You that would have fire from Heaven, do it upon this one ignorance, You know not, &c.

I begin first with the first of these, That there is a Peculiar Spirit that Christians are of: A spirit of the Gospel; and that must be con­sidered here, not in an unlimited latitude, but one as it is opposite to the Spirit of Elias, [...]; Wilt thou do as he did? It D will then be necessary to shew you the peculiarity of the Gospel Spirit, by its opposition to that of Elias, which is manifold for instance; First, Elias was the great assertor of Law, upon which ground Moses and he appear with our Saviour at his transfiguration: So that two things will be observable, which make a difference betwixt the Legal, and the Gospel spirit: 1. That some Precepts of Christ now clearly (and with weight upon them) delivered by Christ, were, if in substance delivered at all; yet sure not so clearly, and at length, and intelligibly E proposed under the Law. You have examples in the fifth of Matthew, in the opposition betwixt the [...], what was said by Moses to the Ancients, and the [...], Christs saying to his Disciples; which if they be interpreted of Moses Law, (as many of the particulars are evidently taken out of the Decalogue, Thou shalt not kill, commit adultery, perjury,) Christs are then clearly superadditions unto Moses; or if they refer to the Pharisees glosses, (as some others of them possi­bly may do) then do those glosses of those Pharisees (who were none F of the loosest, nor ignorantest persons among them; but [...], for their lives, the strictest; & they sit in Moses Chair, & what­ever they teach, that do, for their learning most considerable) argue the Mosaick Precepts not to be so clear, and incapable of being mis­interpreted; and so still Christ's were additions, if not of the substance, [Page 63] A yet of light and lustre, and consequently improvements of the obliga­tion to obedience, in us Christians, who enjoy that light, and are precluded those excuses of ignorance that a Jew might be capable of: From whence I may sure conclude, that the Ego autem, of not re­taliating, or revenging of injuries, (for that is sure the meaning of the [...], which we render resist not evil) the strict precept of loving, and blessing, and praying for Enemies, and the like, is more clearly preceptive, and so more indispensably obligatory to us Christi­ans, B than ever it was to the Jews before. And there you have one part of the Spirit of the Gospel, in opposition to a first notion of the legal Spirit: And by it you may conclude, that what Christian so­ever can indulge himself the enjoyment of that hellish sensuality, that of revenge, or retributing of injuries; nay that doth not practise that high piece of (but necessary, be it never so rare) perfection of over­coming evil with good; and so heap those pretious melting coals of love, of blessings, of prayers, those three species of sacred vestal fire, upon C all Enemies heads; Nescit qualis spiritûs, He knows not what kind of spirit he is of.

But there is another thing observable of the Law, and so of the Judaical Legal Spirit; to wit, as it concerned the planting the Israe­lites in Canaan, and that is the command of rooting out the nations; which was a particular case, upon God's sight of the filling up of the measure of the Amorites sins, and a judicial sentence of his proceeding upon them; not only reveal'd to those Israelites, but that with a pe­remptory D command annext to it, to hate, and kill, and eradicate some of those Nations. Which case because it seldom or never falls out to agree in all circumstances, with the case of any other sinful people, cannot lawfully prescribe to the eradicating of any other (though in our opinion never so great) enemies of God, until it appear as de­monstrably to us, as it did to those Israelites, that it was the will of God they should be so dealt with: and he that thinks it necessary to shed the blood of every enemy of God, whom his censorious faculty E hath found guilty of that charge, that is all for the fire from Heaven, though it be upon the Samaritans, the not receivers of Christ, is but as the Rabbies call him sometimes one of the [...] and [...] sons of blouds, in the plural number, and sons of fire; yea, and like the Disciples in my Text Boanerges, sons of thunder, far enough from the soft temper that Christ left them; Ye know not what kind of spirit ye are of.

In the next place, Elias Spirit was a Prophetick Spirit; whose dictates F were not the issue of discourse and reason, but impulsions from Hea­ven. The Prophetick writings, were not, saith S. Peter, [...], (I conceive in an agonistick sense) of their own starting, or in­citation, as they were moved or prompted by themselves, but as it follows, [...], as they were carried by the Holy Ghost; not as they were led, but carried (when the Lord speaks, [Page 64] who can but Prophecy?) And so likewise are the actions Prophe­tick; A many things that are recorded to be done by Prophets in Scrip­ture, they proceed from some peculiar incitations of God; I mean not from the ordinary, or extraordinary, general, or special direction, or influence of his grace, cooperating with the Word, as in the breast of every regenerate man, (for the Spirit of Sanctification, and the Spirit of Prophecy, are very distant things) but from the extraordinary re­velation of God's Will, many times against the setled rule of duty, acted and animated not as a living creature, by a Soul, but mov'd as B an outward impellent, a sphear by an intelligence, and that frequent­ly into eccentrical and planetary motions; so that they were no fur­ther justifiable, than that prophetick calling to that particular enter­prize will avow: Consequent to which is, that because the prophe­tick office was not beyond the Apostles time to continue constantly in the Church, any further, than to interpret, and superstruct upon what the Canon of the Scripture hath setled among Christians; (Christ and his Word in the New Testament, being that Bath-Col, C which the Jews tell us, was alone to survive all the other ways of Prophecy:) he that shall now pretend to that Prophetick Spirit, to some Vision, to teach what the Word of God will not own; to some incitation, to do what the New Testament Law will not allow of; he that with the late Fryar in France, Pere Barnard. pretends to ecstatical revelations, with the Enthusiasts of the last age, and Phanaticks now with us, to ecstatical motions;Copinger or Artington. that with Mahomet, pretends a dialogue with God, when he is in an Epileptick fit, sets off the most ghastly diseases,D I shall add most horrid sins, by undertaking more particular acquain­tance and commerce with the Spirit of God, a call from God's Provi­dence and extraordinary Commission from Heaven, for those things, which if the New Testament be Canonical, are evaporate from Hell; and so first leads captive silly women, (as Mahomet did his Wife) and then a whole Army of Janizaries into a War, to justifie and pro­pagate such delusions, and put all to death that will not be their Pro­selytes, is far enough from the Gospel Spirit that lies visible in the E New Testament, (verbum vehiculum spiritûs, and the preaching of the Word [...]) and is not infused by dream or whis­per, nor authorized by a melancholy, or phanatick phansie; and so [...], knows not what kind, &c.

In the third place, Elias was the great precedent and example of sharp unjudiciary procedure with Malefactors, which from the com­mon ordinary awards on Criminals in that execution, proceeded Trial, and the Malefactor suffered [...], without attending F the formalities of Law.

Of this kind, two Examples are by Mattathias cited, 1 Macab. ii. one of Phinees, [...], that zeal'd a zeal, and in that run through Zimri and Cozbi, and so (as the Captain once answered for the killing the drowsie Sentinel) reliquit quos invenit, found [Page 65] A them in unclean embraces, and so left them: (And the variety of our interpretations in rendring of that passage in the Psalm, Then stood up Phinehas and prayed, in the Old, and then stood up Phinehas and exe­cuted judgment, in the New Translations, may perhaps give some ac­count of that action of his, that upon Phinehas Prayer for Gods dire­ction what should be done in that matter, God raised him up in an ex­traordinary manner to execute judgment on those offenders.) And the other of Elias in the Text, and he with some addition, [...] B, In zealing the zeal of the Law, called fire from Heaven upon those that were sent out from Ahazai, to bring him to him. And this fact of his (by God's answering his call, and the coming down of the fire upon them) was demonstrated to come from God also, as much as the prediction of the Kings death, which was confirm'd by this means.

It may very probably be guest by Matathias his words in that place that there were no precedents of the zelotick spirit in the Old Testa­ment, C but those two; for among all the Catalogue of examples menti­oned to his sons, to enflame their zeal to the Law, he produceth no o­ther; and 'tis observable, that though there be practises of this nature mentioned in the story of the New Testament, the stoning of S. Stephen, of St. Paul at Iconium, &c. yet all of them practised by the Jews, and not one that can seem to be blameless, but that of Christ (who sure had extraordinary power) upon the buyers and sellers in the Temple; upon which the Apostles remembred the Psalmists Prophecy, [...], D the zeal of Gods house carried him to that act of [...], of in­dignation and punishment upon the transgressors. And what mischief was done among the Jews by those of that sect in Josephus, that call'd themselves by that name of Zealots, and withal, took upon them to be the saviours and preservers of the City, but as it prov'd, the hastners & precipitators of the destruction of that Kingdom, by casting out, & killing the High-Priests first, and then the Nobles and chief men of the Nation, and so embasing, and intimidating, and dejecting the E hearts of the people, that all was at length given up to their fury, Josephus, and any of the learned that have conversed with the Jewish Writers will instruct the enquirer: And ever since, no very ho­nourable notion had of [...] in the New Testament; one of the fruits of the flesh, Gal. v. of the Wisdom that comes not from Heaven, Jam. iii. and in the same [...], a bitter zeal, a gall that will im­bitter all that come near it. The short of it is, the putting any man to death, or inflicting other punishment upon any terms, but that F of legal, perfectly legal process; is the importance of a zelotick Spirit, as I remember in Maimonides, him that curses God in the name of an Idol,De Idol. c. 2. the [...] that meet him, kill him, i. e. the zealots permit­ted, it seems, if not authorized to do so. And this is the Spirit of Elias, that is of all others, most evidently reprehended and renounced by Christ. The Samaritans no very sacred persons, added to their ha­bitual [Page 66] constant guilts, at that time to deny common civility of enter­tainment A to Christ himself; and the Disciples asked whether they might not do what Elias had done, call for fire from Heaven upon them in that case; & Christ tells them, that the Gospel-Spirit was of another complexion from that of Elias, [...], turn'd to them as he did to Peter, when he said, Get thee behind me Satan; as to so many fiery Satanical-spirited men, and checkt them for that their fu­rious zeal, with an [...], &c. The least I can conclude from hence is this, that they that put any to death, by any but perfectly B legal process; that draw the sword upon any, but by the supreme Ma­gistrates command, are far enough from the Gospel-Spirit, whatever precedent they can produce to countenance them: And so if they be really, what they pretend, Christians, [...], they are in a pro­digious mistake, or ignorance; They know not what Spirit they are of.

Yet farther is it observable of Elias, that he did execrate and curse, call for judgments from Heaven upon mens persons; and that C temper of mind in the parallel, you may distribute into two sorts; First in passing judgments upon mens future estates, the censorious reproba­ting Spirit, which though we find it not in Elias at this time, yet is a consequent of the Prophetick Office, and part of the burthen re­ceived from the Lord, and layed upon those guilty persons, con­cerning whom it hath pleased Almighty God to reveal that secret of his Cabinet; but then this rigor cannot, without sin, be pretended to by any else; for in the blackest instances, charity believes all things & D hopes all things, and even in this sence, covers the multitudes of sins. Now this so culpable an insolent humour, rashly to pass a condemning sentence, was discernible in the Pharisees, (this Publican whose pro­fession and trade is forbidden by that Law, and this people that know not that Law, is cursed) so likewise in the Montanists, (nos spirituales, and all others animals and Psychici) so in the Romanists (who con­demn all but themselves) and in all those generally whose pride and malice conjoyned, (most directly contrary to the Gospel-Spirit of hu­mility E and charity) doth (prepare them one and the other) inflame them to triumph, and glut themselves in this spiritual assassinacy, this deepest dye of blood, the murthering of Souls; which because they cannot do it really, they endeavour in effigie, anathematize, and slaughter them here in this other Calvary, the place for the crucifying of reputations, turning them out of the Communion of their charity, though not of bliss; and I am confident, reject many whom the An­gels entertain more hospitably. Another part of this cursing Spirit F there is, more peculiarly Elias's, that of praying (and so calling) for curses on mens persons; and that being upon the enemies of God, and those appearing to Elias, a Prophet to be such, might be then lawful to him, and others like him, David perhaps, &c. in the Old Testament, but is wholly disliked and renounced by Christ under this state of [Page 67] A higher Discipline, to which Christians are designed by him in the New. I say, not only for that which concerns our own enemies, for that is clear, When thine enemy hungreth, feed him; and somewhat like that in the Old Testament, When thine enemies Ox, &c. But I extend it even to the enemies of God himself, and that I need not do upon other evidence than is afforded from the Text; the Samaritans were enemies of Christ himself, and were barbarous and inhumane to his person, and they must not be curst by Disciples. And he that can now curse even B wicked men, who are more distantly the enemies of God, can call for (I say, not discomfiture upon their devices, for that is charity to them, to keep them from being such unhappy Creatures as they would be, contrivers of so much mischief to the world; but) Plagues and Ruine upon their persons, (which is absolutely the voice of Revenge, that sulphur-vapor of Hell) he that delighteth in the misery of any part of Gods Image (and so usurps upon that wretched quality, of which we had thought, the Devil had gotten the Monopoly (that of [...], C joying in the Brother's misery) but now see with horror, is got loose out of that pit to rave among us;) he that would mischief, if it were in his power, and now it is not, by unprofitable wishes of execration, shews his good will toward it, is quite contrary to the Gospel-spirit, and so [...], he knows not, &c.

Lastly, Elias was not only rapt to Heaven, but moved on Earth in a Fiery Chariot, [...], saith the Author of the Book of Macchabees; his zeal had fire and fire again ( [...] comes D from [...] an excessive fervency) and agreeable to his temper is his ap­petite; he desires nothing but fire upon his adversaries, calls for fire, and fire, and fire, as you may see it in the story: And the Gospel-Spirit is directly contrary to this, an allaying, quenching spirit, a gentle lambent flame, that sits on the Apostles heads to enlighten and adorn; by its vital warmth, expelling partial hectick heats, and burning Feverish distempers, that spiritual [...] mentioned in the Gospel; and putting in the place, a cool, sedate, and equable temper, to have E peace with all men, and chiefly with our selves, [...], (an admirable phrase in St. Paul) to use as much diligence to restore the Earth to peace again, as all the wind, or air, or perhaps fire in its bowels (I mean, ambitious, contentious men) do, to set it a shaking; and he that will not contribute his utmost to quench those flames; that will not joyfully do any thing, that may not directly, or by con­sequence include sin, toward the extinguishing a fire thus miserably gotten into the veins and bowels of a calamitous Kingdom, is far F enough from the Gospel-Spirit, and so [...], he knows not, &c.

I shall not clearly give you the Gospel-Spirit, unless I proceed from its opposition to Elias his act, to that other, the opposition to the motion of those Disciples, considered in the particular circumstances. The case stood thus, Christ was going up to Jerusalem, thereupon the Sama­ritans [Page 68] receive him not; the Disciples will have fire from Heaven upon A those Samaritans. Jerusalem was at that time the only proper place of God's worship, & may note to us as an embleme, the true established Protestant Religion of this Kingdom: The Samaritans were great ene­mies to this, enemies to Jerusalem; being, first, Hereticks in Religion, took in the Assyrian Idols into the worship of the true God; they fear­ed the Lord, and served their own gods, as it is in the story, and con­tinued their wont when they turned Christians, make up the first sort of Hereticks in Epiphanius his Catalogue. Secondly, They were B Schismaticks in an eminent manner, fet up a new separation by them­selves, on Mount Gerizim: And farther yet in the third place, pre­tended to the only purity and antiquity, they lived where Jacob once lived; and therefore, though Assyrians by extraction, they boast they are Jacob's seed; and pretend more antiquity for that Schism of theirs, because Jacob once worshipped in that Mountain, than they think can be shewed for the Temple at Jerusalem, which was but in Solomon's time, of a latter structure: Just as they which pretended, though never C so falsly, that they were of Christ; have still despised and separated from all others as Novelists, which walked in the Apostles steps and practises; and so Samaritans under guilts enough: First, Haters of Jerusalem. Secondly, Hereticks. Thirdly, Separatists. Fourthly, Pretenders (though without all reason) to the first antiquity, and so ar­rogant Hypocrites too: And fifthly, beyond all, prodigious, but still confident Disputers; and yet, sixthly, one higher step than all these, Contemners and haters of all, even of Christ himself, on this only D quarrel, because he was a friend to Jerusalem, and looked as if he were a going thither, as if he had some favour to the established Religion of the Land. I wish this passage did not hitherto parallel it self; but see­ing it doth too illustriously to be denied, or disguised, I shall imagin that that which follows, may do so too.

All this together, was temptation to two honest Disciples, to think fire from Heaven a but reasonable reward for such Samaritans; and having flesh and blood about them, compounded with Piety. You E will not much wonder at them, that they were wrought on by the temptation; and yet this very thought of theirs, the [...] is presently checked by Christ, as being against the Gospel-spirit; you know not what spirit you are of. Haters of the Church, Hereticks, Schismaticks, Hypocrites, Irrational Pretenders, Enemies, Contumelious, even to Christ himself, must not presently be assigned the Devils por­tion, the [...], may be yet capable of some mercy, some humanity, not instantly devoted to be sacrifices to our fury. The F Gospel-spirit will have thoughts of peace, of reconciliableness toward them. And let me beseech God first, and then you Right Honorable; God, that he indue and inspire your hearts with this piece of the Gospel spirit, so seasonable to your present consultations: And you, that you would not reject my Prayers to God, but open your hearts to receive [Page 69] A the return of them, and not imitate, even the Disciples of Christ, in that they are Boanerges; but stay till the cool of the day, till you have them in a calmer temper, when Christ's Word and Doctrine hath stil­led those billows, as once he did the other tempestuous Element. It was Antonius his way to be revenged on his enemies, [...] not to imitate them, whatever he did. And this was but an Essay or ob­scure shadow of the Christian Magnanimity, that goes for poverty of spirit in the World, but proceeding from the right principle of un­shaken B patience, of constant unmoveable meekness, of design to be like our Royal Master-sufferer. (Father forgive them that crucifie me, and go and preach the doctrine of the Kingdom to them, after they have crucified me. And you know all, we Ministers ever since are but Ambassadours of Christ, to ingrate, crucifying enemies, Praying them in Christs name and stead, that they would be reconciled, that they that have done the wrong will vouchsafe to be friends.) What is it, but that eminent piece of Gospel-spirit, which they that can be perswaded to part with for all C the sweetness that thirst of Revenge can promise or pretend to bring in unto them, are unhappily ignorant of the richest Jewel, that ever came within their reach: They know not, &c.

I have as yet given you the Gospel-spirit, in one colour or notion, that of its opposition to Elias first, and then to the Boanerges. It will be necessary to add somewhat of the Positive consideration of it, though that must be fetched from other Scriptures. And this will be but ne­cessary to this Text, because that which is here mentioned, is the D [...] spirit in the extent, not only that one part of it that respect­ed the present action; where (though any one eminent defect, that particularly wherein those Disciples offended, were destructive to the Gospel-spirit, Malum ex quolibet defectu, yet) all the several branches of it, are required to integrate or make up the Gospel-spirit, Bonum ex essentiâ integra. And what these branches are, I cannot better direct you, than by putting you in mind of these few severals. First, Christ's badge or cognizance, By this shall all men know that ye are my Disciples, E if you love one another: Nazar. Sosp. Not of one opinion, but of love. Add, Nun­quam laeti sitis, &c. as Jews rend Garments at Blasphemy; so we at Un­charitableness. Secondly, Christs legacy, Peace I leave with you, my peace I give unto you. Thirdly, Christ's copy, Learn of me; what's beyond all his other perfections, I am meek. Fourthly, The Nature of that Wisdom which cometh from above, Jam. iii. First pure, then peaceable. Fifthly, The quality of the fruits of the Spirit, in St. Paul, Gal. v. Love, joy, peace, long-suffering, gentleness, goodness, faith, F meekness, &c. Sixthly, The gallantry of meekness in St. Peter, Orna­ment of a meek and quiet spirit. Seventhly, Titus's charge, that all Christians are to be put in mind of, Tit. iii. 1. To be subject to Principa­lities, to obey Magistrates, to be ready to every good work, to speak evil of no man, to be no brawlers, [...] no fighters, but gentle, shewing all meekness to all men. Things, that it seems nothing but Christianity [Page 70] could infuse; For we our selves were sometimes fools, dis [...]bedient, &c.A But after the kindness and love of God our Saviour appeared, then room for this Spirit.

I cannot give you a readier Landskip to present them all to your view together, than that excellent Sermon of Christ upon the Mount, that [...], as Chrysostom calls it, That top pitch of Divine Philosophy, worthy to be imprinted in every mans heart; and of which, he that hath not been a pondering student, and resolved to regulate his practice by it, as much as his Faith by the Apostles B Creed; yea, and to lay down his life a Martyr of that Doctrine, though he hath all Faith, I cannot promise my self much of his Christianity. If you will have the Brachygraphy of that, the Manual picture that maybe sure, either in words or sense, never to depart from your bosom, but remain your constant Phylactery or Preservative, from the danger of all ungospel spirits, then take the Beatitudes in the front of it: And among them (that I may, if it be possible, bring the whole Iliads into a Nutshel) those that import immediately our C duty towards men; for in that the Gospel-spirit especially consists, en­creasing our love to Brethren; whose flesh Christ now assumed, and in whose interests he hath a most immediate concern. And if you mark, in the Chapter following, all the improvements mentioned except only that of swearing, belong to the commands of the Second Table. And then the integral parts of this Gospel-spirit, will be these four con­stantly, Humility, meekness, mercifulness, peaceableness, and if need be, suffering too: Every of these four brought in to us, with a checker D or lay of duty towards God, of mourning betwixt humility and meek­ness, hungring and thirsting after Righteousness, betwixt meekness, and mercifulness; purity of heart betwixt mercifulness, and peaceableness, and persecution, and reproaches, and [...] every Rabshakeh Topick of railing Rhetorick vomited out upon us (Blessed persecution, blessed reproaches, when our holding to Christ, is that which brings them all upon us) the consummation and crown of all.

Having but named you these severals, Humility, meekness, merci­fulness,E peaceableness, and if need be, patience of all stripes, both of hand & tongue; the sparkling gems in this Jewel, blessed ingredients in this Gospel-spirit, you will certainly resolve it full time for me to descend to my second particular, at first proposed, That some Disci­ples there were, some prime Professors do not know the kind of that spirit, [...], You know not what kind of spirit you are of.

James and John it appears were such Disciples, and that after F they had been for some competent time followers and auditors of his Sermons, so far an easier thing it is to leave their worldly condition, and follow Christ than to leave their carnal prejudices and ignorances and obey him; especially those that had such hold in their passions, (as revenge, they say, is the pleasingest piece of carnality in the heap;) [Page 71] A cheaper to hear his Gospel-Sermons, than to practise them. And you will less wonder at these two, when you see that St. Peter himself, after a longer space of proficiency, in that school, even at the time of Christs attachment, had not yet put off that ignorance, [...], say the Fathers, Peter was of an hot Constitution, and Christs Doctrine had not yet got down deep enough into his heart, to allay or cool him; Nondum concipiens in se Evangelicam patientiam illam tra­ditam sibi a Christo, &c. saith Origen; that Gospel-patience and peace­ableness B that Christ had commended to him, he had not it seems yet received into an honest heart, and so he makes no scruple to cut off Malchus ear, when he was provoked to it. I have heard of a Fryar, that could confess that Malchus signified a King, and yet after made no scruple to acknowledg him in that notion, to be the High-Priests Ser­vant. And secondly, to justifie St. Peters act, and avoid Christs re­prehension, by saying that he was chid, not for doing so much, but for doing no more; not for cutting off his Ear, but for not directing the C blow better, to the cutting off his Head: And how far this Fryar's barbarous Divinity hath been justified of late by the Writings of some (who will yet perswade us that Christ did not reprehend St. Peter for that act) and by the actions of others, I have little joy to represent to you; God knows, I love not to widen breaches; only I am sure the Fathers are clear; that though formerly St. Peter were ignorant, and from that ignorance and zeal together, ran into that fury, yet Christ [...],Theoph. in. Mat. 26. desirous to tune him D to that sweet harmonaical Gospel temper, tells him he must not use the sword, (he having no Commission, especially against those that have it, though they use it never so ill) [...], though it were to avenge even God himself. And having given you these proofs of this ignorance in three Disciples, I think 'tis possi­ble I might extend it to the rest of them, that they were in this parti­cular ignorant too▪ (as it seems they were in many other things) till the Holy Ghost came according to promise to teach them all things, and E to bring to their remembrance, (to thaw their memories, that the words of Christs, like the voice in Plutarch that had been frozen, might at length become audible; or as Plato's Precepts were learned by his Scholars, when they were young, but never understood till they were Men of full age, and tamer passions:) I say, to bring to their remembrance whatsoever Christ had in Person said unto them. And I wish to God it were uncharitable to charge this ignorance still upon Disciples, after so many solemn Embassies of the Holy Ghost un­to F us, to teach us, and remember us of this Duty. Nay, I wish, that now after he hath varied the way of appearing, after he hath sat upon us in somewhat a more direful shape, not of a Dove, but Vultur (tear­ing even the flesh from us on purpose; that when we have less of that carnal Principle left, there might be some heed taken to this Gospel-Spirit) there were yet some proficiency observable among us, some [Page 72] heavings of the [...], that hath so long been a working A in the World; I am confident there were no such way of designing a prosperous, flourishing, durable Kingdom, as to found its policy upon Gospel-Principles, and maintain it by the Gospel-Spirit. I have au­thority to think, that was the meaning of that Prophecy of Christs turning swords into plough-shares, not that he should actually bring peace, he tells you that it would prove quite contrary; but because the fabrick of the Gospel is such, that would all men live by it, all wars & disquiets would be banished out of the World. It was a madness in B Machiavel to think otherwise, and yet the unhappiness of the World, that Sir Thomas Moor's Book that designed it thus, should be then called Utopia, and that title to this hour remain perfect Prophecy, no place to be found where this Dove may rest her foot, where this Gospel-Spirit can find reception. No not among Disciples themselves, those that profess to adventure their lives to set up Christs Kingdom in its purity; none so void of this knowledge, as they. Whether we mean a speculative or practical knowledge of it, few arrived to that C height or vacancy of considering whether there be such a Spirit, or no. Some so in love with nature, that old Pelagian Idol, resolve that suffi­cient to bring them to Heaven, if they but allow their brethren what they can claim by that grand Character, love of Friends, those of the same perswasion, those that have obliged them; they have natures leave, and so are resolved to have Christs, to hate, pursue to death whom they can phancy their Enemies. And I wish some were but thus of Agrippa's Religion, [...], so near being Christi­ans, D as nature it self would advance them; that gratitude, honour to Parents, natural affection, were not become malignant qualities, dis­claim'd as conscientiously, as obedience and justice, and honouring of betters. Others again so devoted to Moses's Law, the Old Testament Spirit, that whatever they find practised there, they have sufficient authority to transcribe. And 'tis observable, that they which think themselves little concerned in Old Testament Duties, (which have a long time past for unregenerate morality, that faith hath perfectly E out-dated) are yet zealous Assertors of the Old Testament Spirit, all their pleas for the present resistance fetch'd from them, yea, and confest by some, that this liberty was hidden by God in the first ages of the Christian Church, but now revealed we cannot hear where yet; but in the Old Testament, and from thence a whole CIX. Psalm full of Curses against God's Enemies and theirs, (and generally those pass for synonymous terms) the special devotion they are exercised in; and if ever they come within their reach, no more mercy for them, than F for so many of the seven nations, in rooting out of which, a great part of their Religion consists. I wish there were not another Prodigy also abroad under the name of the Old Testament Spirit, the opinion of the necessity of Sacrifice, real bloody Sacrifice, (even such as was but sel­dom heard of among Indians, and Scythians themselves) such sacri­fices, [Page 73] A of which the Cannibal Cyclops Feasts may seem to have been but attendants, (furnished with the [...], that come from such savage Altars) sacrificing of Men of Christians, of Protestants, as good as any in the World, to expiate for the bloud shed by Papists in Queen Mary's days; and some Prophets ready to avow, that without such Sacrifice, there is no remission, no averting of judg­ments from the Land. What is this, but like the Pharisees, To build and garnish the Sepulchres of the Prophets, and say, That if they had lived B in their Fathers days, they would never have partaken of the blood of the Prophets, and yet go on to fill up the measure of their Fathers? the very men to whom Christ directs thee, O Jerusalem, Jerusalem, thou that killest, in the present tense, a happy turn, if but the Progeny of those Murtherers, and what can then remain, but the Behold, your house is left unto you desolate, irreversible destruction upon the Land. A third sort there is again that have so confined the Gospel to Promises, and a fourth so perswaded that the Unum necessarium is to C be of right perswasions in Religion; i. e. of those that every such Man is of, (for he that did not think his own the truest, would sure be of them no longer) that betwixt those two popular deceits, that of the Fiduciary, and this of the Solifidian, the Gospel spirit, is not con­ceived to consist in doing any thing; and so still those practical Gra­ces, Humility, Meekness, Mercifulness, Peaceableness, and Christian Pa­tience, are very handsomly superseded; that one Moses's Rod, called Faith, is turned Serpent, and hath devoured all these for rods of the D Magicians; and so still you see Men sufficiently armed and fortified against the Gospel-Spirit. All that is now left us, is not to exhort, but weep in secret, not to dispute, but pray for it, that God will at last give us eyes to discern this treasure put into our hands by Christ, which would yet like a whole Navy and Fleet of Plate, be able to recover the fortune and reputation of this bankrupt Island, fix this floting De­los, to restore this broken shipwrackt Vessel to harbour and safety, this whole Kingdom to peace again. Peace! seasonable, instant peace, the E only remedy on earth to keep this whole Land from being perfect Vastation, perfect Africk of nothing, but wild and Monster; and the Gospel-Spirit, that Christ came to Preach, and exemplifie, and plant among men, the only way imaginable to restore that peace. Lord that it might at length break forth among as! the want of it is certainly the Author of all the miseries we suffer under; and that brings me to the third and last particular, That this ignorance of the Gospel-Spirit, is apt to betray Christians to unsafe, unjustifiable enterprizes: You that F would have fire from Heaven, do it upon this one ignorance, You know not, &c.

It were too sad, and too long a task, to trace every of our evils home to the original; every of the fiends amongst us, to the mansion in the place of darkness, peculiar to it: If I should it would be found too true, what Du Plesse is affirmed to have said to Languet, as the [Page 74] reason why he would not write the story of the Civil Wars of France,A That if he were careful to observe the causes, and honest to report them, [...] must hound the Fox to a Kennel, which it was not willing to acknow­ledge; drive such an action to the Brothel-house, that came speciously and pretendedly out of a Church: Find that to be in truth, the animo­sity of a rival, that took upon it to be the quarrel for Religion; or as in Polybius oft, the [...] to be a thing very distant from the [...] ,the colour from the cause.

In the mean it will not be a peculiar mark of odium on the em­broylers B of this present State and Church, to lay it at their doors, which I am confident never failed to own the like effects in all other Christi­an States, the Ignorance (i. e. in the Scripture phrase, Not Practising) of those Christian Rules which the Gospel-spirit presents us with.

I might tire you but with the names of those effects that flow constantly from this Ignorance, such are usurping the Power that be­longs not to us, which Humility would certainly disclaim; such resist­ing the Powers under which we are placed by God, to which Meekness C would never be provoked; such the judging and censuring mens thoughts and intentions any further than their actions enforce, most unreconcileable with the forgiving part of mercifulness; such the do­ing any kind of evil. that the greatest or publickest good may come, designing of Rapine or Blood to the sanctifiedst end, which S. Paul and Peaceableness would never endure; such Impatience of the Cross, shaking a Kingdom to get it off from our own shoulders, and put it on other men, diametrally opposite to the suffering and patience of D a Christian.

To retire from this Common, to the Inclosure, and to go no far­ther than the Text suggests to me, To call fire from Heaven upon Sa­maritans, is here acknowledged the effect of the [...], the want of knowledge, or consideration of the quality of their spirit.

And what may that signifie to us? Why fire you know is the embleme of a Civil War, which is called a [...], a combustion, or being farther broken out into flames, a conflagration; and I conceive E should be so rendred in that place of S. Peter, where we read the Fiery Tryal.

Now fire you know, belongs most naturally to Hell; and there­fore when the fire and brimstone came down upon Sodom, the phansie of the Fathers calls it Gehennam de Coelo: And so generally the Civil Fire, the Combustion in a State, its original is from thence too; part of that wisdom that is not from above. These Tares so apt for burning, are sowed by Satan, the Enemy-man. From whence come Wars and F strivings among you, [...], Wars of all sizes, are they not from your lusts, that war in your flesh? saith S. James. The lusts from the Flesh, but the War from Hell, the Devil, the Spiritus suf­flans that sets them a warring. Believe it, they would not be able to do it in this manner, prove such fiery boutefeus, if they were not in­flamed [Page 75] A from beneath, if they were not set on fire by Hell. And there­fore to call fire from Heaven, to entitle God or Heaven to that fire, is to do both of them great injury; nay, though it be on Samaritans, that are not so friendly to Christ as might be expected: And so to call fire from Heaven upon Samaritans, is (by accommodation at least) to pre­tend God, or Heaven, or Religion, for the cause of War, which of all things hath least to do it, if the Gospel-spirit may have leave to be considered. Indeed, very few kinds of War there are that will be B justified by Gospel-principles. It was truly said, (though by a rough Soldier) That if the Lord of Hosts were permitted to sit in the Council of War, there would soon be a cessation of Arms, and disbanding of Armies: Though that all War is not unlawful will appear by John Baptists ad­dress to the Soldiers, who gave rules to regulate their Militia, but did not disband them; and the example of the Convert Centurion, a Centurion still after his Conversion: Where yet this still remains as an infallible resolution, that Wars are to be used like the Regia Medi­camenta, C never but when the Physician sees there is no other means available; never upon the wantonness of the Patient, but command of the Physician, and never but when peace appears to be impossible; for if it be possible, the precept is of force, Follow peace with all men. And then to shed the blood of Christians, when blood may be spared, what an hideous thing it is, you may guess by that Emperor, that having beheaded a Christian, was by the sight of a fishes head that came to his Table so astonished, phancying, that it was the head of D that slaughtered Christian gaping on him, that he scarce recovered to his wits; or of that poor penitent David in his pathetick expressi­on, Deliver me from blood-guiltiness, O Lord: A wonderful delive­rance, it seems, to get clear from that. And what an Ocean of fishes heads, may appear one day gaping on some Men, I have no joy to tell: Deliver us from blood-guiltiness, O God.

I have done with my third particular also, and have now no more to importune you with, but my requests to you, and to Heaven for E you, that the time past of all our lives be sufficient to have spent in the will of the Gentiles, after the dictates of that Heathen spirit, the natural or Jewish principles: That you be content at length to go up to the Mount with Christ, and be auditors of his Sermon; to that other Mount with the same Christ and be transfigured after him to that spi­rit of humility, spirit of meekness, spirit of all kind of mercifulness; that peaceable, patient spirit, which will give you a comfortable pas­sage through this valley of Achor here; yea, though it prove a Red F Sea of Blood, and will fit you for a Crown, that true Olympick Olive Crown; the peaceable fruits of righteousness, an eternal weight of glory hereafter. Which God of his infinite mercy grant, through the merit and promise of his Son.

To whom with the Father, &c.

[...]
[...]

The VI. Sermon.

EZEK. xviii. 31.‘For why will ye die?’

SInce the Devil was turned out of Heaven, all his care and counsels have been employed to keep us from coming thither; and finding Gods love very forward and encreasing towards us, he hath set us upon all ways of enmity and opposition against him.D The first warlike exploit he put us upon, was the building of Babel, when man having fortified him­self, and the arm of flesh grown stout, began to reproach and chal­lenge, and even assault the God of Heaven. But the success of that boldness cost so dear, that we have ever since been discouraged from such open proud attempts. Our malice and despight hath kept in some­what more close and secretly, hath retired and setled in the Soul; the inward man hath ever since erected its Babel; proud and high E imaginations out-bidding Heaven and God. These were a long while forged in the Brain, when instead of the acknowledgment of one true God, all Monsters of Atheism filled the understanding, sometimes with a multitude and shole of gods; sometimes deprived it quite, and left it utterly void of any: But now at last, the Devil and all the Atheism in the World, being at last exorcised and banished out of the Brain, by the evidence and power of truth, hath like the Legion, Luk. viii. which being cast out of the man, had leave to enter the Swine,F fixt violently, and taken possession, and intrenched it self in the brutish bestial part, the Affections. All the swellings, and tumors, and ulcers, that ever shewed themselves in any portion of the circum­ference, are now retired into the center: All the Atheism or Heresie that ever soared or floated in the Brain, or surface of the Soul, is now sunk [Page 77] A into the heart; and there the Devil is seated at ease, there to set up and fortifie, and contemn God for ever. So that in brief, the issue of all is this, There is an infinite opposition and thwarting, a profest com­bate and bandying of forces betwixt the will of Man, and the Will of God; God doing, in a kind, his best on one side, & Man on the other. God wonderfully willing and desirous that we should live; man most perversly wilful to his own destruction. This is a truth of a most dis­mal importance, that concerns you to be instructed in, and will not B be more powerfully enforced on you from any place of Scripture, than the Text which I have read to you, Why will ye die? It is God speaks it, and with an infinite emphasis and [...], to note his pass­ion and affectionateness in desiring our good, and willing that we should live.

And then secondly, Why will ye die? Mans resoluteness and stubborn wretchlesness towards his own ruine, rushing or tumbling as in a praecipice violently to Hell, like the swine, which formerly our C Wills were resembled to,Luk. viii. 33. Luk. viii. 33. running full speed down a steep place into the Lake. And these are like to prove the parts of my ensuing discourse; First, Gods willingness that we should be saved, Secondly, Mans wilfulness toward his own damnation. And of these plainly to your hearts, not your ears; not so much to advance your knowledg, which though it could be raised to the tallest pitch, might yet possibly bear thee company to Hell: but rather to encrease your zeal, to work someone good inclination in you, to perswade you to be D content to suffer your selves to be saved; to be but so tame, as to be taken by Heaven, that now even besieges you. And with my affecti­onate Prayers for success to this design, I will presume of your ears and patience, and begin first with the first, God's Willingness that we should live.

Why will ye die?

Amongst all other prejudices and mis-conceits that our phansie can E entertain of God, I conceive not any so frequent or injurious to his At­tributes, as to imagine him to deal double with Mankind in his Word; seriously to will one thing, and to make shew of another; to deliver himself in one phrase, and reserve himself in another. It were an unnecessary, officious undertaking to go about to be God's Advocate, to apologize for him, to vindicate his actions, or in Job's phrase, to accept the person of God. Our proceedings will be more Christian, if we take for a ground or principle, that scorns to be beholding to an Artist F for a proof, that every word of God is an argument of his Will; every action an interpreter of his Word. So that howsoever he reveals himself, either in his Scripture, or his Works, so certainly he wisheth and intends to us in his secret Counsels. Every protestation of his love, every indignation at our stubbornness, every mercy confer'd on us, and that not insidiously, but with an intent to do us good, are [Page 78] but wayes and methods to express his Will: are but rays, and emissi­ons,A and gleams of that eternal Love, which he exhibits to the World. Now there is no way to demonstrate this willingness of God that we should live, à priori, or by anything either in God or us, preexistent as the cause of it, unless it be his love, which yet is rather its genus than its cause, somewhat of larger extent, though otherwise coinci­dent with it. The more vulgar powerful convincing way, is to en­force it to your hearts by its effects, and those divers and familiar: some few of which we will insist on.B

And first,1 Joh. iv. 9. and principally, The sending of his Son; 1 Joh. iv. 9. In this was manifest the love of God toward us, because that God sent his only begotten Son into the World, that we might live through him. Mark God's love to us in sending his Son, that we might live through him; His love, the cause of his Mission; this Mission, the manifestation and argument of that love; and that we live, the end of both. Had God been any way enclined to rigor or severity, there had needed no great skill, no artificial contrivance for a fair plausible execution of it; It C had been but passing us by, the taking no notice of us, the leaving of us in our blood, Ez xvi. Ezek. xvi. and then Hell had presently opened its mouth upon us. We were all cast out in the open field to the loathing of our persons, in the day that we were born, Ezek. xvi. 5. ready for all the Vultures infernal to fix on,Eccles. xiv. 12. that hideous Old Testament, [...], Eccles. xiv. 12. The Testament of Hell, or in the mercifullest constru­ction, the Covenant of Grace had passed on us, naturally then (what infidelity now makes us) condemned already; our damnation seal'd D to us with our life, born to no other inheritance, but Hell; as if the Devil had out of policy faln before Adam, or rather descended, and that in post,Luk. x. 18. like lightning, Luk. x. 18. left if his journey from Heaven, had been to have been performed after, some other Creature should have intercepted him of his prey. But God's Bowels were enlarged a­bove the size, wider than either the covetous gates of Hell, or that hor­rid yawning head that is all mouth. 'Twas not within the Devil's skill to fear, or suspect what a way of mercy and deliverance God had E found out for us. Somewhat he understood by the event, the decay of his Prophetick Arts, becoming now his Oracle; and even his silence growing vocal to him: But all this could not declare the Mystery at large; when Christ was born, he would have been rid of him betimes, musters all his forces, Pharisees and People, Herods and Pilots, Rome and Jerusalem, and all the friends he had in the World, to make away with him; and yet when he was just come to the push, to the con­summation of his plot, he was afraid to act it; as in the Epistle ascribed F to Ignatius the Martyr,Ep. ad Phil. and directed to the Philippians, 'tis observed, that whilst he was at a pretty distance, [...], the De­vil hastned the structure of Christs Cross, as much as he could; set Judas and all the Artificers of Hell about the Work, [...], but when all was even ready, Christ for the Cross, and the Cross for [Page 79] A Christ; then he began to put in demurs; shews Judas an Halter, frights Pilate's Wife in a dream, she could not sleep in quiet for him; and in sum, uses all means possible to prevent Christs Crucifixion. Yet this, saith Ignatius, not out of any repentance, or regret of Con­science, but only being started with the foresight of his own ruine by this means: Christ's suffering being in effect the destruction of his Kingdom, his death our Triumph over Hell, and his Cross our Trophy. By this you may discern what a Miracle of God's love was this giving B of his Son; the conceiving of which was above the Devil's reach, and wherein he was providentially engaged, and (if we may so speak) [...], carried blindfold by God, to be an Instrument of his own ruine, and in a kind, be a Co-worker of our Salvation. Not to enlarge or expatiate upon Circumstances; Man being thus involved in a necessity of damnation, & no remedy within the sphere, either of his power or conceit left to rescue him; (nay, as some have been so bold to say, that God himself had no other means, besides this in his C Store-house of Miracles, to save us, without intrenching on some one of his Attributes) for God then to find out a course that we could never prompt him to, being sollicited to it by nothing in us, but our sins and misery, and without any interposition, any further consultation or de­mur, to part with a piece of himself, to redeem us; Brachium Domini, The Arm of the Lord, Isa. liii. as Isaiah calls our Saviour, Isa. liii. Nay, to send down his very Bowels amongst us, to witness his compassion; to satisfie for us by his own death, and attach himself for our liberty; to undergo D such hard conditions, rather than be forced to a cheap severity; and that he might appear to love his Enemies, to hate his Son: In brief, to fulfil the Work without any aid required from us, and make Sal­vation ready to our hands, as Manna is called in the sixth of Wisdom, [...], Bread baked, and sent down ready from Heaven, Wisd. xvi. 20. to drop it in our mouths, and exact nothing of us, but to accept of it: this is an act of love and singleness, that all the malice we carry about us knows not how to suspect: so far from E possibility of a treacherous intent, or double dealing, that if I were an Heathen, nay a Devil, I would bestow no other appellation on the Christians God, than what the Author of the Book of Wisdom doth so often, [...], the friend, or the lover of Souls. But this is a vulgar, though precious subject, and therefore I shall no longer insist on it. Only before I leave it, would I could see the effect of it exprest in our Souls, as well as acknowledged in our looks, your hearts ravished as thorowly as your brains convinc'd; your breasts as open to value F and receive this superlative mercy, as your tongues to confess it; then could I triumph over Hell and death, and scoff them out of countenance; then should the Devil be reduced to his old pittance, confined to an empty corner of the World; and suffer as much by the solitariness, as darkness of his abode; all his engines and arts of tor­ment should be busied upon himself, and his whole exercise to curse [Page 80] Christ for ever, that hath thus deprived him of Associates But alas!A we are too sollicitous in the Devil's behalf, careful to furnish him with Companions, to keep him warm in the midst of fire; 'tis to be feared, we shall at last thrust him out of his Inheritance. 'Tis a pro­bable argument that God desires our Salvation, because that Hell where­soever it is, (whether at the Center of the Earth, or Concave of the Moon) must needs be far less than Heaven; and that makes us so be­siege the gate, as if we feared weshould find no room there. We begin our journey betimes, left we should be forestall'd, and had rather ven­ture B a throng or crowd in Hell, than to expect that glorious liberty of the Sons of God. 'Tis to be feared, that at the day of Judgment, when each Body comes to accompany its Soul in torment, Hell must be let out, and enlarge its territories, to receive its Guests. Beloved, there is not a Creature here that hath reason to doubt, but Christ was sent to die for him, and by that death hath purchased his right to life. Only do but come in, do but suffer your selves to live, and Christ to have died; do not uncrucifie Christ by crucifying him again by your C unbelief; do not disclaim the Salvation, that even claims right and title to you; and then the Angels shall be as full of joy to see you in Heaven, as God is willing, nay desirous to bring you thither; and Christ as ready to bestow that Inheritance upon you at his second coming, as at his first to purchase it. Nothing but Infidelity restrains Christs sufferings, and confines them to a few. Were but this one Devil cast out of the World, I should be straight of Origens Religion, and preach unto you Universal Catholick Salvation. D

A second Argument of God's good meaning towards us of his wil­lingness that we should live, is the calling of the Gentiles, the dispatch­ing of Posts & Heralds over the whole ignorant Heathen World, and giving them notice of this treasure of Christs blood. Do but observe what a degree of prophaneness, & unnatural abominations the Gen­tile World was then arrived to, as you may read in all their stories; and in the first to the Romans, how well grown, and ripe for the Devil, Christ found them; all of them damnably Superstitious and Idolatrous E in their Worship; damnably unclean in their lives; nay, engaged for ever in this rode of damnation, by a Law they had made; [...], never to entertain any new Laws, Dio. or Religion: not to innovate, though it were to get Salvation, as besides their own Histories, may be gathered out of Act. xvii. 18. And lastly, consider how they were hook'd in by the Devil, to joyn in crucifying of Christ, that they might be guilty of that blood which might otherwise have saved them, and then you will find no argument to perswade you 'twas possible, that F God should have any design of mercy on them. Peter was so resolv'd of the point, that the whole succession of the Gentiles should be damned, that God could scarce perswade him to go and Preach to one of them,Act. x. Act. x. He was fain to be cast into a Trance, and see a Vision about it; and for all that, he is much troubled about [Page 81] A the [...], their prophaneness and uncleanness, that they were not fit for an Apostle to defile himself about their Con­version.

And this was the general opinion of all the Jews; they of the Cir­cumcision were astonished at the news, Act. x. 45. Act. x. 45. Nay this is it that the Angels wondred at so, when they saw it wrought at the Church by Pauls Ministery; never dreaming it possible, till it was effected, as may appear,Eph. iii. 10. Eph. iii. 10. This was the Mystery which from the begin­ning B of the World had been hid in God, Vers. 9. V. 9. One of God's Cabinet Counsels, a Mercy decreed in secret, that no Creature ever wist of, till it was performed.

And in this behalf are we all (being lineally descended from the Gentiles) bound over to an infinite measure both of humiliation and gratitude, for our deliverance from the guilt and reign of that second original sin, that Heathenism of our Ancestors, and Catholick damna­tion, that Sixteen hundred years ago we were allinvolv'd in. Beloved, C we were long ago set right again, and the obligation lies heavy upon us, to shew this change to have been wrought in us to some purpose; to prove our selves Christians in grain, so fixed and established, that all the Devils in Hell shall not be able to reduce us again to that abhorred condition. If we that are thus called out, shall fall back after so much Gospel to Heathen practices, and set up Shrines and Altars in our hearts to every poor delight that our sottishness can call a God; if we are not called out of their sins, as well as out of their ignorance; D then have we advanced but the further toward Hell; we are still but Heathen Gospellers; our Christian Infidelity and practical Atheism, will but help to charge their guilt upon us, and damn us the deeper for being Christians. Do but examine your selves on this one Interro­gatory, whether this calling the Gentiles hath found any effect in your hearts, any influence on your lives; whether your Conversations are not still as Heathenish as ever? If you have no other grounds or mo­tives to embrace the Gospel, but only because you are born within the E pale of the Church, no other evidences of your Discipleship, but your livery; then God is little beholding to you for your service, The same motives would have served to have made you Turks, if it had been your chance to have been born amongst them: and now all that fair Christian outside is not thank-worthy. 'Tis but your good for­tune, that you are not now at the same work with the old Gentiles, or present Indians, a worshipping either Jupiter, or the Sun! 'Twas a shrewd speech of Clemens, that the life of every unregenerate Man, F is an Heathen-life; and the sins of unsanctified Men, are Heathen­sins; and the estate of a Libertine Christian, an Heathen estate: and unless our resolutions and practices are consonant to our profession of Christ, we are all still Heathens; and the Lord make us sensible of this our Condition.

[Page 82] The third, and in sum, the powerfullest Argument to prove God's A willingness that we should live, is, that he hath bestowed his spirit upon us; that as soon as he called up the Son, he sent the Comforter. This may seem to be the main business that Christ ascended to Heaven a­bout; so that a Man would guess from the xvi.John xvi. 7. Chapter of St. John and Vers. 7. that if it had not been for that, Christ had tarried amongst us till this time; but that it was more expedient to send the Spirit to speak those things powerfully to our hearts, which often and in vain had been sounded in our ears. 'Tis a fancy of the Paracelsians, that B if we could suck out the lives and spirits of other Creatures, as we feed on their flesh, we should never die: their lives would nourish and transubstantiate into our lives, their spirit increase our spirits, and so our lives grow with our years, & the older we were, by consequence the fuller of life; and so no difficulty to become Immortal. Thus hath God dealt with us; first sent his Son, his Incarnate Son, his own Flesh, to feed, and nourish us; and for all this, we die daily: he hath now given us his own very Life, and incorporeous Essence, a piece of C pure God, his very Spirit to feed upon, and digest, that if it be possible we might live. There is not a vein in our Souls, unless it be quite pin'd and shrivel'd up, but hath some blood produced in it by that holy nou­rishment; every breath that ever we have breathed toward Heaven, hath been thus inspired; besides those louder Voices of God, either sounding in his Word, or thundring in his Judgments: there is his calm, soft voice of Inspiration, like the Night Vision of old, which stole in upon the mind, mingled with sleep, and gentle slumber. He D draws not out into the Field, or meets us as an Enemy; but entraps us by surprize, and disarms us in our quarters, by a Spiritual Stratagem conquers at unawares, and even betrays, and circumvents, and cheats us into Heaven. That precept of Pythagoras, [...], To worship at the noise and whistling of the wind, had sense, and divinity in it, that Iamblicus that cites it never dreamt of; that every sound and whispering of this Spirit, which rustles either about our ears, or in our hearts, (as the Philosopher saith, Tecum est,E intus est) when it breaths, and blows within us, the stoutest faculty of our Souls, the proudest piece of flesh about us should bow down, and worship. Concerning the manner of the Spirits working, I am not, I need not to dispute. Thus far it will be seasonable and profitable for you to know, that many other Illuminations and holy Graces are to be imputed to Gods Spirit, besides that by which we are effectually con­verted. God speaks to us many times, when we answer him not, and shines about our eyes, when we either wink, or sleep. Our many sud­den F short-winded Ejaculations toward Heaven, our frequent, but weak inclinations to good, our ephemerous wishes, that no man can distinguish from true piety, but by their sudden death; our every-day resolutions of obedience, whilestwe continue in sin are arguments that God's Spirit hath shined on us, though the warmth that it produced [Page 83] A be soon chill'd with the damp it meets with in us. For example, there is no doubt, beloved, but the Spirit of God accompanies his Word, as at this time, to your ears; if you will but open at its knock, and re­ceive, and entertain it in your hearts, it shall prove unto you accord­ing to its most glorious attribute, Rom. i. The power of God unto sal­vation: But if you will refuse it, your stubborness may repel and frustrate God's Work, but not annihilate it; though you will not be saved by it, it is God's still, and so shall continue to witness against you B at the day of doom. Every word that was every darted from that Spirit, as a beam or javelin of that piercing Sun, every atome of that flaming Sword, as the word is phrased, shall not, though it be rebated, va­nish: the day of vengeance shall instruct your Souls, that it was sent from God, and since it was once refused, hath been kept in store, not to upbraid, but damn you.

Many other petty occasions the Spirit ordinarily takes to put off the Cloud, and open his Face towards us: nay, it were not a ground­less C doubt, whether he do not always shine, and the cloud be only in our hearts, which makes us think the Sun is gone down, or quite extinct, if at any time we feel not his rays within us. Beloved, there be many things amongst us, that single fire can do nothing upon; they are of such a stubborn, frozen nature, there must be some material thing for the fire to consist in, a sharp iron, red hot, that may bore, as well as burn or else there is small hopes of conquering them. Many men are so hardned and congealed in sin, that the ordinary beam of D the Spirit cannot hope to melt them; the fire must come consubstan­tiate with some solid instrument, some sound, corpulent, piercing judgment, or else it will be very unlikely to thrive. True it is, the Spirit is an omnipotent Agent, which can so invisibly infuse and insinuate its vertue through the inward man, that the whole most enraged adversary shall presently fall to the earth, Act. ix. the whole carnal man lie prostrate, and the sinner be without delay converted; and this is a Miracle which I desire from my heart, might be present­ly E shewed upon every Soul here present.

But that which is to my present purpose, is only this, That God hath also other manners and ways of working, which are truly to be said to have descended from Heaven, though they are not so successful as to bring us thither; other more calm, and less boysterous influen­ces, which if they were received into an honest heart, might prove semen immortalitatis, and in time encrease, and grow up to immor­tality.

F There is no such encumbrance to trash us in our Christian Progress as a fancy that some men get possessed with; that if they are elected, they shall be called and saved in spight of their teeth; every man ex­pecting an extraordinary call, because Saul met with one; and per­haps running the more fiercely, because Saul was then called, when he was most violent in his full speed of malice against Christians.

[Page 84] In this behalf, all that I desire of you is, First, to consider, that A though our regeneration be a miracle, yet there are degrees of miracles, and thou hast no reason to expect, that the greatest and strongest mi­racle in the world, shall in the highest degree be shewed in thy Salva­tion. Who art thou, that God should take such extraordinary pains with thee?

Secondly, To resolve, that many precious rays and beams of the Spirit, though when they enter, they come with power; yet through our neglect, may prove transitory, pass by that heart which is not B open for them.

And then thirdly, You will easily be convinced, that no duty concerns us all so strictly, as to observe, as near as we can, when thus the Spirit, appears to us; to collect and muster up the most lively, quick-sighted, sprightfullest of our faculties: and with all the per­spectives that spiritual Opticks can furnish us with, to lay wait for every glance and glimpse of its fire or light. We have ways in nature, to apprehend the beams of the Sun, be they never so weak and languish­ing,C and by uniting them into a burning Glass, to turn them into afire. Oh that we were as witty and sagacious in our spiritual estate! then it were easie for those sparks which we so often either contemn or stifle, to thrive within us, and at least, break forth into a flame.

In brief, Incogitancy and inobservance of Gods seasons, supine numbness, and negligence in spiritual affairs, may on good grounds be resolved on, as the main or sole cause of our final impenitence and con­demnation; it being just with God, to take those away in a sleep who D thus walked in a dream, and at last to refuse them, whom he hath so long sollicited. He that hath scorned or wasted his inheritance, can­not complain if he dies a bankrupt; nor he that hath spent his candle at play, count it hard usage, that he is fain to go to bed darkling. It were easie to multiply arguments on this theme, & from every minute of our lives, to discern some pawn and evidence of Gods fatherly will and desire that we should live. Let it suffice, that we have been large, if not abundant in these three chief ones: First, The giving of E his Son to the World. Secondly, Dispatching the Gospel to the Gentiles. And lastly, The sending of his Spirit. We come now to a view of the opposite trenches, which lie pitched at the Gates of Hell▪ obstinate and peremptory to besiege, and take it: Mans resolvedness and wilfulness to die, my second part.

Why will you die?

There is no one conceit that engages us so deep, to continue in F sin, that keeps us from repentance, and hinders any seasonable Re­formation of our wicked lives, as a perswasion, that God's will is a cause of all events. Though we are not so blasphemous as to ven­ture to define God the Author of sin; yet we are generally inclined for [Page 85] A a fancy, that because all things depend on God's decree, whatsoever we have done, could not be otherwise; all our care could not have cut off one sin from the Catalogue. And so being resolved, that when we thus sinned, we could not chuse, we can scarce tell how to repent for such necessary fatal misdemeanors; the same excuses which we have for having sinned formerly, we have for continuing still, and so are generally better prepared for Apologies than Reformation. Beloved, it will certainly much conduce to our edification, instead of this specu­lation B(whose grounds or truth, I will not now examine) to fix this practical theorem in our hearts, that the will of man is the principal cause of all our evil, that death either as it is the punishment of sin, eternal death, or as it is the sin it self, a privation of the life of grace, spiritual death, is wholly to be imputed to our wilful will. It is a Pro­bleme in Aristotle, why some Creatures are longer in conceiving and bringing forth than others, and the sensiblest reason he gives for it, is [...], the hardness of the Womb, which is like dry earth, C that will not presently give any nourishment to either seed or plant; and so is it in the spiritual conception, and production of Christ, that is, of life in us: The hardness and toughness of the heart, the womb where he is to be born, that [...], that dry Earth, in the Philoso­phers; or that way-side, or at best stony ground in Christs phrase, is the only stop and delay in begetting of life within us, the only cause of either barrenness or hard travail in the Spirit. Be the brain never so soft and pliable, never so waxy and capable of impressions; yet if the D heart be but carnal, if it have any thing much of that lust of the flesh, 1 John ii. 15.1 Joh. ii. 15. in its composition, it will be hard for the spiritual life to be conceived in that man. For Faith, the only means by which Christ lives and dwells in us,Ephes. iii. 17. Ephes. iii. 17. is to be seated in the heart, i. e. the will and affections, according to the express words, That Christ may dwell in your hearts by faith. So that, be your brains never so swel­led and puft up with perswasions of Christ our Saviour, be they so big that they are ready to ly-in, and travail of Christ, as Jove's did of Mi­nerva E in the Poem; yet if the heart have not joyned in the concepti­on, if the seed sown have not taken root and drawn nourishment from the will, it is but an aerial or phantastical birth, or indeed rather a dis­ease or tympany; nay, though it come to some proof, and afterward extend and increase in limbs and proportions never so speciously, yet if it be only in the brain, neither is this to be accounted solid nourishment & augmentation, but such as a Camaelion may be thought to have, that feeds on air, and it self is little better, and in sum, not F growth but swellings.

So then if the will, either by nature, or custom of sinning, by fa­miliarity and acquaintance, making them dote on sensual objects, otherwise unamiable; by business and worldly ambitious thoughts, great enemies to faith; or by pride and contentment, both very inci­dent to noble Personages and great Wits, to Courtiers and Scholars: [Page 86] In brief, if this Will, the stronger and more active part of the Soul, re­main A carnal, either in indulgence to many, or, which is the snare of judicious men in chief, of some one prime sin, then cannot all the faith in the world, bring that man to Heaven, it may work so much miracle as Simon Magus is said to have done, who undertook to raise the dead, give motion to the head, make the eyes look up or the tongue speak; but the lower part of the man, and that the heaviest, will by no charm or spell be brought to stir, but weigh & sink even into Hell, will still be carcass and corruption; Ecclus. xx. 25. Damnation is his birth-right, Ecclus. xx. 25.B And it is impossible, though not absolutely, yet ex hypothesi, the second Covenant being now sealed, even for God himself, to save him or give him life. It is not David's Musick, that exorcised and quieted Saul's evil spirit, nor Pythagoras's Spondees that tamed a man, [...] set him right in his wits for ever, that can work any effect on a fleshy heart: So that Chrysostom would not wonder at the voice that cried, O Altar, Altar, hear the voice of the Lord, because Jeroboam's heart was harder than that; nor will I find fault with Bonaventure that made a solemn C prayer for a stony heart, as if it were more likely to receive impressi­on, than that which he had already of flesh.

It were long to insist on the wilfulness of our fleshy hearts, how they make a faction within themselves, and bandy faculties for the Devil; how when grace and life appear, and make proffer of them­selves, all the carnal affections, like them in the Gospel, Joyn all with one consent to make excuses; Luk. xiv. 18. nothing in our whole lives we are so solli­citous for, as to get off fairly, to have made a cleanly Apology to the in­vitations D of God's Spirit, and yet for a need rather than go, we will venture to be unmannerly: We have all married a Wife, espoused our selves to some amiable delight or other; we cannot, we will not come. The Devil is wiser in his generation than we, he knows the price and value of a Soul & will pay any rate for it, rather than lose his market; he will give all the riches in the world, rather than miss. And we at how low a rate do we prize it? it is the cheapest commodity we carry about us. The beggarliest content under Heaven, is fair, is rich enough E to be given in exchange for the Soul. Spiritus non ponderat, saith the Philosopher; the Soul being a spirit, when we put it into the balance, weighs nothing; nay, more than so, it is lighter than vanity, lighter than nothing, i. e. it doth not only weigh nothing, but even lifts up the scale it is put into, when nothing is weighed against it. How many sins, how many vanities, how many idols, i. e. in the Scripture phrase, how many nothings be there in the world, each of which will outweigh and preponderate the Soul?F

It were tedious to observe and describe the several ways that our devillish sagacity hath found out to speed our selves to damnation, to make quicker dispatch in that unhappy rode, than ever Elias his fiery Chariot could do toward Heaven, Our daily practice is too full of arguments, almost every minute of our lives, as it is an example, so is [Page 87] A it a proof of it: Our pains will be employed to better purpose, if we leave that as a worn, beaten, common place, and, betake our selves to a more necessary Theme, a close of Exhortation.

And that shall be by way of Treaty, as an Ambassador sent from God, that you will lay down your arms, that you will be content to be friends with God, and accept of fair terms of composition, which are, That as you have thus long been enemies to God, proclaiming hostili­ty, B & perpetually opposing every merciful will of his by that wilfulness; so now being likely to fall into his hands, you will prevent that ruine, you will come in; and whilst it is not too late, submit your selves, that you may not be forced as Rebels and outlaws, but submit as Servants. This perhaps may be your last parley for peace, and if you stand out, the battery will begin suddenly, and with it the horrendum est, Heb. x. 31. It is a fearful, hideous thing to fall into the hands of the living God: All that remains upon our wilful holding out, may be (the doom of A­postates C from Christianity) a certain fearful looking for of judgment, and fiery indignation that shall devour the adversaries, Vers. 27. And me­thinks the very emphasis in my Text, notes as much; Why will you die? As if we were just now falling into the pit, and there were but one minute betwixt this time of our jollity, and our everlasting hell. Do but lay this one circumstance to your hearts, do but suppose your selves on a Bed of sickness, laid at with a violent burning Fever, such a one as shall finally consume the whole world; as it were battered D with thundering and lightning, and besieged with fire, where the next throw or plunge of thy disease, may possibly separate thy soul from thy body, and the mouth of Hell just then open and yawning at thee; and then suppose there were one only minute, wherein a serious resigning up thy self to God, might recover you to Heaven. O then what power and energy! what force and strong efficacy, would there be in this voice from God, Why will you die? I am resolved, that heart that were truly sensible of it, that were prepared seasonably by all these E circumstances to receive it, would find such inward vigor and spirit from it, that it would strike death dead in that one minute; this ultimus conatus, this last spring and plunge, would do more than a thousand heartless heaves in a lingring sickness, and perhaps over­come, and quit the danger.

And therefore let me beseech you to represent this condition to your selves, and not any longer be flattered or couzened in a slow se­curity: To day if you will hear his voice, harden not your hearts. If you F let it alone till this day come in earnest, you may then perhaps heave in vain, labour and struggle, and not have breath enough to send up one sigh toward Heaven. The hour of our death we are wont to call Tempus improbabilitatis, a very improbable inch of time to build our Heaven in; as after death is impossibilitatis, a time wherein it is impos­sible to recover us from Hell. If nothing were required to make us [Page 88] Saints, but outward performances; if true repentance were but to A groan, and Faith but to cry, Lord, Lord; we could not promise our selves, that at our last hour we should be sufficient for that; perhaps a Lethargy may be our fate, and then, what life or spirits even for that? perhaps a Fever may send us away raving, in no case to name God, but only in oaths and curses; and then it were hideous to tell you, what a Bethlehem we should be carried to: But when that which must save us must be a work of the Soul, and a gift of God, how can we promise our selves, that God will be so merciful, whom we have till then con­temned,B or our souls then capable of any holy impression, having been so long frozen in sin, and petrified even into Adamant? Beloved, as a man may come to such an estate of grace here, that he may be most sure he shall not fall, as St. Paul in likelihood was, when he resolved that nothing could separate him: So may a man be engaged so far in sin, that there is no rescuing from the Devil. There is an irreversible estate in evil, as well as good, and perhaps I may have arrived to that be­fore my hour of death; for I believe Pharaoh was come to it, Exod. C ix. 34. after the seventh Plague hardning his heart; and then I say, it is possible, that thou that hitherto hast gone on in habituate, stupid, customary rebellions, mayest be now at this minute, arrived to this pitch, That if thou run on one pace farther, thou art engaged for ever past recovery. And therefore at this minute, in the strength of your age and lusts, this speech may be as seasonable, as if death were seizing on you, Why will you die? At what time soever thou repent­est, God will have mercy; but this may be the last instant wherein D thou canst repent, the next sin may benumb or fear thy heart, that even the pangs of death shall come on thee insensibly; that the rest of thy life shall be a sleep, or lethargy, and thou lie stupid in it, till thou findest thy self awake in flames. Oh, if thou shouldst pass away in such a sleep! Again, I cannot tell you whether a death-bed re­pentance shall save you, or no. The Spouse sought Christ on her bed, but found him not, Cant. iii. 1. The last of Ecclesiastes would make a man suspect,Cant. iii. 1. that remembring God when our feeble impotent E age comes on us, would stand us in little stead. Read it, for it is a most learned powerful Chapter. This I am sure of, God hath chosen to himself, Tit. ii. 14. a people Zealous of good works, Tit. ii. 14. And they that find not some of this holy fire alive within them, till their Souls are going out, have little cause to think themselves of God's election: So that perhaps there is something in it,Matth. iii. 8. that Matth. iii. 8. the Exhorta­tion, bring forth fruits worthy of repentance, is exprest by a tense that ordinarily signifies time past, [...], have brought forth fruits. F It will not be enough upon an exigence, when there is no way but one with me, to be inclinable to any good works, to resolve to live well, when I expect to die. I must have done this, and more too in my life, if I expect any true comfort at my death. There is not any point we err more familiarly in, and easily, than our spiritual condition; [Page 89] A what is likely to become of us after death? Any slight phansie that Christ died for us in particular, we take for a Faith that will be sure to save us.

Now there is no way to preserve our selves from this Error, but to measure our Faith and Hopes by our Obedience; that if we sincerely obey God, then are we true believers: And this cannot well be done by any that begins not till he is on his death-bed; be his inclinations to good then never so strong, his faith in Christ never B so lusty; yet how knows he, whether it is only fear of death, and a conviction, that in spight of his teeth, he must now sin no longer, that hath wrought these inclinations, produced this faith in him?

Many a sick man resolves strongly to take the Physicians dose, in hope that it will cure him; yet when he comes to taste its bitter­ness, will rather die than take it. If he that on his death-bed hath made his solemnest, severest Vows, should but recover to a possibi­lity C of enjoying those delights which now have given him over, I much fear his fiercest resolutions would be soon out-dated. Such in­clinations that either hover in the Brain only, or float on the Sur­face of the Heart, are but like those wavering, temporary thoughts, Jam. i. 6. Like a wave of the Sea, driven by the wind and tost; they have no firmness or stable consistence in the Soul; it will be hard to build Heaven on so slight a foundation.

All this I have said, not to discourage any tender, languishing D Soul, but by representing the horrors of death to you now in health, to instruct you in the doctrine of Mortality betimes, so to speed and hasten your Repentance: Now, as if to morrow would be too late, as if there were but a small Isthmus or inch of ground between your present mirth and jollity, and your everlasting earnest.

To gather up all on the Clue: Christ is now offered to you as a Jesus: The times and sins of your Heathenism and unbelief, God winketh at, Acts xvii. 30. Acts xvii. 30. The Spirit proclaims all this by the Word E to your hearts; and now (God knows if ever again) commands all men every where to repent.

Oh that there were such a Spirit in our hearts, such a zeal to our eternal bliss, and indignation at Hell; that we would give one heave and spring before we die; that we would but answer those invitati­ons of mercy, those desires of God, that we should live with an incli­nation, with a breath, with a sigh toward Heaven.

Briefly, if there be any strong, violent, boisterous Devil within F us, that keeps possession of our hearts against God; if the lower sen­sual part of our Soul; if an habit of sin, i. e. a combination or legion of Devils, will not be over-topped by reason or grace in our hearts; if a major part of our carnal faculties be still canvasing for Hell; if for all our endeavors and pains it may appear to us, that this kind of evil spirit will not be cast out, save only by Fasting and Prayer: [Page 90] Then have we yet that remedy left, First, To fast and pine, and A keep him weak within, by denying him all foreign, fresh Provision, all new occasions of sin, and the like, and so to block, and in time, starve him up: And then secondly, To pray that God will second and fortifie our endeavours; that he will force, and rend, and ravish this carnal Devil out of us; that he will subdue our wills to his will; that he will prepare and make ready life for us, and us for life; that he will prevent us by his grace here, and accomplish us with his glory hereafter.A

Now to him, &c.

The VII. Sermon.

JER. v. 2.‘Though they say, the Lord liveth, surely they swear falsly.’

-NOt to waste any time or breath, or (which men in this delicate and effeminate Age, are wont to D be most sparing and thrifty of) any part of your precious patience unprofitably, but briefly to give you a guess whither our discourse is like to lead you; We will severally lay down, and sort to your view, every word of the Text single; and so we may gather them up again, and apply them to their natural proper purposes.

First, then the particle, Though] in the front, and, surely] in the bo­dy E of the Text, are but bands and junctures to keep all together into one proposition.

Secondly, the Pronoun, They] in each place, is in the letter, the Jews, in application present Christians, and being indefinite, might seem to be of the same extent in both places, did not the matter alter it, and make it universal in the former, and particular in the latter: For Artists say, that an indefinite sign, where the matter is necessary, is equivalent to an Universal, where but contingent, to a particular. F Now to say the Lord liveth, was, and is necessary; though not by any Logical, yet by a Political necessity; the Government and hu­mane Laws, under which then the Jews, and now we Christians live, require this profession necessarily at our hands: But to swear falsly, not to perform what before they profest, is materia contingens, a matter of no necessity, but free will and choice, that no humane Law can see [Page 92] into; and therefore we must not interpret by the rules of Art, or Cha­rity,A that all were perjur'd, but some only; though 'tis probable a major part;Vers. 1. and as we may guess by the first verse of this Chapter, well nigh all of them.

Thirdly, to say] is openly to make profession, and that very resolutely and boldly, that none may dare to distrust it; nay, with an Oath to confirm it to jealous opinions, as appears by the latter words,Jer. iv. 2. They swear falsly, while they do but say: and Jer. 14. 2. Thou shalt swear, The Lord liveth, &c. B

Fourthly, the Lord] i. e. both in Christianity, and Orthodox Ju­daism, the whole Trinity.

Fifthly, Liveth] i. e. by way of Excellency, hath a life of his own, independent and eternal, and in respect of us, is the Fountain of all Life and Being that we have; and not only of Life, but Motion, and Perfection, and Happiness, and Salvation, and all that belongs to it. In brief, to say, The Lord liveth, is to acknowledg him in his Essence, and all his Attributes, conteined together under that one C Principle, on that of life, to believe whatever Moses and the Prophets then, or now our Christian Faith, hath made known to us of him.

Sixthly, to falsifie and swerve from Truth, becomes a farther ag­gravation, especially in the present instance; though they make men­tion of that God, who is Yea, and Amen, and loves a plain veracious speech, yet they swear; though by loud and dreadful imprecations, they bespeak him a Witness and a Judge unto the Criminal; pray as D devoutly for destruction for their Sin, as the most sober Penitent can do for its Pardon, yet are they perjur'd, they swear falsly.

More than all this, they openly renounce the Deity when they call upon him; their hearts go not along with their words and profes­sions; though it be the surest truth in the World that they swear, when they assert that the Lord liveth, yet they are perjur'd in speak­ing of it; though they make a fair shew of believing in the brain, and from the teeth outward, they never lay the truth that they are so vio­lent E for, at all to their hearts; or as the Original hath it, [...] in va­num, to no purpose 'tis that they swear, no man that sees how they live, will give any heed to their words, will imagine that they be­lieve any such matter.

So now having paced over, and as it were spell'd every word sin­gle, there will be no difficulty for the rawest understanding to put it together, and read it currently enough in this proposition; Amongst F the multitude of Professors of Christianity, there is very little real piety, very little true belief.

In the verse next before my Text, there is an O Yes made, a Procla­mation, nay, a Hew and Cry, and a hurrying about the streets, if it were possible, to find out but a man that were a sincere Believer; and [Page 93] A here in my Text is brought in a Non est inventus, Though they say the Lord liveth] a multitude of Professors indeed every where, yet surely they swear falsly, there is no credit to be given to their words; infide­lity and hypocrisie is in their hearts; for all their fair believing pro­fessions, they had an unfaithful rebellious heart,Vers. 23. V. 23. and the e­vent manifested it, they are departed and gone, arrant Apostates in their lives, by which they were to be tryed; Neither say they in their hearts, Vers. 24. Let us fear the Lord, V. 24. whatsoever they flourished with B their tongues.

Now for a more distinct survey of this horrible wretched Truth, this Heathenism of Christians, and Infidelity of Believers, (the true ground of all false swearing, and indeed of every other sin) we will first examine wherein it consists, secondly, whence it springs; The first will give you a view of its nature, the second its root and growth, that you may prevent it. The first will serve for an ocular or Mathe­matical demonstration, called by Artists [...], that it is so; the second a C rational or Physical [...], how it comes about: The first to convince of the truth of it, the second to instruct you in its causes.

And first of the first, wherein this Infidelity, and to speak more plainly, Perjury of formal Believers consists, Though they say, &c.

Since that rather phancy than Divinity of the Romanists, Schoolmen, and Casuists, generally defining Faith to be a bare assent to the truth of God Word seated only in the understanding, was by the Protestant Di­vines banished out of the Schools, as a faith for a Chamaelion to be nou­rished D with, which can feed on air; as a direct piece of Sorcery and Conjuring, which will help you to remove Mountains, only by think­ing you are able; briefly, as a Chimaera or phantastical nothing, fit to be sent to Limbo for a present. Since, I say, this Magical Divinity which still possesses the Romanist, and also a sort of men, who would be thought most distant from them, hath been exercised, and silenced, and cast out of our Schools (would I could say, out of our hearts) by the Reformation, the nature of Faith hath been most admirably ex­plained; E yet the seat or subject of it, never clearly set down, (some confining it to the Understanding, others to the Will) till at last it pitched upon the whole Soul, the intellective nature. For the Soul of Man, should it be partitioned into faculties, (as the grounds of our ordinary Philosophy would perswade us) it would not be stately e­nough for so royal a guest: either room would be too pent, and nar­row to entertain at once so many graces as attend it. Faith therefore, that it may be received in state; that it may have more freedom to ex­ercise F its Soveraignty, hath required all partitions to be taken down; that sitting in the whole Soul, it may command and order the whole Man; is not in the brain sometimes as its gallery, to recreate and con­template; at another in the heart, as its parlour to feed, or a closet to dispatch business; but if it be truly that royal Personage which we take it for, it is repletive in the whole house at once, as in one room, and [Page 94] that a stately Palace, which would be much disgraced, and lose of A its splendor, by being cut into offices: and accordingly this royal Grace is an entire absolute Prince of a whole Nation, (not as a Tetrarch of Galilee, a sharer of a Saxon Heptarchy) and described to us as one single act, though of great command; and defined to be an assent and adherence to the goodness of the object; (which object is the whole word of God, and specially the promises of the Gospel.) So then, to believe, is not to acknowledge the truth of Scripture, and Articles of the Creed, (as vulgarly we use knowledg) but to be af­fected B with the goodness and Excellency of them, as the most precious objects which the whole world could present to our choice; to em­brace them as the only desireable thing upon the earth; and to be re­solutely and uniformly inclined to express this affection of ours, in our practice, whensoever there shall be any competition betwixt them and our dearest delights. For the object of our Faith is not meer­ly speculative, somewhat to be understood only, and assented to as true, but chiefly moral, a truth to be prosecuted with my desires C through my whole Conversation, to be valued above my life, and set up in my heart, as the only Shrines I worship.

So that he that is never so resolutely sworn to the Scriptures, be­lieves all the Commands, Prohibitions, and Promises never so firm­ly, if he doth not adhere to them in his practice, and by particular ap­plication of them as a rule to guide him in all his actions, express that he sets a true value on them; if he do not this, he is yet an Infidel; all his Religion is but like the Beads-mans, who whines over his Creed D and Commandments over a threshold so many times a Week, only as his task, to deserve his Quarterage, or to keep correspondence with his Patron. Unless I see his belief exprest by uniform obedience, I shall never imagine that he minded what he said. The sincerity of his faith, is always proportionable to the integrity of his life; and so far is he to be accounted a Christian, as he performs the obligation of it, the promise of his Baptism. Will any man say that Eve believed God's in­hibition, when she ate the forbidden fruit? If she did, she was of a E strange intrepid resolution, to run into the jaws of Hell, and never boggle. 'Tis plain by the story, that she heard God, but believed the Serpent; as may appear by her obedience, the only evidence and mea­sure of her Faith. Yet can it not be thought, that she that was so late­ly a Work of God's Omnipotence, should now so soon distrust it, and believe that he could not make good his threatnings. The truth is this; she saw clearly enough in her brain, but had not sunk it down into her heart; or perhaps she assented to it in the general, but not as F appliable to her present case. This assent was like a Bird fluttering in the Chamber, not yet confined to a Cage, ready to escape at the first opening of the door or window; As soon as she opens either ears or eyes to hearken to the Serpent, or behold the Apple, her for­mer assent to God is vanish'd, & all her faith bestowed upon the Devil. [Page 95] A It will not be Pelagianism, to proceed and observe how the conditi­on of every sin, since this time hath been an imitation of that. The same method in sin, hath ever since been taken, first to revolt from God, and then to disobey; first to become Infidels, and then Sinners. Every murmuring of the Israelites, was a defection from the Faith of Israel, and turning back to Egypt, in their hearts.

Infidelity, as it is the fountain from whence all Rebellion springs, (Faith being an adherence, and every departure from the living God, a­rising B from an evil heart of unbelief, Heb. iii. 12.) so it is also the chan­nel where it runs;Heb. iii. 12. Not any beginning or progress in sin, without a concomitant degree of either weakness, or want of Faith. So that Heathens or Hereticks are not the main enemies of Christ (as the que­stion de oppositis fidei is stated by the Romanists) but the Hypocrite and Libertine, he is the Heathen in grain, an Heretick of Lucifer's own sect; one that the Devil is better pleased with, than all the Catalogue in Epiphanius, or the Romish Calendar. For this is it that Satan drives at; C an engine by which he hath framed us most like himself; not when we doubt of the Doctrine of Christ, (for himself believes it fully, no man can be more firmly resolved of it;) but when we heed it not in our lives, when we cleave not to it in our hearts; when instead of li­ving by Faith, Heb. x. 38. Heb. 10. 38. [...], we draw back, and cowardly subduce our selves and forsake our Colours, refusing to be martialled in his ranks, or fight under his Banner. Arian the Stoick Philosopher hath an excellent discourse, concerning the double Infidelity, of the D brain, and heart, very appliable; [...], &c. There are two sorts of this senselessness and stupidity, whereby Men are hardned into stones; the first of the Understanding part, the second of the Practi­cal. He that will not assent to things manifest, his brain is frozen into a stone or mineral; there is no more reasoning with him, than with a pil­lar. The Academicks [...], never to believe or comprehend any thing, was a stupid Philosophy, like to have no Disciples but Posts or Statues; and therefore long ago laught out of the Schools, as an E art of being Brutes, or Metamorphosis, not to instruct but transform them: he could not remain a Man, that was thus incredulous. But the second Stupidity, that of the Practical, Not to abstain from things that are hurtful, to embrace that which would be their death; (the vice, though not doctrine of the Epicures) though this were an argument, both in his, and Scripture-phrase, of a stony heart; yet was it such an one, as the lustiest, sprightfullest men in the World carried about with them. [...]. Nay, 'twas an evidence (saith he) of their strength and F valour, of a heart of metal and proof, to have all modesty and fear of ill cold as a stone, frozen and dead within it. And thus holds it in Chri­stianity, as it did then in reason: Not to believe the truth of Scrip­ture, to deny that the Lord liveth, would argue a brain as impene­trable as Marble, and eyes as Crystal: We sooner suspect that he is not a man, that he is out of his senses, then such an Infidel. Some [Page 96] affected Atheists I have heard of, that hope to be admired for eminent A wits by it: But, I doubt, whether any ever thought of it in earnest, and (if I may so say) conscientiously denied a Deity. But to deny him in our lives, to have a heart of Marble or Adamant, [...], saith Arrian, A dead stupified Soul, [...], it is so frequent amongst us, that it is not worth observing. He is but a puny in the De­vils camp that hath not a privy coat within him to secure his heart from any stroke, that God or Scripture can threaten him with.

Thus you see wherein this Christian infidelity consists, in the not B rooting faith in the heart; in indulgence to those practises which di­rectly contradict his doctrine. So that though every commission of sin be not incompetible with the habit of faith, so far as to denominate him an infidel; yet is it from the not exercising of faith actually, that I ever sin; and every man in the same degree, that he is a sinner, so far is he an unbeliever. So that this conversible retrogradous Sorites may shut up all. He that truly believes, assents in his heart to the goodness, as well as the truth of Scripture: He that assents so in his heart, ap­proves C it according to its real excellency above all rivals in the World: He that thus approves, when occasion comes, makes an actual choice of God's Word before all other most precious delights: He that actually makes the choice, performs uniform obedience, without any respect of sins or persons: He that performs this obedience, never in­dulges himself in sin. And then è converso, backward, thus: He that indulges himself in sin, doth not uniformly obey the Word: He that doth not so obey, doth not actually make choice of it before all competitors:D He that makes not this choice, approves it not according to its real excellency above all things in the world: He that doth not so ap­prove, assents not to the absolute goodness of it in his heart: He that so assents not, doth not truly believe; therefore every indulgent sin­ner is an infidel. And then look about you, and within you: Whoso­ever say, The Lord liveth, and yet remain in your ways of sin, be you never so stout or proud-hearted, my Prophet gives you the lie: If you are incensed, and swear that you are in the truth, and stand upon E your reputation, his answer is mannerly, but tart, Surely you swear falsly; 1 Joh. iii. 6. every indulgent sinner is an infidel. 1 Joh. iii. 6. Whosoever sins, hath not seen Christ, neither known him: But amongst Professors of the Gospel, there be a multitude of habitual sinners go; of infidels, [...], The thing, which in the first place, we under­took to demonstrate.

We now come to the next thing proposed, The root or fountain of this hypocritical faith; where we are to enquire how it comes about,F That they which are so forward to profess, are so far from true belief. And higher in our search we cannot go, than Adam's fall; for the spring head of all this infidelity (as for God's absolute decree, in reject­ing mens persons, and then suffering and leading them to an acknow­ledgment of the truth of the Gospel, only that they may be unexcus­able, [Page 97] A I will not be so vain or unseasonable to examine.) Adam had once the Tree of Life to have eaten, and have been immortal; to have confirmed him and his posterity into an irreversible estate of happi­ness: But since his disobedient heart preferred the Tree of Knowledge before that of Life, the Tree of Life hath never thrived currantly with his progeny. All our care, and traffick, and merchandise, hath been for Knowledge, never prizing or cheapning so poor a commodity, as life. Clem. Strom. 3. [...], &c. All sin is from the Tree B of Knowledge; and that hath rooted it so deep, and given it so fair a growth within us.

As for the Tree of Life, seeing then we would not feed on it, we were never since suffered to come within reach: The Cherubins and a flaming Sword, have fenced it round about,Gen. iii. 34. Gen. iii. 34. and that makes men grow so unproportionably into such monstrous shapes, vast, strong, swoln heads; and weak, thin, crazy bodies, like Pharaoh's lean kine, lank, and very ill-favored: Men for the most part, having C Brains to understand, and Eyes to see, and Tongues to profess; but neither Hearts to apply, nor Hands to practise, nor Feet to walk the ways of God's Commandments. As one far spent in a Consumption, who hath his senses perfectly enough, when he is not able to go. It is only the Effectual Grace of God (of which that other Tree was but an embleme) which must give us life and strength to practise what we know. And this amongst us, is so little cared for, finds such dis­esteem and slight observance when it appears; meets with such re­solute D hardned, stubborn hearts, that it is a miracle, if it ever be brought to submit it self to such course entertainment.

And this is the first and main ground of this Hypocritical faith, our corrupt, immoderate desires of knowledge, and neglect of Grace. The second ground more evidently discernable in us, is, The secret consent and agreement betwixt our carnal desires, and divine knowledg; and the antipathy and incompatibleness of the same with true Faith.

The first pair dwell many times very friendly and peaceably toge­ther, E do not quarrel in an age, or pass an affront or cross word. Know­ledge doth seldom justle or offer violences to the desires of the flesh; a man may be very knowing and very lewd; of a towring Brain, and a groveling Soul; rich in speculation, and poor in practise.

But for the other pair, they are like opposite signs in the Heaven, have but a vicissitude of presence or light in our Hemisphere; never ap­pear or shine together. Faith lusteth and struggleth against the flesh, and the flesh against Faith. The carnal part is as afraid of Faith, as the F Devil was of Christ: For Faith being seated in the concurrence of the dictate of judgment, and (on the other side) the sway of the affections: The one must either couch, or be banished at the others entrance; and then it cries out in the voice of the Devil, Mark i. 24. Mark i. 24. What have I to do with thee; or, as the words will bear, [...]. What communion can there be betwixt me and thee? thou precious Grace of [Page 98] God, Art thou come to torment and dispossess me before my time? O A what a stir there is in the flesh, when faith comes to take its throne in the heart; as at the news of Christ's Incarnation corporal, so at his spiritual, Herod the King is troubled, and all Jerusalem with him, Matt. ii. 3.Mat. ii. 3. All the reigning Herod sins, and all the Jerusalem of habitual ruling lusts and affections are in great disorder, as knowing, that this new King abodes their instant destruction.

It was Aristotles observation,Eth. 6. 8. That the Mathematicks being an ab­stract knowledg, had nothing in them contrary to Passions; and there­fore B young men and dissolute, might study and prove great proficients in them, if they had but a good apprehension; there was no more re­quired: And that perhaps is the reason that such studies as these, History and Geometry, and the like go down pleasantest with those which have no design upon Books, but only to rid them of some hours, which would otherwise lie on their hands. The most studious of our Gentry, ordinarily deal in them, as inoffensive, tame, peaceable studies, which will never check them for any the most inordinate C affections. But of Morality (saith he) and practical knowledge, a young man or intemperate, is uncapable: You may make him con the precepts without Book, or say them by roat, [...], He cannot be said to believe a word of them, his heart is so possest with green, fresh, boister­ous lusts; that he cannot admit any sober precepts any farther than his memory. If you are in earnest with him, to apply and practise what he reads, you exact of him beyond his years; he is not solemn enough for so sad severe employment; and therefore it is concluded,D that he is fit for any intellectual vertue, rather than prudence. This con­sists in a peaceable temper of the mind; an Artist he may prove, and never live the better; suppose him one of youthful luxuriant desires, and never think he will be taught to live by rule; All the learning and study in Books, will never give him Aristotles Moral prudence, much less our spiritual, which is by interpretation, Faith.

And this is the second ground of Infidelity amongst Christians, the competibility of knowledg, and incompatibility of true Faith, with E carnal desires. The third is, The easiness of giving assent to generalities, and difficulty of particular Application.

A common truth delivered in general terms, is received without any opposition: Should it be proposed, whether nothing be to be done, but that which is just? whether drunkenness, were not a vice? whether only an out-side of Religion, would ever save a man? No man would ever quarrel about it. When thus Nathan and David discoursed, they were both of one mind; the one could talk no more against uncon­scionable F dealing, [...]. than the other would assent to. If you propose no other Problems than these, the debauchedst man under Heaven would not dispute against you.Arr. Epict. l. 1. c 22. But all quarrelling, saith the Stoick, is [...], About the Application of ge­neral granted Rules, to personal, private cases.

[Page 99] A The Jews, and Assyrians, and Egyptians, and Romans, are all agreed, that holiness is to be preferred above all things; but whether it be not impious to eat swines flesh, and the like, which of them observes the rules of holiness most exactly, there the strife begins.

Common general declamations against sin, are seldom ever offen­sive; and therefore the Master of Rhetoricks finds fault with them, as dull, liveless, unprofitable Eloquence, that no man is affected with. The cowardliest Bird in the Air, is not afraid of the Faulcon, as long B as she sees him soaring, and never stoop: But when the Ax that was carried about the Wood, threatning all indifferently, shall be laid to the Root of the Tree: When Nathan shall rejoynder with a Thou art the man,] and S. Paul come home to his Corinthians after his declama­tion against Fornicators and Idolaters with, And such were some of you,] 1 Cor. vi. 11.1 Cor. vi. 11. then their hearts come to the touchstone. This is a tryal of their belief: If they will forsake their sins, which before their judgment condemned at a distance: If they will practise the holiness C and integrity which they were content to hear commended. That famous War of the Trojans, and Iliads of Misery, following it in Homer, were all from this ground.

The two great Captains at the Treaty, agree very friendly, that just dealing was very strictly to be observed by all men; and yet neither would one of them restore the Pawn committed to his trust, nor the other divide the spoils: Each as resolute not to practise, as both be­fore unanimous to approve.

D There is not a thing more difficult in the World, than to perswade a carnal man that that which concerns all men should have any thing to do with him; that those promises of Christ which are confest to be the most precious under Heaven, should be fitter for his turn, than this amiable, lovely sin, that now sollicites him. That Scripture is in­spired by God; and therefore in all its dictates to be believed & obey­ed, is a thing fully consented on amongst Christians. We are so re­solved on it, that it is counted but a dull, barren question in the Schools, E a man can invent nothing to say against by way of argument; & if a Preacher in a Sermon should make it his business to prove it to you, you would think he either suspected you for Turks, or had little else to say. But when a particular truth of Scripture comes in ballance with a plea­sing sin; when the general prohibition strikes at my private lust, all my former assent to Scripture is vanished, I am hurried into the em­braces of my beloved delight. Thus when Paul reasoned of temper­ance, righteousness, Act. xxiv. 25. and judgment to come, Felix trembled, Acts xxiv. F 25. His trembling shews, that he assented to Paul's discourse; and as in the Devils, Jam. ii. 29. Jam. ii. 29. it was an effect of a general belief: But this subject of temperance and judgment to come, agreed not with Felix his course of life. His wife Drusida was held by usurpation; he had tolled her away from her husband, the King of the Emiseni, saith Jo­sephus, and therefore he could hear no more of it:Antiq. Jud. l. 20. c. 9. He shifts and com­plements [Page 100] it off till another time, and never means to come in such A danger again to be converted, for fear of a divorce from his two trea­sures; his Heathenism, and his Whore.

Thus was Agrippa converted from the shoulders upward, which he calls Almost a Christian; or as the phrase may be rendred, [...], a little way, Acts xxvi. 28. Acts xxvi. 28. convinced to the general truths in his brain; but the lower half, his heart and affections, remained as Heathenish as ever.

And this is the third ground of practical unbelief, that generalities B can be cheaply believed without parting from any thing we prize: The Doctrine of the Trinity can be received, and thwart never a car­nal affection, as being an inoffensive truth. Christs sufferings and satis­faction for sin, by the natural man, may be heard with joy; but parti­cular application is very difficult: That our obedience to every com­mand of that Trinity, must be sincere: that we must forgo all, and hate our own flesh to adhere to so merciful a Saviour, and express our love to the most contemptible Soul under Heaven, as he hath loved C us; that we must, at last, expect him in majesty as a Judge, whom we are content to hug and embrace in his humility as a Saviour: This is a bloody word, as Moses his wife counted the Circumcision, too harsh and rough to be received into such pampered, tender, fleshy hearts.

The fourth ground is, a general humour that is gotten in the World, To take care of nothing, but our reputations: Nor God, nor life, nor soul, nor any thing can weigh with it in the ballance. Now it is a scandalous thing, a foul blot to ones name to be counted an Atheist,D an arrant Infidel, where all are Christians; and therefore for fashions sake we will believe, and yet sometime the Devil hath turned this humor quite the contrary way, and made some men as ambitious of being counted Atheists, as others of being Christians. It will short­ly grow into a gentile garb, and part of courtship, to disclaim all Re­ligion in shew, as well as deeds. Thus are a world of men in the World, either profest Atheists, or Atheistical Professors, upon the same grounds of vain-glory; the one to get, the other to save their reputa­tion E in the World. Thus do many men stand up at the Creed, upon the same terms as Gallants go into the field; that have but small maw to be killed, only to keep their honor, that they might not be brand­ed and mocked for cowards. And yet certainly in the truth, these are the veriest daftards under Heaven; no worldly man so fearful of death, or pious man of hell, as these are of disgrace.

The last ground I shall mention, and indeed the main of all, is, The subtlety and wiliness of the Devil. He hath tried all his stratagems F in the World, and hath found none like this, for the undermining and ruining of Souls, to suffer them to advance a pretty way in Religion, to get their heads full of knowledg, that so they may think they have faith enough, and walk to hell securely. The Devil's first policies were by Heresies, to corrupt the Brain, to invade & surprize Christianity [Page 101] A by force: but he soon saw this would not hold out long; he was fain to come from batteries, to mines, and supplant those Forts that he could not vanquish. The Fathers (and amongst them chiefly Leo, in all his writing) within the first Five hundred years after Christ, ob­serve him at this ward, Ut quos vincere ferro flammis (que) non poterat, cu­piditatibus irretiret, & sub falsâ Christiani nominis professione corrum­peret. He hoped to get more by lusts, than heresies, and to plunge men deepest in an high conceit of their holy Faith. He had learned B by experience from himself, that all the bare knowledg in the World would never sanctifie: it would perhaps give men content, and make them confident and bold of their estate; and by presuming on such grounds, and prescribing merit to Heaven by their Lord, Lord, even seal them up to the day of damnation; and therefore it is ordinary with Satan to give men the teather a great way, left they should grumble at his tyranny, and prove Apostates from him upon hard usage. Know­ledg is pleasant, and books are very good Company; and therefore if C the Devil should bind men to ignorance, our Speculators and Brain-Epicures would never be his Disciples; they would go away sadly, as the young man from Christ, who was well affected with his ser­vice, but could not part with his riches,Mat. xix. 22. Mat. xix. 22. So then you shall have his leave, to know, and believe in God, as much as you please, so you will not obey him; and be as great Scholars as Satan himself, so you will be as prophane. The heart of Man is the Devils Palace, where he keeps his state; and as long as he can strengthen himself D there by a guard and band of lusts, he can be content to afford the out-works to God, divine speculation, and never be disturbed or affrighted by any enemy at such a distance.

Thus have you the grounds also whereupon true Faith (which is best defined a spiritual prudence, an application of spiritual knowledg to holy practice) should be so often wanting in men which are very knowing, and the fairest Professors of Christianity.

Now lest this discourse also should reach no further than your E ears, lest that which hath been said, should be only assented to in the general as true, not applied home to your particular practises, and so do you no more good, than these general professions did here to the Jews, only to prove you perjur'd Hypocrites, swearing falsly, whilst you say the Lord liveth; we will endeavour to leave some impression upon your hearts, by closing all with Application.

And that shall be in brief, meekly to desire you; and if that will not serve the turn, by all the mercies of Heaven, and horrours of Hell, F to adjure you to examine your selves on these two interrogatories, which my Text will suggest to you, First, Whether you are as good as the Jews here? Secondly, Whether you are not, the best of you, altogether as bad?

For the first, the Jews here said the Lord liveth, were very forward to profess; & 'twere some, though but a low measure of com­mendation [Page 102] for us to be no worse than Jews. Let there go a severe A inquisition out from the Royal Majesty, over the whole Court, or at least from every particular man upon himself; and bring in an impar­tial verdict, whether there be not some amongst you, that are not come thus far as to say, The Lord liveth. Some are so engaged in a trade of mishapen, horrid, monstrous Vices; have so framed and fashioned the whole fabrick of their lives, without any blush, or line­ament of God in them, that they are afraid ever to mention him in ear­nest, for fear of putting them out of their course; they dare not be­lieve B too much of God, lest it should be their undoing; a little sense of him, would take off many of their tricks of sinning, and conse­quently spoil their thriving in the world; like Diana's Silver smith, Act. xix. 24.Act. xix. 24. for by this craft they have their wealth. The least glimpse of God in these mens hearts; nay, one solemn mention of him in their mouths, were enough to bring them into some compass, to upbraid their ways, & reprove their thoughts. Were these men taken to task according to the Canon Laws of our Kingdom, and not suffered to C live any longer amongst Christians, till they understood clearly the promise of their Baptism; till they durst come, and make the same Vow in their own persons, before all the Congregation, which in their infancy their Sureties made for them; were our Canon of Con­firmation duly put in execution, and every one, as soon as he were ca­pable, either perswaded, or forced to fit himself for the receiving of it, (as it is severely required by our Rubrick, though much neglected in the practice;) I doubt not, but there would be fewer sins amongst us,D much more knowledg of God, and mentioning of his Name, without the help of Oaths, & Blasphemies, to which God now is in a kind behold­ing that ever he comes into our mouths. But now men having a great way to go in sin, and nothing in the world to stop them, begin their journey as soon as they are able to go, and make such haste (like the Sun, or Gyant in the Psalmist) to run their course, are so in­tent upon the task the Devil hath set them; that they can never stay to see or hear of God in their lives, which yet is legible and palpable in E every syllable of the World. If they are so well brought up, as to have learned their Creed and Catechism, they have no other use for it, but to break jests, and swear by; and would soon forget God's very Name or Attributes, did they not daily repeat them over, (as School-boyes their parts) and often comment on them by Oaths & Prophanations: and these are [...] in the Apostles phrase,Ephes. ii. 12. Ephes. ii. 12. without God in the world. Others there are of a prouder, lostier strain, [...], and [...], that pitch Camp, and arm and fortifie themselves against F God, that would fain be a forging some other Religion, they are so weary and cloy'd with this.

Thus have I heard of some that have sought earnestly for an Alcoran, and profess an opinion, that all true Divinity lies there, and expect to be esteemed great Wits, of a deep reach, for this supposal. [Page 103] A Others that have not skill enough to understand Turcism, yet have lusts enough to admire it, and the brave carnal Paradise it promises; and if they cannot perswade themselves to believe in it, yet they phancy it notably; and because they cannot expect to have it in ano­ther life, they will be sure of it in this.

Hence do they advance to such a pitch of sensuality, as Heathenism was never guilty of; their whole life is a perpetual study of the arts of death, and their whole Souls an Holocaust, or burnt Sacrifice to B their fleshly lusts. It were an horrid representation but to give you in a diagram, the several Arts that the god of this World hath now taught men to vilifie and reproach the God of Heaven. Profest Athe­ism begins to set up; it comes in fashion, and then some Courtiers must needs be in it. Prophaning of Scripture, & making too cheap of it, was never so ordinary; that holy Volume was never so violently and coursly handled, even ravished and defloured by unhallowed lips. 'Tis grown the only stuff in request, and ordinariest garment to clothe a C piece of scurrilous Wit in, and the best of us can scarce chuse but give it some applause. Beloved, there is not a sin in the World that sticks closer to him that once entertained it; the least indulgence in it, is a desperate sign. 'Tis called the chair of scorners, Psal. 1. a sin of ease and pleasure: a man that uses it, that is once a merry Atheist, seldom, if ever, proves a sad. sober Christian. Julian, and many others, have gone scoffing to Hell, (like men whose custom of mocking hath made wry mouthed) scarcely composing themselves to a solemn Counte­nance, D till horrour either of Hell, or Conscience, hath put smiling out of date. And if any of these sins are but crept in amongst you, it will be worthy our enquiry and examination; (and God grant your own impartial Consciences may return you not guilty:) However this will but prove you no worse than Jews, for they here acknowledg God in their brain and tongues; they said, The Lord liveth.]

Your second Interrogatory must be, Whether whilst you thus pro­fess, you do not also swear falsly? And then 'tis to be feared, that E every action of your lives will bring in an Evidence against you. 'Twere an accusation perhaps that you seldom hear of, to be challen­ged for Hypocrites, to be turned Puritans & pretenders to Holiness: yet this is it my Text must charge you with; professing of Religion, and never practising it; assenting to the truth of Scripture in your brain, but not adhering to it in your hearts; believing in Christ, and yet valuing him beneath the meanest sin you meet with. Look over your Creed, and observe whether your lives do not contradict every word in it; F and is it not Hypocrisie, & Perjury, or, if you will have it, high Comple­menting with God, to be thus profuse and prodigal in our professions, which we never mean to perform? Then is it to be called belief, when it is sunk down into our hearts, when it hath taken root in a well-tempered soil, and begins to spring above ground, and hasten into an ear. That which grows like Moss on the tiles of an house, which is [Page 104] set no deeper than the phancy, will never prove either permanent, or A solid nourishment to the soul. 'Twere a new hours work, to shew every defect in our Faith, by our defections and desertions of Goa i our manners; yet if you will be in earnest with your selves, and ap­ply the grounds premised to your serious Examination, your meditati­ons may throughly make up what here is likely to be omitted.

One thing take home with you for a Rule to eternity, That every indulgence in any sin, is a sure argument of an Infidel: be you never so proud and confident of your Faith, and Justification by it; be you B never so resolute that the Lord liveth; yet if your obedience be not uniform, if you imbrace not what you assent to, surely you swear falsly. Your particular failings I am not knowing enough to represent to you; your own Consciences, if they be but called to, cannot chuse but reflect them to your sight. Your outward profession and frequency in it, for the general is acknowledged; your Custom of the place re­quires it of you; and the example of Piety that rules in your Eyes, cannot but extort it. Only let your lives witness the sincerity of your C professions; let not a dead Carcass walk under a living head, and a nimble active Christian brain, be supported with bed-rid, mentionless Heathen limbs. Let me see you move and walk, as well as breathe, that I may hope to see you Saints, as well as Christians.

And this shall be the sum, not only of my advice to you, but for you, of my Prayers: That the Spirit would, sanctifie all our hearts, as well as brains; that he will subdue, not only the pride and natural A­theism of our understandings, but the rebellions, and infidelity, and hea­thenism D of our lusts; that being purged from any reliques, or tin­cture, or suspicion of irreligion in either power of our Souls, we may live by Faith, and move by Love, and die in Hope; and both in Life and Death, glorifie God here, and be glorified with him hereafter.

The VIII. Sermon.

LUKE xviii. 11.‘God, I thank thee, that I am not as other men, extortioners, &c. or even as this Publican.’

D THat we may set out at our best advantage, and yet not go too far back to take our rise, 'tis but retiring to the end of the 8. verse of this Chapter, and there we shall meet with an abrupt speech, hanging like one of Solomons proverbs, without any seeming de­pendence on any thing before or after it: which E yet upon enquiry will appear [...], faln down from Heaven, in the posture it stands in. In the beginning of the Eight verse he con­cludes the former parable, I tell you that he will avenge them speedily; and then abruptly, Nevertheless, when the Son of man comes, shall he find faith upon the earth? And then immediately verse 9. he spake another parable to certain that trusted in themselves, where this speech in the midst, when the Son of man comes, &c. stands there by it self, like the Pharisee in my Text, seorsim, apart, as an [...] or F intercalary day between two moneths, which neither of them will own, or more truly like one of Democritus his atomes, the casual concurrence of which he accounted the principle and cause of all things.

That we may not think so vulgarly of Scripture, as to dream that any tittle of it came by resultance or casually into the world, [Page 106] that any speech dropt from his mouth unobserved; that spake as A man never spake, both in respect of the matter of his speeches, and the weight and secret energie of all accidents attending them, it will appear on consideration, that this speech of his which seems an [...], or [...] a supernumerary superfluous one, is indeed the head of the corner, and ground of the whole parable, or at least a fair hint or occasion of delivering it at that time. Not to trouble you with its influence on the parable going before con­cerning perseverance in prayer (to which it is as an Isthmus or fi­bula, B to joyn it to what follows) but to bring our eyes home to my present subject. After the consideration of the prodigious defect of faith in this decrepit last age of the world, in persons who made the greatest pretences to it, and had arriv'd unto assu­rance and security in themselves; he presently arraigns the Phari­see, the highest instance of this confidence, and brings his righte­ousness to the bar sub hac formâ.

There is like to be toward the second coming of Christ, his par­ticular C visitation of the Jews, and (then its parallel) his final com­ing to judgment, such a specious pompous shew, and yet such a small pittance of true faith in the world, that as it is grown much less than a grain of mustard-seed, it shall not be found when it is sought; there will be such gyantly shadows, and pigmy substances, so much and yet so little faith, that no Hieroglyphick can sufficiently express it, but an Egyptian temple gorgeously over-laid, inhabi­ted within by Crocodiles, and Cats and carcasses instead of gods; D or an apple of Sodom, that shews well till it be handled; a paint­ed Sepulchre, or a specious nothing; or which is the contraction and Tachygraphy of all these, a Pharisee at his prayers. And there­upon Christ spake the parable, ver. 9. verse 9. there were two men went up into the temple to pray, ver. 10. the one a Pharisee, &c. verse 10.

Concerning the true nature of faith mistaken extremely now adays by those which pretend most to it, expuls'd almost out of mens brains, as well as hearts, so that now it is scarce to be found upon E earth, either in our lives or almost in our books; there might be fra­med a seasonable complaint in this place, were I not already other­wise imbarked. By some prepossessions and prejudices infus'd into us, as soon as we can conn a Catechism of that making, it comes to pass that many men live and die resolved that faith is nothing but the assurance of the merits of Christ applied to every man particular­ly; and consequently of his salvation: that I must first be sure of Heaven, or else I am not capable of it; confident of my salva­tion,F or else necessarily damned. Cornelius Agrippa being ini­tiated in natural magick, Paracelsus in mineral extractions, Plato full of his Idea's, will let nothing be done without the Pythagore­ans, brought up with numbers perpetually in their ears, and the Physicians poring daily upon the temperaments of the body; the [Page 107] A one will define the soul an harmony, In lib. 1. de anima. the other a [...] saith Philopo­nus. And so are many amongst us, that take up fancies upon trust for truths, never laying any contrary proposals to heart, come at last to account this assurance as a principle without which they can do nothing; the very soul that must animate all their obedience, which is otherwise but a carcass or heathen vertue; in a word, the only thing by which we are justified or saved. The confuta­tion of this popular error I leave to some grave learned tongue, B that may enforce it on you with some authority; for I conceive not any greater hindrance of Christian obedience, and godly pra­ctice among us, than this: for as long as we are content with this assurance as sufficient stock to set up for Heaven, there is like to be but little faith upon the earth. Faith if it be truly so is like Christ himself, when he was Emmanuel, God upon the earth, [...], an incarnate faith, cut out and squared into limbs and li­neaments; not only a spiritual invisible faith, but even flesh and C blood, to be seen and felt, organiz'd for action, 'tis to speak, and breath, and walk and run the ways of Gods Commandments. An assent not only to the promises of the Gospel, but uniformly to the whole word of God, commands and threats as well as pro­mises. And this not in the brain or surface of the soul, as the Ro­manist seats it, but in the heart, as regent of the hand and tongue in the concurrence of all the affections. Where it is not only a working faith, an obeying faith, but even a work, even obedience D it self;Rom. i. 5. not only a victorious faith,1 Jo. v. 4. but even victory it self, 1 Jo. 5. 4. This is our victory even our faith: to part with this as a [...], which is our only business, is sure an unreasonable Thesis. Any faith but this, is a faith in the clouds, or in the air, the upper regi­on of the soul, the brain; or at most but a piece of the heart; a magical faith, a piece of sorcery and conjuring; that will teach men to remove mountains, only by thinking they are able; but will never be taken by Christ for this faith upon the earth: if it E do walk here, it is but as a Ghost, 'tis even pity but it were laid. Let me beseech you meekly, but if this would not prevail, I would conjure you all in this behalf; the silly weak Christian to fly from this [...], and call for some light of their lawful pastors, to find out the deceit; and the more knowing illuminate Christian, to examine sincerely and impartially by feeling and handling it throughly, whether there be any true substance in it or no. The Pharisee looking upon himself superficially thought he F had gone on, on very good grounds; very unquestionable terms that he was possest of a very fair estate; he brought in an invento­ry of a many, precious works; I fast, I tithe, &c. verse 12.Verse 12. hath no other Liturgies but thanksgivings, no other sacrifice to bring into the temple, but Eucharistical, and yet how foully the man was mistaken!

[Page 108] God I thank, &c.A

The first thing I shall observe in the words is the [...], the rational importance of them, as they are part of a rhetorical syllogism, an example or parallel to shew that in the last days, though men think that there is a great deal, yet there is indeed like to be but little Faith upon the earth. And the issue from thence is the Pharisees flattering favourable misconceit of his own estate, and the parallel line to that, our premature deceivable perswasions of our selves, that is ordinary among Christians.B

The second thing is the [...], the natural litteral importance of the words, and therein the concomitants or effects of those his misconceits.

1. Pride, 2. Censoriousness. Pride noted by his speech, I thank thee that I am not; then his posture pluming up himself, standing by himself he prayed; as the Syriack set the words, and many greek copies, some by making a comma after [...], others by reading [...], standing by himself; as Beza C renders it, soorsim, apart: not as our English, he stood and prayed thus with himself, but as the words will likewise bear it, he stood by himself thus; this posture signifying a proud contemptuous beha­viour, whilest the Publican stood crouching humbly, and trem­blingly behind.

2. Censoriousness and insinuating accusations of other mens persons, even as this Publican. To which we may add the occa­sion of all this, seeing the Publican behind him, (i. e.) comparing D himself with notorious sinners, he was thus proud and censorious.

And of these in their order, as powerfully and effectually to your hearts, as God shall enable me. And first of the first, the Pharisees favourable misconceits of himself, and parallel to these, our deceivable perswasions of our selves, God I thank, &c.

The black sin that hath dyed the Pharisees soul so deep, as to become his characteristick inseparable property, a kind of agnomen, a perpetual accession to his name, is hypocrisie. The proper E natural importance of which word, signifies the personating or acting of a part, putting on another habit than doth properly be­long to him. But by the liberty we ordinarily allow to words, to enlarge themselves sometimes beyond their own territories, to thrive and gain somewhat from their Neighbours, it is come vulgarly to signifie all that ambitious outside, or formality the colour and varnish of religion, by which any man deceives either others or himself; and accordingly there is a twofold hypocrisie, F the first deceiving others; the second himself. That by which he imposeth upon others is the sin we commonly declaim against, under that name, most fiercely, sometime by just reason, as ha­ving been circumvented by such glozes, sometime in a natural zeal to truth, preferring plain downright impiety, before the same [Page 109] A transfigured by a varnish. Reatus impii pium nomen, his being counted innocent is an accession to his guilt. But then sometimes too, under this odious name we may wound sincere and pure devotion; as the Primitive Christians were by the tyrants put in wild beasts skins that they may be torn in pieces; men may be deterr'd from all the least appearance of purity, for fear they should be counted hypocrites. However this first sort of hypocrisie may deserve its seasonable reprehension, this parable in my text B doth not take it in; but insists mainly upon the other, that colour of piety by which a man deceives himself, and cheats and glozes with his own soul. That first sort, were it not for some hurtful consequences, might for ought I can gainsay, pass for an inno­cent quality in a sinner. For what great injury doth that man do to any other, or himself? what grand sin against God or the World, by desiring to seem better than he is; by labouring to conceal those sins in himself, which could not be known without C dishonour to God, and scandal to his neighbour? 'Twas a Law­yers answer being questioned whether it were lawful for a woman to take money for prostituting her self, that indeed 'twas a sin to prostitute her self; but that being supposed as in some kingdoms it is permitted, he thought 'twas no great fault to get her living by it.

Not to justifie his opinion, but apply it by accommodation: In like manner arraign an hypocrite, and muster up all the sins D he hath commmitted in secret, and all these I will acknowledge worthy of condemnation, because sins: nay, if his end of con­cealing them be to circumvent a welbelieving Neighbour, that shall be set upon his score also, but for the desire itself of keeping his sin from, the eyes of men; so that he do not from the eyes of God, and his ministers upon occasion: for a cautiousness in any one not to sin scandalously, or on the house top, take this by it self, abstracted from the sin it belongs to, and I cannot see E why that should be either a part, or aggravation of a sin. There is nothing that deserves the tears, yea and holy indignation of a godly soul, more than the sight of an immodest boasting sinner, that makes his crimes his reputation; and his abominations his pride, and glory. 'Tis that which we lay to the Devils charge in the times of heathenism; that he strove to bring sin in credit by building temples, and requiring sacrifices to lust, under the name of Venus, Priapus, and the like; that incontinence might F seem an act of religion; and all the prophaness in the world a piece of adoration. And it begins now to be revived in the world again, when bashfulness is the quality of all others most creditably parted with; and the only motive to the commission of some sins is, to be in the fashion, to be seen of men; when men put on affected errors, affected vanities, affected oaths, just [Page 110] as they do gay cloaths, that they may be the better counted of:A this indeed is a damnable hypocrisie, when men are fain to act parts in sin, that they are not naturally inclined to; and to force their constitutions, and even to offer violence to their own tender dispositions, that so they may not be scoffed at for punies, or precise persons, as Augustus his daughter, which being admo­nished of a sin that beasts would never have committed, answer'd that that was the reason they omitted the enjoyment of so preci­ous a delight, because they were beasts; as if innocence were more B bestial than lust, and ignorance of some sins the only guilt. The horrour and detestation that this sin strikes into me, makes me, I confess, willing almost to become an advocate of the first kind of hypocrisie, whereby men retain so much modesty in their sins (I hope of weakness) as to be willing to enjoy the charitable mens good opinion though undeserved.

But for the second kind of hypocrisie, this couzening of a mans own soul, this tyring and personating in the closet, this inventing C of arts and stratagems to send himself comfortably and believing­ly to the Devil, this civil intestine treachery within, and against ones self; this is the grand imposture that here the Pharisee is noted for. An easiness and cheatableness that costs the bankrup­ting of many a jolly christian Soul. He, saith Plutarch, that wants health, [...]. pag. [...]. let him go to the Physicians, but he that wants [...] a good durable habit of body, let him go to the [...] (the ma­sters of exercise) otherwise he shall never be able to confirm D himself into a solid firm constant health, call'd thereupon by Hippocrates [...], the constitution of wrestlers; without which health it self is but a degree of sickness, nourishment proves but swellings, and not growth, but a tympany. Both these, saith he, Philosophy will produce in the soul not only teaching men [...] (where by the way he repeats almost the whole decalogue of Moses, though in an heathen Dialect) to wor­ship the Gods, &c. which is [...], the health of the soul, but E [...], that which is above all, [...], not to be overjoyed or immoderately affected in all this. This which he attributes to Philosophy in general, is, saith Aristotle, an act of intellectual prudence, or sobriety, [...], not to vouchsafe higher titles to himself than he is wor­thy of; not to think himself in better health than he is, which is not the dialect of a meer heathen, but the very language of Canaan, Rom. xii. 3. Rom. 12. 3. [...], the very word in F Aristotle, which cannot be better exprest than by that [...] to have a moderate sober equal opinion of ones own gifts; not to overprize Gods graces in our selves, not to accept ones own person or give flattering titles to ones self; in Jobs phrase. This Chrysostom calls [...],c. 5. pag. 261. a word near kin unto the former, [Page 111] A the meekness or lowliness of heart, [...], &c. when a man having attain'd to a great measure of grace, and done great matters by it, and knoweth it too, yet [...] fancies no great matter of himself for all this. As the 3. children in Daniel having receiv'd a miracle of graces, which affected even the enemies of God, yet were not affected with it themselves. Enabled to be martyrs, and yet live. Or as the Poet of Callimachus that stood after he was dead— B [...];Pantelius. Which is Nebuchadnezzars phrase, walk­ing in the midst of the fire and yet they have no hurt. Yet in their [...] their Song of praise, all that they say of themselves is this,Song of 3. child. ver. 9. and now we cannot open our mouths, ver. 9. for this, saith Chrysostom, we open our mouths, that we may say this only, that it is not for us to open our mouths. By this low modest interpretation every Christian is to make of his own actions and gifts, you may guess somewhat of the Pharisees misconceits.

C For first, were he never so holy and pure, of never so spiritual Angelical composition, yet the very reflecting on these excellen­cies, were enough to make a devil of him. The Angels, saith Gerson, tri. 1. in Magnif. as the Philosophers intelligences; have a double habi­tude, two sorts of imployments natural to them; One upwards, in an admiration of Gods greatness, love of his beauty, obedi­ence to his will, moving as it were a circular daily motion about God, their Center; (as Boethius of them, mentemque profundam D circumeunt) another downward, of regiment and power in respect of all below, which they govern and move and manage. Now if it be questioned, saith he, which of these two be more honour­able, for the credit of the Angelical nature, I determine con­fidently, that of subjection pulchriorem & perfectiorem esse, quam secunda regitivae dominationis, 'tis more renown to be under God, than over all the world besides, As the service to a King is the greatest preferment that even a Peer of the Realm is capable of. And E then if an Angel should make a song of exultance to set himself out in the greatest pomp, he would begin it as Mary doth her Magnificat, For he hath regarded the low estate of his servant: So that the blessed Virgins mention of her own lowliness, was not a piece only of modest devotion, but an [...] of expression, and high Metaphysical insinuation of the greatest dignity in the world. And then let the Pharisee be as righteous as himself can fancy, come to that pitch indeed which the contemptuous opinionative F Philosophers feigned to themselves,p. 162. [...], in Tatianus, which is in the Church of Laodicaea's phrase, I am rich and am increased in spiritual wealth, and have need of nothing; or the fools in the gospel,St. Luke xvi. 19. I have store laid up for many years; nay to St. Pauls pitch, rapt so high, that the schools do question whe­ther he were viator or comprehensor, a traveller or at his journeys [Page 112] end; yet the very opinion of Gods graces would argue him a A Pharisee; this conceiving well of his estate is the foulest mis­conceit. For if he be such a complete righteous person, so ac­complish't in all holy graces, why should he thus betray his soul, by depriving it of this [...], which the very Heathens could observe so absolutely necessary; this humility and lowliness of mind, this useful and most ingenuous vertue, always to think vilely of himself; not to acknowledge any excellence in himself, though he were even put upon the rack. The Philosophers that B wrote against pride, are censured to have spoil'd all by putting their names to their books.Gers. tr. 10. in Magnif. Modesty, like Dina, desiring never so little to be seen, is ravished. The sanctifying spirit that beau­tifies the soul, ie an humbling spirit also, to make it unbeauteous in its own eyes. And this is the first misconceit, the first step of Pharisaical hypocrisy, thinking well of ones self on what ground soever; contrary to that virgin grace Humility, which is a vertue required not only of notorious infamous sinners (for what thanks C or commendation is it for him to be on the ground that hath faln and bruised himself in his race? for him that is ready to starve to go a begging?) but chiefly and mainly of him that is most righte­ous; when he that knows a great deal of good by himself, [...], a great deal of good success in the spirit, yet [...], is not advanced a whit at the fancy of all this.

The Pharisees second misconceit is a favourable overprizing of D his own worth, expecting a higher reward, than it in proportion deserves. When looking in the glass, he sees all far more glo­rious in that reflect beam than it is in the direct, all the defor­mities left in the glass, and nothing but fair return'd to him, a rough harsh unpleasing voice smoothed, and softned, and grown harmonious in the Eccho: there is no such cheating in the world, as by reflexions. A looking-glass by shewing some handsom persons their good faces, and that truly, hath often ruin'd them E by that truth, and betrayed that beauty to all the ugliness and rottenness in the world; which had it not been known by them, had been enjoyed. But then your false glasses what mischief and ruine have they been authors of? how have they given authority to the deformed'st creatures, to come confidently on the stage, and befool'd them to that shame, which a knowledge of their own wants had certainly prevented? What difference there may be betwixt the direct species of a thing, and the same reflected, the F original and the transcript, the artificial famous picture of Henry the fourth of France will teach you; where in a multitude of feigned devices, a heap of painted, phantastical Chimaera's, which being look'd on right resembled nothing, being order'd to cast their species upon a pillar of polish't mettal reflected to the spe­ctators [Page 113] A eye the most lively visage of that famous King. He that hath not seen this piece of art, or hath not skill in Catoptricks enough to understand the demonstrable grounds and reasons of it, may yet discern as much in nature, by the appearance of a rainbow, where you may see those colours reflected by the cloud, which no Philosopher will assert to be existent there. And all this brings more evidence to the Pharisees indictment, and demonstrates his opinion of his own actions or merits, to be commonly deceive­able B and false.

He sees another mans actions radio recto, by a direct beam, and if there be no humour in his eye; if it be not glazed with con­tempt or envy, or prejudice, he may perhaps see them aright. But his own he cannot see but by reflexion, as a man comes not to see his own eyes, but in the shadow, and at the rebound; where­upon Alcinous the Platonick calls this act of the soul, [...], a dialogue of the soul with it self,Pag. 8. and the C knowledge that comes from thence [...], a resemblance by shadowing. The soul understands, and wills its object; this act of it by its species is cast upon the fancy, and from thence, as even now from the column of brass, or bell-mettle, 'tis reflected to the understanding: and then you may guess, what a fair re­port he is likely to receive, when a Pharisees phancy hath the re­turning of it. He that with his own clearest eyes could take a gnat for a taller unweildier creature than a Camel, and thereupon D strains at it, Mat. xxiii. 24. Mat. xxiii. 24. What would he do if he should come to his multiplying glass? He that when he sees a mote, and that ra­dio recto, in others eyes, can mistake it for a beam, how can he think you, improve the least atome of good when he is to look on it in himself? How will his phansie and he; the one a cheat from the beginning, the other full greedy of the bait, fatten and puff up a sacrifice, that he himself hath offer'd? O how fair shall it appear, and ready to devour all the seven f [...]t ones, though E it be the thinnest of Pharaoh's lean kine, lank and very ill favoured? how shall the reflexion of his beggarliest rags return to his eye the picture of a King? and the ordinariest vapour, or cloud of his exhaling be deckt over withall the beauty and variety of the Rainbow? What Aristotle said of the Sophists that they did [...],Elench. l. 1. though it be a p [...]zling place for the Criticks, this Censor or Aristarchus in my text, will interpret by his practice; he blows up himself, as they were used to do their meat against a F [...], a tribunes or a Sheriffs feast, that it may look the fairer, and not deceive others only, but himself; forgets what he has done, and now thinks 'tis his natural complexion: as the Carpenter in the 13. of Wisdom; Wisd. xiii. that piece of wood which him­self had just now carved into an Idol, he presently prays to and worships as a god: or as lyars, that by telling a tale often at last [Page 114] begin to believe themselves; so hath he befool'd himself into a A credulity: the farthing Alms he hath given shall be a strange kind of usury (yet not stranger perhaps than what he deals in dayly) be phansied into a mountain of gold; and the bares calves of their lips become Hecatombs. If he have abstained from flesh when the market would yield none; or forborn to eat a supper after a notorious feast,ver. 12. he will call this fasting twice in the week, ver. 12. and avouch himself an obedient abstemious subject and Christian, though good Friday be witness of his unchristian Epicurism. If he B afford the Minister the tenth of his house-rent, an annual benevo­lence far below that that his dues would come to, which by taking of a jolly fine at first, is for ever after paired into but a larger sort of quit-rents (though his extortion bring in no revenue to any but the Devil and himself) he will yet be confident with the Pharisee, I pay tythes of all that I possess.

A pittance of vertue in a Pharisee is like the Polypod's head, to which Plutarch compares Poetry, Mor. lib. 1. pag. 25. hath some good, but as much or C more ill in it also, sweet indeed and nutritive, saith he; and so is all vertue though simply moral, good wholsom diet for the soul, but withal [...], it sends up vapours into the brain, and ends in whimseys and strange and troublesom dreams: the man phan­sies, I know not what, presently of himself; like learning in an ill natur'd man, all about him are the worse for it; one moral ver­tue tires sometimes the whole vicinity of natural good disposed gifts: 'twere well perhaps for his ingenuity and modesty that he D were not so vertuous, that one drop of water being attenuated in­to air hath taken up all the room in the bladder: 'twere as good for the heart to be shrivel'd up, as thus distended, it must be squeez'd again to make place for some more substantial guest, and be emptied quite, that it may be fill'd. In brief, 'tis the small measure, and this only of aiery, empty piety, that hath pust up the man. As they say a little critical learning makes one proud; if there were more it would condensate and compact it self into E less room.

And generally the more there is within, the less report they give of themselves; as S. Matthew mentioning himself before his conversion, doth it distinctly, Matth. 9. 9. by the name of Mat­thew, and his trade sitting at the receit of custom, Matthew the Pub­lican, by that odious renaming of sin; (whereas all the other Evangelists call him Levi, or the son of Alpheus) but leaves out the story of his own feasting of Christ, (only as Christ sate at meat F in the house) which S. Luke sets down exactly,ver. 10. and Levi made him a great feast, Luk. 5. 27. or as in the history of S. Peter's fall and re­pentance in the Gospel, according to S. Mark; (which the pri­mitive Church agree that S. Peter had a hand in it) his denial is set down with all the aggravating circumstances, more than in all [Page 115] A the rest put together, Mar. 14. 71. he began to curse, and swear, I know not this man of whom you speak: two Evangelists say only he de­nied him the third time; to this S. Matthew adds, he cursed anasware, saying, I know not the man. But he in his own witness, most exactly in aggravating the sin, I know not this, &c. But when he comes to the mention of his repentance, when the two other say, [...], he himself, or S. Mark from him, only [...], he wept; always speaking as much bad, and as little good of them­selves B as can be.

A little windy opinionative goodness distempers the empty brain, 'tis charity must ballast the heart; and that's the grace according to holy Maximius his opinion, [...]. that all this while we have requir'd, but not found in the Pharisee, and that's the reason that the brass sounds so shrill, and the cymbal tinkles so merrily. And this is the Pharisees second misconceit, his over­prizing his own good deeds and graces. The third is.

C His opinion of the consistence and immutability of his present estate, without any, either consideration of what he hath been, or fear what he may be again, he hath learnt or rather abus'd so much Scripture, as that the yesterday and the morrow must care for themselves; Prometheus or Epimetheus are prophane heathen names to him; he is all in contemplation of present greatness; like the heathen gods which are represented to have nothing to do, but admire their own excellencies. I thank God that I am not, &c. D The Pharisee having a first-borns portion from the hand of God, will not be rude or importunate with him for new and fresh supplies; nor will he disparage himself so much as to suspect the perpetuity of his enjoyment. [...], saith Plutarch, a man that is honourably and freely born hath a fair treasure of confidence, [...]. and so a natural advantage of other men; but bastards and men of a crack't race [...], that have a great deal of copper or dross mix't with their E or and argent, [...] these men are born to be humble and shamefac'd. But amongst these contemplations he may do well to consider the Amorite his father, and his mother the Hittite, the pollutions and blood he was clothed with in the day that he was born Ezek. 16.Ezek. xvi. the accursed inheritance as well of shame as sin derived unto him. For then certainly he would never so plume himself in his present sunshine. If he have not gotten in the [...], among the Adamites in Epiphanius, and there set F up for one of Adams sect before his fall,Haeres. 32. or the Valentinians which call'd themselves the spirituals, and the seed of Abel, who indeed never had any natural seed we hear of. If he will but grant him­self of the ordinary composition and race of men, come down from Adam either by Cain or Seth, I am sure he shall find sins past enough either in his person or nature to humble him, be he never [Page 116] so spiritual. And then for the time to come, Christ certainly A was never so espoused to any soul, as to be bound to hold it for better for worse. That if he find ought in that spouse contrary to the vow of wedlock, he can [...] (the word used in divor­ces amongst the Athenians on the husbands part) send the soul out of his house or temple; especially if she do [...] (the phrase used on the womans part) if she leave or forsake the husband, if she draw back or subduce her self out of his house,Heb. x. 8. Heb. 10. 38, &c. by an evil heart of unbelief, openly depart from the living God, Heb. iii. 12. Heb. B 3. 12. It is observ'd by the Criticks as an absurd ridiculous phrase in some authors, to call the Emperors Divi in their life time, which saith Rittershusius when the propriety of the Roman tongue was observed, capitale fuisset, had been a grand capital crime. And as absurd no doubt is many mens [...] and [...], their canonizing, securing and besainting themselves in this life, upon every slight praemature perswasion that they are in Christ. That which Aphrodisius on the Topicks, observes of the C leaves of trees, may perhaps be too true of the spiritual estate and condition of men, that the Vine and Fig and Plane tree, which have thin broad leaves, and make the fairest shew [...], do thereupon shed them presently: some few indeed, the Olive, Bay and Myrtle, which have narrow solid leaves are able to keep them all the year long [...] and [...], always green and flourish­ing. And God grant such laurels may for ever abound in this Paradise, this garden of the land; that the children of this D mother may environ her like olive plants round about her table; this perhaps you will count an high thing to shed the leaf, but what think you of extirpation, and rooting up? even this you shall hear denounced, and executed on those that cast a fair shadow, either as on degenerous or unprofitable trees; either for bad fruit, or none at all, Cut it down, why cumbreth it the ground?

But to our purpose; When S. Paul therefore resolves that no­thing should ever separate him from the love of God, Rom. viii. Rom. 8. sin is E there left out of the catalogue; be he never so possest of that in­heritance, for ought he knows this very confidence may root him out again. His Brethren the Jews thought their estate as irrever­sible as the Pharisees here; and upon as good grounds as he can pretend; the very promise of God to Abrahams seed indefinitely; and yet by that time this parable was spoken, they can bring him word of the repeal of that promise, within a while seal'd and confirm'd by their [...] their instant utter destruction; F a forerunner of which (if not the cause) was this confidence of their immutable estate.

It was a phansie of the Stoicks mention'd by Plutar. Mor. l. 1. p. 43. [...], that a wise man could do nothing amiss, that all that he did was wise and vertuous. And they that will have [Page 117] A men saved and damned by a Stoical necessity, now adays, may borrow this phancy of the Stoicks also: but Homer, saith he, and Euripides long since exploded it. I am sure S. Paul will fairly give any man leave, that takes himself to be in a good estate now, to fear a bad before he dy; to expect a tempest in a calm; or else he would not have been so earnest with him that thinks he stands to take heed lest he fall, 1 Cor. x. 12. 1 Cor. 10. 12. It was the confidence of a Turk (i. e.) a Stoick reviv'd, in Nicetas Chon. that said he B knew they must overcome,pag. 170. on now for ever, as having got [...], an habit of conquering: and it was well if this assurance did not take the pains to lose it him again. It is the Rhetorick of discreet Captains to their Souldiers in Thucydides, and other Historians, to exhort them to fight on comfortably and couragi­ously, as having overcome, in remembrance of their past victo­ries as pawns, and pledges of the future: but 'tis alwayes on condition and presumptions of the same diligence and valour, C which formerly they shewed. And the same military encourage­ments and munition, the Fathers frequently furnish us with against our spiritual warfare, but all rather to increase our dili­gence than security, to set us to work on hope of success; not to nourish us in idleness in hope of a victory. If we should suffer the Devil from this proposition, he will give his Angels charge that a child of his shall not dash his foot against a stone; and then that assumption, thou art the child of God, to conclude that thou D canst not hurt thy self with a fall, he would straight back that with a Mitte te deorsum, Cast thy self down to shew what thou canst do; and then if thou hast not another scriptum est to rejoynder, thou shalt not tempt, (then this confidence is tempting of God) I know not how thou wilt be able to escape a precipice, a bruise if not a breaking. The Valentinian having resolved himself to be [...], spiritual, confest indeed that other men must get some store of faith and works to help them to Heaven,lib. 1. p. 26. [...], E Iren. But they had no need of either, because of their natural spiritualness; that which is spiritual cannot part with its spiritual hypostasis what ever it do or suffer; no more than gold by a sink can lose its lustre; or the Sun beams be defam'd by the dunghil they shine on. They commit all man­ner of impurity, saith he, and yet they are [...], seeds of the election; the seeds indeed, deep set in the earth that take root downward, but never bare fruit upward; they never F spring at all except it be towards Hell; nor sprout out any branch or stalk of works, unless it be of darkness. These forsooth have grace [...] as their proper possessions, all others but to use, and so it seemed, for they of all others made no use of it. There was another like fancy in the same Irenaeus of Marcus and his fol­lowers, that by the [...] a form of baptizing, that they [Page 118] had, that they were become [...] invisible to the judge, A then if ever they were apprehended 'twere but calling to the mother of Heaven, and she would send the helmet in Homer, that they should presently vanish out of their hands. Thus have men been befool'd by the Devil to believe that their sacred persons could excuse the foulest acts, and, as it was said of Cato, even make crimes innocent; thus have some gotten the art of sinning secure­ly, nay religiously, as he that in our English History would put his Neighbours in a course to rebell legally. But I hope all these fancies B have nothing to do, but fill up the catalogues in Irenaeus and Epipha­nius; I trust they shall never be able to transplant themselves into our brains or hearts. But pray God there be no credence of them scattered here and there among hasty, ignorant, overweening Chri­stians. A man shall sometimes meet abroad some reason to suspect it, yet 'twere pitty to fear so far as to set to confute them. There may be indeed a state and condition of Christians so well setled and rivet­ed by Christ in grace, that their estate may be comfortably believed C immutable, an election under oath, perhaps that mentioned by the Psal­mist, I have sworn by my holiness, I will not fail David; for spiritual bles­sings are frequently in Scripture conveyed along with temporal. But it is much to be doubted, that those men that have boldness to believe this of themselves, have not ballast enough of humility and fear to make it good. Porphyry had so much Divinity in him as to observe that [...] were the only [...], that perpe­tual washings, and purgings and lustrations, were the only means to D defend or deliver from evil, either to come or present; the only Amulets and [...] in the world; 'tis the rainbow in the Hea­ven reflected thither from a cloud of tears below, that is, Gods engagement never again to drown the earth. But then there must be also another bow in the heart, that must promise for that, that it shall not be like a deceitful bow, go back again to folly, never again be drowned with swinish,Exod. xvii. bestial, filthy lusts. In the 17. of Exodus the Israelites prevailed against Amalek, and that mira­culously E without any sensible means;verse 16. and verse 16. the promise is made for the future, that the Lord will fight with Amalek for ever, where by the way the LXX. put in [...], God will fight against Amalek as it were under hand, by secret hidden strength; which addition of theirs (if it were inspired into the Translators, as S. Augustin is of opinion, all their variations from the Hebrew are [...], and so Canon) then happily that [...] may signifie some secret infusion of supernatural power into Moses his F hands; that there is promised; answerable to that same effusion of grace, to enable all the people of God in our fight with sin the spiritual Amalek, by which grace Moses and the Christians have assurance to prevail. And this may be ground enough for a Chri­stian; Christ hath prayed, and God promised that your faith shall [Page 119] A not fail. But then all this while, the story of the day will tell us, on what terms this security of victory stood, if so be Moses con­tinue to hold up his hands; noting 1. the power of prayer; 2. of obedience; 3. of perseverence; and upon these terms even a Pharisee may be confident without presumption: but if his hands be once let down; if he remit of his Christian valour (for so manus de­mittere signifies in Agonisticks) Amalek prevails, vers. 11. verse 11. Just as it fared with Samson, he had an inconceivable portion of strength, B even a ray of Gods omnipotence bestowed on him, but this not upon term of life, but of his Nazarites vow (i. e.) as the LXXII. render it Numb. Numb. vi. 2. vi. 2. [...], a prayer as well as a vow; and that of separating or hallowing purity and san­ctity to the Lord; and his vow being broken, not only that of his hair, but with it that of his holy obedience; that piece of Divi­nity presently vanished, and the Philistines deprived him of his eyes and life.Numb. xv. 9. And thereupon it is observable Numb. xv. 9. that C which is in the Hebrew performing a vow, is rendred by the LXXII, [...], to magnifie a vow, then is the vow or resolution truly great, that will stand us in stead when it is per­formed. As for all others they remain as brands and monuments of reproach to us; upbraiding us of our inconstancy first, then of disobedience; and withal as signs to warn that Gods strength is departed from us. I doubt not but this strength being thus lost may return again before our death, giving a plunge, as it did in D Samson, when he pluckt the house about their ears at last, Jude xvi.Jud. xvi. But this must be by the growing out of the hair again, verse 22. the renewing of his repentance and sanctity with his vow,ver. 22. and by prayer unto God, verse 28.ver. 21. Lord God, or as the LXXII. [...], Remember me I pray thee and strengthen me, but for all this,ver. 19. it was said before in the 19. verse his strength, and in the 20. verse the Lord was departed from him. ver. 20. And so now doubt it may from us, if we have no better security for our selves than the present pos­session, E and a dream of perpetuity. For though no man can ex­communicate himself by one rule, yet he may by another, in the Canon Law; that there be some faults excommunicate a man ipso facto; one who hath committed them the law excommunicates, though the Judge do not: you need not the application, there be perhaps some sins and Devils like the Carian Scorpions which Apol­lonius and Antigonus mention out of Aristotle, hist. commen. which when they strike strangers do them no great hurt,cap. 11. [...], F presently kill their own countrey-men; cap. 19. some Devils per­haps that have power to hurt only their own subjects; as sins of weakness and ignorance, though they are enough to condemn an unregenerate man, yet we hope, through the merits of Christ into whom he is ingrafted, [...], shall do little hurt to the regenerate, unless it be only to keep him humble, [Page 120] to cost him more sighs and prayers. But then, saith the same A Apollonius there,Cap. 12. your Labylonian snakes that are quite contrary, do no great hurt to their own countrey-men, but are present death to strangers; and of this number it is to be feared may presumption prove, and spiritual pride; sins that the [...], the Devils na­tives, ordinary habitual sinners need not much to fear; but to the stranger, and him that is come from far, thinking himself, as S. Paul was, dropt out of the third Heaven, and therefore far enough from the infernal countrey, 'tis to be feared I say, they may B do much mischief to them. And therefore as Porphyry sayes of Plotinus in his life, and that for his commendation; that he was not ashamed to suck when he was eight years old, but as he went to the Schools frequently diverted to his nurse; so will it concern us for the getting of a consistent firm habit of soul, not to give over the nurse when we are come to age and years in the spirit, to account our selves babes in our virility, and be perpetually a calling for the dug, the sincere milk of the word, of the Sacraments,C of the Spirit, and that without any coyness or shame, be we in our own conceits, nay in the truth never so perfect, full grown men in Christ Jesus. And so much be spoken of the first point proposed, the Pharisees flattering misconceit of his own estate; and therein implicitely of the Christians premature deceivable perswasions of himself; 1. thinking well of ones self on what grounds soever; 2. overprizing of his own worth and graces; 3. his opinion of the consistency and immutability of his condition, without either D thought of what's past, or fear of what's to come. Many other misconceits may be observed, if not in the Pharisee, yet in his pa­rallel the ordinary confident Christian; as 1. that Gods decree of election is terminated in their particular and individual entities, without any respect to their qualifications and demeanors. 2. That all Christian faith is nothing but assurance, a thing which I toucht [...] in the preface▪ and can scarce forbear now I meet with it again. 3. That the Gospel consists all of promises of E what Christ will work in us, no whit of precepts or prohibitions. 4. That it is a state of ease altogether and liberty, no whit of labour and subjection; but the Pharisee would take it ill if we should di­gress thus far, and make him wait for us again at our return. We hasten therefore to the second part, the [...], or natural impor­tance of the words, and there we shall find him standing apart, and thanking God only perhaps in complement; his posture and language give notice of his pride, the next thing to be toucht F upon.

Pride is a vice either 1. in our natures, 2. in our educations, or 3. taken upon us for some ends: the first is a disease of the soul▪ which we are inclined to by nature; but actuated by a full diet, and inflation of the soul, through taking in of knowledge, virtue, [Page 121] A or the like; which is intended indeed for nourishment for the soul, but through some vice in the digestive faculty, turns all into air and vapours, and windiness, whereby the soul is not fed but distended, and not fill'd but troubled, and even tortured out of it self. To this first kind of pride may be accommodate many of the old fancies of the Poets and Philosophers, the Gyants fighting with God, (i. e.) the ambitious daring approaches of the soul toward the unapproachable light, which cost the Angels so dear, and all B mankind in Eve, when she ventured to taste of the tree of know­ledge. Then the fancy of the heathens mentioned by Athenago­ras, that the souls of those gyants were Devils;pag. 28. B. that 'tis the Devil indeed that old serpent, that did in Adams time, and doth since animate and actuate this proud soul, and set it a moving. And Philoponus saith that winds and tumours (i. e.) lusts and passions, those troublesom impressions in the soul of man, are the accept­ablest sacrifices, the highest feeding to the Devils; nay to the C very damned in Hell, who rejoyce as heartily to hear of the con­version of one vertuous, or learned man to the Devil, of such a brave proselyte, I had almost said as the Angels in Heaven at the repentance and conversion of a sinner. This is enough I hope to make you keep down this boyling and tumultuousness of the soul, lest it make you either a prey, or else companions for Devils; and that's but a hard choice, nay a man had far better be their food than their associates, for then there might be some end hoped for D by being devoured; but that they have a villanous quality in their feeding, they bite perpetually but never swallow, all jaws and teeth, but neither throats nor stomachs; which is noted perhaps by that phrase in the Psalmist, Death gnaweth upon the wicked; is per­petually a gnawing, but never devours or puts over.

Pride in our education is a kind of tenderness and chilness in the soul, that some people by perpetual softness are brought up to, that makes them uncapable and impatient of any corporal or spi­ritual E hardness; a squeasiness and rising up of the heart against any mean vulgar or mechanical condition of men; abhorring the foul cloaths and rags of a beggar, as of some venemous beast: and consequently as supercilious and contemptuous of any piece of Gods service, which may not stand with their ease and state, as a starcht gallant is of any thing that may disorder his dress. Thus are many brought up in this City to a loathing and detestati­on of many Christian duties, of alms-deeds, and instructing their F families in points of religion; of visiting and comforting the sick, nay even of the service of God, if they may not keep their state there; but especially of the publick prayers of the Church, nothing so vulgar and contemptible in their eyes as that. But I spare you, and the Lord in mercy do so also.

The third kind of pride is a supercilious affected haughtiness, [Page 122] that men perhaps meekly enough disposed by nature, are fain to A take upon them for some ends, a 'solemn censorious majestick garb, that may entitle them to be patriots of such or such a facti­on; to gain a good opinion with some, whose good opinion may be their gain. Thus was Mahomet fain to take upon him to be a Prophet, and pretend that 'twas discoursing with the Angel Ga­briel made him in that case, that his new wife might not know that he was Epileptical, and so repent of her match with a beggar, and a diseased person. And upon these terms Turcism first came in­to B the world, and Mahomet was cried up [...], the greatest Prophet (to omit other witness) as the Saracen fragments tells us, that we have out of Euthymius. Thus are imperfections and wants, sometimes even diseases both of body and mind assu­med and affected by some men to get authority to their persons, and an opinion of extraordinary religion; but rather perhaps more oyl to their cruise, or custom to their trading. But not to flutter thus at large any longer, or pursue the common-place C in its latitude, the Pharisees pride here expresseth it self in three things; 1 his posture, standing apart; 2. his manner of praying al­together by way of thanksgiving: 3. his malicious contemptuous eye upon the Publican. The first of these may be aggravated against the schismatick that separates from the Church or customs, but especially Service and Prayers of the Church. 'Tis pride certainly that makes this man set himself thus apart, whereas the very first sight of that holy place strikes the humble Publican upon the knees D of his heart a far off; as soon as he was crept within the gates of the Temple, he is more devout in the porch than the Pharisee before the Altar. The 2d. against those that come to God in the pomp of their souls, commending themselves to God as we ordi­narily use the phrase, commending indeed not to his mercy, but acceptance; not as objects of his pity, but as rich spiritual pre­sents; not tears to be received into his bottle, but jewels for his treasure. Always upon terms of spiritual exultancy, what great E things God hath done for their souls; how he hath fitted them for himself; never with humbled bended knees in acknowledg­ment of unworthiness with St. Paul, who cannot name that word, sinners, but most straight subsume in a parenthesis, of whom I am the chief, 1 Tim. i. 15. 1 Tim. 1. 15. and for the expression of the opinion he had of his own sanctity, is fain to coyn a word for the purpose, [...], a word not to be met with in all Greek Authors again before he used it;Ephes. iii. 8. less than the least of the Saints, Ephes. 3. 8. And F Jacob in a like phrase,Gen. xxxii. 10. I am less than all thy mercies, Gen. 32. 10. The Litany that begins and ends with so many repetitions impor­tuning for mercy, even conjuring God by all powerful names of rich mercy that can be taken out of his Exchequer, to have mercy upon us miserable sinners, this is set aside for the Publican; the [Page 123] A sinners Liturgy, nay as some say, for the profane people only, not to pray but to swear by. But this only as in transitu, not to insist on. The 3d. expression of his pride is his malicious sullen eye upon the Publican, and that brings me to the next thing pro­posed at first, the Pharisees censoriousness and insinuated accusa­tions of all others. I am not as other men, extortioners, &c. or even as this Publican.

'Twere an ingenuous speculation and that which would stand B us in some stead in our spiritual warfare, to observe what hints and opportunities the Devil takes from mens natural inclinations to insinuate and ingratiate his temptations to them; how he ap­plies still the fuel to the fire, the nourishment to the craving sto­mach; and accommodates all his proposals most seasonably and suitably to our affections; not to enlarge this [...] in the gross, nor yet [...] to each particular; you may have a [...] or taste of it in the Pharisee.

C To an easy natur'd man whose soul is relax't, and has its pores open to receive any infection or taint, the devil presents a multi­tude of adulterers, drunkards, &c. thereby to distill the poyson softly into him; to sweeten the sin and secure him in the com­mission of it, by store of companions: but to a Pharisee, rugged, singular, supercilious person, he proposeth the same object under another colour. The many adulterers &c. that are in the world not to entice, but to incense him the more against the sin; not to D his imitation but to his spleen and hatred: that seeing he can hope to gain nothing upon him by bringing him in love with their sin, he may yet inveigle him by bringing him in hatred with their persons; and plunge him deeper through uncharitableness, than he could hope to do by lust. He knows well the Pharisees constitution is too austere to be caught with an ordinary bait, and therefore puts off his title of Beelzebub prince of flies, as seeing that they are not now for his game; but trouls and baits him with E a nobler prey, and comes in the person of a Cato or Aristarchus, a severe disciplinarian, a grave Censor, or as his most Satanical name imports, [...], an accuser and then the Pharisee bites presently. He could not expect to allure him forward, and therefore drives him as far back as he can; that so he may be the more sure of him at the rebound; as a skilful woods-man, that by wind-lassing presently gets a shoot which without taking a compass and thereby a commodious stand, he could never have F obtain'd. The bare open visage of sin is not lovely enough to catch the Pharisee, it must be varnish'd over with a shew of pie­ty; with a colour of zeal, and tenderness in Gods cause, and then the very devilishest part of the Devil his malice and uncha­ritableness, shall go down smoothly with him. And that this stratagem may not be thought proper to the Meridian only where [Page 124] the Pharisee liv'd; Leo within 500. years after Christ, and other A of the Fathers, have observed the same frequently practised by the Devil among the Primitive Christians; ut quos vincere flammâ ferroque non poterat, ambitione inflaret, virus invidiae in­funderet, & sub falsâ Christiani nominis professione corrumperet: That they whom persecution could not affright, ambition may puff up, envy poyson, and a false opinion of their own Christian puri­ty betray to all the malice in the world. Thus have Hereticks and Sectaries in all ages by appropriating to themselves those titles B that are common to all the children of God, left none for any other, but of contumely and contempt: as soon as they fancy to themselves a part of the spirit of God, taken upon them the monopoly of it also. Thus could not the Valentinians be content to be [...] themselves; but all the world beside must be [...] and [...], animal and earthly. 'Twere long to reckon up to you the Idioms and characters that Hereticks have usurped to them­selves in opposition and reproach, and even defiance of all others; C the Pharisees separati, Sadducees justi, Novatians [...], puri, Messalians precantes. As if these several vertues, separation from the world, love of justice, purity, daily exercise of prayer, were no where to be found but amongst them. Even that judicious, learned, eloquent, yea and godly Father Tertullian is caught in this pit-fall; as soon as he began to relish Montanus his heresie, he straight changeth his style, Nos spirituales, and all other Orthodox Christians Psychyci animal, [...] Jejun. carnal men. The Devil could not be con­tent D that he had gain'd him to Montanism (an heresie which 'tis confest only a superlative care of Chastity, abstinence, and martyrdom, brought him to) but he must rob him of his charity too, as well as his religion. Not to keep any longer on the wing in pursuit of this censorious humour in the Pharisee and Primitive hereticks; the present temper and constitution of the Church of God, will afford us plenty of observation to this purpose: a­mongst other crimes with which the reformation charge the E Romanists, what is there that we so importunately require of them as their charity? that seeing with the Apostolical seat, they have seiz'd upon the Keys of Heaven also; they would not use this power of theirs so intemperately, as to admit none but their own proselytes into those gates, which Christ hath opened to all believ­ers. For this cause, saith Eulogius in Photius, were the Keys given to Peter, pag. 1600. [...]. not to John or any other, because Christ foresaw Peter would deny him, that so by the memory of his own failings, he F might learn humanity to sinners, and be more free of opening the gates of Heaven, because he himself (had it not been for special mercy) had been excluded; other Apostles, sfaith he, having never faln so foully, [...], migkt like enough have used sinners more sharply: but 'twas not pro­bable [Page 125] A that Peter would be such a severe Cato, and yet there is not a more unmerciful man under Heaven than he that now ty­rannizeth in his chair. Spalatensis indeed, after his revolt from us could ingenuously confess, that he could have expected comfortably, and perhaps have been better pleased, to have been saved in the Church of England, with a 1000. l. a year, as in the Roman with 500. l. But do not all others of them count this no less than heresie in him thus to hope? Cudsemius the Jesuit denies the English Nation to be B Hereticks, de desp. Cal. vini causa. because they remain under a continual succession of Bishops. But alas! how few be there of them, which have so much cha­rity to afford us? What fulminations and clattering of clouds is there to be heard in that Horizon? What Anathematizing of hereticks (i. e.) Protestants? what excommunicating them with­out any mercy, 1. out of the Church, then out of the book of life; and lastly, where they have power, out of the Land of the living? And yet, would they be as liberal to us poor Protestants, C as they are to their own Stews and Seminaries of all uncleanness, then should we be stor'd with indulgences. But 'twas Tertullian's of old, that there is no mercy from them to be expected, who have no crime to lay against us but that we are true Christians. Apol. If they would but allow one corner of Heaven to receive penitent humble Protestants, labouring for good works, but depending on Christ's merit; if they would not think us past hopes, or prayers, there might be possibly hoped some means of uniting us all in one fold. D But this precious Christian grace of Charity being now so quite perish't from off the earth, what means have we left us, but our prayers to prepare, or mature this reconciliation? Shall we then take heart also, and bring in our action of trespass? Shall we sit and pen our railing accusation in the form that Christ uses against the Pharisees,Mat. xxiii. 13. Matth. 23. 13. Wo unto you Scribes and Phari­sees, Hypocrites, for you shut up the Kingdom of Heaven against men, for you neither go in your selves, neither suffer ye them that are entring E to go in? This we might do upon better grounds, were we so revengefully disposed; but we fear to incur our Saviours censure, Luke 9. 55.Luk. ix. 55. And he turn'd and rebuk'd them saying, Ye know not what manner of spirits ye are of. We should much mistake our Chri­stian spirit, if we should not in return to their curses, intercede with God in prayer for them; First, that he will bestow on them the grace of meekness or charity; then sincerity and up­rightness, without wilful blindness and partiality; and lastly, F to intercede for the salvation of all our souls together.Rom. xii. 20. And this is the only way St. Paul hath left us, Rom. 12. 20. by returning them good to melt them, hoping and praying in the words of Solomon, that by long forbearing this great Prince of the West will be perswaded; and that our soft tongues may in time break the bone. But whilst we preach charity to them, shall we not betray partiality in our [Page 126] selves, by passing over that uncharitable fire that is breaking out A in our own chimnies? 'Twere to be wished that this Christian grace which is liberal enough of it self, would be entertain'd as gratefully as it is preacht; we should not then have so many [...] sons of fire amongst us as we have; who being inflam'd, some with faction, others with ignorant prejudice, others with doting on their own abilities, fall out into all manner of intempe­rate censures [...] words of the sword, all sharp contumelious invectives against all persons, or doctrines, or lives that are not B ordered or revised by them. For what Photius out of Josephus observes among others to have been one main cause or Progno­stick of the destruction of Jerusalem, the civil wars betwixt the [...] and the [...], the Zelots and the cut-throats, pray God we find not the same success amongst us. Whilst the Zelots, saith he, fell on the Sicarii, the whole body of the city, [...], was bitterly and unmercifully butchered betwixt them; and under one of those two names all the people were brought to C suffer their part in the massacre. I desire not to chill or damp you with unnecessary fears, or to suspect that our sins shall be so unlimited as utterly to outvie and overreach Gods mercies. But, beloved, this ill blood that is generally nourish't amongst us, if it be not a Prognostick of our fate, is yet an ill Symptome of our disease. These convulsions and distortions of one member of the body from another as far as it can possibly be distended, this burn­ing heat, and from thence raving and disquietness of the soul, are D certainly no very comfortable Symptomes. When the Church and Kingdom must be dichotomiz'd, precisely divided into two extreme parts, and all moderate persons by each extreme tossed to the other with furious prejudice, must brand all for Hereticks or carnal persons, that will not undergo their razor. And then the con­trary extreme censure and scoff at their preciseness that will not bear them company to every kind of riot. These, beloved, are shrewd feverish distempers, pray God they break not forth into E a flame. When the boat that goes calmly with the stream, in the midst of two impetuous rowers, shall be assaulted by each of them, for opposing or affronting each; when the moderate Chri­stian shall be branded on the one hand for preciseness, on the other for intemperance, on the one side for a Puritan, on the other for a Papist, or a Remonstrant; when he that keeps himself from either extreme, shall yet be entituled to both; what shall we say is become of that ancient Primitive charity and moderation?F The use, beloved, that I desire to make of all this, shall not be to declaim at either; but only by this compass to find out the true point that we must sail by.Eth. 2. 8. By this, saith Aristotle, you shall know the golden mediocrity that it is complained on both sides, as if it were both extremes; that may you define to be exact liberality, which the [Page 127] A covetous man censures for prodigality; and the prodigal for cove­tousness. And this shall be the sum not only of my advice to you, but prayers for you; that in the Apostles phrase, your modera­tion may be known unto all men, by this livery and cognizance, that you are indited by both extremes. And if there be any such Sata­nical art crept in amongst us, of authorizing errors or sins on one side, by pretending zeal and earnestness against their contraries; as Photius observes that it was a trick of propagating heresies, by B writing books intitled to the confutation of some other heresie;P. 249. [...] 397. [...]. the Lord grant that this evil spirit may be either laid or cast out; either fairly led, or violently hurried out of our coasts.

I have done with the Pharisees censoriousness, I come now in the last place to the ground, or rather occasion of it; his seeing the Publican, comparing himself with notorious sinners, I thank thee that, &c.

That verse 1 Cor. xv. 33. which St. Paul cites out of Menanders C Thais, that wicked communication corrupts good manners, is grounded on this moral essay, that nothing raiseth up so much to good and great designs as emulation; that he that casts himself upon such low company, that he hath nothing to imitate or aspire to in them, is easily perswaded to give over any farther pursuit of ver­tue, as believing that he hath enough already, because none of his acquaintance hath any more: thus have many good wits been cast away, by falling unluckily into bad times, which could yield D them no hints for invention, no examples of poetry, nor encou­ragement for any thing that was extraordinary. And this is the Pharisees fate in my text, that looking upon himself, either in the deceivable glass of the sinful world, or in comparison with noto­rious sinners, extortioners, adulterers, Publicans, sets himself off by these foils, finds nothing wanting in himself, so is solaced with a good comfortable opinion of his present estate, and a slothful negligence of improving it. And this, beloved, is the ordinary E lenitive which the Devil administers to the sharp unquiet diseases of the conscience if at any time they begin to rage, the only con­serve that he folds his bitterest receits in, that they may go down undiscern'd; that we are not worse than other men; that we shall be sure to have companions to hell; nay, that we need not neither at all fear that danger; for if Heaven gates be so strait as not to receive such sinners as we, the rooms within are like to be but poorly furnisht with guests; the marriage feast will never be F eaten, unless the lame, and cripples in the street or hospital be fetch't in, to fill the table. But, beloved, the comforts with which the Devil furnisheth these men are, (if they were not merely feigned and fantastical) yet very beggarly and lamentable, such as Achilles in Homer would have scorned, only to be chief among the dead, or Princes and eminent persons in Hell. We must set our emulation [Page 128] higher than so, somewhat above the ordinary pitch or mark, Let A our designs flie at the same white that the skilfullest marks-men in the army of Saints and Martyrs have aimed at before us; that the [...] and [...] and [...] of the Church, the re­ligious exercisers and champions and trophy-bearers of this holy mar­tial field have dealt in. 'Tis a poor boast to have out-gon Hea­thens and Turks in vertue and good works; to be taller than the dwarfs, as it were, and Pygmies of the world; we must not be thus content, but outvy even the sons of Anak, those tall, gyantly B supererogatory undertakings of the proudest, nay humblest Roma­nists. O what a disgrace will it be for us Protestants at the dread­ful day of doom! O what an accession not only to our torments, but our shame, and indignation at our selves, to see the expecta­tion of meriting in a Papist, nay the desire of being counted vertu­ous in a Heathen, attended with a more pompous train of chari­table magnificent deeds, of constant magnanimous sayings, than all our faith can shew, or vouch for us! Shall not the Romanist C triumph and upbraid us in St. James his language,Jam. ii. 18. Chap. ii. 18. Thou hast faith and I have works, and all that we can fetch out of St. Paul not able to stop his mouth from going on, Shew me thy faith without thy works, as our english reads it out of the Syriack and vulgar Latin, and I will shew thee my faith by my works? 'Twill be but a nice distinction for thee then to say, that works are to be separated from the act of justification, when they are found sepa­rated à supposito, from the person also. But not to digress; the D Pharisee seems here pretty well provided, No extortioner, no adulte­rer, guilty of no injustice. And how many be there among you that cannot go thus far with the Pharisee? Some vice or other perhaps there is that agrees not with your constitution or education; drunk­enness is not for one mans turn, prodigality for anothers, and I doubt not but that many of you are as forward as the Pharisee to thank God, or rather require God to thank them, that they are not given to such or such a vice. But if you were to be required E here to what the Pharisee undertakes, if you were to be arraigned at that severe tribunal, I say not concerning your thoughts and evil communications, but even the gross actual, nay habitual sins; if a Jury or a rack were set to inquire into you throughly, how many of you durst pretend to the Pharisees innocence, and confidence, that you are not extortioners, unjust, adulterers? Nay, how many be there that have all the Pharisees pride and censorionsness, and all these other sins too into the vantage? Certainly there is not one F place in the Christian world that hath more reason to humble it self for two or all three of these vices, than this City wherein you live. I am sorry I have said this, and I wish it were uncharitably spoken of me; but though it will not become me to have thought it of you, yet 'twill concern you to suspect it of your selves, that by [Page 129] A acknowledging your guilts you may have them cancell'd, and by judging your selves prevent being judged of the Lord. And here Saint Chrysostome's caution will come in very seasonably toward a con­clusion of all, that the Publicans sins be not preferred before the Phari­sees works, but only before his pride. 'Tis not his store of moral vertues that was like to prove the Pharisees undoing, but his over-valuing them,Arrian. in Epist. [...], saith the Stoick, appliable to this also. 'Tis not his innocence that hath so encum­bred B him all this while, but his opinion of it. The fasting and the tithing must not be cast away, because the Pharisee was proud of them, this were a furious discipline which would down with all violently, that had ever been abused to idolatry or sin; or with him in Plutarch, that because Poetry had some ill consequences some­times, would have the Muses and their favourites dispatched into Epicurus his boat.Mor. l. 1. p. 26. His counsel was more seasonable, that to prevent drunkenness, appointed them to mix water with their wine, that C the mad god might be allay'd with a tame sober one; and that is the caution that I told you of, that you abstract the Pharisees works from his pride; and then borrow the Publicans humility from his works; that you come to the temple of God with all the provision a Pharisee can boast of, and then lay it down all at the Publicans feet, and take up his miserere, his sighs, his dejection, his indig­nation at himself instead of it, then shall you be fit to approach to that templum misericordiae which Gerson speaks of, sine simulachro, D &c. that had not a picture or image of a Saint in it, no manner of ostentation or shew of works, non sacrificiis sed gemitibus, &c. not to be visited with sacrifices but sighs, not to be filled with trium­phant [...], songs of rejoycing and victories, but with the calm and yet ravishing Rhetorick of the Publican, [...], Lord be merciful to me a sinner. Even so, O Lord, deal thou with us, according to thy mercies, visit us with thy salvati­on, draw us with thy mercies, and enlighten us with thy spirit, E thy humbling spirit to season us with a sense of our sins and unwor­thiness; thy sanctifying spirit to fill us here with all holy sincere requisite graces; and in the spirit of thy power to accomplish us hereafter with that immarcessible crown of glory.

Now to him, &c.

The IX. Sermon.

MATTHEW iii. 3.‘Prepare ye the way of the Lord.’

THat our preface may afford some light to our pro­ceeding,D that it may prepare the way and stand us in stead hereafter in our discourse of preparati­on, we will imploy it to observe that natural progress and method of all things, which consists in steps and degrees: travelling on by those gifts which nature hath set them from one stage to another, from a lower degree of perfection to an higher, built upon this ground of nature, that the first things are alwayes least perfect, E yet absolutely necessary to the perfection of the last: and in sum, so much the more necessary, by how much less perfect. Thus is the foundatin more necessary to an house than the walls, and the first stone than the whole foundation, because the walls are neces­sary only to the setting on of the roof, not to the laying of the foundation; the foundation necessary both to the walls and roof, but not to the first stone; because that may be laid without the whole foundation: but the first stone necessary to all the rest,F and therefore of greatest and most absolute necessity. The course of nature is delineated and express'd to us by the like proceedings and method of Arts and Sciences. So those general principles that are most familiar to us, are the poorest and yet most necessary ru­diments required to any deeper speculation: the first stage of the [Page 131] A understanding in its peregrination or travel into those foreign parts of more hidden knowledge is usually very short; and 'tis most re­quisite it should be so, for beginning at home with some [...], and taking its rise at its own threshold, thereby it advances the length, and secures the success of the future voyage. Thus in Po­liticks hath the body of Laws from some thin beginnings under Ly­curgus, Solon, Phaleas, and the like, by dayly accessions and far­ther growth at last encreased into a fair bulk; every age perfect­ing B somewhat, and by that degree of perfection making the matter capable of a farther; so that the very Politicks themselves as well as each Commonwealth have been observed to have their infancy, youth and manhood, the last of which is the only perfect state, which yet this body had never attain'd to, had it not been content to submit it self to the imperfection of the former. Thus also in practical Philosophy there be some praeambula operationis, some com­mon precepts which must be instill'd into us, to work a consisten­cy C in our tempers firm enough for the undertaking and performing all moral tasks. One excellent one Aristotle learnt from Plato in the second of the Ethicks, [...], a skill of ordering those two passions aright, joy and sorrow, an habit ne­ver to rejoyce or grieve but on just occasion: which lesson we must con perfectly when we are young; and then with years an easie discipline will bring on vertue of its own accord. Lastly, in the transcendent knowledge of Metaphysicks, which Aristotle D would fain call wisdom; 'tis the Philosophers labour, which they were very sedulous in, to invent and set down rules to pre­pare us for that study: the best that Aristotle hath is in the third of Metaph. to examine and inform our selves, [...], which things are chiefly worth doubting of, and searching af­ter: in which one thing if we would observe his counsel, if we would learn to doubt only of those things which are worth our knowledge, we should soon prove better Scholars than we are E Iamblicus, Iambl Pro. trept. p. 36. & 37. beyond all the rest most to the purpose prescribes re­tiredness and contempt of the world, that so we might [...], ever live and be nourished by the excursions of the mind towards God; where indeed he speaks more like a Christian than a Pythagorean, as if he had learnt Christ, to deny himself and the world, and follow him, and intended to come to that pitch and [...] which S. Paul speaks of, Gal. ii. 20. The life which I now live in the flesh I live by faith, &c. But to conclude this praecognoscendum, F there be throughout all works of nature and imitations of art, some imperfect grounds on which all perfection is built, some common expressions with which the understanding is first signed: some ground-colours without the laying on of which, no perfect effigies or pourtraicture can be drawn. Nay thus it is in some measure in spiritual matters also, we are men before we are Chri­stians: [Page 132] there is a natural life, and there is a spiritual life. And A as in the resurrection, 1 Cor. xv. 46. so also in the spiritual [...] of the soul, first that which is natural, and after that which is spiritual: and in the spiritual life there be also its periods, the infancy, the youth and virility of the spirit, the first being most imperfect yet most necessary and preparing the way to the last perfection. To bring all home to the business in hand: thus did it not befit the Saviour of the World to come abruptly into it: to put on flesh as soon as flesh had put on sin: the business B was to be done by degrees, and after it had been a long time in working, for the final production of it, the fulness of time was to be expected. The Law had its time of paedagogy to declare it self, and to be obeyed as his Usher for many years: and after all this he appears not in the World, till his Baptist hath proclaimed him: he makes not toward his Court till his Harbinger hath taken up the rooms. He comes not to inhabit either in the greater or lesser Jewry, the World or mans heart, till the Praecursor hath C warn'd all to make ready for him, and this is the voice of the Praecursor his sermon and the words of my Text, Prepare ye the way of the Lord.

Instead of dividing the words I shall unite them, and after I have construed them to you, contrive that into one body which would not conveniently be dismembred. [...] signifies to fit, to prepare, to make ready. Ye] are all those to whom Christ should ever come. The ways of the Lord] are whatsoever is capable D of receiving of Christ or his Gospel, peculiarly the hearts of the e­lect. The form of speech imperative, notes the whole complexum to be one single duty required of all the Baptists and my Auditors, sub hac formâ, that every man's heart must be prepared for the receiving of Christ, or punctually to imitate the order of the words in my Text, the preparation of the soul is required for Christ's birth in us. For there is in every elect vessel a spiritual [...] or mystical incarnation of Christ, where the soul like Mary is first over­shadowed E by the holy Ghost, then conceives, then carries in the womb, grows big, and at last falls into travail and brings forth Christ. My Text goes not thus far to bring to the Birth, neither will I. My discourse shall be happy if it may be his Baptist, his [...] in your hearts to prepare them for his birth, which I shall endeavour to do first by handling preparation in general: 2. The preparation here specified of the soul; 3. In order to Christs birth in us.F

And first of preparation in general: [...] prepare ye or make ready: the necessity of this performance to any undertak­ing may appear by those several precedaneous methods in com­mon life, which have nothing in themselves to ingratiate them unto us, but cost much toil and trouble, yet notwithstanding [Page 133] A are submitted to. If the Earth would answer the farmers expecta­tion without any culture or husbandry, he would never be so pro­digal towards it. But seeing it hath proposed its fruitfulness un­der condition of our drudgery; we plow and harrow and ma­nure and drain and weed it, or else we are sure to fare the worse at harvest. The variety of preparations in these low affairs was by Cato and Varro and Columella accounted a pretty piece of polite necessary learning. And a Christian if he will apply their rules B to his spiritual Georgicks, the culture of his soul, shall be able to husband it the better; and by their directions have a further insight into those fallow-grounds of his own heart, Hos. x. 12. which the Pro­phet speaks of. 'Twere a great, and perhaps unnecessary jour­ney to trace over the whole world of creatures to perfect this obser­vation: almost every passage of nature will furnish you with an example. Hence is it that they that had nothing but natural reason to instruct them, were assiduous in this practice, and never ventured C on any solemn business without as solemn endeavours to fit them­selves for the work they took in hand, those series of preparati­ons before the ancient Athletica, as anoynting, and bathing, and rub­bing and dust, 'twere fit enough for a sermon to insist on the ex­ercise which they prepared for being reputed sacred and parts of their solemnest worship; and the moral of them would prove of good use to discipline and to bring us up to those spiritual Agones mentioned in Scripture, as [...], Eph. 4. 14. [...], 1 Cor. ix. D 26. and in the same place [...], and its preparative [...], Wrestling, cuffing and running, three of the five Olym­pian games adopted as it were into the Church, and spiritualiz'd by the Apostle for our imitation. But to pass by these and the like as less apposite for our discourse, what shall we think? Was it superstition, or rather mannerlyness that made the Graecian Priests so rub and wash and scour themselves before they would meddle with a sacrifice? [...] it was, and that we con­strue E superstition; but indeed it signifies an awe and reverence to the Deity they worship, and a fear and a care lest the un­preparedness of the Priest should pollute their sacrifice; as 'tis much to be feared that our holyest duties for want of this care are turn'd into sin: the vanities and faults of our very prayers adding to the number of those guilts we pray against, and every sacrifice even of atonement it self needing some expiation. To look a while on the highest part, and as it were the Sacraments F of their Religion, their Eleusinia sacra, resembling in one respect Christian Baptism, in another holy Orders. What a multitude of rites and performances were required of every one before his ad­mission to them? For their [...] being divided into two classes, the less or lower sort were praeludia to the greater, Plut. p. 48. or as the Scho­liast on Aristophanes hath it more clearly to our purpose, [...], [Page 134] a premundation or presanctification A of them that sued to be admitted higher: as Baptism, Confirmation and a Christian education in the Church, fits us for the partici­pations of those mysteries which the other sacraments present to us, so that it punctually notes that preparation we here talk of: for before they were admitted to those grand [...] and [...] they were (saith Suidas) to spend a year or two in a lower form, undergo a shop of purgations, [...], and many more; so that Tertullian could not without wonder and praise of their so­lemnities B observe tot suspiria epoptarum, Init. l. i. in Valen. & multam in adytis divini­tatem. 'Twas no mean toil nor ordinary merit that was required to make them capable of these [...], as Aristophanes calls them.Plut. ibid. The ground of all the ceremony we may observe to be the natural impurity which the Heathens themselves acknowledge to be in every man: as may appear most distinctly by Iamblicus, Protrept. though they knew not clearly at what door it came in at: sure they were they found it there, and therefore their own reason C suggested them that things of an excellent purity, of an inherent or at least an adherent sanctity, were not to be adventured on by an impure nature, [...], saith Clement, till it had by some laborious prescribed means somewhat rid it self of its pollutions; and this the Barbarian did [...] (saith he) thinking the bare washing of the outward parts suffi­cient: but the Graecians, whom learning had made more substan­tial in their Worship, required moreover an habituate temper D of passions, longam castimoniam & sedatam mentem, that the inward calmness and serenity of the affections might perform the promi­ses of the outward purity. In sum, when they were thus qualified and had fulfil'd the period, or circle of their purgation required to their [...], they were at length admitted intra adyta ad epoptica sacra, where all the mysteries of their Theology were revealed to them. All which seems to me (as much as can be expected from their dim imperfect knowledge) to express the state of E grace and saving knowledge in the world; and also the office of ministring in sacred things, into which no man was thought fit to be received or initiated but he which had undergone a prentiship of purgations: for although those Eleusynia of theirs, at a Christians examination would prove nothing but religious de­lusions, containing some prodigies of their mythical divinity; in sum, but grave specious puppets and solemn serious nothing, yet hence it may appear that the eye of nature though cheated in F the main, taking that for a sacred mystery, which was but a prodi­gious vanity, yet kept it self constant in its ceremonies; would not dare or hope to approach abruptly to any thing which it could believe to be holy. Now shall we be more sawcy in our devo­tions, and insolent in our approaches to either the throne of Ma­jesty [Page 135] A or grace of our true God, than they were to the unprofitable empty [...], of their false? Shall we call the mannerliness of the Heathen up in judgment against the Christian rudeness? 'Twill be an horrid exprobration at the day of Doom, when a neat, wash't, respectful Gentile shall put a swinish, miry negligent Christian to shame; such a one who never took so much care to trim himself to entertain the bridegroom, as the Heathen did to adore an empty gaud, a vain ridiculous bauble. Yet is not their B example prescribed you as an accomplish't pattern, as the pitch to aim at and drive no higher: but rather as a [...] a sar­casm or contumely engrav'd in Marble to upbraid you mightily if you have not gone so far. All that they practised was but super­ficial and referring to the body, and therein the washing of the outsides: yours must be inward, and of the soul: which is the next word in the doctrine, the specification of it by the subject noted in the Text by [...], the way, and expressed in the latter C part of the subject of my proposition, the Preparation of the soul.

This Preparation consists in removing those burthens, and wip­ing off those blots of the soul which any way deface or oppress it; in scouring off that rust and filth which it contracted in the Womb, and driving it back again as near integrity as may be. And this was the aim and business of the wisest among the Anci­ents, who conceived it possible fully to repair what was lost, be­cause D the privation was not total: and finding some sparks of the primitive flame still warm within them, endeavour'd and hoped hard to enliven them. To this purpose a great company of them, saith S. Austin, puzled themselves in a design of purging the soul per [...], & consecrationes theurgicas, but all in vain, as Porphyry himself confesses; No man, saith he, by this theurgick Magick could ever purge himself the nearer to God, or wipe his eyes clear enough for such a vi­sion. They indeed went more probably to work, which used no o­ther E magick or exorcism to cast out these Devils, to clear and purge the soul, but only their reason, which the Moralist set up and main­tain'd against [...] and [...], the two ringleaders of sensuali­ty. To this purpose did Socrates the first and wisest Moralist furnish and arm the reasonable faculty with all helps and defensations that Philosophy could afford it, that it might be able to shake off and disburthen it self of those encumbrances which naturally weighed and pressed it downward,Arist. 2. Phy. c. 23. ut exoneratus animus naturali vigore in F aeterna se attolleret: where if that be true which some observe of So­crates, that his professing to know nothing, was because all was taught him by his [...]: I wonder not that by others his [...] is called [...], and consecrated into a Deity: for certainly never Devil bore so much charity to mankind, and treachery to his own kingdom, as to instruct him in the cleansing of his soul: [Page 136] whereby those strong holds of Satan are undermined, which can­not A subsist but on a stiff and deep Clay foundation. From these beginnings of Socrates, the moralists ever since have toil'd hard at this task, to get the soul [...], as Iambl. phrases it, out of that corruption of its birth, that impurity born with it, which the soul contracts by its conversation with the body, and from which they say only Philosophy can purge it. For it is Philoponus his ob­servation, that that Canon of the Physicians, That the inclinations of the soul necessarily follow the temper of the body, is by all men set down B with that exception implied, unless the Man have studied Philoso­phy, for that study can reform the other, [...], make the soul contemn the commands, and arm it against the influences and poysons and infections of the body. In sum, the main of Philosophy was to this purpose, to take off the soul from those corporeal depen­dences, and so in a manner restore it to its primitive self; that is, to some of that divine perfection with which it was infused, for then is the soul to be beheld in its native shape, when 'tis stript C of all its passions. At other times you do not see the soul, but some froth and weeds of it, as the gray part of the Sea is not to be called Sea, [...], some scurf and foam and weeds that lye on the top of it. So then to this spiritualizing of the soul, and recovering it to the simplicity of its essence, their main precepts were to quell and suppress [...], as Ma­ximus Tyrius speaks, that turbulent, prachant common people of the soul, all the irrational affections, and reduce it [...], into a Mo­narchy D or regal government, where reason might rule Lord and King. For whensoever any lower affection is suffered to do any thing, there, saith Philoponus, we do not work like men but some other creatures. Whosoever suffer their lower nutritive faculties to act freely, [...], these men are in danger to become trees: that is, by these operations they differ nothing from meer plants. So those that suffer their sensitive appetites, lust and rage to exercise at freedom, are not to be reckoned men, but E beasts, [...], &c. then only will our actions argue us men, when our reason is at the forge. This was the aim and busi­ness of Philosophy to keep us from unmanning our selves, to restore reason to its scepter, to rescue it from the tyranny of that most atheistical usurper, as Iambl. calls the affections; and from hence he which lived according to those precepts of Philosophy was said both by them and Clement, and the Fathers [...], and in Austin, Secundum intellectum vivere, to live according to the gui­dance F of the reasonable soul. Which whosoever did, saith Plotinus, though by it in respect of divinity he was not perfect, yet at last should be sure to find a gracious providence, first to perfect, then to crown his natural moderate well tempered endeavour, as Au­stin cites it out of him, L. 10. de civit. Dei. This whose course [Page 137] A and proceedings and assent of the soul, through these Philosophi­cal preparations to spiritual perfection, is summarily and clearly set down for us in Photius out of Isidorus, Philosophically observed to consist in three steps, [...], &c. The first business of the soul is to call in those parts of it which were engaged in any for­raign fleshly imployment, and retire and collect it self unto its self: and then secondly, it learns to quit it self, to put off the whole natural man, [...], its own fashions and conceits: all the noti­ons, B all the pride of humane reason, and set it self on those things which are nearest kin to the soul, that is spiritual affairs: and then thirdly, [...], it falls into holy enthusiasms and spiritual elevations, which it continues, till it be changed and led into the calm and serenity above the state of man, agreeable to the tranquillity and peace which the Gods enjoy. And could the Philosophers be their own Scholars, could they exhibit that feli­city which they describe and fansie, they might glory in their C morality, and indeed be said to have prepared and purged the soul for the receit of the most pure and spiritual guest. But certainly their speculation out-ran their practice; and their very morality was but Theorical, to be read in their books and wishes far more legible, than in their lives and their enjoyments. Yet some de­grees also of purity, or at least a less measure of impurity they attained to, only upon the expectation and desire of happiness proposed to them upon condition of performance of moral pre­cepts; D for all things being indifferently moved to the obtaining of their summum bonum; all, I say, not only rational agents, [...], as Andronicus saith on the Ethicks, which have nothing but nature to incite them to it; the natural man may upon a sight and liking of an happiness proposed on severe condi­tions, call himself into some degrees of moral temper, as best suiting to the performance of the means, and obtaining of the end he looks for; and by this temper be said to be morally better than E another, who hath not taken this course to subdue his passions. And this was evident enough among the Philosophers, who were as far beyond the ordinary sort in severity of conversation, as depth of learning; and read them as profitable precepts in the example of their lives, as ever the Schools breathed forth in their Lectures. Their profession was incompatible with many vices, and would not suffer them to be so rich in variety of sins as the vulgar: and then whatsoever they thus did, an unregenerate Christian may F surely perform in a far higher measure, as having more choice of ordinary restrainment from sin than ever had any heathen; for it will be much to our purpose to take notice of those ordinary re­straints by which unregenerate men may be, and are curbed, and kept back from sinning; and these, saith Austin, God affords to the very reprobates, Non continens in ira suas misericordias. Much [Page 138] to this same purpose hath holy Maximus in those admirable Secti­ons,A [...], where most of the restraints he speaks of are competible to the unregenerate, [...], &c. 1. Fear of men. 2. Denunciation of judgments from Heaven. 3. Temperance and moral vertues: nay sometimes other moral vices, as [...], vain glory or ostentation of integrity. 4. Natural impressions to do to others as we would be done to. 5. Clearness of judgment in dis­cerning good from evil. 6. An expectation of a reward for any thing well done. Lastly, some gripes and twinges of the Conscience: to B all add a tender disposition, a good Christian education, common custom of the countrey where one lives, where some vices are out of fashion: nay at last the word of God daily preached; not a love, but servile fear of it. These I say, and the like may outwardly restrain unregenerate men from riots; may curb and keep them in, and consequently preserve the soul from that weight of the multitude of sins which press down other men to a desparation of mercy. Thus is one unregenerate man less engaged in sin than C another, and consequently his soul less polluted; and so in all like­lihood more capable of the ordinary means of salvation, than the more stubborn habituate sinner; when every aversion, every com­mission of every sin doth more harden against grace, more alien and set at a greater distance from Heaven: and this briefly we call a moral preparation of the soul; and a purging of it, though not absolutely from sin, yet from some measure of reigning sin, and disposing of it to a spiritual estate: and this is no more than I D learn from Bradwardine in his 16. de causa Dei, ch. 37. A servile fear, a sight of some inconvenience, and moral habit of vertue, and the like, Multum retrahunt à peccato, inclinant ad opera bona, & sic ad charitatem, & gratiam, & opera verè grata praeparant & disponunt. And so I come to my last part, to shew of what use this prepara­tion of the soul is, in order to Christs birth in us, the ways of the Lord.

I take no great joy in presenting controversies to your ears out of E this place; yet seeing I am already fallen upon a piece of one, I must now go through it; and to quit it as soon as I can, present the whole business unto you in some few propositions, of which some I shall only recite as conceiving them evident enough by their own light; the rest I shall a little insist on, and then apply and drive home the profit of all to your affections. And in this pardon me, for certainly I should never have medled with it, had not I resol­ved it a Theory that most nearly concerned your practice, and a F speculation that would instruct your wills as well as your under­standings. The propositions which contain the sum of the business are these.

1. No preparation in the world can deserve or challenge Gods san­ctifying grace: the Spirit bloweth where it listeth, and cannot [Page 139] A by any thing in us be predetermin'd to its object or its work.

2. The Spirit is of power to work the conversi [...]n of any the greatest sinner: at one minute to strike the most obdurate heart and soften it, and out of the unnatural womb of stones infinitely more unfruitful than barrenness and age had made the womb of Sarah, to raise up children unto Abraham. According to the [...] of Aristotle [...],Sect. 1. pro. 2. diseases are sometimes cur'd when the patient is at the extremity or height of danger B in an ecstasie and almost quite gone.

3. 'Tis an ill Consequence, that because God can and sometimes doth call unprepared sinners, therefore 'tis probable he will deal so with thee in particular, or with unprepared men in general. God doth not work in conversion as a physical agent, to the extent of his power, but according to the sweet disposition and counsel of his Will.

4. In unprepared hearts there be many profest enemies to grace, C ill dispositions, ambition, atheism, pride of spirit, and (in chief) an habit in a voluptuous settled course of sinning, an indefatigable resolute walking after their own lusts. And therefore there is very little hope that Christ will ever vouchsafe to be born in such polluted hardned souls. For 'tis Basil's observation, that that speech of the fools heart, There is no God, was the cause that the Gentiles were given over to a reprobate sense, and fell headlong [...], into all manner of abominations. Hence it is that Jobius in D Photius observes that in Scripture some are called dogs, Mat. xv. 26. some unworthy to receive the mysteries of the Kingdom of Heaven, Mat. xiii. 11. that some hated the light and came not to it, Joh. iii. 20. as if all those had taken a course to make themselves uncapa­ble of mercy, and by a perfect hostility frighted Christ out of their coasts. In the liberal dispensation of miracles in the Gospel you would wonder to see Christ a niggard in his own countrey, yet so in respect of other places he was, and did not many miracles E there, because of their unbelief, Mat. xiii. 58. not that their incre­dulity had manacled him, had shortned his hand, or strait­ned his power, but that miracles which when they met with a passive willingness, a contentedness in the patient to receive and believe them, were then the ordinary instruments of faith and conversion, would have been but cast away upon obdurate hearts: so that for Christ to have numbred miracles among his unbelieving Countrey-men no way prepared to receive them, had F been an injurious liberality, and added only to their unexcusa­bleness; which contradicts not the Axiom of St, Paul, 1 Cor. xiii. 22. That some signs are only for unbelievers: for even those unbe­lievers must have within them [...], a proneness or readiness to receive them with belief, [...], &c. in Jobius, to open to the spirit knocking by those miracles, and improve them to their best profit.

[Page 140]5. Though God needs not, yet he requires moral preparation of us, as an ordinary means to make us more capable of grace: for A although according to Saint Austin, Ne ipsâ quidem justitiâ nostrâ indiget Deus: yet according to Salvian's limitation, Fget juxta praeceptionem suam, licet non juxta potentiam: eget secundum legem suam, non eget secundum Majestatem. We are to think that God hath use of any thing which he commands, and therefore must perform whatever he requires, and not dare to be confident of the end, without the observation of the means prescribed. 'Tis too much boldness, if not presumption, to leave all to his omnipo­tent B working, when he hath prescribed us means to do somewhat our selves.

6. Integrity and Honesty of Heart, Vid. Wisd. 3. 14. a sober moral life, and chiefly humility and tenderness of spirit: in summ, whatever degree of Innocence, either study, or fear, or love, or natural disposition can work in us, some or all of which may in some measure be found in some men not yet regenerate, are good preparations for Christs birth in us; so saith Clement of Philosophy that it doth [...],C &c. make ready and prepare the way against Christs coming, [...], cooperate with other helps that God hath given us; all with this caution, that it doth only prepare not perfect; facilitate the pursuit of wisdom to us, [...], which God may bestow on us without this means. To this pur­pose hath Basil a notable homily to exhort scholars to the study of forreign, humane, especially Grecian learning, and to this end saith he that we prepare our selves [...], to the Heavenly spiritual Philo­sophy. D In the like kind the Fathers prescribe good works of charity, observing out of the xix. of St. Matthew, that the distribution of all their substance to the poor was a praeludium in the Primitive believers to the following of Christ, Prius vendant omnia quam sequan­tur: from whence he calls alms deeds, exordia quasi & incuna­bula conversionis nostrae. The like may be said, though not in the same degree, of all other courses, quibus carnalium sarcinarum im­pedimenta projicimus: for if these forementioned preparations be E meer works of nature in us, as, some would have them, then do they naturally encline the subject for the receiving of grace when it comes, and by fitting, as it were, and organizing the subject faci­litate its entrance; or if they be works of Gods restraining pre­venting grace, as 'tis most orthodoxally agreed on, then are they good harbingers for the sanctifying spirit: good comfortable symptoms that God will perfect and crown the work which he hath begun in us.F

7. Gods ordinary course, as far as by events we can judge of it, is to call and save such as are thus prepared. Thus to instance in a few of the first and chiefest. 'Twas appointed by God that she only should be vouchsafed the blessed office of dignity of being the [Page 141] A [...] Christ's Mother, who was [...], saith he in Photius, fuller of vertues than any else of her sex could brag of. In like manner, that the rest of the family, Christs Father and brethren, in account, on earth should be such whose vertues had bestowed a more eminent opinion, though not place upon them amongst men: so was Joseph and his sons [...], famous for very just men, James the brother of the Lord [...], holy from the womb (as Eusebius cites it) B called by the Jews [...], saith he out of Hegesippus which he inter­prets [...], the stay of the people and justice it self. In brief; if a Cornelius be to be called from Gentilism to Christianity, ye shall find him in the beginning of his character Act. x. 1. to be a devout man and one that feared God with all his house, gave much alms to the people, and prayed to God alway: one cut out as it were [...], to be the first-fruit of the Gentiles. Now though none of these vertues can be imputed to C nature in the substance of them, but acknowledge a more super­natural spiritual agent in them, yet are they to be reckoned as preparations to Christs birth in them, because they did precede it: for so in respect of his real incarnation in the world, the type of his spiritual in the soul, Mary was a vertuous pure virgin before the Holy Ghost overshadowed her, Joseph a just man before the Holy Ghost appeared to him, Mat. i. 19. James holy from the womb, and Cornelius capable of all that commendation for devo­tion D and alms-deeds, Acts x. 1. before either Christ was preach't to him in the 37. or the Holy Ghost fell on him, in the 44. verse.

8. The Conversion of unprepared hardned blasphemous sinners, is to be accounted as a most rare and extraordinary work of Gods power and mercy, not an every days work like to be bestowed on every habituate sinner: and therefore 'tis commonly accompanied with some evident note of difference to point it out for a miracle. Thus E was Paul called from the Chief of sinners, 1 Tim. i. 15. to the chief of Saints, but with this mark that Christ Jesus might shew forth all long suffering, &c. which was in him, first, and perhaps last in that degree: that others in his pitch of blasphemies might not pre­sume of the like miracle of mercy. And indeed he that is thus called must expect what Paul found, a mighty tempest throughout him, three days at least without sight or nourishment, if not a [...] or [...] a swoon, a ki [...]d of ecstasie of the whole F man, at this tumultuary driving out of this high, rank, insolent, habituate body of sin. 'Tis observed that when the news of Christ birth was brought by the wise men, the city was straight in an uproar, Herod was much troubled and all Jerusalem with him, Mat. ii. 3. for it seems they expected no such matter: and there­fore so strange and sudden news produced nothing but astonish­ment [Page 142] and tumult; whilst Symeon, who waited for the consolation of A Israel makes no such strange business of it; takes him presently into his embraces, and familiarly hugs him in his arms, having been before acquainted with him by his faith. Thus will it at Christs spiritual [...], be in an unprepared heart, his reign­ing Herod- sins, and all the Jerusalem and Democracy of affections, a strange tumult of repining old habituate passions will struggle fiercely, and shake the whole house before they leave it. If a strong man be to be dispossessed of house or abode, without warn­ing,B a hundred to one he will do some mischief at his departure, and draw at least some pillar after him: when as a prepared Sy­meon's soul lays hold as soon as he hears of him, is already orga­niz'd, as it were, for the purpose, holds out the arms and bosom of faith, and at the first minute of his appearance takes him into his spiritual embraces. This very preparation either had denied the strong man entrance, or else binds his hands, manacles that blind Sampson, and turns him out in peace, and then the spirit enters in­to C that soul (which it self or its harbingers have prepared) in a soft still wind, in a still voice, and the soul shall feel its gale, shall hear its whispering, and shall scarce discern, perhaps not at all observe the moment of its entrance.

Lastly, by way of Corollary to all that hath been said, though God can and sometimes doth call blasphemous sinners, though nothing in us can facilitate Gods action to him, though none of our performan­ces or his lower works in us, can merit or challenge his sanctify­ing D grace; though in brief all that we can do is in some respect enmity to grace; yet certainly there is far more hope of the just care­ful moral man, which hath used all those restraints which are given him, that he shall be called and saved; of such a one we are to judge far more comfortably, and expect more confidently than of another more habituate sinner, negligent of the commands of either God or nature. And this I conceive I have in some mea­sure proved through each part of the former discourse, and so I E should dismiss it, and come to application, but that I am stay­ed and thwarted by a contrary proposition maintained by a sort of our popular preachers, with more violence than discretion, which I conceive to be of dangerous consequence, and therefore worth opening to you. In setting down the pitch that an unrege­nerate man may attain to, and yet be damned, some of our preaching writers are wont duly to conclude with this perempto­ry doctrine, that of a mere moral man though never so severe a censor F of his own ways, never so rigid an exactor of all the precepts of na­ture and morality in himself; yet of this man there is less hope, ei­ther that he shall be converted or saved, than the most debauched ruf­fian under Heaven. The charity and purity of this Doctrine you shall judge of, if you will accompany me a while, and first ob­serve [Page 143] A that they go so far with the meer moral man, and drive him so high, that at his depression again many a regenerate man falls with him under that title, and in issue, I fear, all will prove meer moralists in their doom, which do fall short of that degree of zeal, which their either faction or violent heats pretend to; and so as Tertullian objects to the Heathen, expostulating with them why they did not deifie Themistocles and Cato as well as Jove and Hercules, Quot potiores viros apud inferos reliquistis? They leave ma­ny B an honester man in Hell, than some of those whom their favour or faction hath besainted.

Secondly, observe to what end or use this doctrine may serve, but as an allay to civil honesty in a Commonwealth, and fair, just dealing, which, forsooth, of late is grown so luxuriant, the world is like to languish and sink, 'tis so overburthened with it: and on the other side an encouragement to the sinner in his course, an en­gagement in the pursuit of vice to the height and [...], as the C pitch and cue which God expects and waits for, as they conclude on these grounds, because he lookt upon Peter not till the third de­nial, and then called Paul when he was most mad against the Christians: as if the nearest way to Heaven were by Hell-gates, and Devils most likely to become saints; as if there were merit in abominations, and none in the right way to Christianity, but whom Atheism would be ashamed of; as if because the natural man understands not, &c. all reliques of natural purity were so­lemnly D and pro formâ to be abandoned to make us capable of spi­ritual. 'Tis confessed that some have been and are thus converted, and by an ecstasie of the spirit snatched and caught like firebrands out of the fire; and though some must needs find their spiritual joys infinitely encreased, [...] by that gall of bitter­ness, from which they were delivered, and are therefore more abundantly engaged to God, as being not the objects only, but the miracle of his mercy: But yet for all this shall one or two E variations from the ordinary course, from the [...] be turned into a ruled case? Shall the rarer examples of Mary Mag­dalen or a Saul prescribe and set up? Shall we sin to the purpose, as if we meant to threaten God that 'twere his best and safest course to call us? Shall we abound in rebellions, that grace may superabound? God pardon and forbid.

Thirdly, consider the reason of their proposition, and you shall judge of the truth of it, and besides their own fancies and resolu­tion F to maintain them, they have none but this, The meer moral man trusts in his own rigteousness, and this confidence in the arm of flesh, is the greatest enemy to sanctifying grace, which works by spiritual humility. To which we answer distinctly, that the fore­said pride, trust or confidence, is neither effect nor necessary ad­junct of morality; but an absolute defection from the rules there­of; [Page 144] and therefore whatsoever proceeds either as an effect, or con­sequent A from pride or confidence cannot yet be imputed to mora­lity at all, or to the moral men per se, no more than the thundring or lightning is to be imputed to my walking, because it thunders whilst I walk; or preaching to my standing still, because whilst I stand still I preach; [...], saith Aristotle in the first Post. c. 4. It doth not lighten because I walk, but that is an accident proceeding from some other cause. To strive against the motions of the spirit, and so to render conversion B more difficult, is an effect perhaps of pride or trust, but yet is not to be imputed to morality, though the moral man be proud or self-trusting, because this pride or self-trusting is not an effect, but an accident of morality; and therefore their judgment should be able to distinguish and direct their zeal against the accidental vice, not the essential innocent vertue, against pride not morality. Besides, this pride is also as incident to him who is morally evil; nay, either supposes or makes its subject so, being formally a C breach of morality. For that [...] belonging to the under­standing, which is, not to think more highly on ones own worth than he ought, [...], Rom. xii. 3. Do we not find it commended and dilated on by Aristotle 4. Eth. 3. [...], &c. not to overprize his own worth, or to expect an higher reward than it in proportion deserves? So that he that trusts in his mora­lity for Heaven, doth eo nomine offend against morality, according to that of Salvian, Hoc ipsum genus maximae injustitiae est, si quis se ju­stum D praesumat; and indeed Aristotle and Seneca could say as much: and so then the accusation is unjust and contumelious; for to a moral man if he be truly so, this pride or confidence is incompa­tible: for do we not find that treble humility, [...] of the heart, [...] of the tongue, [...] of the actions, Ephes. iv. 2. handled also and prescribed by the Philosophers? In sum, that which in all moral precepts comes nearest pride or highminded­ness, is that [...], Eth. 4. 3. part of which is setting value E on ones self. But if you observe, this goes no farther than [...], honour or worldly pomp: as for the immortal blessedness of the soul, 'twas a thing infinitely above the pitch of their hope or confidence: the most perfect among them never pretended any jus meriti to it, and if they did, they had by so much the less hopes to attain to it. Now if it be supposed, as I fear is too true, that our moral men fall far short of the ancient Philosophers, if they be now adays confident and trust in their works for salvation, then F they do not make good their name; they are only so [...] and [...], abusively and notionally. And yet even these equivocal moral men seem to me in as good, if not better case, than the other term of comparison, the careless negligent debauch't men. For upon their grounds is it not as easie for the converting [Page 145] A spirit to enter and subdue one Lucifer, one proud Devil in the heart, otherwise pretty well qualified, as to deal with a whole legion of blasphemous, violent, riotous, railing, ignorant Devils? I have done all with the confutation of this loose groundless opini­on, which if 'twere true, would yet prove of dangerous conse­quence to be preached, in abating and turning our edge, which is of it self blunt and dull enough toward goodness: nay, certainly it hath proved scandalous to those without; as may appear by that B boast and exultancy of Campian in his Eighth reason, where he up­braids us English-men of our abominable Lutheran, licentious do­ctri [...]e, (as he calls it) Quanto sceleratior es, tanto vicinior gratiae: and therefore I do not repent that I have been somewhat large in the refuting of it; as also because it doth much import to the clearing of my discourse: for if the meer moral men be farthest from Heaven, then have I all this while busied my self, and tor­mented you with an unprofitable, nay injurious preparation, C whereas I should have prescribed you a shorter easier call, by being extremely sinful, according to these two Aphorisms of Hippocrates, [...], &c. The strongest bodies are in greatest dan­ger, and [...], the [...] and height of a disease is the fittest op­portunity for a miraculous cure.

But beloved, let us more considerately bethink our selves, let us study and learn and walk a more secure probable way to Hea­ven; and for those of us which are yet unregenerate, though we D obtained no grace of God, but that of nature and reason, and our Christianity to govern us, yet let us not contemn those ordinary re­straints which these will afford us: let us attend in patience, so­briety, and humility and prayers, the good time and leisures of the spirit; let us not make our reasonable soul, our profession of men, of Christians ashamed of us: let not the heathen and beasts have cause to blush at us; let us remain men till it may please him to call us into Saints; lest being plunged in habitual confi­dent E sinning, that Hell and Tophet on Earth, the very omnipo­tent mercy of God be in a manner foiled to hale us out again: let us improve, rack, and stretch our natural abilities to the highest; that although, according to our thirteenth Article, we cannot please God, yet we may not mightily provoke him. Let every man be in some proportion to his gifts Christs Baptist and forerunner, and harbinger in himself, that whensoever he shall appear or knock, he may enter, lodge and dwell without resistence. Lastly, after F all thy preparations be not secure, if the bridegroom will not vouchsafe to rest with you, all your provision is in vain; all the morality and learning, and gifts, and common graces, unless Christ at last be born in us, are but embryo's, nay abortives, rude, imperfect, horrid, [...], that Philosopher dies in his nonage in whom Christ was never born: The highest reach of [Page 146] years and learning is but infancy without the virility and manhood A of the spirit, by which we are made perfect men in Christ Jesus. Wherefore above all things in the world let us labour for this per­fection; let us melt and dissolve every faculty and spirit about us in pursuit of it, and at last seal, and bless, and crown our endea­vours with our prayers; and with all the Rhetorick, and means, and humility, and violence of our souls importune and lay hold on the sanctifying Spirit, and never leave till he hath blessed and breathed on us. O thou mighty, controuling, holy, hallowing B Ghost, be pleased with thine effectual working to suppress in us all resistence of the pride of nature, and prepare us for thy king­dom of grace here, and glory hereafter. Now to him which hath elected us, hath created and redeemed us, &c.

The X. Sermon.

JOHN vii. 48.‘Have any of the Pharisees believed on him?’

D IT is observable from History with what difficulty Religion attempts to propagate, and establish it self with the many: what Countenance and en­couragement it hath required from those things which are most specious, and pompous in the E World: how it hath been fain to keep its de­pendencies and correspondencies, and submit to the poor con­dition of sustaining it self by those beggarly helps which the World and the flesh will afford it. Two main pillars which it relies on are Power and Learning, the Camp and the Schools, or in a word, authority of great ones and countenance of Scho­lars; the one to force and extort obedience, the other to in­sinuate belief and assent, the first to ravish, the second to per­swade. One instance for all: if we would plant Christianity in Turky, we must first invade and conquer them, and then con­vince them of their follies: which about an hundred years ago F Cleonard proposed to most Courts of Christendom, (and to that end himself studied Arabick) that Princes would joyn their strength and Scholars their brains, and all surprize them in their own land and language, at once besiege the Turk and his Al­coran, put him to the sword, and his religion to the touchstone; command him to Christianity with an high hand, and then to [Page 148] shew him the reasonableness of our commands. Thus also may A we complain but not wonder that the Reformation gets ground so slow in Christendom, because the forces and potent abettors of the Papacy secure them from being led captive to Christ; as long as the Pope is riveted so fast in his chair, and as long as the rulers take part with him, there shall be no doubt of the truth of their religion; unless it please God to back our arguments with steel, and to raise up Kings and Emperours to be our Champions, we may question but never confute his supremacy. Let us come with B all the power and Rhetorick of Paul and Barnabas, all the demon­strations of reason and spirit, yet as long as they have such To­picks against us, as the authority of the Rulers and Pharisees, we may dispute out our hearts, and preach out our Lungs, and gain no proselytes: all that we shall get is but a scoffe and a curse, a Sarcasm and an Anathema, in the words next after my text, This people which know not the law are cursed, ver. 49. there is no heed to be taken to such poor contemptible fellows. To bring all home to the C business of the text; Let Christ come with all the enforcement and violence and conviction of his spirit, sublimity of his speech and miracles, all the power of Rhetorick and Rhetorick of his power, so that all that see or hear bear witness that never man spake as this man, yet all this shall be accounted but a delusion, but an in­chantment of some seduced wretches, unless the great men, or deep scholars will be pleased to Countenance them. And 'tis much to be feared they are otherwise possessed, and rather than this D shall not be followed, Christ shall be left alone; rather than they shall speak in vain, the Word it self shall be put to silence: and if they which were appointed to take and bring him to judgment shall be caught by him they came to apprehend, and turn their accusations into reverence, the Pharisees will not be without their reply, they are doctors in the Law, and therefore for a need can be their own Advocates: Then answered the Pharisees, are ye also deceived, have any of the rulers and Pharisees believed on him? E

Concerning the infidelity of the rulers in my Text, as being not so directly appliable to my audience, I shall forbear to speak. My discourse shall retire it self to the Pharisee, as being a pro­fessor of learning, brought up at the University in Jerusalem, and God grant his vices and infidelity be not also Academical.

The words we shall divide not into several parts but considera­tions, and read them either as spoken by the Pharisee, or recorded by the Evangelist. In the first, we have the [...], the rational F force of them as they are part of an argument, that they which be­lieved in Christ were deceived sub hâc formâ; he that would judge of the truth of his life, is to look which way the greatest scholars are affected, and then though in that case it concluded fallaciously, yet the argument was probable, and the point worth our dis­cussion; [Page 149] A that the judgment of learning and learned men, is much to be heeded in matters of Religion.

In the second we have the [...] and [...], the rational sense of the words being resolved, as affirmative interrogations are wont, into a negative Proposition, Have any, &c. The Pharisees did not believe on him, i. e. the greatest Scholars are not always the best Chri­stians. And first of the first, the authority of learning and learn­ed men in matters of Religion, noted from the logical force of the B words, Have any, &c.

Amongst other acts of Gods Providence and wise Oeconomy of all things, there is not one more observable than the succession of his Church, and dispensation of his most precious gifts attend­ing it; you shall not in any age find the flourishing of learning sever'd from the profession of Religion; and the proposition shall be granted without exception: Gods people were always the learnedst part of the world. Before the flood we are not so con­fident C as to define and set down the studies and proficiency in all kinds of knowledge amongst those long-liv'd ancients; how far soever they went belongs little to us. The Deluge made a great chasm betwixt us, and 'twould be hard for the liveliest eyes to pierce at such distance through so much water; let those who fancy the two Pillars, Joseph. lib. 1. cap. 4. in which all learning was engraven, the one of brick, the other of marble, to prevent the malice either of fire or water, please themselves with the fable, and seem to have D deduc'd all arts from Adam. Thus far 'tis agreed on, that in those times every Father being both a Priest and a King in his own Family, bestowed on his son all knowledge both secular and sacred which himself had attained to: Adam by tradition instruct­ing Seth, and Seth Enoch in all knowledge as well as righteousness. For 'tis Josephus his observation,Bell. Jud. l. 2. c. 4. that whilest Cain and his proge­ny employed themselves about wicked and illiberal inventions, groveling upon the earth, Seth and his bore up their thoughts as E well as eyes towards heaven, and observed the course and disci­pline of the stars: wherein it was easy to be exquisite, every mans age shewing him the several conjunctions and oppositions and other appearances of the luminaries, and so needing no successors to perfect his observations. Hence Philo calls Abraham [...], and says his knowledge in Astronomy led him to the notice of a Deity, and that his sublime speculation gave him the name of Abram a high exalted Father, before his Faith had given the better F Compellation of Abraham, Father of many Nations: hence from him, 1 Chaldaea, 2 Aegypt, 3 Greece, came all to the skill they brag of; so that Proclus made a good conjecture, that the Wisdom of the Chaldaeans was, [...] a gift of some of the gods, it coming from Abraham who was both a friend and in a manner an acquaintance of the true God, and far ancienter and [Page 150] wiser than any of their false. In sum, all learning as well as reli­gion A was pure and classical only among the Hebrews, as may ap­pear by Moses in his [...], the only true natural Philosophy that ever came into the World: so that even Longinus, which took the story of the Creation to be a fable, [...]. yet commends Moses his expression of it, Let there be light, and there was light] for a speech admirably suited to a God; for the greatest [...] or sublimity that any Rhetorician could strain for. And Demetrius Phalareus commends the Pentateuch to Ptolomy [...],B &c.Euseb. 1. p. 206. as the most Philosophical, accurate discourse he had ever heard of. And if by chance any scraps or shreds of knowledge were ever scat­tered among the Gentiles, they certainly fell from the Chaldaeans table: from whence in time the poor beggarly world gathered such baskets-ful, that they began to feed full, and be in good like­ing, and take upon them to be richer than their Benefactors, and Athens at last begins to set up as the only University in the World. But 'tis Austins observation, that 'twas in respect of Christ, and for C the propagation of the Church that learning was ever suffered to travel out of Jewry. Christ was to be preached and received among the Gentiles, and therefore they must be civiliz'd before-hand, lest such holy things being cast abruptly before swine, should only have been trampled on: or as Moses his books falling among the [...]oets, have been only distorted into fables, turned also into pro­digies, Metamorphoses, and Mythical divinity. Cum enim pro­phetae, &c. Under Abraham and Moses, whilest the learning and the D sermons of the Prophets were for Israels use, the Heathen world was as ignorant as irreligious; but about Romulus his time, when the Pro­phecies of Christ which belonged also to the Gentiles, were no longer whispered, but proclaimed by the mouth of Hosea, Amos, Isaiah, Micah, and Jonas from the reign of Uzziah, to Hezekiah Kings of Judah, then also began learning to flourish abroad among the Nations, to dilate it self over the World: Greece began to hearken after wisdom, and brag of its [...], Thales and the like,E ut fontes divinae & humanae sapientiae pariter erupisse videantur, That then secular knowledge might dare to shed it self among the na­tions, when Christ began to be revealed, the expectation of the Gentiles. 'Twere an infinite discourse to present unto you the like proceedings through all ages, the continual marriages, the Combinations, and never any divorce betwixt Learning and Reli­gion. The Fathers before mentioned are large in drawing it down to our hands in tables of collateral descent throughout all genera­tions; F and I hope the present state of the World will sufficiently avouch it. For what is all the beggarly skill of the Arabians in Physicks and the Mathematicks, all the Cabalisms of the Jews; in sum, all the rather folly than wisdom, that either Asia, or Africa, pretend to? what hath all the world beside that dare look a Chri­stian [Page 151] A in the face? I doubt not but this corner of Europe where we live, may challenge and put to shame, nay upbraid the ignorance of the learnedst Mahometan, and be able to afford some Champions which shall grapple with the tallest gyant, with the proudest son of Anak that Italy can boast of. I will hope and pray, and again dare to hope, that as all Europe hath not more moderation and purity of Religion than this Kingdom, so it never had a more learned Clergy; never more incouragement for learning from reli­gion; B never more advantages to religion from learning. But all this while we hover in the air, we keep upon the wing, and talk only [...], at large and in Thesi: we must descend lower to the [...] and hypothesis here; where heed is to be taken to the Pharisee, to the Doctor in my Text. The Disciples were but Fisher­men and Mechanicks, illiterate enough, and yet a word of theirs shall more sway mine assent, and rule my faith, than the proudest dictates out of Moses chair. And thus indeed are we now adayes C ready to repose as much trust in the Shop as in the Schools, and rely more on the authority of one lay-professor, than the sagest El­ders in theirs or our Israel. Learning is accounted but an ostenta­tious complement of young scholars, that will never bring the Pa­stor or his flock the nearer to the way toward Heaven. But to recal our judgments to a milder temper, we are to learn from Clemens, that although the Wisdom of God, and Doctrine of the Gos­pel be [...], able to maintain, and fence, and autho­rize D it self, yet even Philosophy and secular learning is of use, nay necessity to defeat the treacheries and sophisms, and stratagems of the Adversary: And although the truth of Scripture be the bread we live on, the main staff and stay of our subsistence; yet this exoterical learning, [...], as Sophronius calls them, this [...] of the Schools must be served in [...], as cates and dainties to make up the banquet; nay they are not only for superfluity, but solid and material uses. E'Twas a custome of old,l. 1. p. 9. saith Dionysius Halic. to build cities [...], never far from some hill, or mountain, that beside the natural strength, the hold from the foundation, they may receive some security and safeguard from so stout and tall a neighbour: thus will it stand us upon, so to build our faith upon a rock, that we may also have some shelter near us to fence and fortifie our fabrick, when the wind or tempest shall arise. Had not Peter indeed and the rest at Christs call left their ignorance with F their nets, and trades: had they not been made scholars as well as Disciples, all trades promiscuously might justly have challenged and invaded the pulpit, and no man denyed to preach that was able to believe. But you are to know that their calling was an inspiration, they were furnish't with gifts as well as graces; and whatever other learning they wanted, sure I am they were the [Page 152] greatest Linguists in the world. Yea, the power and convincing A force of argument,August. de [...]iv. De [...], l. 5. c. 53. which the heathen observed in Peter, made them get the Oracles to proclaim that he had learnt Magick from his Master. To drive the whole business to an issue in brief, take it in some few propositions.

1. There is not so great a dependence betwixt learning and religion in particular persons, as we have observed to be in Ages and Countries: so that though plenty of knowledge be a symptom or judiciary sign, that that Church where it flourishes is the true Church of B God, yet it is no necessary argument, that that man where it in special resides is the sincerest Christian; for upon these terms is the wisest man, the scribe the disputer of the world, the loudest braggers of Jews or Grecians are found guilty of spiritual igno­rance, 1 Cor. i. as the last part of our discourse shall make evi­dent.

2. Matters of Faith are not Ultimò resolubilia in principia rationis, therefore not to be resolved any farther than the Scriptures; they are not to beg authority from any other science; for this is the C true Metaphysicks, [...], the mistress and commandress of all other knowledges, which must perpetually do their homage to it, as servants always to attend and confirm its propo­sals, never to contradict it, as Aristotle hath it, Met. 2. 2.

3. Though Faith depend not upon reason, though it subsist entirely upon its own bottom, and is then most purely Faith when it relies not on reason, and adheres wholly to the [...] of Gods word, yet doth the concurrence, and agreement, and evidence of reason add D much to the clearness, and beauty, and splendor of it: takes away all fears and jealousies, and suspicious surmisings out of the under­standing, and bestows a resolution and constancy on it. For Faith, though in respect of its ground Gods word, it be most infal­lible, yet in its own nature is, as the Philosopher defines it, a kind of opinion, and in our humane frailty subject to demurs, and doubts, and panick terrors, for fear it be false grounded, and therefore Aristotle faith of it, that it differs from knowledge [...] E [...] as a sickly man or a strong, 'tis very weak and aguish, subject to sweats, and colds, and hourly distempers: whereas the evidence and assurance of sense and reason added to it, bestows a full health and strength upon it, an [...], a per­fect state that it shall never be forced or frighted out of. In brief, where reason gives its suffrage, it unvails faith, and to adherence super-adds evidence, and teaches us to feel, and touch, and handle what before we did believe; to gripe, and hold, and even F possess what before we apprehended: and these are believers in a manner elevated above an earthly condition, initiated to the state which is all vision,Heb. iv. 13. where every thing is beheld [...], naked and display'd, as the entrals of a creature cut down [Page 153] A the back;2 Cor. III. 28. or with open face beholding as in a glass, 2 Cor. iii. 28.

4. There be some difficulties in Religion at which an illiterate under­standing will be struck in a maze; some depths of mystery where an Elephant can scarce tread water, a Lamb must not hope to wade. Many above the apprehensions of the most capacious brain, where reason being not able to express, must be content to shadow, and describe in some rude lines what it cannot perform in pourtraicture: and here, I say, learning, though it cannot reach, yet can heave up B and point at; profit, though not perfect us, help us to some ima­ges and resemblances, to conceive that which we cannot fully com­prehend: so saith Philoponus, will Mathematical abstractions facilitate the simplicity of Gods essence to our understandings, the lucid na­ture of the Sun express the brightness of his glory, and the mysteri­ous numbers of the Pythagoreans, represent the Trinity to our phan­sies. And thus doth Zoroastes in Patricius, Philosophari de Deo, sub­due, as it were, divinity to reason, and raise up reason to joyn issue C with divinity, and by his [...], that paternal depth made of three threes, comprise all the secrets of the Godhead. But besides these secrets of the upper Cabinet, these supernatural depths, there are others secundae alti­tudinis, and as Halicar. l. 1. p. 11. calls those which are above the reach of all but Philosophers, [...], and Aristotle [...], natural miracles, which none but Scholars can attain to. And these I hope shall never be discust upon a shopboard, or enter into D any brain that is not before well ballast with weight and substance at the bottom: I need not name them to you, you may know them by this, that when they come into an empty brain, they breed winds, and turn all into vertigoes and dizziness. There be yet farther lights of a third magnitude, which yet every one hath not eyes to gaze on, and of this condition are almost all the speculations in divinity; nay the ordinariest truth in a Catechism can scarce be forced into a vulgar understanding; his brain is not set that way, E and many of our subtilest worldlings have mistaken the Virgin Mary for an Angel, and the Apostles Creed, where only they find mention of her, for a prayer: and then you cannot imagine what stead a little learning would stand these men in, what even mi­racles 'twould work upon them.

5. 'Tis but necessity and exigence of nature that those which are the weak should apply themselves for help and directions to those that are stronger; the child in a Cradle must be put to a Nurse, which F may give it suck till it be able to eat, and for a while bear it in her arms, that it may be taught to go. There be in nature, faith Ari­stotle in his Mechan. many wants; she performs not all our needs, and therefore Engines were invented to supply defects. Thus is Art a Machina or invention, [...], to furnish us with those abilities which nature was a niggard in: [Page 154] and therefore to deprive our selves of this guidance when it is of­fered,Arist. Rhet. l. 1. c. 7. A is [...], to put out an eye of his that hath but one in all, which was of old a great aggravation to the injury in the Rhetor. indeed to leave our selves desperately blind. [...], in lambl. In matters of Religion we must not so much as speak, nay, not think without a Candle, we shall want the guidance of some Teacher to direct every such word out of our mouths or thought into our hearts. An ignorant man must not have leave so much as to meditate on God without a B guide;Cl [...]m. p. 56. for he is mad, say the Philosophers, and then every thought of his will be a kind of delirium or phrenzy. 'Tis the law of nature, saith the Historian, Dion. Hal. l. 1. p. 6. [...], that superiors should have a kind of sovereignty over all that are inferior to them, a magisterium and command over them, to rule and order them; and this superiority and sovereignty hath the learned Pastor, or gene­rally the Scholar over all ignorant men, be they never so rich or potent; and whosoever denies or scorns thus to obey, I say not, is C to be slain (as the Law was in the ancient wars) [...],Ibid. p. 533. without an assizes; but to be condemned of much peevishness and more stupidity, and his punishment is, Let him fall into his own hands, i. e. be ruled by a fool or mad man.

6. Much of the speculative part of Religion may be had from a Pha­risee as well as a Disciple. Christ himself bears witness of him, that he was orthodox in matters concerning the Law: They sit in Moses chair, and therefore whatsoever they bid you, that observe and do, Mat,D xxiii. 3. They err indeed in prescribing their additions to duty, as divine command, but the chief obliquity was in their lives: they were Hereticks, nay Apostates from their doctrine, and therefore do not after their works, for they say and do not, verse 4. If I am resolved of such a mans abilities in learning, but see him a scandalous liver, I will borrow of his gifts, and pray God to en­crease his graces. In matters of spiritual joy and sorrow, I will, if I can, be counselled by an heart which once was broken, that I E may see how he recovered, and repair my breaches by a pattern; and yet even these things may be learnt from him which never had them, but in his speculation: as the Physician may cure a disease, though himself was never sick of it. But for the ordinary Theories of Religion, I will have patience to receive instructions from any one, and not examine his practices, but in modesty, and in sub­mission, and humility receive the Law at his mouth. But all this with caution, [...], as to a guide not a monarch F of my Faith; rule he shall my belief, but not tyrannize over it. I will assent to my teacher 'till I can disprove him, but adhere, and anchor, and fix my self on the Scripture.

7. In matters of superstruction, where Scripture lays the founda­tion, but interpreters, i. e. private spirits build upon it, some [Page 155] A gold, some stubble, &c. and I cannot judge or discern which is firmliest rooted on the foundation; I will take the Philosophers counsel in the first of his Rhetor. and observe either [...] or [...], be guided either by the ancientest, if they have shewed themselves in the cause, or else men alive, which be best reputed of for integrity and judgement: I shall scarce trust the honestest man you can commend to me, unless I have some knowledge of his parts; nor the learned'st you can cry up, unless I can believe B somewhat in his sincerity.

8. All the contradictions and new ways of my own brain, oppo­site or wide from the current of the learned, I must suspect for a work of my own phansie, not entitle them to Gods spirit in me. Verebar omnia opera mea, saith Job, whatever a man can call his own, he must be very cautious and jealous over it. For 'tis no less then atheism which the scorners of the last age are to fall upon by walking after their own lusts, 2 Pet. iii. 3. And thus was the Pharisees pra­ctice C here, who makes use of his own authority to deny Christ; 'twas the Pharisees that said, Have any of the Pharisees believed on him? There is not a more dangerous mother of heresies in the midst of piety, then this one, that our phansie first assures us that we have the spirit, and then that every phansie of ours is Theopneust, the work of the spirit. There are a multitude of deceits got alto­gether here; 1. We make every idle perswasion of our own the evidence of Gods spirit, then we joyn infallibility to the person, D being confident of the gift; then we make every breath of our nostrils, and flame that can break out of our hearts an immediate effect of the spirit and fire which hath spiritually enlivened us, and then we are sure it is authentical; and all this while we never examine either the ground or deductions from it, but take all up­on trust from that everlasting deceiver our own heart, which we ought to sit upon and judge of by proofs and witnesses, by com­paring it with other mens dictates, probably as godly, perhaps E more learned, but certainly more impartial judges of thee, then thou canst be of thy self.

Lastly, If the word of God speak distinctly and clearly, enforce, as here by miracles done before, all men to their astonishment and redargution, then will I not stay my belief to wait on or follow the learn­edst man in the world: when Christ himself speaks to my eyes, the proudest, eminentest Pharisee in earth or hell, nay if any of their sect have crowded into Heaven, shall not be able to charm my ear, F or lay any clog upon my understanding. So that you see the Pha­risees argument in that case was sophistical, (the matter being so plain to them that they needed no advicè, His works bore witness of him, John v. 36.) yet in the general it holds probable and learn­ing remains a good guide still, though an ill Master in matters of Religion, [...], the first thing we undertook to demonstrate. [Page 156] And this we should draw down yet lower to our practice, and A that variously, but that almost every Proposition insisted on hath in part spoken to your affections, and so prevented store of uses. This only must not be omitted; For Scholars to learn to set a value on their precious blessing which God hath vouchsafed them above all the world beside; to bless God infinitely that they understand and conceive what they are commanded to believe: this I am sure of, there is not a greater and more blessed priviledge besides Gods spirit, which our humane condition is capable of, then this of B learning, and specially divine knowledge, of which Aristotle him­self witnesseth, [...], none is better then it. As long as we have no evidence or demonstration from that (which yet it most nearly concerns us to rely upon) we cannot enjoy without an immediate supernatural irradiation, a tranquillity and consi­stency of spirit, we cannot peremptorily have resolved our selves that we have built upon the rock: every temptation proves a dis­couragement to us, many horrours take hold of us, and some­times C we must needs fall to that low ebb, not far from despair, which the Apostles were in, Luke xxiv. 22. We had trusted, but now we know not what to think of it, that this was he that should have redeem­ed Israel. But to see all the Articles of my faith ratified and confirm­ed to my understanding, to see the greatest treasure and inheri­tance in the world sealed and delivered to me in my hand, writ­ten in a character and language that I am perfectly skilled in; O what a comfort is this to a Christian soul! O what a fulness of D joy to have all the mysteries of my salvation transcribed out of the book of the Lord, and written in my heart, where I can turn and survey, and make use of them, as much and as often as I will! Nay, where I have them without book, though there were nei­ther Father nor Bible in the world, able out of my own stock to give an account, nay, a reason of my faith before the perversest Pa­pist, Heathen or Devil. This serves me instead of having lived, and conversed, and been acquainted with Christ. E

By this I have my fingers pit into the print of the nails, and my hands thrust into his side, and am as sure as ever Thomas was; I see him as palpably as he that handled him, that he is my Lord and my God. 'Twas observed by the Philosopher as an act generally practised among Tyrants to prohibit all Schools and means of learning and edu­cation in the Commonwealth, [...], to suffer neither learning, nor Schools, nor com­mon meetings, that men being kept blind might be sure to obey,F and tyrannical commands through ignorance be mistaken for fair government. And thus did Julian interdict the Christi­ans all manner of literature, and chiefly Philosophy, for fear, saith Nazianzen, Steliteut. they should be able to grapple with the Heathen, and cut off Goliah's head with his own weapon. [Page 157] A The continuance of these arts of spiritual tyranny, you may ob­serve in the prescribed stupidity and commanded ignorance of the Laity through all Italy. All which must call for a superlative measure of thanks to be exprest, not in our tongues and hearts only, but in our lives and actions; from us I say, who have obteined not only a knowledge of his laws, but almost a vision of his secrets, and for as much as concerns our eternal bliss, do even see things as they were acted, having already comprehended in our reason, B(not only in our faith,) the most impossible things in nature; the bredth and length and depth and height of the conceived, incarnate, and crucified God: and if all that will not serve our turn, but we must press into his cabinet-secrets, invade the book of life, and oversee, and divulge to all men abscondita Domini Dei nostri, then are Gods mercies unworthily repaid by us, and those indulgences which were to bestow civility upon the world, have only taught us to be more rude. In sum the reallest thanks we can perform C to God for this inestimable prize, is modestly and softly to make use of it, 1. To the confirming of others faith, and 2. to the ex­pressing of our own. For 1. he is the deepest scholar, saith the Philosopher, [...]. who is [...], best able to teach other men what himself conceives; and then 2. he hath the habit most radi­cated who hath prest it down into his heart, and there sow'd a seed which shall encrease and fructify, and spread, and flourish, laden with the fruits of a lively faith. He is the truest scholar that hath D fed upon learning, that hath nourished and grown, and walked, and lived in the strength of it. And till I see you thrive and be­stir your selves like Christians, I shall never envy your learning: the Pharisees were great scholars, well seen in the Prophets, and 'tis much to be suspected could not choose but find Christ there, and acknowledge him by his Miracles, they saw him plain enough, and yet not a man would believe on him; My second part, The greatest scholars are not always the best Christians.

E'Tis observable in the temper of men, that the cowardly are most inquisitive, their fears and jealousies make them very careful to foresee any danger, and yet for the most part they have not spirit enough to encounter, and they are so stupid and sluggish that they will not get out of its way when they have foreseen it: the same baseness and timerousness makes them a sort of men most diligent to at a distance avoid, and near hand most negligent to pre­vent. Thus in iiii. Dan. 5. Nebuchadnezzar dreams and is affright­ed, F and a proclamation is made for all the Wisdom of the World to come in and consult and sit upon it, and give their verdict for the interpretation of the dream, and when he had at last got the knowledge of it by Daniel, that his fears were not in vain, that the greatest judgement that ever was heard of was within a twelve moneth to fall on him, then as though he had been a beast before [Page 158] his time, without all understanding he goes and crowns himself A for his slaughter. Just when, according to the Prophecy, he was to suffer, then was he walking in his pride; whilest he was igno­rant, he was sensible of his danger, and now he sees it before his eyes, he is most prodigiously blind. At the end of twelve moneths, when his ruine was at hand, ver. 29. he walked in the Palace of the Kingdom of Babylon, and the King spake and said, Is not this great Babylon that I have built, &c. In brief he that was most earnest to understand the dream, is most negligent of the event of it, and B makes no other use of his knowledge of God's Will, but only more knowingly and wilfully to contemn it. And this generally is the state of corrupt nature, to keep a distance and a bay betwixt our knowlege and our wills, and when a truth hath fully conquer'd and got possession of our understanding, then to begin to fortifie most strongly, that the other castle of the soul, the affections may yet remain impregnable. Thus will the Devil be content to have the outworks and the watch-tower taken, so he may be sure to C keep his treasure within from danger: and will give us leave to be as great scholars as himself, so we will continue as prophane. And so we are like enough to do for all our knowledge: for wisdom, saith Aristotle, is terminated in it self, [...], it nei­ther looks after, nor produces any practical good, saith Andronicus, [...], , nay there is no dependence betwixt knowing and doing: as he that hath read and studied the [...], may perhaps be never the better wrastler, nor the skilfullest Physician D the more healthy: experience and tryal must perfect the one, and a good temperature constitute the other. A young man may be a good Naturalist, a good Geometer, nay a wise man, because he may understand [...], wonders, depths, nay Di­vine matters, but hee'l never be [...], prudent or actually vertuous,Eth. 6. 8. i. e. a good Moralist: [...], moral precepts they cannot be said to believe, they have not entred so far, they float only in their memories, they have them E by heart, they say them over by rote, as children do their Cate­chism, or Plato's scholars (saith Plutarch) his depths of Philosophy: they now recite them only, and shall then understand them, when they come of age, when they are stayed enough to look into the meaning of them, and make use of them in their practice. The Mathematicks, 2 Met. 2. saith Aristotle, have nothing to do with the end or chief good that men look after: never any man brought good or F bad, better or worse into a demonstration; there's no consultation or election there, only plain downright diagrams, necessary convi­ctions of the understanding. And therefore for these meer specu­lations, which hover only in the brain, [...]. the youngest wit is nim­blest; for [...], sharpness of apprehension is a sprightfulness of the mind,Ethic. 6. 13. and is there liveliest, where there be most spirits: [Page 159] A but prudence and active vertue requires an habituate temper of passions, a stayedness of the mind, and long tryal and experience of its own strength, a constancy to continue in vertue in spight of all forreign allurements or inward distempers. And the ground of all this is, that those things that most incumber the Will and keep us from practice, do nothing clog or stop the understanding, sensuality or pleasure hinders us not from knowing [...],Ethic. 6 5. &c. that a Triangle hath three angles equal to two right ones, and the B like. Nay the most insolent tyrannizing passions which domineer over us, which keep us in awe, and never suffer us to stir, or move, or walk, or do any thing that is good, will yet give us leave to understand as much as we would wish, they have only fettered our hands and feet, have not blinded our eyes; as one shut up in the Tower from the conversation of men, may be yet the great­est proficient in speculation; The affections being more gross and corporeous (from thence called the heels of the soul) and so easily C chained and fettered: but the understanding most pure and spi­ritual, and therefore uncapable of shackles: nay is many times most free and active, when the will is most dead and sluggish. And this may be the natural reason that even Aristotle may teach us, why the greatest scholars, are not alwayes the best Chri­stians: the Pharisees well read in the Prophets yet backwardest to believe, because faith which constitutes a Christian is a spiritual prudence, as 'tis best defined, and therefore is not appropriate to D the understanding: but if they be several faculties, is rather seated in the Will; the objects of Faith being not meerly speculative, but always apprehended and assented to sub ratione boni, as being the most unvaluable blessings which ever we desired of the Lord, [...], &c. Ethic. 6. 7. or can require. The speculative part of divine wisdom may make us [...], intelligent spirits, nay possibly do it in the worst no­tion, render us devils. Real practical knowledge, only prudence will make Angels, ministring spirits unto God, teach us to live E and be better then we did. So then in the first place learning doth neither make nor suppose men Christians: Nay 2ly. it doth per accidens many times hinder, put a rub in our way, and keep us from being Christians. Philoponus and Synesius (Miracles of learn­ing) were therefore hardest to be converted, they were so possest and engaged in Peripatetical Philosophy: that however they might be perswaded to the Trinity, they will not believe the re­surrection. 'Twas too plain a contradiction to philosophical reason F ever to enter theirs. Thus in the 1 Cor. i. 21.1 Cor. I. 21. the World by wisdom knew not God: they so relyed on their reason, and trusted in it for all truths, that they concluded every thing impossible that would not concur with their old Principles. But this resistance which reason makes is not so strong, but that it may easily be supprest, and therefore Synesius was made a Bishop before he explicitly be­lieved [Page 160] the resurrection, because they were confident that he which A had forsaken all other errors, would not long continue perverse in this, and so good a Christian in other things, [...], could not choose but be illuminated in time, in so necessary a point of faith: and indeed so it happened in them both. But there are other more dangerous engins, more insidious courses which learning uses to supplant or undermine belief: other strata­gems to keep us out of the way, to anticipate all our desires or in­clinations, or thoughts that way-ward: and these are spiritual pride B and self-content. Men are so elevated in height of contemplation, so well pleased, so fully satisfied in the pleasures and delights of it, that the first sort scorn to submit or humble themselves to the po­verty and disparagement of believing in Christ; the second are never at leasure to think of it. For the first, spiritual pride, 'tis set down as a reason that the natural man receives not the things of the spirit, 1 Cor. ii. 14. receives them not, i. e. will not take them, will not accept of them, though they are freely given him; for they C are foolishness unto him, i. e. so his proud brain reputes them. The pride of Worldly wisdom extremely scorns the foolishness of Christ, and consequently is infinitely opposite to faith which is wrought by special humility.

Secondly, for self-content: [...], saith Hera­clitus in Hesych: Wise men need no friends, they are able to subsist by themselves without any help: they will have an happiness of their own making, and scorn to be beholding to Christ for a new D inheritance, they are already so fully possest of all manner of contents. Let any man whisper them of the joys of the new Jerusalem, of the Intercessor that hath saved, of the way thither and made it passable, of all the priviledges and promises of our adoption, they will hear them [...], as old wives fables; they have the fortunate Islands too, their exactest tranquillity and sereni­ty of mind in a perpetual contemplation, and all the golden Apples in Paradise shall not tempt or allarm them out of it. 'Tis strange E to see when such a man is called, what a doe there is to get him out of his dream to hale him out of his study to the Church, how sleepy, and drowsy, and lethargical he is in matters of Religion: how soon a little devotion hath tired him out, that could have pored over a book incessantly all his life long, and never thought thus to have been interdicted the delights of humane learning, thus to have been pluckt and torn from the embraces of his Athenian Idol. His conversion is much unlike another mans: that which calls F others into compass seems to let him loose, thrusts him abroad into the world, teaches him to look more like a man then ever he meant, makes him a member of the Commonwealth that was formerly but an Anchoret, and forces him to walk and run the way of Gods Commandments, that had once decreed him himself to a chair [Page 161] A for ever. In brief, there is as little hopes of one that indulges himself, and gives himself up to the pride and contents of any kind of learning, of him that terminates knowledge either in it self, or else in the ostentation of it, as of any other that is captiv'd to any one single worldly or fleshly kind of voluptuousness. This of the brain in spight of the Philosopher is an intemperance, as well as that of the throat and palate, and more dangerous, because less suspe­cted, and seldomer declaimed against; and from this Epicurism, B especially of the soul, good Lord deliver us.

Not to heap up reasons of this too manifest a truth, (would God it were not so undeniable) take but this one more, of the un­sufficiency of learning never so well used to make a man a Christian. Let all the knowledge in the world, prophane and sacred, all the force and reason that all ages ever bragg'd of, let it concur in one brain, and swell the head as big as his was in the Poem that tra­vell'd of Minerva: let all Scriptures and Fathers joyn their power C and efficacy, and they shall never by their simple activity produce a saving faith in any one; all the miracles they can work are only on the understanding, the will distinctly taken is above their sphear or compass: or if their faculties are not distinguisht, and to will is present with me, Rom. vii. 18. as well as to understand, yet they can produce only an absolute simple general will, that is, an assent and approbation of the absolute goodness of the thing proposed, not a resolute will to abandon all other worldly purposes to per­form D that which I will. Knowledge and right apprehension of things may convince me first of the history, that all that is spoken of, or by Christ is true, and then of the expedience to apply all his merits to my soul, but when I see all this cannot be done without paying a price, without undoing my self, without pawning all that I have, my learning, my wealth, my delights, my whole worldly being, without self-denial, then the general assent, that absolute will is grown chill and dead; we are still (whatever we E believe) but infidels; all the Articles of the Creed thus assented to are not enough to make us Christians. So that the issue of all is, all knowledge in the world cannot make us deny our selves, and therefore all knowledge in the world is not able to produce be­lief; only the spirit must breath this power into us of breathing out our selves, he must press our breasts, and stifle, and strangle us; we must give up the natural ghost, he must force out our earthly breath out of our earthly bodies, or else we shall not be F enlivened by his spiritual. Thus have you reasons of the common divorce betwixt knowledge and faith, i. e. the no manner of depend­ence betwixt them in nature. Secondly, the open resistence in some points betwixt reason and Scripture. Thirdly, the more secret reluctancies betwixt the pride and contents of learning and the spirit. And lastly, the insufficiency of all natural knowledge, and [Page 162] transcendency of spiritual, so that he cannot know them, because A they are spiritually discerned. I should now in very charity re­lease you, but that there is one word behind of most important necessity to a Sermon, and that is of Application.

That laying to our hearts the important documents of the Text, our righteousness and faith may exceed that of the Pharisees, Mat. v. 20. our preaching and walking may be like that of Christs, in power, and as having authority, and not as the Scribes, Mat. vii. 29. and we not content with a floating knowledge in the brain, do press and B sink it down into our inferiour faculties, our senses and affections, till it arise in a full harvest of fruitful, diligently working faith. It was Zenophanes his phansie, [...], and that God was all eyes and all ears, but breathed not, there was no use of that in him; and so is it with us, who are always exercising our knowledge, powers to see and hear what e're is possible; but for any breath of life in us, any motion of the spirit, we have no use of it: it is not worth valuing or taking notice of, nothing so vulgar and con­temptible C in them that have it, nothing of which we examine our selves so slightly, of which we are so easily mistaken, so willingly deceived, and nothing that we will be content to have so small a measure of. A little of it soon tires us out, 'tis too thin aery diet for us to live upon, we cannot hold out long on it; like the Isra­elites, soon satiated with their bread from Heaven, nothing com­parable to their old food that Nilus yielded them, Numb. xi. 5. We remember the fish that we did eat in Egypt, but now our soul is D dryed away, there is nothing but this Manna before our eyes, as if that were not worth the gathering.

Pythagoras could say, that if any one were to be chosen to pray for the people, to be made a Priest, he must be a vertuous man, [...], in Iamblicus, Vit. Fyth. p. 61. because the Gods would take more heed to his words: p. 107. and again, that many things might be permit­ted the people, which should be interdicted Preachers. It was the confir­mation of his precepts by his life, p. 164. and practice, [...], that E made Italy, p. 157. [...], all the Country his School, and all that ever heard him his Disciples. Nothing will give such authority to our doctrine, or set such a value on our calling as a religious conversation. He that takes such a journey, as that into Holy Or­ders, must go on, [...], according to his 15. Symbolum, must not return to his former sins as well as trade, saith lamblicus: the falling into one of our youthful vices, is truly a disordering of our selves, and a kind of plucking our hands from the plow. A F Physician, saith Hippocrates, must have colour and be in flesh, [...], of a good promising healthy complexion, and then men will guess him a man of skill, otherwise the patient will bid the Physician heal himself, and having by his ill look a preju­dice against his Physick, his phansie will much hinder its working. [Page 163] A You need no application; He again will tell you, that the profes­sion suffers not so much by any thing as by rash censures, and un­worthy professors. In brief, our very knowledge will be set at nought, and our gifts scoffed at, if our lives do not demonstrate that we are Christians as well as Scholars. No man will be much more godly for hearing Seneca talk of providence, nor be affected with bare words, unless he see them armed and backt with power of him that utters them. Consider but this one thing, and withal B that my doctrine is become a proverb, and he is a proud man that can first draw it upon a Scholar, his learning and his clergy make him never the more religious. O let our whole care and carriage, and the dearest of our endeavours strive and prevail to cross the pro­verb, and stop the mouth of the rashest declamer. That Come­dy of Aristophanes took best, [...]. which was all spent in laughing at Socrates, and in him involved and abused the whole condition of learning; though through Alcibiades his faction it miscarried and C mist its applause once or twice, yet when men were left to their humour, 'twas admired and cried up extremely. Learning hath still some honourable favourers which keep others in awe with their countenance, but otherwise nothing more agreeable to the people then Comedies or Satyrs, or Sarcasms dealt out against the Universities: let us be sure that we act no parts in them our selves, nor perform them before they are acted. Let us endeavour that theirs may be only pronunciations, a story of our faults as present­ed D in a scene, but never truly grounded in any of our actions. One wo we are secure and safe from,Luke VI. 26. Wo be to you when all men shall speak well of you] we have many good friends that will not [...]et this curse light on us. O let us deliver our selves from that catalogue of woes which were all denounced against the Pharisees for many vices, all contained in this accomplisht piece, Ye say but do not, Mat. xxiii. 4. And seeing all our intellectual excellencies cannot allure, or bribe, or wooe Gods spirit to overshadow us, and con­ceive E Christ, and bring forth true and saving faith in us; let all the rest of our studies be ordered in a new course, let us change both our method and our Tutor, and having hitherto learnt God from our selves, let us be better advised, and learn our selves from God. Let us all study all learning from the spring or fountain, and make him our instructer, who is the only Author worth our understanding, and admit of no interpreter on him but himself. The knowledge of God shall be our vision in heaven, O let it be F our speculation on earth. Let it fill every conceit or phansie that we at any time adventure on. It is [...], the last work in which all the promises, all our possible designs are accomplished: O let us in part anticipate that final revelation of him, lest so sudden and so full a brightness of glory be too ex­cellent for the eyes of a Saint: and labour to comprehend here, [Page 164] where the whole comfort of our life is what we shall then possess.A And if all the stretches, and cracking, and torturing of our souls will prevail, the dissolving of all our spirits, nay, the sighing out of our last breath will do any thing, let us joyn all this, even that God hath given us, in this last real service to our selves, and ex­pire whilst we are about it in praying, and beseeching, and impor­tuning, and offering violence to that blessed spirit, that he will fully enlighten and enflame us here with zeal as well as know­ledge; that he will fill us with his grace here, and accomplish us B with his glory hereafter.

Now to him that hath elected us, hath created us and redeemed us, &c.

The XI. Sermon.

Matth. X. 15.‘It shall be more tolerable for the land of Sodom and Gomorrah in the day of judgment, then D for that City.’

THE whole new Covenant consists of these two words, Christ and Faith; Christ bestowed on Gods part, Faith required on ours; Christ the matter, Faith the condition of the Cove­nant. Now to bring or present this Faith be­fore E you, as an object for your understandings to gaze at, or to go farther, to dissect (and with the diligence of Anatomy instruct) in eve­ry limb, or joynt, or excellency of it, were but to recal you to your Catechism, and to take pains to inform you in that which you are presum'd to know. The greater danger of us is, that we are behind in our practice, that we know what faith is, but do not labour for it; and therefore the seasonablest work will be on our affections to pro­duce, F if it were possible, this precious vertue in our souls, and to sink and press down that floating knowledge which is in most of our brains, into a solid weighty effectual Faith, that it may begin to be [...], a work of faith, which was formerly but a phan­sie, dream and apparition. To this purpose to work on your wills, no Rhetorick so likely, as that which is most sharp and terrible, [Page 166] no such Physick for dead affections as Corrosives, the consideration A of the dismal, hideous, desperate estate of infidels here in my Text; and that both in respect of the guilt of the sin, and degree of the punishment, proportioned to it, and that above all other sinners in the World, It shall be more, &c. Where you may briefly observe, 1. the sin of infidelity, set down by its subject, that City which would not receive Christ being preach't unto it, v. 14. 2 the greatness of this sin, exprest by the punishment attending it; and that either positively, it shall go very sore with it, and therefore B it is to be esteemed a very great sin, implyed in the whole Text; or else comparatively being weighed with Sodom and Gomorrah in judg­ment, it shall be more tolerable for them then it: and therefore 'tis not only a great sin, but the greatest, the most damning sin in the world. And of these in order plainly, and to your hearts rather then your brains, presuming that you are now come with solemn serious thoughts to be edified not instructed, much less pleased or humor'd. And first of the first: The sin of infidelity, noted in C the last words, that City.

To pass by those, which we cannot choose but meet with, 1. a multitude of ignorant Infidels, Pagans and Heathens. 2. of knowing but not acknowledging Infidels, as Turks and Jews; We shall meet with another order of as great a latitude, which will more nearly concern us; a world of believing Infidels, which know and acknowledge Christ, the Gospel and the promises, are as fairly mounted in the understanding part as you would wish,D but yet refuse and deny him in their hearts, apply not a Command to themselves, submit not to him, nor desire to make themselves capable of those mercies which they see offered by Christ in the World; and these are distinctly set down in the verse next before my Text, Whosoever shall not receive you, i. e. entertain the acceptable truth of Christ and the Gospel preached by you, as 'tis interpreted by the 40. verse, He that receiveth you receiveth me, i. e. believes on me, as the word is most plainly used, Mat. xi. 14.Mat. XI. 14. If you will re­ceive E it, i. e. if you will believe it, this is Elias which was for to come. And Joh. i. 12. To as many as received him, even to them that believe in his name. For you are to know that Faith truly justifying is nothing in the World, but the receiving of Christ. Christ and his sufferings and full satisfaction was once on the Cross render'd, and is ever since by the Gospel and its Ministers offered to the world: and nothing required of us but an hand and an heart to apprehend and receive: and to as many as received him, he gives power to be­come F the sons of God, Joh. i. 12. So that Faith and infidelity are not acts properly determined to the understanding, but indeed to the whole soul, and most distinctly to the Will, whose part it is to receive or repel, to entertain or resist Christ and his promises, the Author and finisher of our salvation. Now this receiving [Page 167] A of Christ is the taking or accepting of the righteousness of Christ, and so making it our own, as Rom. i. 17. being rightly weighed will enforce. Read and mark, [...], thus [...], in it, or by it, the Gos­pel, mention'd in the former verse [...], the righteousness of God by Faith, as Rom. iii. 22.Rom. III. 22. i. e. the not legal but Evangelical righteousness, which only God accepts, directly set down Phil. iii. 9.Phil. III. 9. That righteousness which is through Faith of Christ, B the righteousness which is of God by Faith; [...], is revealed to Faith, is declared that we might believe; that finding no life or righteousness in our selves, we may go out of our selves, and lay hold on that which is offered us by Christ: and this you will find to be the clearest meaning of these words, though somewhat obscured in our English reading of them. Now the accepting of this righteousness is an act of ours following a pro­posal or offer of Christ's, and consummating the match or bargain C between Christ and us. Christ is offered to us as an Husband in the Gospel, we enquire of him, observe our own needs, and his Excellencies and riches to supply them, our sins and his righteous­ness; and if upon advice we will take him, the match is struck, we are our beloved's, and our beloved is ours; we are man and wife, we have taken him for our husband, and with him are entituled to all his riches: we have right to all his righteousness, and enjoy by his Patent all the priviledges, all the promises, all the mercies D of the Gospel. But if the offer being thus made by God to give us his Son freely, we stand upon terms, we are too rich, too learned, too worldly minded, too much in love with the praise of men, Joh. xii. 43.Joh. XII. 43. i. e. fixt upon any worldly vanity, and re­solve never to forego all these, to disclaim our worldly liberty, our own righteousness, and to accept of so poor an offer as a Christ; then are we the Infidels here spoken of, We will not come to him that we might have life, Joh. v. 40. When he is held out to E us, we will not lay hold on him, we have some conceit of our selves, and therefore will not step a foot abroad to fetch his righ­teousness home to us. And indeed if any worldly thing please you; if you can set a value upon any thing else, if you can enter­tain a paramour, a rival, a Competitour in your hearts, if you can receive the praise of men,how can you believe? Joh. v. 44.Joh. V. 44. So that in brief, Infidelity consists in the not receiving of Christ, with a reciprocal giving up of our selves to him, in the not answering affir­matively F to Christs offer of himself, in the not taking home and applying Christ to our souls. And this is done, either by denying to take him at all, or by taking him under a false person, or by not performing the conditions required or presumed in the making of the match. They that deny to take him at all, are the prophane, negli­gent, presumptuous Christians, who either never hearken after [Page 168] him, or else are so familiar with the news, as to underprize him:A have either never cheapned Heaven, or else will not come to Gods price; like Ananias and Sapphira, perhaps offer pretty fair, bring two parts of their estate and lay them at the Apostles feet, but will give no more; fall off at last for a trifle, and peremptorily deny Christ, if they may not have him on their own Conditions. Some super­fluities, some vanities, some chargeable or troublesom sins per­haps they can spare, and those they will be inclinable to part with­al; but if this will not serve, Christ must seek for a better Chap­man,B they stand not much upon it, they can return as contentedly without it as they came. And this arises from a neglect and security, a not heeding or weighing of Gods justice, and consequently un­dervaluing of his mercies. They have never felt God as an angry Judge, and therefore they now scorn him as a Saviour: they have liv'd at such ease of heart, that no legal terrour, no affrightments, or ghastly representations of sin can work upon them: and if the reading of the law that killing letter, have been sent by God to C instruct them in the desperateness of their estate, to humble these libertine souls to the spirit of bondage, and so school them to Christ, they have eyes, but see not, ears, but hear it not, they are come to this [...], Rom. i. 28. a reprobate sense, or as it may be rendred, an undiscerning mind, not able to judge of that which is thus read and proposed to it: or again a sense without sense, not apprehensive of that which no man that hath eyes can be ignorant of: nay in Theod. phrase [...], an heart that will reverberate D any judgement or terrour, receiving no more impression from it then the Anvil from the hammer, violently returns it again, smooth'd somewhat over perhaps by often-beating, but nothing softned. Nay if the law cry too loud, and by an inward voice preach damnation in their bowels, and resolve to be heard before it cease; then do they seek out some worldly employment to bu­sie themselves withal, that they may not be at home at so much unquietness: they will charm it with pleasures, or overwhelm it with E business, as Gain, when his Conscience was too rough, and rigid for him,Gen. IV. 16. Gen. iv. went out from the presence of the Lord, ver. 16. and as 'tis observed, built Cities, v 17. got some of his progeny to invent Musick, v. 21. perhaps to still his tumultuous raving Con­science, that the noise of the hammers and melody of the Instru­ments might outsound the din within him, as in the sacrifices of Molock, where their children, which they offered in an hollow brazen vessel, could not choose but howl hideously, they had F timbrels and tabrets perpetually beating,2 Kin. XXIII. 10. (whereupon Tophet, where these sacrifices were kept, is by Grammarians deduced from [...], tympanum) to drown the noise of the childrens cry;Seld. de diis these I say which will not be instructed in their misery,Syr. l. 1. c. 6. or better'd by the preaching of the law, which labour only to make their [Page 169] A inward terrors insensible, to skin not cure the wound, are Infidels in the first or highest rank, which deny to take him at all, will not suffer themselves to be perswaded that they have any need of him; and therefore let him be offered for ever, let him be pro­claimed in their ears every minute of their lives, they see nothing in him worth hearkning after; and the reason is, they are still at home, they have not gone a foot abroad out of themselves, and therefore cannot lay hold on Christ. He that never went to B school to the law, he that was never sensible of his own damned estate, he that never hated himself, [...], will never receive, never accept of Christ.

Secondly, some are come thus far to a sense of their estate, and are twing'd extremely, and therefore fly presently to the Gospel, hearing of Christ, they fasten, are not patient of so much delibe­ration as to observe whether their hands be empty, they are in distress, and Christ must needs save them suddenly: they lay C hold as soon as ever they hear a promise, and are resolved to be saved. by Christ, because they see otherwise they are damned. And these take Christ indeed, but under a false person: either they take the promises only, and let Christ alone, or take Christ the Saviour, but not Christ the Lord. Are willing to be saved by him, but never think of serving him: are praying for ever for Heaven and glory, but never care how little they hear of grace: the end they fasten on, the Covenant they hug and gripe with D their embraces, but never take the condition of repentance and obedience: this is not for their turn, they abstract the cheap and profitable attributes of Christ, his Priestly office of satisfaction and propitiation: but never consider him as a King; and so in a word lay hold of the estate before they have married the husband, which they have yet no more right to, then a meer stranger: for the communicating the riches of a husband being but a conse­quence of marriage, is therefore not yet made over till the mar­riage E(which is the taking of the husbands person) be consummate. And this I say is a second degree of infidelity somewhat more se­cret and less discernable, when by an Errour of the person, by taking Christ the Saviour for Christ the Lord, or his promises abstracted from his person, we believe we shall be saved by him, but deny to be ruled; desire to enjoy all the priviledges, but sub­stract all the obedience of a Subject.

In the third place, they which have accepted and received the F true person of Christ as a Master, as well as a Jesus, they which have taken him on a resolved vow of performing this condition of homage and obedience, are not in event as good as their engage­ments: when they think the match is fast, and past danger of re­calling, when they seem to have gotten a firm title to the promi­ses, and are in a manner entred upon the goods and estate of their [Page 170] husband, they do begin to break Covenant, and either wholly sub­stract,A or else divide their love; they married him for his wealth, and now they have that, they are soon weary of his person: they came with the soul of an harlot, looking only what they should get by him, and now they have many other old acquaintances they must needs keep league with; their self-denial, their humi­lity, their vows of obedience were but arts and stratagems that want and necessity put them upon, and now they have got their ends, all those are soon out-dated; they have faith and so are ju­stified,B and sure of their estate, and so now they may sin securely, there is no condemnation to them, they are in Christ, and all the sins, nay, all the devils in the world shall never separate them. And this is a sanctified religious piece of infidelity in men, which think they have made sure of the main, and so never think of the Con­sectaries; they have faith, and so T'is no matter for good works; the lease is sealed, the wedding solemniz'd, and then never dream or care for Covenants. And these mens fate is like to be the same C spiritually, which we read of Samson's bodily strength: he vowed the vow of a Nazarite, and as long as he kept unshaven no oppo­sition could prevail against him; but as soon as he broke his vow, when he had let his Mistress cut his locks, his strength departed from him. All the promises and priviledges of our being in Christ, are upon condition of our obedience, and our vow being broken, the Devil and the Philistins within us will soon deprive us of our eyes and life. Whatsoever livelihood we presume we have in Christ,D we are deceived, we are still dead in trespasses and sins. Thus do you see the three degrees of infidelity frequent amongst Christi­ans, 1. a not taking him at all; 2. a mistaking of his person; 3. a breaking off the Covenants: now that you may abhor and fly from, and get out of each of them by a lively faith, my next par­ticular shall warn you, the greatness of this sin, and that first posi­tively in its self, it shall be very tolerable for that City.

Faith may be conceived in a threefold relation, either to men E the subjects of it, and those sinners, or 2. to Christ and his suffer­ing the objects of it, with all the effects, remission of sins, and sal­vation attending it: or 3. to God the Father, the Author and Com­mander of it, as the only condition annext to all his promises. And consequently infidelity, [...], shall be aggravated by these three depths or degrees, each adding to its exceeding sin­fulness.

As Faith respects its subject, and that a sinful miserable one, en­gaged F and fixt in an unremediable necessity of sinning and suffer­ing for ever; so is it the only means upon earth, nay in the very counsel of God, able to do us any help; all the arts and spiritual engins even in Heaven besides this are unprofitable. Nay, the second Covenant now being seal'd, and God for ever having esta­blisht [Page 171] A the rule and method of it; I say, things thus standing, God himself cannot be presum'd to have mercy upon any one, but who is thus qualified; it being the only foundation on which our hea­ven is built, the only ground we have to hope for any thing, as is manifest by that place,Heb. XI. 1. Heb. xi. 1. being rightly weighed, Now faith is the substance of things hoped for, where the Greek phrase, [...], signifies the ground or foundation of every of those things which can be the object of a Christians hope. So B that where no ground-work, no building; if no faith, no hope, no possibility of Heaven. If the Devil could have but stoln this jewel out of the world, he had shut up Heaven gates eternally, and had left it as empty of Saints, as it is full of glory, not capable of any flesh but what Christ's hypostatical union brought thither. And this is no more then I conceive the learned mean by necessitas medii, that faith is necessary as a means, i. e. there is no means be­sides of power, either absolutely or ex hypothesi, of it self, or on C supposition of Gods Covenant, to bring us to Heaven. Nothing is of force besides in reason to prepare, or morally accommodate; and God hath not promised to accept in mercy of any thing else. For whereas the promises are sometimes made to repentance, some­times to obedience, as whosoever repenteth shall be saved; and the like you are to know, that it is on this ground of the necessary union of these graces, that where one of them is truly and sincerely, there the rest are always in some degree, there being no example D of penitence or obedience in any subject which had not faith also. For he that comes to God must believe that he is, Heb. XI. 6. &c. Heb. xi. 6. And he that heartily believes he is, and is a rewarder of them that seek him, will not fail to search, pursue, and follow after him. So that though the promises are made promiscuously to any one which hath either of these graces, yet 'tis upon supposal of the rest; if it be made of faith, 'tis in confidence that faith works by love, Gal. V. 6. Gal. v. 6. and as St. James enforces it, is made perfect by works, E James ii. 22.James II. 22. So that in the first place infidelity is sufficiently ag­gravated in respect of the subject; it being a Catholick destroyer, an intervenient that despoils him of all means, all hope, all possi­bility of salvation: finding him in the state of damnation, it sets him going, suffers him not to lay hold on any thing that may stay him in his precipice; and in the midst of his shipwrack, when there be planks and refuges enough about him, hath numm'd his hands, depriv'd him of any power of taking hold of them.

F In the second place, in respect of Christ and his sufferings, the ob­jects of our Faith, so Faith is in a manner the Soul of them, gi­ving them life and efficacy, making things which are excellent in themselves prove so in effect to others. Thus the whole splendor and beauty of the world, the most accurate proportions and images of nature are beholding to the Eye, though not for their absolute [Page 172] excellency, yet for both the account and use that is made of them; A for if all men were blind, the proudest workmanship of nature would not be worth the valuing. Thus is a learned piece cast away upon the ignorant, and the understanding of the auditor is the best commendation of a speech or Sermon. In like manner, those infinite unvaluable sufferings of Christ, if they be not belie­ved in, are but, as Aristotle saith of divine knowledge, a most honou­rable thing, but of no manner of use, if they be not apprehended, they are lost. Christ's blood if not caught up in our hearts by B Faith, but suffered to be poured out upon the earth, will prove no better then that of Abel's, Gen. IV. 10. Gen. iv. 10. crying for judgment from the ground; that which is spilt is clamorous, and its voice is to­ward Heaven for vengeance; only that which is gathered up, as it falls from his side, by faith, will prove a medicine to heal the Na­tions. So that infidelity makes the death of Christ no more then the death of an ordinary man, in which there is no remedy, Wisd. ii. 1. [...], there is no cure, no physick in it; or as the same C word is rendred, Eccles. xxviii. 3. no pardon, no remission wrought by it, a bare going down into the grave, that no man is better for. It doth even frustrate the sufferings of Christ, and make him have paid a ransom to no purpose, and purchased an inheritance at an infinite rate, and no man the better for it. Again, Christ is not only contemn'd, but injur'd, not only slighted, but robb'd, he loses not only his price and his thanks, but his servant, which he hath bought and purchased with his blood. For redemption is D not an absolute setting free, but the buying out of an Usurpers hands, that he may return to his proper Lord; changing him from the condition of a captive to a subject. He which is ransomed from the Gallies is not presently a King, but only recovered to a free and tolerable service: nay generally, if he be redeemed he is eo nomine, a servant, by right and equity his Creature that re­deemed him,Luke I. 74. according to the express words, Luke i. 74. That we being delivered might serve him. Now a servant is a possession,E part of ones estate, as truly to be reckoned his, as any part of his inheritance. So that every unbeliever is a thief, robs Christ not only of the honour of saving him, but of one of the Members of his family, of part of his goods, his servant; nay, 'tis not a bare theft, but of the highest size, a sacriledge, stealing an holy instrument, a vessel out of Gods Temple, which he bought and delivered out of the common calamity to serve him in holiness, Luke I. 74. Luke i. 74. to be put to holy, special services.F

In the third place, Faith may be considered in reference to God the Father, and that 1. as the Author or fountain of this Theologi­cal grace: 2. as the commander of this duty of believing; and ei­ther of these will aggravate the unbelievers guilt, and add more articles to his indictment. As God is the Author of faith, so the [Page 173] A Infidel resists, and abandons, and flies from all those methods, all those means, by which God ordinarily produces Faith; all the power of his Scriptures, all the blessings of a Christian education, all the benefits of sacred knowledge; in sum, the prayers, the sweat, the lungs, the bowels of his Ministers, in Christs stead beseeching you to be reconciled, 1 Cor. V. 20. 1 Cor. v. 20. spending their dearest spirits, and even praying and preaching out their souls for you, that you would be friends with God through Christ. All these, B I say, the Infidel takes no notice of, and by his contempt of these inferiour graces, shews how he would carry himself even towards Gods very spirit, it it should come in power to convert him, he would hold out and bid defiance, and repel the omnipotent God with his omnipotent charms of mercy: he that contemns Gods or­dinary means, would be likely to resist his extraordinary, were there not more force in the means, then forwardness in the man: and thanks be to that controuling, convincing, constraining spirit, if C ever he be brought to be content to be saved. He that will not now believe in Christ when he is preached, would have gone ve­ry near, if he had lived then, to have given his consent, andjoyn'd his suffrage in crucifying him. A man may guess of his inclination by his present practices, and if he will not now be his Disciple, 'twas not his innocence, but his good fortune, that he did not then betray him. 'Twas well he was born amongst Christians, or else he might have been as sowr a prosest enemy of Christ as Pilate or D the Pharisees: an unbelieving Christian is, for all his livery and profession, but a Jew or Heathen, and the Lord make him sensible [...] his condition.

Lastly, consider this duty of faith in respect of God the Father commanding it, and then you shall find it the main precept of the Bible. 'Twere long to shew you the ground of it in the law of [...], the obscure, yet discernable mention of it in the moral law, [...] transcendently, in the main end of all, and distinctly, though E [...]ot clearly in the first Commandment, he that hath a mind to see may find it in Pet. Baro. de praest. & dignit. div. legis. 'Twere as [...]som to muster up all the commands of the Old Testament, which exactly and determinately drive at belief in Christ, as ge­nerally in those places where the Chaldee Paraphrase reads instead of God, Gods Word, as Fear not Abraham, for I am thy shield, say they, thy word is thy shield, which speaks a plain command of faith; for not to fear, is to trust; not to fear on that ground, because Gods F Word,John I. 1. [...], the Word, Joh. i. 1. i. e. Christ is ones shield, is nothing in the world but to believe, and rely, and fasten, and de­pend on Christ. Many the like commands of Faith in Christ will the Old Testament afford, and the new is nothing else but a perpe­tual inculcating of it upon us, a driving and calling, entreating and enforcing, wooing and hastning us to believe. In which re­spect [Page 174] the Schools calls it also necessary necessitate praecepti, a thing A which though we should be never the better for, we are bound to perform. So that though faith were not able to save us, yet in­fidelity would damn us, it being amongst others a direct breach of a natural, a moral, nay, an Evangelical Commandment. And so much for the danger of infidelity considered positively in relation to the Subject, whom it deprives of Heaven, the Object Christ and his offers in the Gospel, which it frustrates, and lastly the Author and commander of it God the Father, whom it resists, disobeys, and B scorns. You will perhaps more feelingly be affected to the loath­ing of it, if we proceed to the odious and dangerous condition of it, above all other sins and breaches in the world, which is my third part, its comparative sinfulness, It shall be more tolerable, &c.

And this will appear, if we consider it, 1. in it self; 2. in its consequences. In it self it is fuller of guilt, in its consequences ful­ler of danger, then any ordinary breach of the moral Law. In it self, so it is 1. the greatest aversion from God, (in which aver­sion C the School-men place the formalis ratio, the very essence of sin) it is the perversest remotion and turning away of the soul from God, and getting as far as we can out of his sight, or ken, the forbidding of all manner of commerce or spiritual traffick, or cor­respondence with God,Heb. X. 38. as may appear by that admirable place, Heb. X. 38. The just shall live by faith, but if any man draw back, my soul hath no pleasure in him: and verse 39. We are not of them which draw back unto perdition, but of them that do believe to the saving of the D soul. Where the phrase of drawing back oppos'd here to faith and believing, is in the original [...], a cowardly, pusillanimous subducing of ones self, a getting out of the way, a not daring to meet, or approach, or accept of Christ when he is offered them; the same with [...] among the Physicians, a contraction of the soul, a shriveling of it up, a sudden correption and depression of the mind, such as the sight of some hideous danger is wont to produce,2 Mac. VI. 12. so 2 Mac. vi. 12. [...], &c. to be discouraged, and E to forsake the Jewish Religion, because of the calamities. So is the word used of Peter, Gal. II. 12. Gal. ii. 12. [...], &c. He withdrew and separated himself, fearing those that were of the Circumcision. The Infidel, I say, draws back, with­draws and sneaks out of the way, as if he were afraid of the mer­cies of his Saviour, as if it were death to him to be so near salvati­on; as if Christ coming to him with the mercies of the Gospel, were the mortal'st enemy under Heaven, and there were no such F mischief to be done him as his conversion. This indeed is an aversi­on in the highest degree, when we fly and draw back from God when he comes to save us, when the sight of a Saviour makes us take our heels. Adam might well hide himself when God came to challenge him about his disobedience; the guilty conscience [Page 175] A being afraid of revenge, may well slink out of his presence with Cain, Gen. IIII. 16. Gen. iiii. 16. But to tremble and quake at a proclamation of mercy,Hos. XI. 4. when God draws with cords of a man, Hos. xi. 4. a power­ful phrase exprest in the next words with the bands of love: when he loveth us, and calls his Son out for us, v. 1. then to be bent to backsliding, in the 7. v. to draw back when he comes to em­brace, this is a stubbornness and contraction of the soul, a crouch­ing of it in, a [...] or [...], that neither nature nor reason B would be guilty of: an aversion from God, which no other sin can parallel, and therefore of all other most intolerable in the first place.

2. Infidelity, gives God the lye, and denies whatever God pro­claims in the Gospel. The reason or ground of any ones belief, the object am for male quo, that by assenting to which I come to believe is Gods Veracity, the Confidence that God speaks true, the relying on his word, is that which brings me to lay hold on Christ: and C therefore the Infidel is down-right with God; he will not take his word, he'l never be perswaded that these benefits of Christs death that are offered to all men, can ever do him any good. Let God call him to accept them, he'l never come, his surly, resolute carriage is in effect a contradicting of whatever God hath affirmed, a direct thwarting, a giving the lye to God and his Evan­gelists: and this is an aggravation not to be mentioned without reverence or horror, the most odious affront in the World: the D Lord be merciful to us in this matter.

Next, this sin is a sin of the most dangerous consequences of any. 1. It produces all other sins, and that positively, by doubting of his justice, and so falling into adulteries, blasphemies, and the like, in security and hope of impunity, by distrusting of his providence and mercy, and so flying to Covetousness, murmuring, tempting, subtlety, all arts and stratagems of getting for our temporal estate, and ordinary despair in our spiritual: then privatively, depriving E us of that which is the mother and soul of our obedience and good Works, I mean faith, so that every thing for want of it is turned into sin, and thereby depopulating the whole man, making him nothing in the World but ruins and noysomness, a confluence of all manner of sins, without any concomitant degree of duty or obedience.

2. It frustrates all good Exhortations, and forbids all manner of superstructions which the Ministers are wont to labour for in F moving us to charity and obedience, and joy, and hope, and prayer, by not having laid any foundation whereon these must be built; any of these set or planted in any Infidel heart will soon wither: they must have a stock of faith whereon to be grafted, or else they are never likely to thrive. As Galba's Wit was a good one, but 'twas unluckily placed, ill-seated, there was no good to be wrought [Page 176] by it. The proudest of our works or merits, the perfectest mo­rality A will stand but very weakly, unless it be sounded on that foundation whose corner stone is Christ Jesus.

3. It leaves no place in the world for remedy: he that is an Ido­later, a Sabbath-breaker, or the like: he that is arraigned at the law, and found guilty at that Tribunal, hath yet an Aavocate in the Gospel, a higher power to whom he may appeal to mitigate his sentence: but he that hath sinned against the Gospel, hath no far­ther to go, he hath sinn'd against that which should have remitted all B other sins; and now he is come to an unremediable estate, to a kind of hell, or the grave of sin, from whence there is no recovery. There's not a mercy to be fetch'd in the world but out of the Gospel, and he that hath refused them, is past any farther treaty: He that believeth not is condemned already, Joh. III. 18. Joh. iii. 18. his damna­tion is sealed to him; and the entail past cutting off, 'tis his pur­chase, and now wants nothing but livery and seizin; nay 'tis his patrimony [...],Eccl. XX. 25. Ecclus. XX. 28. he is as sure C of it, as of any peny-worth of his inheritance. And the reason is implyed, 1 Cor. XV. 17. If Christ be not risen you are yet in your sins: there is no way to get out of our sins but Christs resurrection, and he that believeth not, Christ is not risen to him: 'twere all one to him if there had never been a Saviour; and therefore he re­mains in his old thraldom; he was taken captive in Adam, and hath never since had any other means to restore him: the ransom that was offered all, he would none of, and so he sticks unre­deemed,D he is yet in his sins, and so for ever like to continue. And now he is come to this state, 'twere superfluous farther to aggravate the sin against him; his case is too wretched to be up­braided him; the rest of our time shall be imployed in providing a remedy for him, if it be possible, and that must be from consi­deration of the disease, in a word and close of application.

The sin being thus displayed to you with its consequencies, O what a spirit should it raise in us! O what a resolution and ex­pression E of our manhood, to resist and banish out of us this evil heart of unbelief! Heb. iii. 12.Heb. III. 12. what an hatred should it work in our bowels, what a reluctancy, what an indignation, what a revenge against the fruit of our bosom, which hath so long grown and thrived within us, only to our destruction! which is provided as it were to eat our souls, as an harbinger to prepare a place within us for the worm in Hell, where it may lye and bite and gnaw at ease eternally! 'Tis an Examination that will deserve the F most precious minute of our lives, the solemnest work of our souls, the carefullest muster of our faculties, to shrift and win­now, and even set our hearts upon the rack, to see whether any fruit or seed of infidelity lurk in it; and in a matter of this dan­ger to prevent Gods inquest by our own, to display every thing [Page 177] A to our selves, just as it shall be laid open before God in judgment, [...],Heb. IV. 13. Heb. iv. 13. naked and discernible as the entrals of a Creature cut down the back, where the very method of nature in its secrecies is betrayed to the eye. I say, to cut our selves up, and to search into every crany of our souls, every winding of either our understanding or affections; and observe whether any infidel thought, any infidel lust, be lodged there: and when we have found this execrable thing which hath brought B all our plagues on us, then must we purge, and cleanse, and lustrate the whole City for its sake: and with more Ceremony then ever the heathen used, even with a superstition of daily, hourly pray­ers, and sacrificing our selves to God, strive and struggle, and offer violence to remove this unclean thing out of our Coasts; use these unbelieving hearts of ours, as Josiah did the Altars of Ahaz, 2 King. XXIII. 12. 2 King. xxiii. 12. break them down, beat them to powder, and cast the dust of them into the brook Kidron; that Cedron which Christ passed C over when he went to suffer,Joh. XVIII. 1. Joh. xviii. 1. even that brook which Christ drank of by the way, Psal. CX. 7. Psal. cx. 7. And there indeed is there a remedy for infidelity, if the Infidel will throw it in. If he will put it off, be it never so dyed in the contempt of Christs blood, that very blood shall cleanse it: and therefore

In the next place let us labour for Faith; let not his hands be stretched out any longer upon the cross to a faithless and stubborn ge­neration. 'Twere a piece of ignorance that a Scholar would abhor D to be guilty of, not to be able to understand that inscription writ­ten by Pilate in either of three languages, Jesus of Nazareth King, Joh. xix. 19.Joh. XIX. 19. Nay for all the Gospels and Comments written on it, both by his Disciples and his works, still to be non-proficients, this would prove an accusation written in Marble, nay an Exprobra­tion above a [...]. In a word, Christ is still offered, and the proclamation not yet outdated, his sufferings in the Scripture proposed to every one of you to lay hold on, and his Ministers sent E as Embassadors beseeching you to be reconciled, 2 Cor. V. 20. 2 Cor. v. 20. and more then that in the Sacrament of the Eucharist, his body and blood set before our eyes to be felt and gazed on, and then even a Didy­mus would believe, nay to be divided amongst us, and put in our mouths, and then who would be so sluggish as to refuse to feed on him in his heart?

For your Election from the beginning to this gift of Faith, let that never raise any doubt or scruple in you, and forslow that F coming to him; this is a jealousie that hath undone many, in a resolvedness that if they are not elected, all their faith shall prove unprofitable. Christ that bids thee repent, believe, and come unto him, is not so frivolous to command impossibilities, nor so cruel to mock our impotence. Thou mayest believe, because he bids: Be­lieve, and then thou mayest be sure thou wert predestinated to be­lieve; [Page 178] and then all the decrees in the World cannot deny thee A Christ, if thou art thus resolved to have him. If thou wilt not believe, thou hast reprobated thy self, and who is to be accused that thou art not saved? But if thou wilt come in, there is sure entertainment for thee. He that begins in Gods Councels, and never thinks fit to go about any Evangelical duty, till he can see his name writ in the book of life, must not begin to believe, till he be in Heaven; for there only is that to be read radio recto. The surer course is to follow the Scripture; to hope comfortably every one B of our selves, to use the means, apprehend the mercies, and then to be confident of the benefits of Christs suffering: and this is the way to make our Election sure, to read it in our selves radio re­flexo, by knowing that we believe to resolve that we are elected; thereby we know that we are past from death to life, if we love the brethren, 1 Joh. III. 14. 1 Joh. iii. 14. And so is it also of faith, for these are inse­parable graces. So Psal xxv. 14. Prov. iii. 32. Gods secret and his Covenant being taken for his decree is said to be with them that C fear him, and to be shewed to them, i. e. their very fearing of God is an evidence to them that they are his elect, with whom he hath entred Covenant. Our faith is the best argument, or [...], by which to make a judgment of Gods decree concerning us. I say, if we will believe, God hath elected us; 'tis impossible any true faith should be refused upon pretence the person was predestined to destruction; and if it were possible, yet would I hope that Gods decrees (were they as absolute as some would D have them) should sooner be softned into mercy, then that mercy purchased by his Son, should ever fail to any that believes. The bargain was made, the Covenant struck, and the immutability of the Persian laws are nothing to it, that whosoever believeth in him should not perish but have everlasting life, Joh. III. 15. Joh. iii. 15. Wherefore in brief, let us attend the means, and let what will or can come of the End; Christ is offered to every soul here present to be a Jesus, only do thou accept of him, and thou art past from death to life; there E is no more required of thee, but only to take him; if thou art truly possessor of him, he will justifie, he will humble, he will sanctifie thee; he will work all reformation in thee: and in time seal thee up to the day of redemption: Only be careful that thou mistakest not his Person; thou must receive him, as well as his promises; thou must take him as a Lord and King, as well as a Saviour, and be content to be a subject, as well as a Saint. He is now proclaimed in your ears, and you must not foreslow the au­dience F or procrastinate; To day if you will hear his Voice harden not your hearts. He holds himself out on purpose to you, and by the Minister wooes you to embrace him: and then it nearly concerns you not to provoke so true, so hearty, nay even so passionate a friend:Psal. II. 12. if he be not kissed he will be very angry. Lastly, if in [Page 179] A this business of believing so vulgarly exposed, there yet appear some difficulties in the practice to be overcome before it prove a possible duty: if self-denial be incompetible with flesh and blood; if delights and worldly contentments, if an hardned heart in sin, and a world of high Imaginations, refuse to submit or humble themselves to the poverty of Christ; if we cannot empty our hands to lay hold, or unbottom our selves to lean wholly on Christ, then must we fly, and pray to that spirit of power, to subdue, and B conquer, and lead us captive to it self, to instruct us in the base­ness, the nothingness, nay the dismal, hideous wretchedness of our own estate, that so being spiritually shaken and terrified out of our carnal pride and security, we may come trembling and quaking to that Throne of Grace, and with the hands of Faith though feeble ones, with the eye of Faith, though dimly, with a hearty sincere resigning up of our selves, we may see and apprehend, and fasten, and be united to our Saviour: that we may live in C Christ, and Christ in us, and having begun in the life of grace here, we may hope and attain to be accomplished with that of Glory hereafter.

Now to him which hath elected us, &c.

The XII. Sermon.

Acts XVII. 30.‘And the times of this ignorance God winked at, but now commandeth all men every where to repent.D

THE words in our English Translation carry somewhat in the sound, which doth not fully reach the importance of the Original, and there­fore it must be the task of our Preface not to connect the Text, but clear it; not to shew its dependence on the precedent words, but to re­store it to the integrity of it self, that so we E may perfectly conceive the words, before we venture to discuss them; that we may [...], as Aristotle phrases it,Eth. 1. 7. first represent them to you in the bulk, then describe them particularly in their several lineaments. Our English set­ting of the words, seems to make two Propositions, and in them a di­rect opposition betwixt the condition of the ancient and present Gentiles that God had winked at, i.e. either approved, or pitied, or pardoned the ignorance of the former Heathens, but now was resol­ved F to execute justice on all that did continue in that was hereto­fore pardonable in them, on every one every where that did not repent. Now the Original runs thus, [...], &c. that is, in a literal constru­ction, God therefore passing over the times of ignorance, as if he [Page 181] A saw them not, doth now command all men every where to repent. Which you may conceive thus, by this kind of vulgar [...], or sensible proceeding in God. God always is essentially and perfectly every one of his Attributes, Wisdom, Justice, Mercy, &c. but yet is said at one time to be peculiarly one Attribute, at another time another, i. e. to be at one time actually just, at another time actu­ally merciful, according to his determination to the object. As when God fixes his eyes upon a rebellious people, whose sins are B ripe for his justice, he then executes his vengeance on them as on Sodom: when he fixes his eyes upon a penitent believing people, he then doth exercise his mercy, as on Nineveh. Now when God looks upon any part of the lapsed world on which he intends to have mercy, he suffers not his eye to be fixed or terminated on the medium betwixt his eye and them, on the sins of all their ancestors from the beginning of the world till that day; but having another accompt to call them to, doth for the present [...], C look over all them, as if they were not in his way, and imputing not the sins of the fathers to the children, fixeth on the children, makes his covenant of mercy with them, and command­eth them the condition of this covenant, whereby they shall ob­tain mercy, that is, every one every where to repent. So that in the first place, [...], must not be rendred by way of opposition, he winked then, but now commands, as if their former ig­norance were justifiable, and an account of knowledge should only D be exacted from us. And in the second place, [...], a word read but this once in all the New Testament, must be rendred, not winking at, but looking over, or not insisting upon; as when we fix our eyes upon a hill we suffer them not to dwell on the valley, on this side of it, because we look earnestly on the hill. Now if this be not the common Attical acception of it, yet it will seem agreeable to the penning of the New Testament, in which who­soever will observe may find words and phrases which perhaps the E Attick purity, perhaps Grammar, will not approve of. And yet I doubt not but Classick authorities may be brought where [...], shall signifie not a winking, or not taking notice of, but a looking farther, a not resting in this, but a driving higher, for so it is rendred by Stephanus, Ad ulteriora oculos convertere, and then the phrase shall be as proper as the sense, the Greek as authenti­cal as the doctrine, that God looking over and not insisting upon the ignorance of the former Heathen, at Christs coming entred a co­venant F with their successors, the condition of which was, that eve­ry man every where should repent.

And this is made good by the Gr. Schol.Oecumen, Arc [...]as. of the N. T. [...], &c. that is spoken, not that the former heathen should be unpunished, but that their successors to whom St. Paul preached, if they would repent should not be called to an accompt of their ignorance, should not fare [Page 182] the worse for the ignorance of their fathers; and at this drives also A Chrysostome, Tom. 4. out of whom the Scholiasts may seem to have bor­rowed it, their whole [...], being but [...], gleanings out of the Fathers before them. I might farther prove the necessity of this interpretation if it were required of me: and thus far I have stay'd you to prove it, because our English is somewhat imper­fect in the expression of it. [...], saith Aristotle, Two cubes are not a cube, but another figure very different from it: and indeed our English Translations by making two Proposition B of this Verse, have varied the native single Proposi­tions in that regard, and made it unlike it self, which briefly (if I can in­form my self aright) should run thus, by way of one simple Enun­ciation; God therefore not insisting on, but looking over those times of ignorance, P. 47. doth now command all men every where to repent; of which those three lines in Leo his fourth Sermon de Passione Domini are a just Paraphrase, Nos sub veteris ignorantiae profunda nocte pereuntes, in Patriarcharum societatem, & sortem electi gregis adoptavit. So then C the words being represented to you in this scheme or single dia­gram, are the covenant of mercy made with the progeny of igno­rant Heathens upon condition of repentance, in which you may ob­serve two grand parallel lines, 1. the ignorance of the Heathen, such as in the justice of God might have provoked him to have preter­mitted the whole world of succeeding Gentiles: 2. the mercy of God, not imputing their ignorance to our charge, whosoever eve­ry where to the end of the world shall repent. And first of the D first, the ignorance of the Heathen, in these words, [...], the times, &c.

If for the clearing of this bill we should begin our inquest at Ja­phet the father of the Gentiles, examine them all by their grada­tions, we should in the general find the evidence to run thus; 1. that they were absolutely ignorant, as ignorance is opposed to learning: 2. ignorant in the affairs of God, as ignorance is oppo­sed E to piety or spiritual wisdom: 3. Ignorant supinely, perversly, and maliciously, as it is opposed to a simple or more excusable ig­norance.

Their absolute ignorance or [...], their want of learning is at large proved by St. Austin 18. de Civ. Dei, Eusebius Prepar. 10. Clemens in his Protrep. and others, some of whose writings to this purpose (because it is easier for my Auditors to believe me in gross, then to be troubled with the retail) is this, that the begin­nings of learning in all kinds was among the Jews, whilst the F whole Heathen world besides was barbarously ignorant; that Moses appointed Masters among the tribes, [...], which initiated the youth of Israel in all kind of secular learn­ing, or if you will believe Patricius and his proofs,In Zoroastr: P. 4. that Sem erect­ed, and afterwards Heber enlarged Scholas Doctrinarum, Schools [Page 183] A or Seminaries of learning, where learning was professed and taught,l. 9. p. 244. that Abraham, as Eusebius cites Nic. Damascenus for it, was excellent in the Mathematicks, and dispersed and communicated his knowledg in Chaldea, from whence the Aegyptians, and from them the Grecians came to them;Ib. p. 245. that Enoch was probably judg'd by Polyhistor to be that Atlas to whom the Heathen imputed the beginning of Astronomy; that in the sum, all learning was primi­tive among the Hebrews, and from them by stealth and filching B some seeds of it sown in Phaenicia, Aegypt, and at last in Greece. For they make it plain by computation, that Moses (who yet was long after Enoch, and Sem, and Heber, and Abraham, all in confesso great Scholars) that Moses, I say, was 1500 years ancienter then the Greek Philosophers, that all the learning that is found or bragg'd of amongst the Grecians (whose ignorance my Text chiefly deals with, St. Paul's discourse here being addrest to the Athenians) was but a babe of a day old in respect of the true antiquity of learning: C that all their Philosophy was but scraps, [...], which fell from the Jews tables; that in their stealth they were very im­prudent, glean'd only that which was not worth carrying away, [...], &c. stuft their sacks, which they carried into Aegypt to buy food, only with some unprofitable chaff, with empty speculations that would puff up, not fill or nourish the soul, but brought no valuable real commodity away with them, whereby they might improve their knowledg, or reform D their manners; upon which two grounds, 1. the vanity and unpro­fitableness of their learning; 2. the novelty of it in respect of the Hebrews from whom they stole it afar off; they are not thought worthy of the title of Scholars; and for all the noise of their Phi­losophy, are yet judged absolutely ignorant, as ignorance is oppo­sed to learning.

In the second place, for their ignorance in the affairs of God, their own Authors examination will bring in a sufficient evidence. E If you will sort out the chiefest names of learned men amongst them, you will there find the veriest dunces in this learning. The Deipnosophists, the only wits of the time, are yet described by Athe­naeus to imploy their study only how to get good chear a free-cost, [...], they fed deliciously, and yet were at no charge for the provision, and amongst them you shall scarcely find any knowledg or worship of even their Heathen Gods, but only in drinking, where their luxury had this excuse or pretence of reli­gion, F that it was [...], an experiment of the power of that good God which had provided such a creature as Wine for them to abuse; which perhaps a drunken Romish Ca­suist stole from them, where he allows of drinking supra modum, ad glorificandum Deum, &c. to the glorifying of God Creator of so excel­lent a creature, which hath the effect in it of turning men into beasts. [Page 184] So that it seems by the story of them in brief, that the Deipnoso­phists, A men of the finest, politest conceits, as Ulpianus Tyrius, Calli­phanes, and the like in Athenaeus, in the multitude of the Grecian Gods had but one Deity, and that was their belly, which they wor­shipped religioso luxu, not singing, but eating and drinking prai­ses to his name; to this add the Sophistae, Protagoras, Hippias, and the like great boasters of learning in Socrates his time, and much followed by the youth, till he perswaded them from admiring such unprofitable professors, and these are observed by Plutarch, B to be meer hucksters of vain-glory; getting great store of money and applause from their auditors, [...], silver and po­pularity, but had no manner of profitable learning to bestow upon them, as Plutarch dooms them in his Platonick questions, and Socra­tes in his Dialogues in confutation of them; and certainly by their very profession 'tis plain that these men had no God to know or worship, except their gain. But not to insist on these or other their Professors of more curious, trim, polite learning, as their C Philosophers, Grammarians, and Rhetoricians, it will be more seasonable to our Text to examine St. Paul's auditors here, the great speculators among them: (1.) the deepest Philosophers, and there where you expect the greatest knowledge you shall find the most barbarous ignorance; in the midst of the [...], of the Grecians, the Philosophers (saith Clem. and 'tis plain by their writings) finding out and acknowledging in private this multitude of Gods to be a prodigious vanity, and infinitely below the gravi­ty D and wisdom of their profession, took themselves off from this unreasonable worship, and almost each of them in private wor­shipped some one God. And here you would think that they jump'd with the Jews of that time, in the acknowledging an uni­ty: but if you mark them you shall find that they did not reform the popular Atheism, but only varied it into a more rational way. Thales would not acknowledg Neptune, as the Poets and people did,In [...]. vid. ch. 15. but yet he deifies the water, as Clem. observes: another scorn­ed E to be so senseless as to worship wood or stone, and yet he deifies the earth, the parent of them both, and as senseless as them both; and does at once calcare terram, & colere, tread on the earth with his feet, and adore it with his heart. So Socrates (who by bring­ing in morality was a great refiner and pruner of barren Philoso­phy) absolutely denying the Grecian Gods, and thence called [...],In [...]. is yet brought in by Aristophanes, worshipping the clouds, [...], &c. and by a more friendly Historian described ad­dressing F a sacrifice to Aesculapius, Plato. being at the point of death. So that in brief, the Philosophers disliking the vulgar superstition went to School, faith Clem. to the Persian Magi, and of them learnt a more Scholastick Atheism. The worship of those venerable Ele­ments, which because they were the beginnings, out of which [Page 185] A natural bodies were composed, were by these naturalists admi­red and worshipped instead of the God of nature. From which a man may plainly judg of the beginning and ground of the gene­ral Atheism of Philosophers, that it was a superficial knowledge of Philosophy, the sight of second causes and dwelling on them, and being unable to go any higher. For men by nature being inclined to acknowledge a Deity, take that to be their God which is the highest in their sphere of knowledge, or the supremum cognitum B which they have attained to; whereas if they had been studious, or able by the dependence of causes to have proceeded beyond these Elements, they might possibly, nay certainly would have been reduced to piety and religion, which is [...], the knowledge and worship of God; but there were many hindrances which kept them groveling on the earth, not able to ascend this ladder. 1. They wanted that [...], which Aphrod. on the Topicks speaks of, that kindly,P. 11, familiar good temper, C or disposition of the soul [...], by which the mind is able to find out and judge of truth; they wanted that either natural harmony, or spiritual concord of the powers of the soul, by which it is able to reach those things which now in corrupt nature,In [...]. A. 16. are only spiritually discerned. For it is Clem. his Christian judgment of them, that the Gentiles being but bastards, not true born sons of God, but Aliens from the Commonwealth of Israel, were therefore not able to look up toward the Light, D(as 'tis observed of the bastard-brood of Eagles) or consequently to discern that inaccessible light, till they were received into the Covenant, and made [...], true proper Children of light. A 2d. hindrance was the grossness and earthyness of their fancy, which was not able to conceive God to be any thing but a corporeous substance, as Philoponus observes in Schol. on the books de animâ, [...], &c. When we have a mind to be­take our selves to divine speculation, our fancy comes in, [...], E raises such a tempest in us, so many earthly meteors to clog, and over-cloud the soul, that it cannot but conceive the Deity under some bodily shape, and this disorder of the fancy doth per­petually attend the soul, even in the fairest weather, in its greatest calm and serenity of affections, [...], &c. saith Plato, even when the soul is free from its ordinary distractions, and hath pro­vided it self most accurately for contemplation. Philoponus in this place finding this inconvenience, fetches a remedy out of F Plotinus for this rarifying and purifying of the fancy, and it is the study of the Mathematicks, [...]&c. Let young men be brought up in the study of the Mathematicks, to some acquaintance with an incorporeous nature: but how unprofitable a remedy this study of the Mathematicks was, to the purpose of preparing the soul to a right conceit of God, I doubt not but he himself [Page 186] afterwards found, when he turned Christian, and saw how far A their Mathematical and Metaphysical abstractions, fell below those purest Theological conceits, of which only grace could make him capable. So that in brief their understanding being fed by their fancies, and both together fatned with corporeous phantasms, as they encreased in natural knowledge, grew more hardned in spiritual ignorance, [...], P. 52. and as Clem▪ saith of them, were like birds cram'd in a Coop; fed in darkness and nourished for death: their gross conceits groping on in obscurity, and furnishing them B only with such opinions of God, as should encrease both their ignorance and damnation. That I be not too large and confused in this discourse, let us pitch upon Aristotle one of the latest of the ancient Philosophers, not above 340 years before Christ, who therefore seeing the vanities, and making use of the helps of all the Grecian learning, may probably be judged to have as much know­ledge of God as any Heathen, and indeed the Colen Divines had such an opinion of his skill and expressions that way, that in their C Tract of Aristotle's Salvation, they define him to be Christs Prae­cursor in Naturalibus, as John Baptist was in gratuitis. But in brief, if we examine him, we shall find him much otherwise, as stupid in the affairs of 1. God, 2. The soul, 3. Happiness, as any of his fellow Gentiles▪ If the book [...], were his own legitimate work, a man might guess that he saw something, though he denied the particular providence of the Deity, and that he acknow­ledged his omnipotence, though he would not be so bold with D him, as to let him be busied in the producing of every particular sublunary effect. The man might seem somewhat tender of God, as if being but newly come acquainted with him he were afraid to put him to too much pains,Aristot. [...]. cap. 9. as judging it [...], &c. neither comely nor befitting the Majesty of a God, to interest himself in every action upon earth. It might seem a reverence and awe which made him provide the same course for God, which he saw used in the Courts of Susa and Ecbatana, where the King (saith he) lived in­visible E in his Palace, and yet by his Officers as through pro­spectives and Otacousticks saw and heard all that was done in his Dominions. But this book being not of the same complexion with the rest of his Philosophy is shrewdly guest to be a spurious issue of latter times, entitled to Aristotle and translated by Apu­leius, but not owned by its brethren, the rest of his books of Philo­sophy; for even in the Metaphysicks (where he is at his wisest) he censures Zenophanes for a Clown for looking up to Heaven,F and affirming that there was one God there the cause of all things, and rather then he will credit him, he commends Parmenides for a subtle fellow, who said nothing at all, or I am sure to no pur­pose.

Concerning his knowledge of the soul, Schol. in lib. de anima. 'tis Philoponus his obser­vation [Page 187] A of him, that he perswades only the more understanding, laborious, judicious sort to be his Auditors in that subject, [...], &c. But dehorts men of meaner vulgar parts, less intent to their study, from medling at all with this science about the soul,c. 2. for he plainly tells them in his first de anima, 'tis too hard for any ordinary capacity, and yet in the first of the Metaph. he defines the wise man to be one who besides his own accurate knowledg of hard things, as the Causes of the soul, &c. is also able to teach any body B else who hath such an habit of knowledg, and such a command over it, that he can make any Auditor understand the abstrusest mystery in it. So then out of his own words he is convinced to have had no skill, no wisdom in the business of the soul, because he could not ex­plain nor communicate this knowledg to any but choice Audi­tors. The truth is, these were but shifts of pride, and ambitious pretences to cloak a palpable ignorance, under the habit of my­sterious, deep speculation: when alas poor man! all that which he C knew, or wrote of the soul was scarce worth learning, only enough to confute his fellow ignorant Philosophers, to puzzle others, to puff up himself: but to profit, instruct, or edifie none.

In the third place, concerning happiness, he plainly bewrays himself to be a coward not daring to meddle with Divinity. For 1 Eth. c. 9. being probably given to understand,1 Eth. 9. or rather indeed plainly convinced, that if any thing in the world were, then hap­piness D must likely be [...], the gift of God bestowed on men, yet he there staggers at it, speaks sceptically, and not so magisterially as he is wont, dares not be so bold as to define it: and at last does not profess his ignorance, but takes a more ho­nourable course, and puts it off to some other place to be discust. Where Andronicus Rhodius his Greek Paraphrase tells us he meant his Tract [...], about Providence: but in all Laertius his Catalogue of the multitude of his writings we find no such title, E and I much suspect by his other carriages that the man was not so valiant as to deal with any so unwieldy a subject, as the Providence would have proved. Sure I am he might, if he had had a mind to it, have quitted himself of his engagements, and seasonably enough have defined the fountain of happiness there, in Ethicks, but in the 10. c. it appears that it was no pretermission,Eth. 1. 10. but igno­rance; not a care of deferring it to a fitter place, but a necessary silence, where he was not able to speak. For there mentioning F happiness and miserableness after death, (where he might have shewed his skill if he had had any) he plainly betrays himself an arrant naturalist in defining all the felicity, and misery to be the good or ill proof of their friends and children left behind them, which are to them being dead, happiness or miseries, [...], of which they are not any way sensible. But of what hath been spo­ken [Page 188] it is plain that the heathen never looked after God of their A own accord, but as they were driven upon him by the necessity of their study, which from the second causes, necessarily lead them in a chain to some view of the first mover, and then some of them either frighted with the light, or despairing of their own abilities, were terrified or discouraged from any farther search, some few others sought after him but as Aristotle saith the Geo­meter doth,Eth. l. 1. c. 7. after a right line only, [...], as a contem­plator of truth, but not as the knowledg of it is any way useful or B conducible to the ordering, or bettering of their lives: they had an itching desire to know the Deity, but neither to apply it as a rule to their actions, nor to order their actions to his glory. For ge­nerally whensoever any action drove them on any subject which intrenched on Divinity, you shall find them more flat then ordi­nary, not handling it according to any manner of accuracy or sharp­ness, but only [...], only as much use or as little as their study in the search of things constrained them to, and then for C most part they fly off abruptly, as if they were glad to be quit of so cumbersom a subject. Whence Aristotle observes, that the whole Tract de causis was obscurely and inartificially handled by the an­cients,1 M [...]t. 4. and if sometimes they spake to the purpose, 'twas as unskilful, unexercised fencers [...], they lay on, and some­times strike a lucky blow or two, but more by chance then skill, sometimes letting fall from their pens those truths which never entred their understandings,l. 2. p. 17. as Theophilus ad Aulo. observes of D Homer and Hesiod, that being inspired by their Muses, i. e. the devil, spake according to that spirit, lyes and fables, and exact Atheism, and yet sometimes would stumble upon a truth of Di­vinity, as men possest with Devils, did sometimes confess Christ, and the evil spirits being adjured by his name, came out and con­fest themselves to be devils. Thus it is plain out of the Philosophers and Heathen discourses, 1. Of God, 2. The soul, 3. Happiness, that they were also ignorant, as ignorance is opposed to piety E or spiritual wisdom, which was to be proved by way of premise, in the 2. place.

Now in the third place, for the guilt of their ignorance, that it was a perverse, gross, malicious and unexcusable ignorance, you shall briefly judge.l Met. 2; Aristotle 1 Met. 2. being elevated above or­dinary in his discourse about wisdom, confesses the Knowledg of God to be the best Knowledg and most honourable of all, but of no manner of use or necessity; [...], &c. No knowledg is F better then this, yet none more unnecessary, as if the Evidence of truth made him confess the nobility of this wisdom, but his own supine, stupid, perverse resolutions made him contemn it as unnecessary. But that I may not charge the accusation too hard upon Aristotle above others, and take as much pains to damn him as [Page 189] A the Colen Divines did to save him, we will deal more at large, as Aristotle prescribes his wise men,c. 2. 1 Met. and rip up to you the un­excusableness of the heathen ignorance in general: 1. by the au­thority of Clemens, who is guest to be one of their kindest patrons in his [...]. where having cited many testimonies out of them, [...], p. 36. concerning the unity, he concludes thus, [...], &c. Seeing that the Heathen had some sparks of the divine truth, some gleanings out of the written word, and yet make so little use of it as they do, they do, B saith he, shew the power of Gods word to have been revealed to them, and accuse their own weakness, that they did not improve it to the end for which it was sent: that they encreased it not into a saving knowledg, where (by the way) the word weakness is used by Clement by way of softning, or mercy, as here the Apostle useth ignorance, when he might have said impiety. For sure if the accusation run thus, that the word of God was revealed to them, and yet they made no use of it, as it doth here in Clem. the sentence then upon this C must needs conclude them, not only [...] weak, but perverse contemners of the light of Scripture. Again, the Philosophers themselves confess that ignorance is the nurse, nay, mother of all impiety: [...],V. Clem. [...]. p. 56. &c. whatsoever an ignorant man or fool doth, is unholy and wicked necessarily; ignorance being [...], a species of madness, and no mad-man being capa­ble of any sober action; so that if their ignorance were in the midst of means of knowledg, then must it be perverse; if it had D an impure influence upon all their actions, then was it malici­ous and full of guilt. 2. Their chief ground that sustained and continued their ignorance proves it to be not blind but affected, which ground you shall find by the Heathen objection in Clem. [...]. p. 42. to be a resolution not to change the religion of their fathers. 'Tis an un­reasonable thing, [...] say the Heathens, which they will never be brought to, to change the customs bequeathed to them by their an­cestors. From whence the Father solidly concludes,Wisd. XIV. 16 that there E was not any means in nature,Tert. Apol. which could make the Christian Re­ligion contemned and hated, but only this pestilent custom, of ne­ver altering any customs or laws, though never so unreasonable: [...], &c. 'tis not possible that ever any nation should hate and fly from this greatest blessing that ever was bestowed upon mankind, to wit, the knowledg and worship of God, unless being carried on by custom they resolved to go the old way to Hell, rather then to venter on a new path to Heaven. [...]. p. 1. B. Hence it is that Athenagor as in F his Treaty with Commodus for the Christians, [...]o [...]ders much that among so many Laws made yearly in Rome, there was not one enacted [...], that men should forsake the customs of their fathers, which were any way absurd. P. 2. A. From whence he falls straight to their absurd Deities, as if it being made lawful to relinquish ridiculous customs there would be no plea left for [Page 190] their ridiculous gods.P. 47. So Eusebius Praep. l. 2. makes the cause of A the continuance of superstition to be, that no man dared to move those things which ancient custom of the Country had authorized; and so also in his fourth book,P. 78. where to bring in Christianity was accounted [...], to change things that were fixt, [...], &c. and to be pragmatical, friends of innovation; and so 'tis plain they esteemed St. Paul, and hated him in that name, as an Innovator, because he preached unto them Jesus and the resurre­ction, Acts 17. 18.Acts XVII. 18. So Acts the 16. 21. St. Paul is said to teach B customs which were not lawful for them to receive nor observe, being Ro­mans, because, [...] saith Casaubon out of Dio, 'twas not lawful for the Romans to innovate any thing in religion, for saith Dio, this bring­ing in of new Gods will bring in new Laws with it. So that if (as hath been proved) their not acknowledging of the true God was ground­ed upon a perverse resolution, not to change any custom of their fathers, either in opinion or practice, though never so absurd, then was the ignorance (or as St. Paul might have called it, the ido­latry)C of those times impious, affected, not a natural blindness, but a pertinacious winking, not a simple deafness, but a resolved stubbornness not to hear the voice of the charmer; which we might further prove by shewing you thirdly, how their learning or [...], which might be proved an excellent preparative to reli­gion, their Philosophy, which was to them as the Law to the Jews, by their using of it to a perverse end grew ordinarily very pernicious to them. 4. How that those which knew most, and were D at the top of prophane knowledge, did then fall most desperately headlong into Atheism; as Hippocrates observes,Aph. 3. that [...], and St. Basil, P. 230. that [...], the most perfect constitution of body, so of the soul, is most dangerous if not sustained with good care and wisdom. 5. How they always forged lies to scan­dal the people of God, as Manetho the famous Egyptian Historian saith, that Moses and the Jews were banished out of Aegypt, [...], because of an infectious leprosie that overspread the Jews,E as Theophilus cites it,Ad Autol. l. 3. and Justine out of Trogus, P. 130. and also Tacitus; and the Primitive Christians were branded and abomined by them for three special faults,L. 36. which they were little likely to be guilty of: 1. Atheism, 2. Eating their Children, 3. Incestuous, common using of women, P. 4. as we find them set down and confuted by Athen. in his Treaty or Apology,L. 3. p. 119. and Theophilus ad Autol, &c. 6. By their own confession, as of Plato to his friend, when he wrote in earnest, and secretly acknowledging the unity which he openly denied against F his conscience and the light of reason in him, and Orpheus the in­venter of the [...], professing and worshipping 365 Gods all his life time, at his death left in his will [...], that, however he had perswaded them all the while, there was indeed but one God. And lastly, Theop. ad Au­tol. l. 3. p. 117. how these two affections in them, admiration and gratitude; ad­miration [Page 191] A of men of extraordinary worth and gratitude, for more then ordinary benefactions done either to particular men or Nati­ons, were the chief promoters of idolatry; making the Heathens worship them as Gods, whom they were acquainted with, and knew to be but men, as might be proved variously and at large. If I could insist upon any or each of these,2 Chrysost. Hom. 1. p. 15. it would be most evident, what I hope now at last is proved enough, that the ignorance of those times was not simple, blind ignorance, but malign, perverse, B sacrilegious, affected, stubborn, wilful, I had almost said, knowing ignorance in them, which being the thing we first promised to de­monstrate, we must next make up the Proposition which is yet imperfect, to wit, that ignorance in these Heathen, in Gods justice, might have provoked him to have pretermitted the whole world of succeeding Gentiles, which I must dispatch only in a word, because I would fain descend to Application, which I intended to be the main, but the improvident expence of my time hath now lest only to be the close C of my discourse. The ignorance of those times being of this com­position, both in respect of the superstition of their worship, which was perverse, as hath been proved, and the prophaneness of their lives, being abominable even to nature (as might farther be shew­ed) is now no longer to be called ignorance, but prophaneness, and a prophaneness so Epidemical over all the Gentiles, so inbred and naturalized among them, that it was even become their property, radicated in their mythical times, and by continual succession deri­ved D down to them by their generations. So that if either a natu­ral man with the eye of reason, or a spiritual man by observation of Gods other acts of justice, should look upon the Gentiles in that state which they were in at Christs coming, all of them damnable superstitious, or rather idolatrous in their worship: all of them damnable prophane in their lives, and which was worse, all of them peremptorily resolved, and by a law of homage to the customs of their fathers necessarily engaged to continue in the road of damnati­on, E he would certainly give the whole succession of them over as desperate people, infinitely beyond hopes or probability of salvati­on. And this may appear by St. Peter in the 10.Acts X. of the Acts, where this very thing, that the Gentiles should be called, was so incre­dible a mystery, that he was fain to be cast into a trance, and to receive a vision to interpret it to his belief: and a first or a second command could not perswade him to arise, Verse 16. kill, and eat, verse 16. that is, to preach to Gentiles; he was still objecting the [...], F the prophaneness and uncleanness of them. And at last, when by the assurance of the spirit,Verse 15. verse 15. and the Heathen Cor­nelius his discourse with him, he was plainly convinced what otherwise he never dreamt possible, that God had a design of mercy on the Gentiles, he breaks out into a phrase both of ac­knowledgment and admiration,Verse 34. Of a truth I perceive, &c, verse 34. [Page 192] and that you may not judg it was one single Doctors opinion, 'tis A added,Verse 45. verse 45. And they of the Circumcision which believed were asto­nished, because that on the Gentiles also was poured out the gift of the Ho­ly Ghost. Nay, in the 3. to the Ephesians verse 10. it is plain, that the calling of the Gentiles was so strange a thing, that the Angels themselves knew not of it till it was effected. For this was the mystery which from the beginning of the world had been hid in God, verse 9. which was now made known by the Church to principalities and powers, v. 10. The brief plain meaning of which hard place is, that by S. Paul's B preaching to the Gentiles, by this new work done in the Church, to wit, the calling of the Gentiles, the Angels came to under­stand somewhat, which was before too obscure for them, till it was explained by the event, and in it the manifold wisdom of God. And this Proposition I might prove to you by many Topicks: 1. by symtoms, that their estate was desperate, and their disease [...], very, very mortal; as that God when he would mend a people he punisheth them with afflictions, when he intends to C stop a current of impetuous sinners, he lays the ax to the root, in a [...] or total subversion of them: but when his punish­ments are spiritual, as they were here, when he strikes neither with the rod nor with the sword, but makes one sin the punishment of another, as unnatural lust of idolatry, and the like; when he leaves a nation to it self, and the very judgment laid upon them makes them only less capable of mercy; then is it much to be feared that God hath little mercy intended for that people, their desertion D being a forerunner of judgment without mercy. 2. I might prove it ab exemplo, and that exactly with a nec datur dissimile in Scrip­ture, that the nine Monarchies which the learned observe in Scrip­ture, were each of them destroyed for idolatry, in which sin the Heathen now received to mercy, surpass all the precedent world, and for all their many destructions, still uniformly continued in their provocation. These and the like arguments I purposely omit, as concerning St. Peter's vision mentioned before out of the E 10. of the Acts sufficiently to clear the point, and therefore judging any farther enlargment of proofs superfluous, I hasten with full speed to Application.

And first from the consideration of our estate, who being the off­spring of those Gentiles, might in the justice of God have been left to Heathenism, and in all probability till St. Peter's vision discove­red the contrary, were likely to have been pretermitted eternally; to make this both the motive and business of our humiliation: for F there is such a Christian duty required of us, for which we ought to set apart some tithe, or other portion of time, in which we are to call our selves to an account for all the general guilts, for all those more Catholick engagements that either our stock, our nation, the sins of our progenitors back to the beginning of the world, nay, the [Page 193] A common corruption of our nature hath plunged us in. To pass by that ranker guilt of actual sins (for which I trust every man here hath daily some solemn Assizes to arraign himself) my Text will afford us yet some farther indictments; if 1700 years ago our father were then an Amorite, and mother an Hittite, if we being then in their loyns, were inclosed in the compass of their Idolatry; and as all in Adam, so besides that we again in the Gentilism of our Fathers were all deeply plunged in a double common damnati­on; B how are we to humble our selves infinitely above measure; to stretch, and wrack, and torture every power of our souls to its extent, thereby to inlarge and aggravate the measure of this guilt against our selves, which hitherto perhaps we have not taken no­tice of? There is not a better [...] in the world, no more powerful medicine for the softning of the soul, and keeping it in a Christian tenderness, then this lading it with all the burdens that its common or private condition can make it capable of; this tiring C of it out, and bringing it down into the dust in the sense of its spi­ritual engagements. For 'tis impossible for him, who hath fully valued the weight of his general guilts, each of which hath lead enough to sink the most corky, vain, fluctuating, proud, stubborn heart in the world; 'Tis impossible, I say, for him either wilfully to run into any actual sins, or insolently to hold up his head in the pride of his integrity. This very one meditation that we all here might justly have been left in Heathenism, and that the sins of the D Heathens shall be imputed to us their children, if we do not re­pent is enough to loosen the toughest, strongest spirit, to melt the flintiest heart, to humble the most elevated soul, to habituate it with such a sense of its common miseries, that it shall never have cou­rage or confidence to venter on the danger of particular Rebelli­ons.

2. From the view of their ignorance or impiety, which was of so hainous importance, to examine our selves by their indictment, E 1. for our learning; 2. for our lives; 3. for the life of grace in us. 1. For our learning, Whether that be not mixed with a great deal of Atheistical ignorance, with a delight, and acquiescence, and contentation in those lower Elements, which have nothing of God in them; whether we have not sacrificed the liveliest and sprite­fullest part of our age, and souls in these Philological and Physi­cal disquisitions, Storm. 1, vid. A. 17. which if they have not a perpetual aspect and aim at Divinity, if they be not set upon in that respect, and made use F of to that purpose, [...], saith Clement, their best friend, they are very hurtful, and of dangerous issue; Whether out of our circle of humane heathen learning, whence the Fathers produced precious antidotes, we have not suckt the poyson of unhallowed va­nity, and been fed either to a pride and ostentation of our secular, or a satiety or loathing of our Theological learning, as being too [Page 194] course and homely for our quainter palates; Whether our stu­dies A have not been guilty of those faults which cursed the Heathen knowledge, as trusting to our selves, or wit and good parts, like the Philosophers in Athenagoras, Apol. pro Chri­stian. p. 8. A. [...], &c. not vouchsafing to be taught by God even in matters of religion, but every man con­sulting, and believing, and relying on his own reason; Again, in making our study an instrument only to satisfie our curiosity, [...], only as speculators of some unknown truths, not intending or desiring thereby either to promote vertue, good works, B or the Kingdom of God in our selves, or which is the ultimate end (which only commends and blesses our study or knowledge) the glory of God in others.

2. In our lives, to examine whether there are not also many re­licks of heathenism, altars erected to Baalim, to Ceres, to Venus, and the like; Whether there be not many amongst us whose God is their belly, their back, their lust, their treasure, or that [...], that earthly unknown God (whom we have no one C name for, and therefore is called at large) the God of the world; Whether we do not with as much zeal, and earnestness, and cost, serve and worship many earthy vanities which our own phansies deisie for us, as ever the Heathen did their multitude and shole of gods; And in brief, whether we have not found in our selves the sins, as well as the blood of the Gentiles, and acted over some or all the abominations, set down to judge our selves by, Rom. i. from the 21. verse to the end?D

Lastly, for the life of grace in us, Whether many of us are not as arrant heathens, as meer strangers from spiritual illumination, and so from the mystical Commonwealth of Israel as any of them; Clem. Strom. 2.p. 281. calls the life of your unregenerate man a Heathen life, and the first life we have by which we live, and move, and grow, and see, but understand nothing; and 'tis our regeneration by which we raise our selves [...], from being still meer Gentiles: and Tatianus farther; [...] [...]. that without the spirit we differ from beasts,E only [...], by the articulation of our voice. So that in fine, neither cur reason, nor Christian profession, distinguisheth us either from beast or Gentiles, only the spirit is the formalis ra­tio by which we excel and differ from the Heathen sons of darkness. Wherefore, I say, to conclude, we must in the clearest calm and serenity of our souls make a most earnest search and inquest on our selves, whether we are yet raised out of this heathenism, this ig­norance, this unregeneracy of nature, and elevated any degree in F the estate of grace; and if we find our selves still Gentiles, and (which is worse then that) still senseless of that our condition, we must strive, and work, and pray our selves our of it, and not suffer the temptations of the flesh, the temptations of our nature, the temptations of the world, nay, the temptations of our secular, [Page 195] A proud learning lull us one minute longer in that carnal security, lest after a careless unregenerate natural life, we die the death of those bold, not vigilant, but stupid Philosophers. And for those of us who are yet any way Heathenish, either in our learning or lives; which have nothing but the name of Christians to exempt us from the judgment of their ignorance; ‘O Lord, make us in time sensible of this our condition, and whensoever we shall humble our selves before thee, and confess unto thee the sinful­ness B of our nature, the ignorance of our Ancestors, and every man the plague of his own heart, and repent and turn, and pray toward thy house, then hear thou in Heaven thy dwelling place, and when thou hearest forgive; remember not our offences, nor the offences of our Heathen Fathers, neither take thou venge­ance of our sins, but spare us O Lord, spare thy people whom thy Son hath redeemed, and thy spirit shall sanctifie, from the guilt and practice of their rebellions.

C Now to God, who hath elected us, hath, &c.

The XIII Sermon.

Acts XVII. 30.‘And the times of this ignorance God winked at, but now commandeth all men every where to D repent.’

THEY which come from either mean or disho­noured Progenitors, will desire to make up their fathers defect by their own industry, [...], saith Leo in his Tacticks, Will be more forward to undertake any valiant E enterprize, to recover that reputation, which their Ancestors cowardice and unworthy car­riage forfeited. So doth it nearly concern the son of a bankrupt, to set upon all the courses of Thrift, and stratagems of fiugality, to get out of that hereditary poverty in which his fa­thers improvidence had engaged him. Thus is it also in the poverty and bankrupt estate of the Soul: they who come from prodigal Ance­stors, which have embezled all the riches of Gods mercy, spent pro­fusely F all the light of nature, and also some sparks out of the Scrip­tures, and whatsoever knowledg and directions they met with, either for the ordering of their worship, or their lives, spent it all upon har­lots, turned all into the adoring of those Idol-gods, wherein consists the spiritual adultery of the soul; Those I say who are the stems [Page 197] A of this ignorant, profane, Idolatrous root, ought to endeavour the utmost of their powers, and will, in probability, be so wise and careful as to lay some strict obligations on themselves, to strive to some perfection in those particulars which their Ancestors fail'd in: that if the Gentiles were perversly blind, and resolutely, per­emptorily ignorant, then must their Progeny strive to wipe off the guilt and avoid the punishment of their ignorance. Now this igno­rance of theirs being not only by Clemens and the fathers, but by B Trismegistus in his Paemander defined to be [...], a prophaneness, Lib. 2. p. 7. 1. an irrational sleep, and drunkenness of the soul; in sum an ignorance of themselves, and of God, and a stu­pid neglect of any duty belonging to either; this ignorance being either in its self or in its fruits [...], the wickedness of the soul, and all manner of transgression: The only way for us, the successors of these ignorant Gentiles to repair those ruins,p. 10. m. to renew the Image of God in our selves, which their Idolatrous C ignorance defaced, must be to take the opposite course to them, and to provide our remedy antiparallel to their disease, (i. e.) in respect of their simple ignorance, to labour for knowledge, in respect of the effects of their ignorance, idolatry, prophaneness, and all manner of wickedness, to labour for Piety and Repentance. Briefly, if their ignorance of God was an heirous sin, and ver­tually all kind of sin, then to esteem repentance the greatest know­ledge, to approve and second the force and method of St. Paul's D argument, to prescribe our selves whatever God commands. For so here in this Chapter, having discourst over their ignorance, he makes that a motive of our repentance, and that back't with a special Item from God, Who now commands every man every where to repent.

We have heretofore divided these words, and in them hand­led already the ignorance of the ancient Heathen, which in the justice of God might have provoked him to have pretermitted the E whole world of succeeding Gentiles. We now come to the 2d. part; the mercy of God, not imputing their ignorance to our charge, who­soever every where to the end of the world shall repent. And in this you must consider, first Gods Covenant made with the Gentiles, or the receiving them into the Church, deduced out of these words, But now commands, for all to whom God makes known his commands, are by that very cognizance known to be parts of his Church; and with all these he enters covenant, he promiseth sal­vation F upon performance of the condition required by his com­mands, Repentance. Secondly the condition it self, in the last words, to repent. And then lastly the extent of both; the latitude of the persons with whom this covenant is made, and from whom this condition is exacted, all men everywhere. And first of the first, the covenant made with the Gentiles, or the receiving [Page 198] them into the Church, noted in these words, But now com­mands, A &c.

'Tis observable in our common affairs, that we do not use to lay our commands on any, but those who have some relation to us: a King will not vouchsafe to imploy any in any peculiar service, but those whom he hath entertained, and by oath admitted into his Court. And 'tis the livery by which one is known to belong to such a family, if he be imployed in either common or special service by the master of it. To express it more generally, they are B call'd natural members of a Kingdom, who are tyed to obedience, to all laws or customs national, who are engaged in the common burthens, as well as priviledges, the services, as well as benefits of a subject. The Ecclesiastical Canons are meant and exhibited only to those, who are either in truth, or profession parts of the Church: the Turk or Infidel profess'd is not honoured so much as to be bound to them. The orders and peculiar laws of a City or Country are directed to those who are either cives, or civitate C donati; and our oaths and obligations to these, or these local Collegiate statutes, argue us [...], to be members of this or that foundation. Now to whomsoever these Laws and com­mands do belong, whosoever is thus entertained, and admitted into services, is partaker also of all advantages which belong to a member of a family; and is by covenant to receive all emolu­ments in as ample a manner as any other of his quality. And this briefly is the state of the Gentiles here in the Text, who, in that D God commands them here to repent (which is the law and con­dition of the New Testament) are judged upon these grounds to be received into the covenant of the New Testament; and con­sequently made members of the Church. For as once it was an argument that only Jury was Gods people, because they only re­ceived his Commands, and the Heathen had not knowledge of his Laws; so now was it as evident a proof that the heathen were received into his Church (i. e.) into the number of those whom E he had culled out for salvation, because he made known his ordi­nances to them, entertained them in his service, and command­ed them every one every where to repent. Appian observes in his Proeme to his History, that the Romans were very coy in taking some nations into their dominions; they could not be perswaded by every one to be their Lords: he saw himself many Embassadors from the Barbarians, who came solemnly to give themselves up to the Roman greatness, ambitious to be received into the number of F their dominions, [...], and the King would not receive such low unprofitable servants. 'Twas esteemed a preferment, which it seems every nation could not attain to, to be under the Roman government, and commanded by the Roman laws: and there were many reasons, if we may judge by the outside, why [Page 199] A the Gentiles should not be likely to obtain this priviledge from God, to be vouchsafed his commands. For 1. they had been neazled up in so many centuries of ignorance, they had been so starved with thin hard fare, under the tyranny of a continued su­perstition, which gave them no solid nourishment, nothing but husks, and acorns to feed on, that they were now grown horrid, and almost ghastly, being past all amiableness or beauty, [...], good for nothing in the World. We see in Histories that B perpetual war hinders tillage, and suffers them not to bestow that culture on the ground, which the subsistence of the Kingdom requires. Thus was it with the Gentiles in the time of their [...], their hostility with God: they generally bestowed no trimming or culture on the soul, either to improve or adorn it; and then receiving no spiritual food from God, all passages being shut up by their Idolatry, they were famished into such a meager­ness, they were so ungainly and crest-faln, that all the fat kine C of Aegypt according to Pharaoh's dream, all heathen learning could not mend their looks, they were still for all their Philoso­phy, like the lean kine that had devoured the fat, yet thrived not on it; they were still poor and ill favoured, such as were not to be seen in all the land of Jury for badness, Gen. xli. 19.

2. They had engaged themselves in such a course, that they could scarce seem ever capable of being received into any favour with God.Lib. 1. p. 29. Polybius observes it as a policy of those which were de­lighted D in stirs and wars, to put the people upon some inhumane, cruel practice, some killing of Embassadors, or the like feat, which was unlawful even amongst enemies, that after such an action the enemy should be incensed beyond hope of reconciliation. So did Asdrubal in Appian, Ap. [...], p. 54. use the captive Romans with all possible cruelty, with all arts of inhumanity, fley'd them, cut off their fin­gers, and then hanged them alive; to the end, saith he, that thereby he might make the dissensions of Carthage and Rome E [...], not possibly to be composed, but to be prosecuted with a perpetual hostility. This was the effect of Achitophel's coun­sel to Absalom, that he should lye with his fathers concubines; and this also was the Devils plot upon the Gentiles, who as if they were not enough enemies unto God for the space of 2000 years Idolatry, at last resolved to fill up the measure of their rebellions, to make themselves, if it were possible, sinful beyond capability of mercy; and to provoke God to an eternal revenge, they must F needs joyn in crucifying Christ, and partake of the shedding of that blood, which hath ever since so dyed the souls, and cursed the successions of the Jews. For it is plain, 1. by the kind of his death which was Roman, 2. by his Judge, who was Caesaris rationalis, by whom Judaea was then governed: or as Tacitus saith in the 15. of his Annals, Caesar's Procurator; all capital judgments being [Page 200] taken from the Jews Sanhedrim, as they confess, Joh. xviii. 21. it is A not lawful for us to put any one to death, 3. by the Prophecy, Mat. xx. 19. They shall deliver him to the Gentiles: by these I say, and many other arguments, 'tis plain that the Gentiles had their part and guilt in the crucifying of Christ, and so by slaying of the Son, as it is in the parable, provoked and deserved the implacable revenge of the Father. And yet for all this, God enters league, and truce, and peace with them, thinks them worthy to hear and obey his laws; nay above the estate of servants, takes them into B the liberty and free estate of the Gospel, and by binding them to ordinances as Citizens, expresseth them to be civitate donates caelesti, within the pale of the Church, and covenant of salvation. They which are overcome and taken captives in war, may by law be possest by the victor for all manner of servitude and slavery, and therefore ought to esteem any the hardest conditions of peace and liberty as favours and mercies, [...], saith Marcus in Polybius: they which are conquered must C acknowledg themselves beholding to the victor, if he will upon any terms allow them quarter, or truce. Thus was it above all other sinners with the Gentiles of that time, after 2000 years war with the one God, they were now fallen into his hands, ready to receive the forest strokes, to bear the shrewdest burdens he could lay on them; had it not been then a favour above hope, to be received even as hired servants, which was the highest of the Prodigals am­bition? Luke xv. 19.Luke XV. 19. Had it not been a very hospitable carriage D towards the dogs as they are called,Mat. XV. 26. Mat. xv. 26. to suffer them to lick up those crums which fell from the childrens table? Yet so much are Gods mercies above the pitch of our expectation, or deserts; above what we are able or confident enough to ask, or hope, that he hath assumed and adopted these captives into sons. And as once by the councel of God Jacob supplanted Esau, and thrust him out of his birth-right; so now by the mercy of God, Esau hath sup­planted Jacob, and taken his room in Gods Church and Favour,E and instead of that one language of the Jews, of which the Church so long consisted, now is come in the confusion of the Gentiles, Parthians, Medes, Elamites, and the Babel of tongues, Act. ii. 9. And as once at the dispersion of the Gentiles by the miracle of a pu­nishment, they which were all of one tongue, could not under­stand one another, Gen. xi. 9.Gen. XI. 9. so now at the gathering of the Gen­tiles by a miracle of mercy,V. Leo. p. 67. they which were of several tongues understood one another, and every Nation heard the Apostles speak F in their own language, Acts XI. 6. Acts xi. 6. noting thereby, saith Austin, that the Catholick Church should be dispersed over all Nations, and speak in as many languages as the world hath tongues. Concerning the bu­siness of receiving the Gentiles into covenant,De Civit. l.18. p. 49. c. St. Austin is plenti­ful in his 18. Book de Civit. Dei. where he interprets the symboli­cal [Page 201] A writings, and reads the riddles of the Prophets to this pur­pose, how they are called the children of Israel, Hos. I. 11. Hos. i. 11. as if Esau had robbed Jacob of his name, as well as inheritance; that they are declared by the title of barren and desolate, Esa. LIV. 1. Esa. liv. 1. whose fruitfulness should break forth, surpass the number of the children of the married wife. To this purpose doth he enlarge himself to expound many other places of the Prophets, and among them the Prophecy of Obadiah, from which (Edom by a pars pro B toto signifying the Gentiles) he expresly concludes their calling, and salvation: but how that can hold in that place, seeing the whole Prophecy is a denunciation of judgments against Edom, and ver. 10. 'tis expresly read, For thy violence against thy brother Jacob, shame shall cover thee, and thou shalt be cut out for ever. How I say, from that place, amongst others, this truth may be deduced, I leave to the revealers of Revelations, and that undertaking sort of people, the peremptory expounders of depths, and Prophe­cies. C In the mean time we have places enough of plain predicti­on beyond the uncertainty of a guess, which distinctly foretold this blessed Catholick Truth, and though Peter had not mark't or remembred them so exactly, as to understand that by them, the Gentiles were to be preach't to, and no longer to be account­ed prophane and unclean, Acts x. yet 'tis more then probable, that the devil, a great contemplator, and well seen in Prophecies, observ'd so much; and therefore knowing Christs coming to be D the season for fulfilling it, about that time drooped, and sensibly decayed: lost much of his courage, and was not so active amongst the Genti'es as he had been; his oracles began to grow speechless, and to slink away before hand, lest tarrying still they should have been turned out with shame. Which one thing, the ceasing of Oracles, though it be by Plutarch, and some other of the devils champions, refer'd plausibly to the change of the soyl, and failing of Enthusiastical vapours and exhalations; yet was it an evident E argument that at Christs coming, Satan saw the Gentiles were no longer fit for his turn, they were to be received into a more honourable service under the living God, necessarily to be impa­tient of the weight and slavery of his superstitions, and therefore it concern'd him to prevent violence with a voluntary flight, lest otherwise he should with all his train of oracles have been forced out of their coasts: for Lucifer was to vanish like lightning, when the light to lighten the Gentiles did but begin to appear; and his F laws were outdated, when God would once be pleased to com­mand. Now that (in a word) we may more clearly see, what calling, what entring into covenant with the Gentiles, is here meant by Gods commanding them; we are to rank the commands of God into two sorts, 1. common Catholick commands, and these extend as far as the visible Church, 2. peculiar commands, [Page 202] inward operations of the spirit, these are both priviledges and A characters, and properties of the invisible Church (i. e) the Elect, and in both these respects doth he vouchsafe his commands to the Gentiles. In the first respect God hath his louder trumpets, [...], Matth. xxiv. 31.Mat. XXIV. 31 which all acknowledge, who are in the noise of it, and that is the sound of the Gospel, the hearing of which constitutes a visible Church. And thus at the preaching of the Gospel, [...], all the Heathens had know­ledge of his Laws, Acts l. 25. and so were offered the Covenant, if they would B accept the condition. For however that place, Acts i. 25. be by one of our writers of the Church wrested, by changing (that I say not, by falsifying) the punctuation, to witness this truth, I think we need not such shifts to prove, that God took some course by the means of the Ministery and Apostleship, to make known to all nations under Heaven (i. e.) to some of all nations, both his Gos­pel and commands;Rom. X. 18. the sound of it went through all the earth, Rom. x. 18.Psal. XIX. 4. cited out the xix. Psal. verse 4. though with some change of C a word, their sound in the Romans for their line in the Psalmist, caused by the Greek Translators, who either read and rendred [...], for [...], [...], or else laid hold of the Arabick notion of the word, the loud noise and clamor which hunters make in their pur­suit and chase.Mar. XIV. 9. So Mark xiv. 9. This Gospel shall be preached througth­out the world: Mar. XVI 15. So Mark xvi. 15. To every creature; Matth. xxiv. 14. in all the world, Mat. XXIV. 14 and many the like, as belongs to our last particu­lar to demonstrate. Besides this, God had in the second respect,D his vocem pedissequam, which the Prophet mentions, a voice at­tending us to tell us of our duty, to shew us the way, and accom­pany us therein. And this, I say, sounds in the heart not in the Ear, and they only hear and understand the voice, who are par­takers as well of the effect, as of the news of the covenant. Thus in these two respects doth he command, by his word in the Ears of the Gentiles, by giving every man every where knowledge of his laws:Just. l. 24. and so in some Latin Authors mandare signifies to give notice, E to express ones will, to declare or proclaim. And thus secondly, doth he command by his spirit in the spirits of the elect Gentiles, by giving them the benefit of adoption, and in both these respects he enters a covenant with the Gentiles (which was the thing to be demonstrated) with the whole name of them at large, with some choice vessels of them more nearly and peculiarly; and this was the thing which by way of doctrine we collected out of these words, but now commands.] Now that we may not let such a F precious truth pass by unrespected, that such an important specula­tion may not float only in our brains, we must by way of Appli­cation press it down to the heart, and fill our spirits with the com­fort of that doctrine, which hath matter for our practice as well as our contemplation. For if we do but lay to our thoughts, 1. the [Page 203] A miracle of the Gentiles calling (as hath been heretofore and now in­sisted on) and 2. mark how nearly the receiving of them into cove­nant concerns us their successors, we shall find real motives to pro­voke us to a strain and key above ordinary thanksgiving. For as Peter spake of Gods promise, so it is in the like nature of Gods command (which is also virtually a promise) it belonged not to them only, but it is to you and your children, and to all that are afar off, even as many as the Lord our God shall call, Acts II. 39. Acts ii. 39. From the first, B the miracle of their calling, our gratitude may take occasion much to enlarge it self.Pag. 158. 'Tis storied of Brasidas in the fourth of Thucidides, that imputing the victory which was somewhat mira­culous to some more then ordinary humane cause, he went pre­sently to the Temple loaded with offerings, and would not suffer the gods to bestow such an unexpected favour on him unrewarded: and can we pass by such a mercy of our God without a spiritual sacrifice, without a daily Anthem of Magnificats and Hallelu­jah's? C Herodotus observes it is as a Proverb of Greece, [...],Pag.59. that if God would not send them rain, they were to famish; for they had, said he, no natural fountains, or any other help of waters, [...], but what God from above sent. Pag. 130. So faith Thucidi­des, in the fourth of his History, there was but one fountain with­in a great compass, and that none of the biggest. So also was Aegypt another part of the Heathen world, to be watered only by Nilus, Herod. p.62. and that being drawn by the Sua, did often succour them, D and fatten the Land, for which all the neighbours fared the worse: for when Nilus flowed,Pag.61. the neighbouring Rivers were left dry, saith Herodotus. You need not the mythology; the Philosophers, as well as soyl of Greece, had not moisture enough to sustain them from na­ture; if God had not sent them water from Heaven, they and all we Gentiles had for ever suffered a spiritual thirst. Aegypt and all the Nations had for ever gasped for drought, if the sun-shine of the Gospel had not by its beams call'd out of the Well which had E no bucket, [...], living or enlivening water, John 4. 6. But by this attraction of the Sun, these living waters did so break out up­on the Gentiles, that all the waters of Jury were left dry, as once the dew was on Gideons fleece, and drought on all the earth besides, Judg. vi. 37.Judg. VI: 37. And is it reasonable for us to observe this miracle of mercy, and not return even a miracle of thanksgiving? Can we think upon it without some rapture of our souls? Can we insist on it, and not feel a holy tempest within us, a fsorm and disquiet, F till we have some way disburthened and eased our selves, with a powring out of thanksgiving? That spirit is too calm, (that I say not stupid) which can bear and be loaded with mercies of this kind, and not take notice of its burthen: for besides those peculi­ar favours bestowed on us in particular, we are, as faith Chryso­stome, Tom. 4.P. 824. in our audit of thanksgiving, to reckon up all the [...], [Page 204] all those common benefactions of which others partake with A us: for 'tis, saith he, an ordinary negligence in us, to recount Gods mercies as we confess our sins, only in gross, with an [...], we are great sinners, and God hath abounded in mercies to us; never calling our selves to a strict retail either of our sins or his mercies; and this neglect, saith he, doth deprive us of a great deal of spiritual strength. For 1. the recounting of the multitude of Gods mercies to us former­ly, might give us confidence of the continuance of them, according B to St. Cyprian, donando debet, Gods past blessings are engagements, and pawns of future. 2. 'Tis, faith he, of excellent use, [...], to bring us acquainted and familiar with God, and infinite­ly increaseth our love to him, and desire of performing some man­ner of recompence. Which one thing made the Heathen of old so love and respect their benefactors, that they worship't them, and would not suffer any common real benefaction to be done them without an [...], to the author of it, as might be pro­ved C through all ancient writings; for on these grounds was it that they would needs sacrifice to Paul and Barnabas, Acts XIV. 13. Acts xiv. 13. In the second place, if we consider how nearly it concerns us, that if they had been pretermitted, we to the end of the world might probably have lived in the same darkness, that we now hold our right to Heaven by the Covenant made to them, that those com­mands belong also to us and our children, then we must in some reason of proportion thank God liberally, for that calling of the D Gentiles, as we cannot chuse but do for our present adoption, and enlarge our thanksgiving not for our own only, but for that first justification, sanctification, and salvation of the Gentiles. And this effusion of our souls in thanks, will prove of good use to us both to confirm our confidence, and keep us in a Christian tem­per of humility and chearful obedience. And therefore I thought good to present it to you in the first place as a duty of no ordinary moment.E

2. If God hath commanded, and consequently expects our obe­dience; if these commands concern us, and contain in them all that belongs to our salvation; if they are, as hath been proved, Gods covenant with the Gentiles, then not to be wanting to our selves, but earnestly to labour and provide that no one circum­stance of them may be without its peculiar profit, and advantage to our souls.Lib. 1. p. 30. Polybius from the war betwixt the Numidians and Uticenses, observes, that if a victory gotten by the Captain, be not F by the Souldiers prosecuted to the utmost, it likely proves more dangerous, then if they had never had it: if the King, faith he, take the City, [...], and the multi­tude overjoy'd with the news, begin to grow less earnest in the battle, a hundred to one, but the conquer'd will take notice and heart from [Page 205] A this advantage, and, as the Uticenses did, make their flight a stra­tagem to get the victory. Thus is it in those spiritual combats, where God is our leader, our commander, our conquerer against the Devils host, if we of his command, the [...], the many, who expect our part in the profit of the victory, do not prosecute this conquest to the utmost, to the utter discomfiting and disarm­ing of our fugitive enemy; if we should grow secure upon the news, and neither fear nor prevent any farther difficulties, we may B be in more danger for that former conquest, and as 'twas ordina­ry in story, by that time we have set up our Trophie's, our selves be overcome. I might prescribe you many courses, which it would concern you to undertake, for the right managing of this victory, which this our Commander, hath not by his fighting, but by his very commanding purchased us. But because my Text requires hast, and I go on but slowly, I must omit them, and only insist on that which is specified in my Text, repentance, which drives C to the condition of the covenant, the matter of the command which comes next to be discuss'd.

The word Repent] may in this place be taken in a double sense; 1. generally for a sorrow for our sins, and on that, a disburdening of our selves of that load which did formerly press down the soul; for a sense of our former ill courses, and a desire to fit our selves for Gods service; for an humbling our selves before God, and flying to him as our only succour, and so it well may be called D the condition of Gods covenant with us, that which God requires at our hands under the Gospel: for it was the first word at the first preaching of the Gospel, by John Baptist, Repent, for the king­dom of God is at hand, Mat. III. 2. Matth. iii. 2. which, saith the Text, was in effect, Prepare ye the way of the Lord, make his paths straight, verse 3. So that briefly, this repent is a straightning and rectifying all crookedness, every distortion of the soul, and thereby a preparing of it for the receiving of Christ and embracing his Gospel. 2. In E a nearer relation to the first words of the verse, repentance is taken more specially by way of opposition, for a mending and for­saking of that which of old was the fault, and guilt of the Gen­tiles, a reforming of every thing which was either formally or virtually contain'd in their ignorance, and what that is you shall briefly judg.

'Tis observed by Interpreters, that doing or suffering, action or passion are exprest in Scripture by the word knowing; so to F know sin is to commit sin, to know a woman, and the like. So Peter to the maid, Matth. xxvi. 70. I know not what thou saist (i. e.) I am not guilty of the doing what thou imputest to me. According to which Hebraism to know God and his laws, is to worship him, and perform them: and consequently to be ignorant of both, is neither to worship God, nor practise any thing which his laws [Page 206] command: and so knowledge shall contain all piety and godly A obedience, or love of Gods commandments, as God is said to know those whom he loves; and ignorance, all prophaneness and neglect, yea and hatred either of God or goodness. According to which Exposition are those two sayings, the one of Hermes in his 10. Book called [...], the igno­rance of God is all manner of sin, the other of Pastor in Clemens, [...], repentance is a great piece of knowledge or wisdom. So that briefly the recovering of the soul to the B pure knowledge of God and goodness, the worshipping, loving, and obeying of God, is the thing here meant by re­pentance, which yet we may press into a nearer room, into one single duty, the directing all our actions to his glory: for this is in effect to worship, to obey, to love God, to worship for obe­dience sake, because he commands it, to obey him for love's sake, because we desire he should be glorified in our obedience. And this is the excellency and perfection of a Christian, infinitely C above the reach of the proudest moralists: this is the repentance of a Christian, whereby he makes up those defects, which were most eminently notorious in the Heathen: this is the impression of that humbling spirit, which proud heathen nature was never stamp't with, for 'twas not so much their ignorance in which they offended God, (though that was also full of guilt, as hath been proved) as their misusing of their knowledge to ungainly ends, as either ambition, superstition, or for satisfying their curiosity, as partly D hath, and for the present needs not farther to be demonstrated, Only for us whom the command doth so nearly concern, of repent­ing for, and reforming their abuses; how shall we be cast at the bar, if we still continue in the same guilt? The orderly composition of the world,P. 5. saith Athenagoras, the greatness, com­plexion, figure, and harmony of it, are [...], engagements to us and pawns to oblige us to a pious worship of God. For what Philoponus observes of the doctrine of the soul, is in like E manner true of all kind of learning, [...], they extend and have an influence over all our conversation; and if they be well studied, and to purpose, leave their characters and impressions in our lives, as well as our understandings: and from thence arose the Gentiles guilt, who did only enrich their intellectual part with the knowledge and contemplation of them, no whit better their lives, or glorifie God which made them. But for us whose knowledge is much elevated above their pitch, who F study and ordinarily attain to the understanding of those depths which they never fathom'd, the reading of those riddles which they never heard of, the expounding of those mysteries which they never dream't of; for us, I say, who have seen a marvellous light, thereby only to enlighten our brains and not our hearts, to [Page 207] A divert that precious knowledge to some poor, low, unworthy ends; to gather nothing out of all our studies which may advance Gods Kingdom in us, this is infinitely beyond the guilt of Heathenisin; this will call their ignorance up to judgment against our know­ledge, and in fine make us curse that light, which we have used to guide us only to the Chambers of death. Briefly, there was no one thing lay heavier upon the Gentiles, then the not directing that measure of knowledge they had, to Gods glory, and a vertuous B life: and nothing more nearly concerns us Christians to amend and repent of. For the most exquisite knowledge of nature, and more specially the most accurate skill in Theological mysteries, if it float only in the brain, and sink not down into the heart, if it end not in reformation of erroneous life, as well as doctrine, and glorifying God in our knowledge of him, it is to be reputed but a glorious, specious curse, not an enriching, but a burthening of the soul, Aurum Tholosanum, an unlucky merchandise, that can never C thrive with the owner, but commonly betrays and destroys all other good affections and graces in us.Aust. de civ. Dei, lib: 8. cap. 3. &c. Proclus. v. Patricii Plat. exoter. p. 42. Socrates was the first that brought morality into the Schools, ideoque ad hominum sa­lutem natus est, said an old Philosopher: and that made the oracle so much admire him for the wisest man in the world. At any piece of speculation, the devil durst challenge the proudest Phi­losopher amongst them, but for a vertuous life, he despaired of ever reaching to it: this set him at a gaze, this posed and made D a dunce of him, and forced him to proclaim the Moralist the greatest Scholar under Heaven. [...], saith Hesychius, [...], the making use of knowledge to ambition, or puffing up, is a dangerous desperate disease, and pray God it be not [...], also in its other sence, a disease that attends our holyest speculations, even our study of Divinity.Arrian. in Epict. l. 1. c. 26. For as Arrian saith of those who read many Books and digest none, so is it most true of those who do not concoct their [...], and turn it into spiritual nourishment E of the soul, [...], they vomit it up again, and are never the better for it, they are opprest with this very learning, as a stomack with crudities, and thereby fall many times [...], into vertigoes and catarrhes, the first of which dis­orders the brain, and disables it for all manner of action: or if the more classical notion of the word take place, it disaffects the bowels, entangles and distorts the entrals, and (as St. Paul com­plains on this occasion) leaves without natural affection, and then F 2. by the defluxion of the humors on the breast, clogs, and stifles the vital parts, and in fine brings the whole man to a [...], or corruption of all its spiritual graces. Thus have you at once the do­ctrine and the use of my 2. part, the nature of that repentance which is here meant in opposition to the Gentiles fault, which we have shewed to be, the directing of our knowledge to a sober pious [Page 208] end; Gods glory and our own edification, together with the A danger and sinfulness attending the neglect of these ends, both which are sufficient motives to stir you up, to awake and conjure you to the practice of this doctrine. To which you may add but this one more, that even some of the Heathen were raised up by the study of the creatures, to an admiration of Gods excellency, which was a kind of glorifying his power, and those Philoponus calls [...], perfect exact Naturalists; who from physical causes ascend to divine.Galen. de Vsu part. l. 3. c. 6. Witness Galen. de Usu partium, B where from the miraculous structure of the foot, he falls off into a meditation and Hymn of Gods providence, [...], a Psalm or holy Elogy of him that hath so wonderfully made us. Pag. 4. So Hermes in his first Book of piety and Philosophy, makes the only use of Philosophy to return thanks to the Creator, as to a good Father, and profitable Nurse, which duty he professes himself resolved never to be wanting in: and after in the latter end of his 5. Book he makes good his word, breaking out into a C kind of holy rythme, [...], &c. The like might be shewed in some measure out of others more classick heathen writers, which may briefly serve to upbraid our defects, and aggravate our offence, if we with all our natural, and spiritual light, go on yet in learning, as travellers in pere­grination, only either as curious inquisitors of some novelties, which they may brag of at their return, or else having no other end of their travel but the journey it self: without any care to D direct our studies to the advancement either of Gods glory in other, or graces kingdom in our selves. For this is the thing no doubt here aimed at, and the performance of it as strictly requi­red of us Christians, and that not some only of us, but as many as the commandment is here given to, every man every where. So I come to my last particular, the extent and latitude of the persons with whom this covenant is made, and from whom this condition is exacted, All men every where. E

Now the universality of the persons, reflects either to the pre­ceding words, Commands: or to the subsequent, the matter of these commands, Repentance. From the first, the point is, that Gods Commands were made known by the preaching of the Gospel to all men every where. From the 2. that the Repentance here meant is necessary to every man that will be saved. For the first, it hath been already proved out of Scripture, that the vocal articu­lation of Gods commands, the sound and preaching of the Gospel,F hath gone out into all the World, and that not Universis, but singulis, directed and promulged at least to every creature,Mar. XVI. 15. Mar. xvi. 15. the whole Gentile world has title to it. Now for the spiritual efficacy of this voice,1 Cor. 11. 4. the demonstration of the spirit and of power, hath not this also waited on the voice, and in some kind or other evi­denced [Page 209] A it self in the like extensive latitude? Yes no doubt, for there being two effects of the preaching of the Word, either con­verting or hardening, either dissolving the wax, or stiffening the clay, you shall in every man be sure to meet with one of them. For the conversion; what a multitude came in at the first noise of it, primo manè, as soon as ever the Sun of righteousness began to dawn. In the ancient Sea-fights they had their [...], little light ships, [...], saith Zenophon, [...], say B Thucydides and Polybius, which they sent out as spyes in the night, or at day break, to bring word how the Seas were cleared; that so they might dare to make use of the first opportunity to go out with their whole Navy. Thus was Job and some few other Gentiles before the Gospel, and Cornelius at the dawning of it, sent before in a manner, ut lembi ante classem, to spy and bring word whether the Gentiles might enter and be received; and these returning to them like Noahs Dove in Gen. viii. 11.Gen. VIII. 11. with an olive leaf in her mouth, C as a token of peace and safety to all that would venture, then did the whole Navy and Troop follow, then did the, [...], the many, the root, the common people of the world, out of all Nations, and conditions some, hasten and run and croud for a part in this salvation, and the Glory of the Lord was revealed, and all flesh saw it together, as it is in the phrase of the Prophecy, Isa. xl. 5. or in the words of the Story, Isa. XL. 5. There were daily added to the Church such as should be saved. Look but on the Doctor of the Gen­tiles, D as he sits in his chair in Tyrannus his School,Acts XIX. 10. Acts xix. 10. and you shall find that at that one Lecture (which indeed was two years long) all the lesser Asia heard the Word of the Lord Jesus, both Jews and Greeks. The 3000 souls which were added to the Church at St. Peters Sermon, Acts ii. 4. was a sufficient hours work,Acts 11. 4. and a thing so admired by the wise men of the Gentiles, that they imputed it magicis Petriartibus & veneficis carminibus, De▪ Civ. l. 18. c. 53. saith Austin, to some incantations and magical tricks which Peter used. And E they got the dying oracle to confirm it with some suppos [...]itious verses, to the purpose forged by them: that the Christian Religi­on was raised by Peters witchcraft, and by it should last 365 years, and then be betrayed and vanish. But had these same Gentiles in this humour of malice and prejudice, seen a third part of the Roman world, all the Proconsular Asia converted by one Pauls disputations, they would certainly have resolved that all the sorcery of Hell or Chaldaea could never have yielded such miraculous en­chantments. F And this the Sons of Sceva had experience of, Acts xix. 14.Acts XIX. 14. who with all their exorcisms and the name of Jesus added to them, could not yet imitate the Apostles in any one miracle; but the devil was too hard for them, wounded, overcame, prevail'd against them. Briefly 'twas more then the magick either of men or devils, which so convinced the artificers of hell, that they [Page 210] brought out their Books and burnt them openly; Act. XIX. 19. which beside the price A of their most profitable skill, were rated at 50000 pieces of silver, which is computed to be about 6250 l. So mightily grew the word of God and prevailed, and the first effect of it, conversion, was mira­culously manifest, though not on all, yet on many of all people every where. Now for the other effect of it, the hardning of obdu­rate Atheists, Act. XIX. 9. look on xix. Acts. 9. where it is plain, that for all Pauls Logick and Rhetorick, disputing and perswading for the space of three moneths, many were hardned and believed not. They had B within them [...], as Theodoret calls it, a heart that would reverberate either precept or instruction, and make it rebound against the hand that sent it;Philip. l. 1. de Anima. [...], as Philoponus phrases it in his 1. l. de animâ, their spirits fatned and incrassated within them, stal'd up and fed to such a brawniness, that neither the understanding nor the affections were capable of any impres­sion, and so their condition proved like that of the Anvil, which by many strokes is somewhat smoothed, but no whit softned; all C they got by one days preaching, was to enable them the better to resist the second. Every Sermon of a Paul or Peter was but an ala­rum to set them on their guard of defence, to warn them to cast up some more trenches and bulwarks, to fortifie themselves strong­er against any possible invasion of Gods spirit; according to that of the Aegyptian Hermes, P. 5. speaking, [...], which is in a Christian phrase the power of the Scripture; they have, saith he, this property in them, that when they meet with evil D men, [...], they do more sharpen and egg them on to evil. Thus was the preaching of the word to all men every where attended with some effects or other, according to the materials it met with, never returned unprofitably, but either was the power of God to salvation unto all that believed, or the witness of God to condemnation to those which were hardned. Now if this precious receipt administred to all, find not in all the like effect of recovering, yet from hence is neither the Physick to be under-pri­zed E nor the Prescriber; the matter is to be imputed sometimes to the weakness and peevishness of the Patient, [...], that he cannot or will not perform the prescrip­tions, sometimes [...], the fault is to be laid on the stubbornness and stoutness of the disease, which turns every medicine into its nourishment, and so is not abated but ele­vated by that which was intended to asswage it, as Hippocrates de­fines it medicinally in his Book [...].F

So then by way of Use, Pag. 2. If we desire that these commands, this covenant offered to all men every where, may evidence it self to our particular souls in its spiritual efficacy, we must with all the industry of our spirits endeavour to remove those hindrances, which may any way perturb, or disorder, or weaken it in its working [Page 211] A in us; [...],Hippoc. [...]. &c. saith Hippo­crates, you must furnish your self before-hand with a shop of se­veral softning plaisters, and take some one of them as a preparative before every Sermon you come to, that coming to Church with a tender, mollified, waxy heart, you may be sure to receive every holy character, and impression, which that days exercise hath pro­vided for thee, lest otherwise if thou should'st come to Church with an heart of ice, that ice be congealed into Crystal, and by B an [...], the warmth of Gods word not abate, but en­crease the coldness of a chill frozen spirit, and finding it hard and stubborn, return it obdurate. O what a horrid thing is it that the greatest mercy under Heaven should by our unpreparedness be turned into the most exquisite curse, that Hell or malice hath in store for us? That the most precious Balm of Gilead, should by the malignity of some tempers be turned into poyson, that the leaves which are appointed for the healing of the Nations should C meet with some such sores, which prove worse by any remedy; that the most soveraign [...], or lenitive in the world should only work to our obduration, and the preaching of the word of mercy add to the measure of our condemnation! this is enough to perswade you by an horror into some kind of sollicitude to prepare your souls to a capability of this cure, to keep your selves in a Christian temper, that it may be possible for a Sermon to work upon you, that that breath which never returns in vain, may be D truly Gospel happy in its message, may convert not harden you; to which purpose you must have such tools in store,Hippocrat. ibidem. which the Physici­an speaks of, [...], instruments of spiritual surgery, to cut and prune off all luxuriant cumbersom excre­scences, all rankness and dead flesh, which so oppress the soul, that the vertue of medicine cannot search to it. And for this pur­pose there is no one more necessary, of more continual use for eve­ry E man every where, then that which here closeth my Text, Re­pentance.

And so I come to the second respect, the universality of the per­sons, as it refers to the matter of the command, repentance, eve­ry man every where to repent.

And here I should shew you that repentance, both generally ta­ken for a sorrow for sin, containing in it virtually saith also, so the Baptism of repentance is interpreted,Acts XIX 4. Acts xix. 4. John bapti­zed with the Baptism of repentance, saying unto the people, that they F should believe, &c. and more specially in this place taken for the directing of our knowledge to practice, and both to Gods glory, as hath been shewn, is and always was necessary to every man that will be saved.1 [...]st. c. 4. For according to Aristotles rule, [...], noting both an universality of subject and circumstance, is a degree of necessity; and therefore repentance being here commanded, [Page 212] [...], is to be judged a condition necessary to every man,A who answers at the command, (i. e.) who expects his part in the covenant of salvation; this, I say, I might prove at large, and to that purpose vindicate the writings of some of the Fathers, especi­ally of Clemens, who I am almost confident is groundlesly cited, for bestowing salvation on the Heathen, without exacting the con­dition of faith and repentance, which now 'twere superfluous to insist on. 2. Urge it both to your brains and hearts, and by the necessity of the duty, rouse, and enforce, and pursue you to the B practice of it. But seeing this Catholick duty is more the inspira­tion of the Holy Ghost, then the acquisition of our labours, seeing this fundamental Cardinal gift comes from the supreme donor, seeing nature is no more able spiritually to reinliven a soul then to animate a carcass, our best endeavour will be our humiliation, our most profitable directions will prove our prayers, and what our frailty cannot reach to, our devotions shall obtain.

And let us labour and pray, and be confident, that God which C hath honoured us with his commands will enable us to a performance of them, and having made his covenant with us, will fulfil in us the condition of it; that the thundering of his word being accompa­nied with the still voice of his spirit, may suffer neither repulse nor resistance; that our hearts being first softned, then stamped with the spirit, may be the images of that God that made them: that all of us every where endeavouring to glorifie God in our knowledg, in our lives, in our faith, in our repentance, may for ever be glo­rified D by him, and through him, and with him hereafter.

Now to him that hath elected us, hath created, redeemed, &c.

The XIV Sermon.

Rom. I. 26.‘For this cause God gave them up unto vile D affections.’

-IN this most accurate Epistle that ever the Pen of man could lay title to, in which all the coun­sels, and proceedings, and methods of God in the work of our salvation are described, our Apostle in his discourse goes on the same way that God is said to do in his Decree; lays the E foundation of it as low and deep as possible, be­gins with them as it were in Massa, and though they were already Romans and Christians, yet before he openeth Heaven gates to them, and either teaches or suffers them to be Saints, he stays them a while in the contemplation of their impurity, and damn'd neg­lected estate of the stock they come from; looks upon them as pol­luted or troden down in their own blood, Ezek. XVI. 6. as the phrase is, Ezek. xvi. 6. He plows and harrows, and digs as deep as possible, that the seed F which he meant to sow might be firm rooted, that their Heaven might be founded in the Center of the earth; and their faith being secur'd by the depth of its foundation, might encrease miracu­lously both in height and fruitfulness. Thus in the latter part of this first Chapter doth he shew them the estate and rebellions, and punishment of their heathen Ancestors, that the unregenerate man [Page 214] may in that glass see his picture at the length, the regenerate hum­ble A himself in a thankful horrour, over-joyed, and wondring to observe himself delivered from such destruction. And that all may be secured from the danger of the like miscarriage, he sets the whole story of them distinctly before their eyes, 1. How the law and light of nature was sufficient to have instructed them into the sight and acknowledgement of God, and therefore that they could not pretend want of means to direct them to his worship. 2. That they contemn'd and rejected all the helps and guidances B that God and nature had afforded them, and that therefore, 3. God had deserted, and given them up unto the pride, and luxury, and madness of their own hearts, all vile affections: for this is the force of the illation, They abused those instructions which God had printed in the creature to direct them, and therefore he will bestow no more pains on them to so little purpose, their own rea­son convinced them there was but one God, and yet they could not hold from adoring many, and therefore he'l not be troubled C to rein them in any longer; for all his ordinary restraints they will needs run riot, And for this cause God gave them up to vile affecti­ons. So that in the Text you may observe the whole state and histo­ry of a heathen, natural, unregenerate life, which is a progress or travel from one stage of sinning to another, beginning in a con­tempt of the light of nature, and ending in the brink of Hell, all vile affections. For the discovery of which we shall survey, 1. The Law or light of nature, what it can do; 2. The sin of con­temning D this law or light, both noted in the first words (for this cause) that is, because they did reject that which would have stood them in good stead; 3. The effect or punishment of this contempt, sottishness leading them stupidly into all vile affections; And lastly, the inflicter of this punishment, and manner of inflicting of it, God gave them up: and first of the first, the law and light of nature what it can do.

To suppose a man born at large, left to the infinite liberty of a E creature, without any terms or bounds, or laws to circumscribe him, were to bring a River into a plain, and bid it stand on end, and yet allow it nothing to sustain it; were to set a babe of a day old into the world, and bid him shift for a subsistence; were to bestow a being on him, only that he may lose it, and perish, be­fore he can ever be said to live. If an infant be not bound in, and squeez'd, and swathed, he'l never thrive in growth or feature, but as Hippocrates saith of the Scythians, for want of girdles, run all F out into breadth and ugliness. And therefore it cannot agree either with the mercy or goodness of either God or nature, to create men without laws, or to bestow a being upon any one without a guardian to guide and manage it. Thus, lest any creature for want of this law any one moment should immediately sin against [Page 215] A its creation, and no sooner move then be annihilated; the same wisdom hath ordered that his very soul should be his Law-giver, and so the first minute of its essence should suppose it regular. Whence is it that some Atheists in Theophilus ad Auto. L. 2. p. 82: B. which said that all things were made by chance, and of their own accord, yet affirm'd that when they were made they had a God within them to guide them, their own conscience, and in sum affirm'd, [...], that there was no other God in the world. B Aristotle observes that in the creatures which have no reason, phan­tasie supplies its place, and does the Bee as much service to perform the business of its kind, as reason doth in the man. Thus farther in them whose birth in an uncivilized Countrey hath deprived of any laws to govern them, reason supplies their room, [...], saith Arius Didymus, Euseb. Prep. Reason is naturally a law, and hath as soveraign dictates with it,Ev. l. 15. p. 477 pronounceth sen­tence every minute from the tribunal within, as autho­ritatively, C as ever the most powerful Solon did in the the­atre. There is not a thing in the world purely and absolutely good, but God and nature within commends and prescribes to our practice, and would we but obey their counsels, and commands, 'twere a way to innocence, and perfection, that even the Pelagi­ans never dreamt of. To speak no farther then will be both pro­fitable and beyond exception, the perfectest law in the world, is not so perfect a rule for our lives as this [...], D as Methodius calls it,Photius. p. 915 this law of nature born with us, is for these things which are subject to its reach. Shall I say Scripture it self is in some respect inferior to it? I think I shall not prejudice that blessed Volume; for though it be as far from the least spot, or suspition of imperfection, as falshood, though it be true, perfect and righteous altogether, yet doth it not so evidence it self to my dull soul; it speaks not so clearly and irrefragably, so beyond all contradiction, and demur to my Atheistical understanding, as E that law which God hath written in my heart. For there is a double certainty, one of Adherence, another of Evidence, one of faith, the other of sense; the former is that grounded on Gods Word, more infallible because it rests on divine authority; the latter more clear, because I find it within me by experience. The first is given to strengthen the weakness of the second, and is there­fore called [...],2 Pet. I. 19. 2 Pet. [...]. 19. A more firm sure word, the second given within us to explain the difficulties and ob­scurities F of the first, [...],Verse 16. verse 16. we saw it with our eyes: so that Scriptures being conceived into words, and sen­tences, are subject either not to be understood, or amiss; and may either be doubted of by the ignorant, or perverted by the malicious. You have learnt so many words without book, and say them minutely by heart, and yet not either understand, or [Page 216] observe what you are about: but this unwritten law, which no A pen but that of nature hath engraven, is in our understandings, not in words, but sence, and therefore I cannot avoid the inti­mations; 'tis impossible either to deny or doubt of it, it being written as legible in the tables of our hearts, as the print of huma­nity in our foreheads. The commands of either Scripture or Emperour may be either unknown or out of our heads, when any casual opportunity shall bid us make use of them: but this law of the mind is at home for ever, and either by intimation or loud B voice, either whispers or proclaims its commands to us, be it never so gag'd, 'twill mutter and will be sure to be taken notice of, when it speaks softliest. To define in brief what this law of nature is, and what offices it performs in us, you are to know, that at that grand forfeiture of all our inheritance, (goods truly real and personal) all those primitive endowments of soul and body upon Adams rebellion, God afterwards, though he shined not on us in his full Image and beauty, yet cast some rays and beams C of that eternal light upon us; and by an immutable law of his own councel hath imprinted on every soul that comes down to a body, a secret, unwritten, yet indeleble Law, by which the crea­ture may be warn'd what is good or bad, what agreeable, what hurtful to the obtaining of the end of its creation. Now these com­mands or prescriptions of nature, are either in order to speculation or practice; to encrease our knowledg or direct our lives. The former sort I omit, as being fitter for the Schools then Pulpit to discourse D on, I shall meddle only with those that refer to practice, and those are either common, which they call first principles, and such are in every man in the world equally, & secundum rectitudinem, & notitiam, saith Aquinas: Frima secun­dae, qu. 94. every one doth both conceive them in his understanding what they mean, and assent to them in his will; that they are right and just, and necessary to be performed; and of this nature are the Worship of God and justice amongst men: for that lumen super nos signa­tum, in Bonaventures phrase,L. 2. d. 39. ar. 1. q 2. that light which nature hath seal'd, and E imprinted on our souls, is able to direct us in the knowledge of those moral principles, without any other help required to perswade us; or else they are particular and proper to this or that business, which they call conclusions drawn out of these common principles; as when the common principle commands just dealing, the con­clusion from thence commands to restore what I have borrowed, and the like. And these also if they be naturally and directly deduced, would every man in the world both understand, and assent to; F did not some hindrance come in and forbid, or suspend, either his understanding or assent. Hindrances which keep him from the knowledge or conceiving of them, are that confusion and Chaos, and black darkness, I had almost said that Tophet and hell of sen­sual affections, which suffers not the light to shew it self, and in­deed [Page 217] A so stifles and oppresses it, that it becomes only as hell fire, not to shine but burn; not to enlighten us what we should do, but yet by gripes and twinges of the conscience to torment us for not doing of it.Verse 21. And this hindrance the Apostle calls, ver. 21. the vanity of imaginations by which a foolish heart is darkned. Hin­drances which keep us from assenting to a conclusion in particular, which we do understand, are sometimes good, as first a sight of some greater breach certain to follow the performance B of this. So though I understand that I must restore every man his own, yet I will never return a knife to one that I see resolved to do some mischief with it. And 2. Divine laws, as the command of robbing the Aegyptians, and the like, for although that in our hearts forbid robbing, yet God is greater then our hearts, and must be obeyed when he prescribes it. Hindrances in this kind are also sometimes bad: such are either habitude of nature, cu­stom of Country, which made the Lacedemonians esteem theft a C vertue, or again the tyranny of passions: for every one of these hath its several project upon the reasonable soul, its several design of malice either by treachery, or force to keep it hood-winkt or cast it into a lethargy, when any particular vertuous action re­quires to be assented to by our practice. If I should go so far as some do, to define this law of nature to be the full will of God written by his hand immediately in every mans heart after the fall, by which we feel our selves bound to do every thing that is D good, and avoid every thing that is evil, some might through ignorance or prejudice guess it to be an elevation of corrupt na­ture above its pitch, too near to Adams integrity; and yet Zanchy, who was never guest near a Pelagian, in his 4. Tome 1. l. 10. c. 8. Thesis would authorize every part of it, and yet not seem to make an Idol of nature, but only extol Gods mercy, who hath bestowed a soul on every one of us with this character and impression, Holiness to the Lord; which though it be written unequally, in some E more then others, yet saith he, in all in some measure so radica­ted, that it can never be quite changed, or utterly abolished. However I think we may safely resolve with Bonaventure out of Austin against Pelagius, Which Da­mascen. calls, lucem natura­lem intelle­ctus, as the Schools have it from him. Wiggers [...]p. 160. Non est parum accepisse naturale indicatorium, 'tis no small mercy that we have received a natural glass, in which we may see and judge of objects before we venture on them, a power of distinguishing good from evil, which even the malice of sin and passions in the highest degree cannot wholly extinguish in us, F as may appear by Cain, the voice of whose conscience spake as loud within him as that of his brothers blood: as also in the very damn'd, whose worm of sense, not penitence for what they have done in their flesh shall for ever bite, and gripe them hide­ously. This Light indeed may either by, first blindness, or 2. delight in sinning, or 3. peremptory resolvedness not to see, be for [Page 218] the present hindred secundum actum, from doing any good upon us.A He that hath but a vail before his eyes, so long cannot judge of co­lours, he that runs impetuously cannot hear any one that calls to stop him in his career; and yet all the while the light shines, and the voice shouts: and therefore when we find in Scripture some men stupified by sin, others void of reason; we must not reckon them absolutely so, but only for the present besotted. And again, though they have lost their reason, as it moves per modum delibera­tionis, yet not as per modum naturae, their reason which moves them B by deliberation and choice to that which is good, is perhaps quite put out, or suspended; but their reason which is an instinct of na­ture, a natural motion of the soul to the end of its creation, remains in them, though it move not, like a Ship at hull and becalmed, is very still and quiet, and though it stir not evidently, yet it hath its secret heavs and plunges within us.

Now that the most ignorant, clouded, unnurtured brain amongst you may reap some profit from this Discourse, let him but one C minute of his life be at so much leisure, as to look into his own heart, and he shall certainly find within him, that which we have hitherto talkt of, his own soul shall yield him a Comment to my Sermon; and if he dare but once to open his eyes, shall shew him the law and light of nature in himself, which before he never dreamt of. Of those of you that ever spared one minute from your worldly affairs to think of your spiritual, there is one thought that suddenly comes upon you, and makes short work of all that spi­ritual D care of your selves. You conceive that you are of your selves utterly unable to understand, or think, or do any thing that is good, and therefore you resolve it a great pain to no purpose ever to go about so impossible a project. God must work the whole bu­siness in you, you are not able of your selves so much as either see, or move, and that is the business which by chance you fell upon as soon as shook off again, and being resolved you never had any eyes, you are content to be for ever blind, unless, as it was wont E to be in the old Tragedies, some [...], some new su­pernatural power come down, and bore your foreheads, and thrust, and force eyes into your heads. 'Tis a blessed desire and gracious humility in any one to invoke God to every thought they venture on, and not to dare to pretend to the least sufficiency in themselves, but to acknowledge and desire to receive all from God: but shall we therefore be so ungratefully religious, as for ever to be a craving new helps and succours, and never observe,F or make use of what we have already obtained, as 'tis observed of covetous men, who are always busied about their Incomes, are little troubled with disbursements,Art. in Ep. [...], without any proportion betwixt their receipts and expences. Shall we be so senseless as to hope that the contempt of one blessing will [Page 219] A be a means to procure us as many? I told you that God had written a law in the hearts of every one of you, which once was able, and is not now quite deprived of its power to furnish with knowledge of good and evil: and although by original, and actual, and ha­bitual sin this inheritance be much impaired, this stock of pre­cepts drawn low; yet if you would but observe those directions which it would yet afford you, if you would but practice whate­ver that divine light in your souls should present and commend to B you, you might with some face petition God for richer abilities, and with better confidence approach and beg, and expect the grace that should perfect you to all righteousness. In the mean time bethink your selves how unreasonable a thing it is that God should be perpetually casting away of alms on those who are re­solved to be perpetually bankrupts: how it would be reckoned prodigality of mercies, to purchase new lands for him that scorns to make use of his inheritance. As ever you expect any boon C from God, look, I conjure you, what you have already received, call in your eyes into your brains, and see whether your natural reason there will not furnish you with some kind of profitable, though not sufficient directions, to order your whole lives by; bring your selves up to that stay'dness of temper, as never to ven­ture on any thing, till you have askt your own souls advice whether it be to be done or no; and if you can but observe its dictates, and keep your hands to obey your head; if you can be content to D abstain when the soul within you bids you hold, you shall have no cause to complain that God hath sent you impotent into the world; but rather acknowledge it an unvaluable mercy of his, that hath provided such an eye within you to direct you, if you will but have patience to see; such a curb to restrain and prevent you, if thou wilt only take notice of its checks. 'Tis a thing that would infinitely please the Reader to observe, what a price the Heathens themselves set upon this light within them, which yet certainly E was much more dimmed and obscured in them by their idolatry and superstition, then I hope it can be in any Christian soul, by the unruliest passion. Could ever any one speak more plainly and distinctly of it then the Pythagoreans and Stoicks have done, who represent conscience not only as a guide and moderator of our actions, but as [...], a tutelary spirit, or Angel, or genius, which never sleeps or dotes, but is still present and em­ployed in our behalf? And this Arrian specifies to be the reason­able F soul, which he therefore accounts of as a part of God sent out of his own essence, [...], a piece or shread, L. 1. c. 14. or as others more according to modest truth call it, [...], a ray or beam of that invisible Sun, by which our dull, unactive, frozen bodies, after the fall were warmed and re-inlivened. Now if any one shall make a diligent inquisition in himself, shall, as [Page 220] the Philosopher in his Cynical humour light a candle to no purpose,A or as the Prophet Jeremy, seek and make hue and cry after a man through all Jerusalem, and yet not meet with him: if, I say, any body shall search for this light in himself, and find all darkness within, then will you say I have all this while possest you with some phansies and Ideas, without any real profit to be received from them; you will make that complaint as the women for our Savi­our, We went to seek for him, and when we went down all was dark, and emptiness,Joh. XX. 13. They have taken him away, and I know not where they B have laid him. Nay, but the error is in the seeker, not in my di­rections: he that would behold the Sun must stay till the cloud be over; he that would receive from the fire, either light or warmth, must take the pains to remove the ashes. There be some encum­brances, which may hinder the most active qualities in the world from working, and abate the edge of the keenest metal. In sum, there is a cloud, and gloom, and vail within thee, like that dark­ness on the face of the deep, when the earth was [...], with­out C form and void, Gen. i. 2. or like that at Lots door among the Sodomites, or that of Aegypt, thick and palpable: and this have we created to our selves, a sky full of tempestuous, untamed affections; this cloud of vapors have we exhaled out of the lower part of our soul, our sensitive faculty; and therewith have we so fill'd the air within us with sad, black meteors, that the Sun in its Zenith, the height or pride of its splendor would scarce be able to pierce through it. So that for to make a search for this light within thee,D before thou hast removed this throng, and croud of passions which encompass it, and still to complain thou canst not meet with it, were to bring news that the Sun is gone out, when a tempest hath only masked it, or to require a candle to give thee light through a mud-wall. Thou must provide a course to clear the sky, and then thou shalt not need to entreat the Sun to shine on thee, espe­cially if this cloud fall down in a showr, if thou canst melt so thick a viscous meteor as those corrupt affections are, into a soft E rain, or dew of penitent tears, thou mayest then be confident of a fair bright Sun-shine. For I dare promise that never humble, tender, weeping foul, had ever this light quite darkned within it, but could at all times read and see the will of God and the law of its creation, not drawn only, but almost engraven and woven in­to its heart. For these tears in our eyes will spiritually mend our sight; as whatever you see through water, though it be represent­ed somewhat dimly, yet seems bigger and larger then if there F were no water in the way, according to that Rule in the Opticks, Whatever is seen through a thicker medium seems bigger then it is. And then by way of Use, shall we suffer so incomparable a mercy to be cast away upon us? Shall we only see and admire, and not make use of it? Shall we fence, as it were, and fortifie our out­ward [Page 221] A man with walls and bulwarks, that the inner man may not shine forth upon it? Or shall we like silly improvident flies make no other use of this candle, but only to singe, and burn, and con­sume our selves by its flame; receive only so much light from it as will add to our hell and darkness? 'Tis a thing that the flintiest heart should melt at, to see such precious mercies undervalued; such incomparable blessings either contemned, or only improved into curses. Arrian calls those, in whom this light of the soul is, B as I shewed you,L. 1. c. 19. clouded and obscured, [...] & [...], dead trunks and carkasses of flesh, c. 2. 9. and to keep such men in order were humane laws provided, which he therefore calls, [...], miserable hard laws to keep dead men in compass, C. 13. and again, [...], Earth and Hell, the places to which dead bodies are committed. And certainly, if so, then by way of contrary, all the life that we possess is but by obedience to this law within us; and 'tis no longer to be called life, but either sleep, C or death, or lethargy, every minute that we move out of the circle of its directions. There is not a step, or moment in our lives, but we have a special use, and need of this law to manage us: eve­ry enterprize of our thoughts or actions will yield some difficulty which we must hold up, and read, and judge of by this candle, nay, sometimes we have need of a glass, or instrument to contract the beams and light of it, or else 'twould scarce be able to get through to our actions, passion, and folly, and the Atheism of D our lives, hath so thickned the medium. Wherefore in brief, re­member that counsel,Mal. II. 15. Mal. ii. 15. Take heed to your spirit, and let none deal treacherously with the wife of his youth: the wife of his youth, i. e. saith Jeroms gloss, legem naturalem scriptam in corde, the law of nature written in his heart, which was given him in the womb as a wife and help to succour him. Let us set a value on this polar Star within us, which hath, or should have an influence, at least dire­ctions on all our actions; let us encrease, and nourish, and make E much of the sparks still warm within us. And if Scholars, and Antiquaries prize nothing so high as a fair Manuscript or ancient In­scription, let us not contemn that which Gods own finger hath writ­ten within us, lest the sin of the contempt make us more miserable, and the mercy profit us only to make us unexcusable. And so I come to my second part, the sin of contemning or rejecting this law. For this cause he gave them up, 1. because the contempt of his law thus provoked him.

F The guilt arising from this contempt shall sufficiently be cleared to you, by observing and tracing of it not through every particular, but in general through all sorts of men since the fall, briefly redu­cible to these three heads, 1. the Heathens, 2. the Jews, 3. present Christians, and then let every man that desires a more distinct light descend and commune with his own heart, and so he shall make up the observation.

[Page 222] The Heathens sin will be much aggravated, if we consider how A they reckon'd of this law, as the square, and rule, and canon of their actions, and therefore they will be inexcusable who scarce be ever at leisure to call to it to direct them, when they had use of it.A [...]r. Ep. l. 2. c. 9. The Stoick calls it [...], the promise that every man makes; the obligation that he is bound in to nature at his shaping in the womb, and upon which condition his reasonable soul is at his conception demised to him; so that whosoever puts off this obedience doth (as he goes on) renounce and even pro­claim B his forfeiture of the very soul he lives by, and by every un­natural, that is, sinful action, [...], destroyes the natural man within him, and by a prodigious regeneration is in a manner transubstantiate into a beast of the field. Which conceit many of them were so possest with, that they thought in earnest, that 'twas ordinary for souls to walk from men into Cocks and Asses, and the like, and return again at natures appointment, as if this one contempt of the law of nature were enough to unman C them, and make them without a figure, comparable, nay coessential to the beasts that perish. 'Twere too long to shew you what a sense the wisest of them had of the helps that light could afford them: so that one of them cryes out confidently,Hesych. [...]. in vit. Aesch. [...], &c. If all other laws were taken out of the world, we Philosophers would still live as we do, those directions within us would keep us in as much awe, as the most imperious or severest Law-giver. And again how they took notice of the perversness of men in refusing to make use of it: for D who, saith one, ever came into the knowledge of men without this [...],Arr. l. 2. c. 11. this knowledge and discretion of good and evil, as old in him as his soul? And yet who makes any use of it in his actions: nothing so ordinary as to betray, and declare that we have it, by finding fault, and accusing vices in other men; by calling this justice, this tyranny, this vertue, this vice in another: whilst yet we never are patient to observe or discern ought of it in our selves. [...], &c. Who ever spares to call injustice which he sees E in another by its own name, for his own reason tells him 'tis so, and he must needs give it its title? But when the case concerns his own person, when his passions counsel him against the law within him, then is he content not to see, though it shine never so bright about him; and this was one degree of their guilt, that they observed the power of it in their speculations, and made use of it also to censure and find fault with others; but seldom or never strived to better themselves, or straighten their own actions by it. Again,F to follow our Apostles argument, and look more distinctly upon them in their particular chief sins which this contempt pro­duced in them, you shall find them in the front to be Idolatry and superstition, in the verses next before my Text: When they knew God they glorified him not as God, Verse 21. verse 21. But changed his glory into an [Page 223] A Image, Verse 24. &c. verse 24. And then we may cry out with Theodoret in his, [...], the errors and vanities of their worship hath rased out all the characters that God anciently had written in them. And can any man shew a greater contempt to a book, or writing, then to tear, and scrape, and scratch out every letter in it? The first voice of nature in the creature which it uttered even in the cradle, when it was an infant in the world, and therefore perhaps, as children B are wont, not so plainly, and syllabically, and distinctly, as could have been wished, is the acknowledgment and worship of one eternal God, Creator of that soul we breath by, and world we live in; as one simple, incorporeal, everlasting essence; and thus far (no doubt) could nature proclaim in the heart of every Gentile, though it was by many of them, either silenced, or not hearkned to, which if it were doubted of, might be deduced out of the 19. verse of this chap. God hath shewed unto them, Verse 19. &c. Now this C light shining not equally in all eyes; some being more over­spread with a film of ignorance, stupid conditions and passions, and the like, yet certainly had enough to express their contempt of it, so that they are without excuse, Verse 20. ver. 20. All that would ever think of it, and were not blind with an habit of sottishness, ac­knowledged a God,Vid. Origen. contr. Celsum, l. 1. p. 7. [...], &c. Clem. Strom. l. 1. yet none would think aright of him. Some would acknowledge him a simple essence, and impossible to be described, or worship't aright by any Image, as Varr [...] an Hea­then D observes, that the City and Religion of old Rome continued 170 years without any Images of the Gods in it. Yet even they which acknowledged him simple from all corporeity and compo­sition, would not allow him single from plurality. Jupiter and Saturn, and the rest of their shole of Gods, had already got in, and possest both their Temples, and their hearts. In sum their under­standings were so gross within them, being fatned and incrassate with magical phantasms, that let the truth within them say what E it would, they could not conceive the Deity without some quantity, either corporeity, or number; and either multiply this God into many, or make that one God corporeous. And then all this while how plainly and peremptorily, and fastidiously they re­jected the guidance of nature, which in every reasonable heart, counselled, nay proclaimed the contrary; how justly they pro­voked Gods displeasure, and disertion, by their forsaking and provoking him first by their foolish imaginations, I need not F take pains to insist on.1. 6, 7, c. Aristotle observes in his Rhet. that a man that hath but one eye loves that very dearly, [...], and sets a far higher price on it, is much more tender over it then he that hath two; so he that hath but one son, cannot chuse but be very fond of him, and the greatest lamentation that can be exprest, is but a shadow of that which is for ones only Son, as may appear, [Page 224] Amos viii. 10.Amos VIII. 10. Zach. xii. 10. when 'tis observed that, [...] A and [...],Zach. XII. 10. the only begotten and the beloved are taken in Scripture promiscuously, as signifying all one. And then what a price should the Heathen have set upon this eye of nature, being [...], having no other eye to see by? having neither Scripture nor Spirit, those two other glorious eyes of the world to enlighten them: and therefore being sure by the contemning and depriving themselves of this light to turn all into horrible darkness. 'Twould strike a man into agony of pity and amazement, to see a world B of Gentiles for many years thus imprisoned, and buried in a dun­geon, and grave of invincible idolatrous ignorance; and from thence engaged in inevitable hell, as 'tis in the Book of Wisdom, and all this directly by contemning this first, and only begotten light in them, which God set in the Firmaments of their hearts, to have lead and directed them a more comfortable way. And this or as bad is every unregenerate mans case exactly, if they be not forewarned by their elder brethren the Heathens example: as we C shall anon have more leisure to insist on.

Secondly, among the Jews, under which name I contain all the people of God, from Adam to Christ, 'tis a lamentable contem­plation to observe, and trace the law and the contempt of it; like a Jacob at the heels supplanting it in every soul which it came to inhabit. Those Characters of verum and bonum which in Adam were written in a statelier Copy and fairer Manuscript then our slow undervaluing conceits can guess at: nay afterwards ex­plain'd D with a particular explication to his particular danger; Of the tree of knowledge, Gen. II. 17. &c. thou shalt not eat, Gen. ii. 17. Yet how were they by one slender temptation of the Serpent presently sullied and blurr'd? so that all the aqua fortis, and instruments in the world will never be able to wash out or erase that blot; or ever restore that hand-writing in our hearts to the integrity and beauty of that Copy in its primitive estate. And since when by that sin darkness was in a manner gone over their hearts, and there remain­ed E in them only some tracks and reliques of the former structure, the glory whereof was like that of the second Temple, nothing comparable to the beauty of the first: instead of weeping with a loud voice,Ezra III. 12. as many of the Priests and Levites did, Ezra iii. 12. or building, or repairing of it with all alacrity, as all Israel did through that whole Book, their whole endeavour and project was even to destroy the ruins, and utterly finish the work of destru­ction which Adam had begun, as being impatient of that shelter F which it would yet, if they would but give it leave, afford them. Thus that [...] and [...], two sparks of that primitive sacred flame, which came from Heaven still alive and warm, though weak in them, intended by God to direct them in his will, and for ever set either as their funeral pile, or their Ordeal fire, their pu­nishment, [Page 225] A or acquittal, either as their Devil, or their God, to accuse, or else excuse them, were both in their practice neg­lected, and slighted; nay in a manner opprest and stifled. For any natural power of doing good, (God knowes) it was ut­terly departed, and therefore this thin measure of knowledge or judgment, betwixt good and evil that was left them (which my awe to Gods sincere love of his creature makes me hope and trust he bestowed on them for some other end then only to increase B their condemnation, to stand them in some stead in their lives, to restrain and keep them in from being extreamly sinful.) This, I say, they horribly rejected, and stopt their ears against that charmer in their own bosoms, and would not hear that soft voice which God had still placed within them, to upbraid their wayes, and reprove their thoughts. What a provocation this was of Gods justice, what an incentive of his wrath, may appear by that terrible promulgation of the Ten Commandments at Mount C Sinai. They despised the law in their hearts where God and nature whisper'd it in calmly, insensibly, and softly, and therefore now it shall be thunder'd in their ears in words, and those boiste­rous ones,Exod. xix. 18. at which the whole mount quaked greatly, Exod. xix. 18. And in the 16.Verse 16. verse, it must be usher'd with variety of dismal me­teors upon the Mount, and the voice of a trumpet exceeding loud, so that all the people that was in the Camp trembled. Thus upon their contempt and peevishness was this manuscript put in print, this D Privy Seal turned into a Proclamation, and that a dreadful one, bound and subscribed, with a Cursed is he that continues not in e­very title of it to perform it. Mean while the matter is not altered, but only the dispensation of it. That which till then had taught men in their hearts, and had been explain'd from tradition, from Father to Son. Adam instructing Seth, and Seth Enoch in all righ­teousness, is now put into Tables, that they may have eyes to see, that would not have hearts to understand, that the perverse may E be convinced, and that he that would not before see himself bound, may find, and read himself accursed. And after all this yet is not the old law within them, either cast away or cancel'd by the promulgation of the other: for all the book is printed, the old copy is kept in archivis, though, perhaps, as it alwayes was, neg­lected, soil'd, and moth-eaten, and he shall be censured either for ambition or curiosity, that shall ever be seen to enquire, or look after it. Still I say, throughout all their wayes, and arts, F and methods of rebellions, it twing'd, and prick't within, as Gods judgments attended them without, and as often as sword, or plague wounded them, made them acknowledge the justice of God, that thus rewarded their perversness. Nay you shall see it some­times break out against them, when perhaps the written law spake too softly for them to be understood. Thus did Davids [Page 226] heart smite him when he had numbred the people; though there A was no direct commandment against mustering or en [...]olment, yet his own conscience told him that he had done it either for distrust, or for ostentation,Ex. XXX. 12. and that he had sinned against God in trusting and glorying in that arm of flesh, or paid not the tribute appoint­ed by God on that occasion. To conclude this discourse of the Jews, every rebellion and idolatry of theirs was a double breach, of a double law, the one in tables, the other in their heart; and could they have been freed from the killing letter of the one, the B wounding sense of the other would still have kept them bound, as may appear in that business of crucifying Christ, where no humane law-giver or magistrate went about to deter them from shedding his blood, or denying his miracles, yet many of their own hearts apprehended, and violently buffetted, and scourged, and tor­mented them. At one time when they are most resolved against him, the whole Senate is suddenly pricked, and convinced within, and express it with a Surely this man doth many miracles, John XI. 48. John xi. 48.C At another time at the top and complement of the business, Pilate is deterr'd from condemning, and though the fear of the people made him valiant, yet, as if he contemn'd this voice of his consci­ence against his will, with some reluctance, he washes his hands when he would have been gladder to quench the fire in his heart, which still burnt and vext him. Lastly, when Judas had betray'd and sold him, and no man made huy and cry after him, his con­science was his pursuer, judge, and executioner, persecuted him D out of the world, haunted him, would not suffer him to live, whom otherwise the law of the Country would have reprived, till a natu­ral death had called for him.

Lastly, even we Christians are not likely to clear our selves of this bill; 'tis much to be feared, that if our own hearts are called to witness,Arr. l. 2. c. 11. our Judge will need no farther Indictments. 'Twas an Heathen speech concerning this rule of our lives and actions, that to study it hard, to reform and repair all obliquities and de­fects E in it, and then [...], to set it up strong and firm as a pillar in our hearts, was the part and office of a Philosopher; and then af­terwards to make use of it in our whole conversation, this was the part of a vertuous man complete and absolute. And how then will our contempt be aggravated, if Christianity, which Clemens calls spiritual Philosophy, and is to be reckoned above all moral per­fections, hath yet wrought neither of these effects in us? if we have continued so far from straightning, or setting up, or making F use of this rule, that we have not so much as ever enquired or mark't whether there be any such thing left within us or no? The­odoret in his second [...].Theod. Therap. 1, 2. is very passionate in the expression of this contempt of the [...], the light of truth shining in our understandings. There be a sort of birds, saith he, [Page 227] A that flie or move only in the night, called from thence Night-birds, and Night-ravens, which are afraid of light, as either an enemy to spy, to assault, or betray them; but salute, and court, and make love to darkness as their only Queen, and Mistress of their acti­ons, [...], as a creature sent on purpose to preserve them: and these, saith he, deserve not to be child but pitied, for nature at first appointed them this condition of life, [...], 'tis their birth­right and inheritance, and therefore no body will be angry with B them for living on it: [...], &c. But for them who were made creatures of light, and, had it not been for their wil­fulness, had still continued light in the Lord, who are altogether encompast and environed with light, light of nature, light of rea­son, light of religion, nay, the most glorious asterism, or con­junction of lights in the world, the light of the Gospel to walk in; for these men meerly out of perversness of wilful hearts, to hate and abjure, and defie this light, to run out of the world almost C for fear of it; to be for ever a solliciting and worshipping of darkness,Aristoph. in Nub. as Socrates was said to adore the clouds, this is such a sottishness, that the stupidst element under Heaven would natural­ly scorn to be guilty of: for never was the Earth so peevish, as to forbid the Sun when it should shine on it, or to slink away, or sub­duce it self from its rayes. And yet this is our case, beloved, who do more amorously, and flatteringly court, and woo, and solli­cite darkness, then ever the Heathens adored the Sun. Not to D wander out of the sphere my Text hath placed me in, to shew how the light of the Gospel and Christianity is neglected by us, our guilt will lie heavy enough on us, if we keep us to the light only of natural reason within us. How many sins do we daily commit, which both nature and reason abhor and loath? How many times do we not only unman, but even uncreature our selves? Aristotle observes, that that by which any thing is known first, that which doth distinguish one thing from another à priore, Mat. 4. [...], E is to be called the beginning or cause of that thing, and that the light of reason distinguishing one action from another, being the first thing that teaches me that this is good, that otherwise may from thence be termed the beginning of every reasonable action in us, and then where ever this cause or beginning is left out, and want­ing, there the thing produced is not so called a positive act, or proper effect, but a defect, an abortion, or still-born frustrate issue; and of this condition indeed is every sin in us. Every acti­on F where this law within us is neglected, is not truly an action, but a passion, a suffering or a torment of the creature. Thus do we not so much live and walk, which note some action, as lie entranced, asleep, nay, dead in sin; by this perversness 'tis perpetual night with us, nay, we even die daily; our whole life is but a multiply­ed swoon or lethargie, in which we remain stupid, breathless, [Page 228] sensless, till the day of death or judgment with a hideous voice A affrights and rouses us, and we find our selves awake in Hell; and so our dark souls having a long while groped wilfully in the Sun, are at last lead to an everlasting, inevitable darkness, whither the mercy or rayes of the Sun can never pierce; where it will be no small accession to our torment, to remember and tremble at that light which before we scorn'd. Thus, I say, do we in a manner uncreate our selves, and by the contempt of this law of our crea­tion, even frustrate and bring to nothing our creation it self, and B this is chiefly by sins of sloth, and stupid, sluggish, unactive vices, which, as I said, make our whole life a continued passion, never daring, or venturing, or attempting to act or do any thing in Church or Commonwealth, either toward God or our Neigh­bour; and of such a condition'd man no body will be so chari­table as to guess he hath any soul, or light of reason in him, be­cause he is so far from making use of it, unless it be such a soul as Tully saith a Swine hath, which serves it only instead of salt, to C keep it from stinking. For 'tis Aristotles observation, that eve­ry one of the elements,De animâ l. 1. c. 2. besides the earth, was by some Philosopher or other defin'd to be the soul. Some said the soul was fire, some that 'twas air, some water, but never any man was so mad, as to maintain the earth to be it, because 'twas so heavy and unweildy. So then this heavy, motionless, unactive Christian, this clod of earth, hath, as I said, uncreatured himself, and by contemning this active reason within him, even deprived himself of his soul.D Again, how ordinary a thing is it to unman our selves by this con­tempt of the directions of reason, by doing things that no man in his right mind would ever have patience to think of? Beloved, to pass by those which we call unnatural sins, 1. so in the highest de­gree, as too horrid for our nature, set down in the latter end of this Chapter, for all Christian ears to glow and tingle at, and I had hoped for all English spirits to abhor and loath. To pass these (I say) our whole life almost affords minutely sins which E would not argue us men, but some other creatures. There be few things we do in our Age, which are proper peculiar acts of men; one man gives himself to eating and drinking, and bestows his whole care on that one faculty which they call the vegetative grow­ing faculty; [...], &c. Porphyr. [...] 1. 3. p. 44. and then what difference is there betwixt him and a tree, whose whole nature it is to feed and grow? Certainly un­less he hath some better imployment, he is at best but [...], a plant-animal, whose shape would perhaps persuade you that it F hath some sense or soul in it, but its actions betray it to be a meer plant, little better then an Artichoak or Cabbage: another goes a little higher, yet not far, doth all that his sense presents to him, suffers all that his sensitive faculties lust, and rage to exercise at freedom; is as fierce as the Tyger, as lustful as the Goat, as rave­nous [Page 229] A as the Wolf, and the like: and all the beasts of the field, and fowls of the air, be but several Emblemes, and Hieroglyphicks con­curring to make up his character, carries a wilderness about him, as many sins as the nature of a sensitive creature is capable of: and then who will stick to compare this man to the beasts that perish? For 'tis Theophilus his note,Ad Anto. l. 2. p. 95. that the cattle and beasts of the field were created the same day with man,Gen. 1. 25. Gen. i. 25. to note, [...], the brutish condition of some men, and that therefore the B blessing was not bestowed on them, but reserved for the man which should have the dominion over them, Verse 26, 28. verse 26, 28. In sum, every action which Reason, or Scripture, or Gods spirit guides not in us, is to be called the work of some other creature of one of these three sorts; either earthly, the work of a plant, or sensual, the work of a brute, or thirdly, [...] Iambl. Pro­trept. p. 145. above the condition of both these, devillish. Thus do you see the sin of the contempt of the light of nature, which although it be dimm'd in us by our corruption, yet C shined so bright in the Heathen, that they were left without ex­cuse; in the Jews, that even their own hearts accused them for their rebellions; and in us Christians, that unless we move accord­ing to its directions, we are fallen below the condition of men, almost of creatures. 'Twere now superfluous farther to demon­strate it, our time will be better spent if we close with some use of it; and that will prove manifold, 1. by way of caution, not to deifie or exalt too high, or trust in this light of nature. It was D once a perfect glorius rule, but is now distorted and defaced; it once was light in the Lord, almost an Angel of light, it shone as the Sun in the Firmament, in majesty and full brightness, but is now only as the Moon, pale and dim, scarce able to do us any service, unless it borrows some rays from the Sun of Righteous­ness. The fall hath done somewhat with it, I know not what to call it, either much impaired it, and diminisht its light in its es­sence, or else much incumbred, or opprest it in its operations, as a E candle under a vail, or lanthorn, which, though it burn, and shine as truly as on a candlestick, yet doth not so much service in enlight­ning the room: the soul within us is much changed, either is not in its essence so perfect, and active, and bright, as once it was; or else being infused in a sufficient perfection, is yet terribly over­cast with a gloom and cloud of corruptions, that it can scarce find any passage to get through, and shew it self in our actions; for the corruptible body presseth down the soul, &c.Wisd. IX. 15. Wisd. ix. 15. And F from this caution grow many lower branches, whence we may ga­ther some fruit; as in the second place, infinitely to humble our selves before God for the first sin of Adam, which brought this darkness on our souls, and account it not the meanest, or slightest of our miseries, that our whole nature is defiled, and bruised, and weakned: to aggravate every circumstance and effect [Page 230] of that sin against thy self, which has so libera [...]ly afforded f [...]el A to the flames of lust, of rage, and wild desire, and thereby with­out Gods gracious mercy to the flames of Hell. This is a most profitable point, yet little thought on; and therefore would de­serve a whole Sermon to discuss to you. 3. To observe and ac­knowledge the necessity of some brighter light, then this of nature can afford us, and with all the care and vigilancy of our hearts, all the means that Scripture will lend us, and at last with all the im­portunities and groans, and violence of our souls, to petition and B sollicit, and urge Gods illuminating spirit to break out and shine on us. To undertake to interpret any antient Author, requires, say the Grammarians, a man of deep and various knowledge, because there may be some passage or other in that book, which will refer to every sort of learning in the world, whence 'tis ob­served that the old Scholiasts and [...], were most exquisit Scho­lars. Thus certainly will not any ordinary skill serve turn to in­terpret and explain many dark sayings, which were at first writ­ten C in the book of our hearts, but are now almost past reading; only that omniscient Spirit, that hath no shadow of ignorance, the finger that first writ, must be beseeched to read and point out the riddle. We must make use of that rotten staffe of nature, as far as its strength will bear, and that very gingerly too, never daring to lean, or lay our whole weight upon it, lest it either wound with its splinter, or else break under us: our help and stay, and subsistence, and trust must be in the Lord, our eyes must wait on D his inlightning Spirit, and never lose a ray that falls from it. Fourthly, to clear up as much as we can, and reinliven this light within us. And that first,

By stirring up and blowing, and so nourishing every spark we find within us. The least particle of fire left in a coal, may by pains be improved into a flame; 'tis held possible to restore, or at least preserve for a time any thing that is not quite departed. If thou findest but a spark of Religion in thee, which saith, A God is to E be worship't, care, and [...]edulity, and the breath of prayers, may in time by this inflame the whole man into a bright fire of Zeal to­wards God. In brief, whatever thou dost, let not any the least atome of that fire, which thou once feelest within thee, ever go out: quench not the weakest motion, or inclination even of reason to­wards God, or goodness: how unpolish't soever this Diamond be, yet if it do but glissen, 'tis too pretious to be cast away. And then 2.F

By removing all hindrances, or incumbrances that may any way weaken or oppress it, and these you have learnt to be corrupt affections. That democracy, and croud, and press, and common people of the soul, raises a tumult in every street within us, that no voice of law or reason can be heard. If you will but dis­gorge, [Page 231] A and purge the stomach, which hath been thus long op­prest, if you will but remove this cloud of crudities, then will the brain be able to send some rayes down to the heart, which till then are sure to be caught up by the way, anticipated, and de­voured. For the naked simplicity of the soul, the absence of all disordered passions is that [...],In T [...]p. l. 1. saith Aphro­diseus, that kindly familiar good temper of the soul, by which it is able to find out and judge of truth. In brief, if thou canst B crop thy luxuriant passions, if thou canst either expel, or tame all the wild beasts within thee, which are born to devour any thing which is weak or innocent, then will that mild voice with­in thee, in the cave, take heart and shew it self. In the mean time this hurry of thy senses drowns that reason, and thou canst not hope to see, as long as like old Tobit, the dung, and white film doth remain upon thine eyes. If thou canst use any means to dissolve this dung of affections which an habit of sin hath baked C within thee, the scales will fall off from thine eyes, and the blind Tobit shall be restored to his sight. In brief, do but fortifie thy reasonable soul against all the undermining, and faction, and violence of these sensual passions, do but either depose, or put to the sword that Atheistical Tyrant, and Usurper, as Iamblichus calls the affections, do but set reason in the chair, and hear, and observe his dictates, and thou hast disburthened thy self of a great company of weights, and pressures: thou wilt be able to look more D like a man, to hold thy head more couragiously, and bend thy thoughts more resolutely toward Heaven: and I shall expect, and hope, and pray, and almost be confident, that if thou dost perform sincerely what thy own soul prompts thee to, Gods spirit is nigh at hand to perfect, and crown, and seal thee up to the day of redemption.

In the next place, thou maist see thine own guilts the clearer, call thy self to an account even of those things which thou thinkest E thou art freest from; that which the Apostle in this chapter and part of my discourse hath charged the Heathens with: and if thou lookest narrowly, I am afraid thou wilt spy thine own picture in that glass, and find thy self in many things as arrant a Gentile, as any of them. For any sincere care of God, or Religion, how few of us are there, that ever entertained so unpleasant a guest in their hearts: we go to Church, and so did they to their Temples: we pray, and they sacrificed; they washed and bathed themselves F before they durst approach their deities, and we come in our best cloths, and cleanest linen; but for any farther real service we mean towards God there, for any inward purity of the heart, for any sincere worship of our soul, we are as guiltless, as free from it, we do as much contemn, and scorn it, as ever did any Heathen. Again, what man of us is not in some kind guilty even [Page 232] of their highest crime Idolatry? Some of them took the brain A to be sacred, [...], saith Athenaeus; and therefore hear­ing some cry God help when one sneezed, the ignorant sort wor­shipt that noise as an expression of a Deity in the brain; and so as senslesly many of us deify our own brains, and adore every thing that ever comes out of them. Every conceit of ours must be like the birth of Jupiters brain, a Minerva at least; be we never so ignorant or mechanical, every device, every fancie of our own (especially in matters of Religion) is straight of Divine Authori­ty; B and having resolved our selves the children of God, every cro­chet we fall upon, must be necessarily Theopneust, and inspired, and others accused for irreligious, or singular, that will not as soon give homage to it. In sum, every imagination becomes an Image, and the Artificer deifies his own handy-work, forgetting that he made it as 'tis described in the 13. of Wisd. Wisd. XIII. toward the end, and this is one kind of Idolatry. Again who is there that hath not some pleasure in his heart, which takes place of God there? They had C their Sun and Moon most glorious creatures, their Heroes, whose vertues had even deified their memory, and silly men they ad­mired, and could not choose but worship. The Devil, and a humor of superstition customary in them, fee'd and bribed the law in their hearts to hold its peace, and not recall them. But how basely have we out-gone their vilest worships? How have we outstript them? Let but one appearance of gain like that gol­den calf of the Israelites, a beautiful woman, like that Venus of the D Heathens, nay in brief, what ever Image, or representation of de­light thy own lust can propose thee, let it but glance, or glide by thee, and Quis non incurvavit? Shew me a man that hath not at some time or other faln down and worshipt. In sum, all the low­er part of the soul, or carnal affections are but a picture of the Ci­ty of Athens, Acts xvii. 16.Acts XVII. 16. Wholly given to Idolatry. The basest, unworthiest pleasure or content in the world, that which is good for nothing else,Wisd. XIII. 13. the very refuse of the refuse, Wisd. xiii. 13. is be­come E an Idol, and hath its shrines in some heart or other: and we crouch and bow, and sacrifice to it, and all this against the voice of our soul, and nature within us, if we would suffer it to speak aloud, or but hearken to its whisperings: [...], saith Philoponus, 4 Ar. de. au. Nature only bids us feed our selves with suffi­cient, lust brought in superfluity and pleasure. But this only by the way, lest you might think that part of my Sermon concerning the Heathens contempt of this law, did belong little to you, and so F might have been spared.

Lastly, not to lade every part of my former discourse with its several use, or application, take but this one more. If this Light shines but dimly within us, then let us so much the more not dare contemn it. That Master that speaks but seldom, then surely de­serves [Page 233] A to be obeyed; he that is flow in his reproofs, certainly hath good reason when he falls foul with any body. If Craesus his dumb son in Herodotus, Herod. l. 1. seeing one come to kill his father, shall by vio­lence break the string of his tongue that formerly hindred his speech, and he that never spake before roar out an [...], Sir kill not Craesus, I wonder not that the Persian held his hand: a very Barbarian would be amazed, and stopt by such a prodigy; it must needs be an odious thing when the child B which can scarce speak expresses indignation. Wherefore if ever our bestial soul, that of our sense, shall seduce us to any thing that our manly soul, that of our reason, which is now somewhat decre­pit, and dim-sighted, shall yet espy and find fault with: if in any enterprize this natural law within us shall give the check, let us sud­denly remove our project, and not dare to reject such fatherly, sage admonishments; if all the means in the world can help to a­void it, let us never fall into the snare. And if at thy audit with C thy own soul, and examination of thy self, amongst the root of thy customary ignorant sins, (and O Lord deliver me from my secret faults) if in that heap and chaos, thy own heart can pick out many of this nature, and present them to thee, which it before forewarn­ed thee of; then let the saltest, most briny tear in thy heart be called out to wash off this guilt: let the saddest mortified thought thou canst strain for be accounted but a poor unproportionable ex­piation. Think of this seriously, and if all this will nothing move D you, I cannot hope that any farther Rhetorick, if I had it to spare, would do any good upon you. Only I will try one suasory more, which being somewhat rough may chance to frighten you, and that is the punishment that here expects this contempt, and that a dis­mal hideous one, all the wild savage devourers in the wilderness, Vile affections, which punishment together with the inflicter, and manner of inflicting it, are the last parts of my discourse, of which together in a word. God gave them up to vile affections.

E A punishment indeed; and all the Fiends of Hell could not in­vent, or wish a man a greater: there is not a more certain presage of a [...], or total subversion of body and soul, nor a more desperate prognostick in the world.P. 36. 9. 'Tis observed in Photius, as a sure token that Jerusalem should be destroyed, because pu­nishment came upon it in a chain, every link drew on another, no intermission, or discontinuance of judgments, [...], &c. A single judgment that brings no train after it is cheap­ly F entertained, and is therefore called not a calamity, but a vi­sitation: but when one plague shall invade, shall supplant another, when the pestilence shall fright out the famine, and the sword pur­sue the pestilence, that neither may slay all, but each joyn in the glory of the spoyl: then must the beholder acknowledge [...], that God is resolved to make them the scene of his rage, [Page 234] not only of his wrath. Thus also in the spiritual [...] of the estate A of the soul, some sins may be suffered to invade us, and stick as did the Amorites, to goad our sides, not destroy, but humble us. But when sins shall come like gaol birds linked, and chained together, when our corruptions, and insolent tyrannical passions shall make us contemn the light and law of reason, and nature; when that con­tempt shall bring forth Idolatry, and the like, either worship of Idol­gods, or vain conceits, or imaginary delights, every lust of our ba­ser soul, then can it not be expected that God will have so little to B do, as to take any more care of us, that he will have so much mer­cy as even to punish us any longer.Es. 1. 5. The next voice that we can expect, is that horrible mercy of his, Why should you be smitten any more? Any restraint either of chastisement, or instruction would be scarce seen upon us, and therefore 'tis but lost labour to beat the air, or to lay stripes upon the sea with Xerxes. The height of Gods wrath in this world, is but our just reward, and that is di­sertion, or dereliction, and giving us over, and giving us up, which C will suddenly bring us to that which our corrupt nature posts after, all vile affections.

The issue of all is this; that those that contemn Gods ordinary restraints, God ordinarily leaves to themselves, and suffers them to run into most horrible sins. 'Tis justice that they which delight in errour, should be let alone in their course, that they may see and acknowledge the errour of their delight, that they which have contemned Gods voice, and natures within them, should be for­saken D and left without either, ungodly, unnatural; that they which lul'd their reasonable soul into a lethargie, for fear it should awake them, or disturb their delights, should not have life enough without it, ever to awake or rouse themselves or it; that they which have maliciously, and contemptuously put out the Sun, should for ever suffer a continued night.De aqu. aer. & locis. 'Tis Hippoer. his ob­servation that the Africans are very libidinous: they are neither hardy nor valiant, nor laborious, [...], Lust hath E so effeminated them, that they are fit for nothing, but for softness: and therefore saith he, [...], there be among them beasts of all sorts of strange shapes, the heat and vio­lence of the same lust makes the very beasts unnatural, the con­fusion of species is ordinary among them; and so almost every birth a Monster: nature is almost lost amongst them, and many beasts may be found in Africk, which never had any of their kind in the Ark; Africa semper aliquod apportat novi, whosoever hath F a mind to a strange sight, there he shall have store of them. Thus is it in the soul, if the upper, the manly part of it be overswell'd with lust, it straight becomes effeminate, and ener­vate, hath neither strength, nor sinews, nor courage for any undertaking: and then the beasts of the field, the lower, baser, [Page 235] A sensual faculties of the soul are not only lusty, but outragious, having no keeper to govern them, they become wilde: scorn any limits, or bounds of nature, do every day conceive horrid, un­natural, vile imaginations, and every season grow big, and bring forth Monsters, monstrous oaths, monstrous delights, monstrous vanities. Some new art or trick of sinning that was never heard of before, is invented against every solemn season of our jollity, and this we carry about, and shew, and brag of as a new creature, B or strange sight, and get a great deal of applause, and admiration, and perhaps some money by the employment. 'Twere too long to point out the several sorts of these vile affections, which con­tempt of this light hath produced in every one of us; only let us strive, and strain, and stretch the eyes that are left us to examine, and observe, every degree and Symptome, and prognostick of them in our selves, and never leave poring till we have pierced through that carnal security that blinded us, and fully humble C our selves in a sense of that desperate estate, and almost the hell that we are fain blindfold into. And if we are still blinded, still unable to see, or move, or relieve our selves, let us then lay hold of the next post or pillar we meet with, and there fix and dwell and weep, and pray, to that omnipotent Physician of our souls, that Restorer of reasonable creatures, that he will by some spiritual eye water, recover us to that sense. 'Tis impossible saith Tobias, for any one to restore us to the Image of the Father which was once on D us, Photius p. 601. but him only who was the eternal Image of the Father, he only could [...], turn out that unreasonable blind soul within us, made up of our sins which move us, and reduce us to the dignity of reasonable creatures. He hath already by his incarnation, delivered us from one long night, the dark gloom of our heathen Ancestors, O that he would be born again spiritually in our souls, to deliver us from other more Cimerian darkness, the night, and hell of habituate sin, wherein we E grope. He once breathed on us the breath of life to make us men, O that he would again but breath on us the [...], His holy breath, his hallowing breath, his breath of holiness to make us Saints. It is he that must prevent us with his Spirit, or else we run headlong into all vile affections.

O that he would but Sanctifie us, and then the most plausi­ble flattering sin in the world, nay, the most boystrous, impetuous lust, should not be able to tyrannize over us. In F the mean time, let us remain men till it shall please that free voice to call us into Saints. Grace is never placed but in a rea­sonable creature; and is therefore said to be sent to make reason see, what by nature only it cannot, never to blemish it in what it can comprehend, as the Learned Bishop hath ob­served against the Jesuit. Let us make much of all the light [Page 236] that nature and reason will afford us, let us not suffer one precious A ray to be cast away upon us, but improve it to the extent of its virtue, for the direction of our lives. And whensoever this light shall fail that it cannot guide us, or our eyes dazle that we cannot follow, let us pray to the father of lights, and God of Spirits, that he will shine spiritually in our hearts, and fulfill us with his light of grace here, which may enable us to behold him, and enjoy him, and rejoyce with him, and be satisfied with that eternal light of his Glory hereafter.B

Now to him which hath elected us, hath created, redeemed, &c.

The XV. Sermon.

Gal. VI. 15.‘But a new Creature.’

D AMongst all other encumbrances, and delayes in our way to Heaven, there is no one that doth so clog and trash, so disadvantage and back­ward us, and in fine, so cast us behind in our race, as a contentedness in a formal worship of God, an acquiescence and resting satisfied in outward performances, when men upon a confidence that they perform all that can be E required of a Christian, they look no farther then the outward work, observe not what heart is under this outside, but resolve their estate is safe, they have as much interest in Heaven as any one. Such men as these the Apostle begins to character and censure in the 12.Verse 12. verse of the Chapter, As many as desire to make a fair shew in the flesh, &c. They that stand only on a fair specious out-side, and think all the sap and life of Religion lies in the bark, they do this and this, these will have you circumcised, and constrain you to a many F burthensome ceremonies; measuring out Religion to you by the weight, thus much is required of you to do (as Popish Confessors set their deluded votaries their task of Ave Maries and Pater nosters by tale) and thus you may be sure to be saved. In brief, the Apostle here shews the unprofitableness of all these, and sets up the inward sanctity and renewedness of heart against them all, as the only thing [Page 238] that will stand us in stead, and appear to be of any weight in the A balance of the sanctuary. If you observe all the commands, and submit your selves to all the burden of both Law and Gospel, and bear it upon your shoulders never so valiantly, if you be content to be circumcised as Christ was, or because he hath now abrogated that, make use of Christian liberty, and remain uncircumcised, not­withstanding all inducements to the contrary: In brief, be you outwardly never so severe a Jew or Christian, all that is nothing worth, there is but one thing most peremptorily required of you,B and that you have omitted; For neither circumcision availeth any thing, neither uncircumcision, but a new creature.

The particle but in the front of my Text is exclusive and restri­ctive, it excludes every thing in the world from pretending to a­vail any thing, from being believed to do us any good. For by cir­cumcision the Church of the Jews, and by uncircumcision the whole profession of Christian Religion being understood, when he saith neither of these availeth any thing, he forcibly implies that all other C means, all professions, all observances that men think or hope to get Heaven by are to no purpose, and that by consequence it ex­actly restrains to the new creature; there it is to be had, and no where else: thus doth he slight and undervalue, and even repro­bate all other wayes to Heaven, that he may set the richer price, and raise a greater estimation in us of this. The substance of all the Apostles discourse, and the ground-work of mine shall be this one Aphorism, Nothing is efficaciously available to salvation, but a renew­ed,D regenerated heart. For the opening of which we will examine by way of doctrine, wherein this new creature consists, and then by way of use, the necessity of that, and unprofitableness of all o­ther plausible pretending means; and first of the first, wherein this new creature consists.

'Tis observable, that our state of nature and sin is in Scripture exprest ordinarily by old age, Rom. VI. 6. the natural sinful man, that is, all our natural affections that are born and grow up with us,Col. III. 9. are cal­led E the old man, as if since Adams fall we were decrepit,Eph. IV. 22. and feeble, and aged as soon as born, as a child begotten by a man in a consumption never comes to the strength of a man, is alwayes weak, and crazy, and puling, hath all the imperfections and cor­poral infirmities of age before he is out of his Infancy. And ac­cording to this ground the whole Analogy of Scripture runs; all that is opposite to the old decrepit state, to the dotage of nature is phrased new;Mar. I. 27. The new Covenant, Mark i. 27. The language of be­lievers F new tongues, Mar. XVI. 17. Mark xvi. 17. A new commandment, John xiii. 34.Joh. XIII. 34. A new man, Ephes. ii. 15. In sum, the state of grace is exprest by [...],Eph. II. 15. all is become new, 2 Cor. v. 17. So that old and new, 2 Cor. V. 17. as it divides the Bible, the whole state of things, the world; so it doth that to which all these serve, man; every natural man [Page 239] A which hath nothing but nature in him, is an old man, be he never so young is full of years, even before he is able to tell them. Adam was a perfect man when he was but a minute old, and all his chil­dren are old even in the cradle,Eph. 11. 5. nay, even dead with old age, Eph. ii. 5. And then consequently, every spiritual man which hath somewhat elsé in him then he received from Adam, he that is born from above, John III. 3. John iii. 3. [...], (for it may be so rendred from the original, as well as born again, as our English read it) B he that is by Gods spirit quickned from the old death,Eph. II. 5. Ephes. ii. 5. he is contrary to the former, a new man, a new creature; the old Eagle hath cast his beak and is grown young; the man, when old has entred the second time into his mothers womb, and is born a­gain, all the gray hairs and wrinkles fall off from him, as the scales from blind Tobits eyes, and he comes forth a refin'd, glorious, beau­teous new creature, you would wonder to see the change. So that you find in general, that the Scripture presumes it, that there C is a renovation, a casting away of the old coat, a youth and spring again in many men from the old age and weak bed-rid estate of na­ture. Now that you may conceive wherein it consists, how this new man is brought forth in us, by whom it is conceived, and in what womb 'tis carried, I will require no more of you, then to observe and understand with me what is meant by the ordinary phrase in our Divines, a new principle, or inward principle of life, and that you shall do briefly thus. A mans body is naturally D a sluggish, unactive, motionless, heavy thing, not able to stir or move the least animal motion, without a soul to enliven it; with­out that 'tis but a carcass, as you see at death, when the soul is separated from it, it returns to be but a stock or lump of flesh, the soul bestows all life and motion on it, and enables it to perform any work of nature. Again, the body and soul together conside­red in relation to somewhat above their power and activity, are as impotent and motionless, as before the body without the soul. E Set a man to remove a mountain, and he will heave perhaps to o­bey your command, but in event will do no more towards the displacing of it, then a stone in the street could do: but now let an omnipotent power be annext to this man, let a supernatural spirit be joyned to this soul, and then will it be able to overcome the proudest, stoutest difficulty in nature. You have heard in the primitive Church of a grain of faith removing mountains, and be­lieve me, all miracles are not yet out-dated. The work of regene­ration, F the bestowing of a spiritual life on one dead in trespasses and sins, the making of a carcass walk, the natural old man to spring again, and move spiritually, is as great a miracle as that. Now the soul in that it produces life and motion, the exercise of life in the body is called a principle, that is, a spring or fountain of life, because all comes from it; in like manner, that which [Page 234] [...] [Page 235] [...] [Page 236] [...] [Page 237] [...] [Page 238] [...] [Page 239] [...] [Page 240] moves this soul, and enables it to do that which naturally it could A not; that which gives it a new life, which before it lived not, fur­nisheth it with spiritual powers to quell and subdue all carnal af­fections which were before too hard for it; this, I say, is called properly an inward principle, and an inward, because it is in­wardly and secretly infused, doth not only outwardly assist us as an auxiliary at a dead lift, but is sown and planted in our hearts, as a soul to the soul to elevate and enable it above it self, hath its seat and palace in the regenerate heart, and there exercises domi­nion,B executes judgment, and that is commonly either by prison or banishment, it either fetters, or else expels all insolent rebelli­ous lusts. Now the new principle, by which not the man, but the new man the Christian lives, is, in a word, the spirit of God, which unites it self to the regenerate heart, so that now he is said to be a godly man, a spiritual man from the God, from the spirit, as before a living reasonable man from the soul, from the reason that inform'd and ruled in him; which is noted by that distincti­on C in Scripture betwixt the regenerate and unregenerate, exprest by a natural or animal, and a spiritual man. Those creatures that have no soul in them are called naturals, having nothing but nature within to move them, others which have a soul, animals, or living creatures, by both which the unregenerate is signified indifferently, because the soul which he hath stands him in little stead, his flesh rules all, and then he is also called a carnal man, for all his soul he is but a lump of flesh, and therefore, whether D you say he hath a soul, and so call him an animal, or hath not a soul, and so call him a meer natural, there is no great difference in it. But now the regenerate man which hath more then a soul, Gods spirit to enliven him, he is of another rank, [...], a spi­ritual man, nay, only he properly a Christian, because he lives by Christ,Gal. II. 20. He lives, yet not he, but Christ liveth in him, Gal. ii. 20. This being premised, that now you know what this new creature is, he that lives and moves by a new principle, all that is behind E will be clearliest presented to you by resolving these four questi­ons; 1. whence it comes; 2. where it lodges; 3. when it enters; 4. what works it performs there. To the first, whence it comes, the answer is clear and punctual,John III. 3. John iii. 3. [...], from above, from whence comes every good, and especially every perfect gift, James i. 17.James I. 17. but this most peculiarly by a several and more excellent way then any thing else. Since Christs ascension the Holy Ghost of all the persons in the Trinity is most frequently employed in the F work of descending from Heaven, and that by way of mission from the Father and the Son, according to the promise of Christ, John xv. 26.John XV. 26. The comforter whom I will send from the Father. Now this spirit being present every where in its essence, is said to come to us by communication of his gifts, and so to be peculiarly resident [Page 241] A in us, as God is in the Church, from which Analogy our bodies are called the Temples of the Holy Ghost which is in us,1 Cor. VI. 19. 1 Cor. vi. 19. God sends then his Spirit into our hearts; and this, I said, by a peculiar manner, not by way of emission, as an arrow sent out of a bow, which loses its union which it had with the bow, and is now fastned in the But or white; nor properly by way of infusion, as the soul is in the body, infus'd from God, yet so also, that it is in a manner put into our hands, and is so in the man's possession B that hath it, that it is neither in any mans else, nor yet by any ex­traordinary tye annext to God from whom it came: but by way of irradiation, as a beam sent from the Sun, that is in the air indeed, and that substantially, yet so as it is not separated from the Sun, nay, consists only in this, that it is united to the Sun; so that if it were possible for it to be cut off from the Sun, it would desist to be, it would illuminate no longer. So that you must conceive these beams of Gods Spirit at the same time in the Christians heart C and in the spirit, and so uniting that Spirit to the heart, as you may conceive by this proportion. I have a javelin or spear in my hand, if I would mischief any thing, or drive it from me, I dart it out of my hand at it, from which Gods judgments are compa­red to shooting and lightning, He hath bent his bow, he hath sent forth his arrows, Psal. XVIII. 14. he cast forth lightnings, Psal. xviii. 14. But if I like any thing that I meet with, if I would have it to me, I reach out my spear and fasten in it, but still hold the spear in my hand, and D having pierct it draw it to me. Thus doth God reach forth his graces to us, and as I may so say, by keeping one end in his hand, and fastning the other in us, plucks and unites us to himself, from which regeneration is ordinarily called an union with Christ, and this union by a strong able band, [...], in Euseb. his phrase, which no man can cut asunder. 'Tis impos­sible to divide or cut a spirit, and this bond is [...], a spiritual one, and that made St. Paul so confident, That no crea­ture E should ever separate him, Rom. VIII. 39 Rom. viii. 39. And this God does by way of emanation, as a loadstone sending out its effluvia or mag­netick atomes draws the iron to it self, which never stays till it be united. Thus do you see from whence this principle comes to me, and in what manner, from Gods Spirit by this means uniting me to himself.

To the second question, where it lodges, my answer is, in the heart of man, in the whole soul; not in the understanding, not in F the will, (a distinction of faculties invented by Philosophers, to puz­zle and perplex Divines, and put them to needless shifts) but, I say, in the whole soul, ruling and guiding it in all its actions, enabling it to understand and will spiritually; conceived, I say, and born in the soul, but nursed, and fed, and encreased into a perfect sta­ture by the outward Organs and actions of the body, for by them [Page 242] it begins to express and shew it self in the world, by them the ha­bit A is exerted and made perfect, the seed shot up into an ear, the Spring improved to Autumn, when the tongue discourses, the hands act, the feet run the way of Gods Commandments. So, I say, the soul is the mother, and the operations of soul and bo­dy the nurse of this Spirit in us, and then who can hold in his Spirit without stifling, from breaking out into that joyful acclamation, Blessed is the womb that bears this incarnate Spirit, Luke XI. 27. and the paps that give him suck! Now this inward principle, this grace of regenerati­on,B though it be seated in the whole soul, as it is an habit, yet as it is an operative habit producing, or rather enabling the man to pro­duce several gracious works, so it is peculiarly in every part, and accordingly receives divers names according to several exercises of its power in those several parts. As the soul of man sees in the eye, hears in the ear, understands in the brain, chooses and desires in the heart, and being but one soul, yet works in every room, every shop of the body in a several trade, as it were, and is ac­cordingly C called a seeing, a hearing, a willing or understanding soul: thus doth the habit of grace seated in the whole, express and evidence it self peculiarly in every act of it, and is called by as several names as the reasonable soul hath distinct acts, or ob­jects. In the understanding 'tis first, spiritual wisdom, and discre­tion in holy things,Rom. I. 28. opposite to which is [...], Rom. i. 28. an unapproving, as well as unapproved or reprobate mind, and frequently in Scripture spiritual blindness. Then as a branch of this,D it is belief or assent to the truth of the promises, and the like; in the practical judgment 'tis spiritual prudence in ordering all our holy knowledge to holy practice; in the will 'tis a regular choice of whatsoever may prove available to salvation, a holy love of the end, and embracing of the means with courage and zeal. Lastly, in the outward man 'tis an ordering of all our actions to a blessed conformity with a sanctified soul. In brief, 'tis one principle with­in us doth every thing that is holy, believes, repents, hopes, loves,E obeys, and what not? And consequently, is effectually in every part of body and soul, sanctifying it to work spiritually, as an ho­ly instrument of a divine invisible cause, that is, the Holy Ghost that is in us and throughout us.

For the third question, when this new principle enters; first, you are to know, that comes into the heart in a three-fold condition; 1. as an harbinger; 2. as a private secret guest; 3. as an inhabitant, or house-keeper. As 'tis an harbinger, so it comes to fit and prepare F us for it self; trims up, and sweeps, and sweetens the soul, that it may be readier to entertain him when he comes to reside; and that he doth (as the ancient gladiators had their arma praelusoria) by skirmishing with our corruptions before he comes to give them a pitch-battel; he brandishes a flaming sword about our ears, [Page 243] A and as by a flash of lightning, gives us a sense of a dismal hideous state; and so somewhat restrains us from excess and fury; first, by a momentary remorse, then by a more lasting, yet not purify­ing flame, the Spirit of bondage. In sum, every check of consci­ence, every sigh for sin, every fear of judgment, every desire of grace, every motion or inclination toward spiritual good, he it never so short-winded, is praeludium spiritus, a kind of John Baptist to Christ, something that God sent before to prepare the wayes of B the Lord. And thus the Spirit comes very often, in every afflicti­on, every disease, (which is part of Gods discipline to keep us in some order,) in brief, at every Sermon that works upon us at the hearing: then I say, the lightning flashes in our eyes, we have a glimpse of his Spirit, but cannot come to a full sight of it▪ and thus he appears to many, whom he will never dwell with. Unhappy men that they cannot lay hold on him when he comes so near them! and yet somewhat more happy, then they that never came within ken of C him: stopt their ears when he spake to them even at this di­stance. Every man in the Christian Church hath frequently in his life a power to partake of Gods ordinary preparing graces: and 'tis some degree of obedience, though no work of regenera­tion, to make good use of them: and if he without the Inhabitance of the Spirit cannot make such use as he should, yet to make the best he can: and thus I say the Spirit appears to the unregenerate, almost every day of our lives. 2. When this Spirit comes a D guest to lodge with us, then is he said to enter; but till by actions and frequent obliging works he makes himself known to his neighbours, as long as he keeps his chamber, till he declare him­self to be there, so long he remains a private secret guest: and that's called the introduction of the form, that makes a man to be truly regenerate, when the seed is sown in his heart, when the habit is infused, and that is done sometimes discernibly, some­times not discernibly, but seldom, as when Saul was called in the E midst of his madness,Acts IX. Acts ix. he was certainly able to tell a man the very minute of his change, of his being made a new creature. Thus they which have long lived in an enormous Antichristian course, do many times find themselves strucken on a sudden, and are able to date their regeneration, and tell you punctually how old they are in the Spirit. Yet because there be many preparations to this Spirit, which are not this Spirit; many presumptions in our hearts false-grounded, many tremblings and jealousies in those that have it, F great affinity between faith natural and spiritual: seeing 'tis a Spirit that thus enters, and not as it did light on the Disciples in a bodily shape, 'tis not an easie matter for any one to define the time of his conversion. Some may guess somewhat nearer then others, as re­membring a sensible change in themselves; but in a word, the surest discerning of it, is in its working, not at its entring. I may know [Page 244] that now I have the Spirit better then at what time I came to it.A Undiscernibly Gods supernatural agency interposes sometimes in the mothers womb, as in John Baptist springing in Elizabeth at Maryes salutation, Luke I. 41. Luke i. 41. and perhaps in Jeremy, Jer. i. 5. Before thou camest out of the womb I Sanctified thee, Jer. l. 5. and in Isaiah, Isa. xlix. 5.Isa. XLIX 5. The Lord that formed me from the womb to be his servant. But this divine address attends most ordinarily till the time of our Baptism, when the Spirit accompanying the outward sign in­fuses it self into their hearts, and there seats and plants it self, and B grows up with the reasonable soul, keeping even their most luxu­riant years within bounds; and as they come to an use of their reason, to a more and more multiplying this habit of grace into holy spiritual acts of Faith and Obedience: from which 'tis ordi­narily said, that Infants baptized have habitual Faith, as they may be also said to have habitual repentance, and the habits of all other graces, because they have the root and seed of those beauteous healthful flowers which will actually flourish then, when they C come to years. And this, I say, is so frequent to be performed at Baptism, that ordinarily 'tis not wrought without that means, and in those means we may expect it, as our Church doth in our Liturgies, where she presumes at every Baptism that it hath pleased God to regenerate the Infant by his holy Spirit. And this may prove a solemn piece of comfort to some, who suspect their state more then they need: and think 'tis impossible that they should be in a regenerate condition, because they have not as yet found any D such notable change in themselves, as they see and observe in others. These men may as well be jealous they are not men, be­cause they cannot remember when their soul came to them: if they can find the effects of spiritual life in themselves, let them call it what they will, a religious education, or a custom of well doing, or an unacquaintedness with sin; let them comfort them­selves in their estate, and be thankful to God who visited them thus betimes; let it never trouble them that they were not once as E bad as other men, but rather acknowledge Gods mercy, who hath prevented such a change, and by uniting them to him in the cradle, hath educated, and nursed them up in familiarity with the Spirit. Lastly, the Spirit sometimes enters into our hearts upon occasional emergencies, the sense of Gods judgments on our selves or others, the reflexion on his mercies, the reading good Books, falling into vertuous acquaintance, but most eminently at, and with the preach­ing of the Word: and this by degrees as it seems to us; but in­deed F at some one especial season or other, which yet perhaps we are not able to discern, and here indeed are we ordinarily to expect this guest if we have not yet found him: here doth it love to be cherished, and refreshed, and warm'd within us, if we have it,Rom. I. 16. for even it is the power of God unto salvation, Rom. i. 16. [Page 245] A The 3. condition in which this Spirit comes into our hearts, is as an inhabitant, or house-keeper. The Spirit,Epist. 105. ad Xystum. saith Austin, first is in us, then dwels in us: before it dwels, it helps us to believe: when it dwels, it helps, and perfects, and improves our faith, and accomplishes it with all other concomitant graces. So I say here, the Spirit is then said to inhabit, and keep house in us, not as soon as it is entertained and received: but when it breaks forth into acts, and declares it self before all men, When men see our good works, and glorifie our B Father, Mat. V. 16. Matth. v. 16. Before we were said to live in the Spirit, now to walk, Gal. V. 25. as you shall see the phrases used distinctly, Gal v. 25▪ [...] walk, that is to go about conspicuously in the sight of all men, breaking forth into works, (as the Sun after the dispersions of a mist or cloud) whereby all men see and acknowledge his faith and obedience, and find their own evil wayes reprehended, and made manifest by his good,Eph. V. 13. as is noted in the 13. verse, All things that are reproved, are made manifest by the light. Semblable C to which is that of the Atheists repining at the godly man,Wisd. II. 14. 2 Wisd. ii. 14. He is made to reprove our thoughts. Thus is the third Quere resolved also, when this inward principle enters. 1. It comes as an harbenger, in every outward restraint by which God keeps us from sinning. 2. It enters as a guest in some season or other, once for all. In the womb, at Baptism, at some Sermon, some­times at a notable tempest, shaking and stirring us violently, ordi­narily and for the most part not to be discerned by us: and lastly, D it comes and dwels with us, and shews it self in its works, yet that not at any set time after his entrance, not constantly without ever covering his face, but when and as often as it pleases, and the flesh resisteth not. To the last Quere, What works it performs, the answer shall be brief; every thing that may be called spiritual, Faith, Repentance, Charity, Hope, Self-denial, and the rest: but these not promiscuously, or in an heap altogether, but by a wise dispensation, in time and by degrees. The soul being enabled E by this inward principle, is equally disposed to the producing of all these, and as occasions do occur, doth actually perform and produce them; so that in my conceit that question concerning the priority of Repentance, or Faith, is not either of such moment, or difficulty, as is by some disputers pretended. The seeds of them both are at one time planted in the soul: and then there is no Faith in any subject, but there is Repentance also; nor Re­pentance without Faith. So that where it is said, Without Faith 'tis F impossible to please God in any thing else, 'tis true; but argues no necessary precedence of it before other graces, for the habits of them all are of the same age in us, and then also will it be as true, that without Repentance, or without Love, Faith it self cannot please God: for if it be truly acceptable Faith, there is both Repentance and Love in the same womb to keep it company. Thus are we [Page 246] wont to say that only Faith justifieth, but not Faith alone: and the A reason these promises in Scripture are made sometimes to one grace precisely, sometimes to another, is because they are all at once rooted in the man, and in their habits chain'd together inseparably. Faith saves every man that hath it, and yet the be­lieving'st man under Heaven shall not be saved without Charity. Charity hides a multitude of sins, and yet the charitablest man in the world shall never have his score cross't without Repentance. A catalogue of these fruits of the Spirit you may at your leisure B make up to your selves for your tryal,Gal. V. 22. out of the fifth to the Gal. from the 22. verse, 1 Pet. I. V. and 1 Peter i 5. All these graces together, though some belonging to one, some to another faculty of the soul, are yet all at once conceived in it, at once begin their life in the heart, though one be perhaps sooner ready to walk abroad, and shew it self in the world then another. As in the 2 of Kings iv. 34.2 Kings IV. 34. Elisha went up on the bed and lay on the child and put his mouth on his mouth, and eyes upon his eyes, and hands upon his hands, and C stretched himself upon the child, and the flesh of the child waxed warm, and verse 35.Verse 35. the child sneezed seven times, and opened his eyes. Thus I say, doth the Spirit apply it self unto the soul, and measure it self out to every part of it; and then the spiritual life comes at once into the soul (as motion beginning in the centre, diffuses it self equally through the whole sphere, and affecteth every part of the circumference) and the flesh of the child waxed warm; where the flesh indefinitely signifieth every part of it together, and in D the spiritual sense the whole soul; and this is when the inward principle, when the habit enters. Then for acts of life, one per­haps shews it self before another, as the child first sneezed seven times, a violent disburthening it self of some troublesom humors that tickle in the head; to which may be answerable our spiritual clearing and purging our selves by Self-denial, the laying aside every weight, Heb. XII. 1. Heb. xii. 1. then opened his eyes, which in our spiritual creature, is spiritual illumination, or the eye of Faith; these I say,E may first shew themselves as acts, and yet sometimes others before them, yet all alike in the habit, all of one standing, one conception, one plantation in the heart: though indeed ordinari­ly, (like Esay and Jacob) the rougher come out first. We begin our spiritual life in Repentance and contrition, and with many harsh twinges of the Spirit; and then comes Faith like Jacob at the heels, smooth and soft, applying all the cordial promises to our penitent souls. In brief, if any judgment be to be made, which of these F graces is first in the regenerate man, and which rules in chief; I conceive Self denial and Faith to be there first, and most eminent, according to that notable place,Matth, XVI. 24. Matth, xvi. 24. where Christ seems to set down the order of graces in true Disciples. Let him deny himself, and take up his cross, that is, forgo all his carnal de­lights, [Page 247] A and embrace all manner of punishments and miseries, prepare himself even to go and be crucified, and then follow me; that is, by a lively faith believe in Christ, and prize him before all the world besides: and indeed in effect these two are but one, though they appear to us in several shapes: for Faith is nothing with­out Self-denial, it cannot work till our carnal affections be subject­ed to it. Believe a man may, and have flesh and fleshly lust in him, but unless Faith have the pre-eminence, Faith is no Faith. B The man may be divided betwixt the law of his members, and the law of his mind; so many degrees of flesh, so many of spirit: but if there be constantly but an even balance, or more of flesh then spirit, if 3 degrees of spirit, and 5 of flesh, then can there not be said to be any true Self-denial, and consequently any Faith, no more then that can be said to be hot, which hath more degrees of cold, then heat in it. In brief, 'tis a good measure of Self-denial that sets his faith in his Throne, and when by it faith hath conquered, C though not without continual resistance, when it hath once got the upper hand, then is the man said to be regenerate, where­upon it is that the regenerate state is called the life of Faith. Gal. II. 20. Faith is become a principle of the greatest power and activity in the soul. And so much for these 4 Queries; from which I conceive every thing that is material, and directly pertinent to instruct you, and open the estate of a new creature, may be resolved. And for other niceties, how far we may prepare our selves, how co-ope­rate D and joyn issue with the spirit, whether it work irresistibly by way of physical influence, or moral perswasion, whether being once had, it may totally or finally be lost again, and the like; these I say, if they are fit for any, I am resolved are not necessary for a Countrey Auditory to be instructed in. 'Twill be more for your profit to have your hearts raised, then your brains puft up; to have your spirits and souls inwardly affected to an earnest desire and longing after it, which will perhaps be some­what E performed, if we proceed to shew you the necessity of it, and unavailableness of all things else, and that by way of Use and Application.

And for the necessity of renewedness of heart, to demonstrate that, I will only crave of you to grant me, that the performance of any one duty towards God is necessary, and then it will prove it self; for it is certain no duty to God can be performed without it. For 'tis not a fair outside, a slight performance, a F bare work done that is accepted by God: if it were, Cain would deserve as much thanks for his sacrifice as his brother Abel; for in the outside of them there was no difference, unless perhaps on Cain's side, that he was forwardest in the duty, and offered first, Gen. iv. 3. But it is the inside of the action,Gen. IV. 3. the marrow and bowels of it that God judges by. If a sum in gross, or a bag [Page 248] sealed up, would pass for payment in Gods audit; every man A would come and make his accounts duly enough with him: and what he wanted in gold for his payment, should be made up in counters. But God goes more exactly to work, when he comes to call thee to an account of thy stewardship: he is a God of thoughts, and a searcher of the heart and reins, and 'twill then be a harder bu­siness to be found just when he examines, or clear when he will judge. The least spot and blemish in the face of it, the least maim or im­perfection in the offering, the least negligence or coldness in the B performance, nay the least corruption in the heart of him that doth it, hath utterly spoiled the sacrifice. Be the bulk and skin of the work never so large and beautiful to the eye, if it come not from a sanctified, renewed, gracious heart, it will find no accep­tance, but that in the Prophet,Isa. Who hath required it at your hands? This is not it that God is taken with, or such as he commanded, it may pass for a complement, or a work of course, but never be valued as a duty or real service. Resolve thy self to dwell no C where but in the Church, and there (like Simeon [...], in Euseb.) plant thy self continually in a Pillar, with thy eyes, and words, fixt, and shot up perpetually towards Heaven. If there be not a spirit within thee to give light to the eyes; to add sighs and groans to the voice, all this that thou hast done is nothing but as a blind mans pretensions to sight, and a dumb mans claim to speech; and so in like manner in all our duties which the world and carnal men set a price on. And the reason is, because every D spiritual seeming work done by a natural man, is not truly so: 'tis nothing less then that which it is said to be; his prayers are not prayers, lip-labour perhaps, but not devotion; his serving of God is formality, not obedience; his hope of Heaven, not a hope but a phancy. If God, or Satan, a judge, or a tempter, should come to reason with him about it, he would soon be worsted, never be able to maintain his title to it. In brief, the fairest part of a natural man, that which is least counterfeit, his desire and E good affections to spiritual things (which we call favourably natural desires of spiritual obedience,) these I say, are but false de­sires, false affections. 1. They have no solidity or permanency in the will, only fluid and transitory, some flight sudden wishes, tempests and storms of a troubled mind, soon blown over: the least temptation will be sure to do it. They are like those waver­ing prayers without any stay of faith,Jam. I. 6. Jam. 1. 6. like a wave of the sea driven by the wind and tost. 2. That being which they have is F counterfeit, they are not that which they are taken for. We are wont to say, that acts are distinguished by their objects, he sees truly which judges the thing to be that that it is: 'tis true indeed that another man sees, he that takes blew for green, but he does not see truly: so also he only willeth a good thing, that wills that [Page 241] A in it, which is truly good. Now the natural man, when he is said to chuse spiritual things, as Heaven, Happiness and the like, he desires not a spiritual but a carnal thing: in desiring Heaven, he desires somewhat that would free him from misery in happiness, a natural or moral good, that would be acceptable to any creature under Heaven: and so a Turk will desire paradise, and that very impatiently, in hope that he shall have his fill of lust there. Ge­nerally you may mark that in such desires of spiritual things, 'tis B some carnality that moves unregenerate men: somewhat it is that may please the flesh, and then 'tis not the spiritual but the carnal part of it that is their object which they woo, and make love too: which you may judge of by this, that they are frequent and im­portunate in their wishes for glory, seldom or never for grace (though that also may be wished for carnally, to make us more re­nowned and better esteemed in the world.) For the most part, I say, they desire glory, for that will make them happy, and out of danger C of worldly misfortunes: remission of sins, for these lie heavy on their consciences, and give them many a twinge that they would fain be eased of: but seldom petition for grace, as if holiness with­out other conveniencies or gains, were not worth the having. And this arises from hence, that our love of Christ grows by sending out and fastning our affections on him as an object fittest for our turns, that will advantage us most; but not by receiving in his Image and shape into our souls: this indeed would make us not only love, but D imitate him, and having once tasted, long after him, this would sanctifie our souls, whereas the other doth but only satisfie our gree­dy affections.

By what hath been said 'tis plain enough (though it might be much more amplified) that grace is of absolute necessity to perfor­mance of any holy work acceptable to God: that without it what­soever is done in spiritual matters is carnal, not indeed spiritual, but equivocally and absurdly so called. The natural mans desires E of Heaven, are not desires of Heaven: his faith, no faith: his be­lieving of the Scripture, infidelity; because he doth not apply them particularly to himself to obey them. In sum, when he prayes, hopes, or give alms, he does somewhat indeed, and 'tis well done of him: but he doth not truly either pray, or hope, or give alms, there is some carnality in them that hath poysoned them, and quite altered the complexion, the constitution, and inward qualities of the work. And then indeed how impatient F should every Christian be of this Coloquintida within him? There's mors in ollâ, 2 Kings. as the Prophet once spake, that's death in the pot, that so infects and kills every thing that comes out of it. How should we abhor, and loath, and detest this old leaven that so besowres all our actions? this Heathenism of ungenerate carnal nature, which makes our best works so unchristian? To insist longer [Page 242] upon this, were but to encrease your thirst, not to satisfie it: to make A you sensible of that marasmus and desperate drought that hath gone over your souls, but not to help you to any waters for the cure: that shall come next, as the last work of this exercise to be per­formed, in a word.

Having learnt what this new creature is, and how absolutely ne­cessary to a Christian; O let us not defer one minute longer to ex­amine our estates, whether we are yet renewed or no, and by the acts which we daily perform, observe whether the sanctifying ha­bit B be as yet infused into our souls. If the grounds of our best duties, that which moves us in our holiest actions, be found upon search to be but carnal; if a careful religious education, custom of the place which we live in, fear of humane laws, nay perhaps a good soft tender disposition, and the like, be the things that make thee love God, and perform holy duties, and not any inward principle of sanctity within thee: I counsel thee to think better of thine estate, and consider whether the like motives, had it so C hapned that thou hadst been born and brought up in Turky, might not have made thee worship Mahumet. I would be sorry to be rigid; I fear thou wilt find they might: well then, a new course must be taken, all thy former heathen, carnal, or at best good moral life, all thy formal performances, the best of thy natural desires must be content to be rank't here with circumcision and uncircumcision availing nothing, there is no trust, or confidence to be placed on these Aegyptian staves of reed, Es. xxxvi. 6. And then if thou wilt D not live heartless for ever, if ever thou meanst to move or walk, or do any thing, you must to that Creator of Spirits and Lover of Souls, and never leave solliciting, till he hath breathed another breath into your nostrils, another Soul into your Soul: you must lay your self at his feet, and with all the violence and Rhetorick, and humility, that these wants will prompt thee to, and woo, and importune the Holy Spirit to overshadow thee, to conceive all holy graces spiritually in thee: and if thou canst not suddenly re­ceive E a gracious answer, that the Holy Ghost will come in unto thee, and lodge with thee this night: yet learn so much patience from thy beggarly estate, as not to challenge him at thy own times, but comfortably to wait his leisure. There is employment enough for thee in the while to prepare the room against his coming, to make use of all his common graces, to cleanse and reform thy foul corruptions, that when the Spirit comes it may find thee swept and garnish't. All the outward means which God hath afforded thee,F he commands thee to make use of, and will require it at thy hands in the best measure, even before thou art regenerate, though thou sin in all thy unregenerate performances, for want of inward san­ctitie, yet 'tis better to have obeyed imperfectly, then not at all: the first is weakness, the other desperate presumption; the first ma­terial [Page 243] A partial obedience, the second total disobedience. Yet whilst thou art preparing, give not over praying, they are acts very com­petible; thou maist do them both together. Whilst thou art a sortifying these little kingdoms within thee, send these Embassadors abroad for help, that thou maist be capable of it when it comes. But above all things be circumspect, watch and observe the Spirit, and be perpetually ready to receive its blasts, let it never have breathed on thee in vain; let thine ear be for ever open to its B whisperings: if it should pass by thee either not heard, or not un­derstood, 'twere a loss that all the treasures upon earth could not repair, and for the most part you know it comes not in the thunder. Christ seldom speaks so loud now adayes as he did to Saul, Acts ix. 'tis in a soft still voice, and I will not promise you that men that dwell in a mill, that are perpetually engaged in worldly loud em­ployments, or that men asleep, shall ever come to hear of it. The sum of all my exhortation is, after examination, to cleanse, and C pray, and watch; carefully to cleanse thy self, incessantly to pray, and diligently to watch for the Sun of Righteousness, when he shall begin to dawn, and rise, and shine in thy heart by grace. And do thou, O Holy Lord, work this whole work in us, prepare us by thy outward, perfect us by thy inward graces: awaken us out of the dark­ness of death, and plant a new seed of holy light and life in us: infuse into our heathen hearts a Christian habit of sanctity, that we may per­form all spiritual duties of holiness, that we may glorifie thee here D by thy Spirit, and be glorified with thee by thy Christ hereafter.

Now to him that hath elected us, hath, &c.

The XVI. Serm.

2 Pet. III. 3.‘Scoffers walking after their own lusts.’

THat we may take our rise luckily, and set out D with the best advantage, that we may make our Preface to clear our passage to our future dis­course, and so spend no part of our precious time unprofitably, we will by way of introdu­ction examine what is here meant 1. by scoffers, 2. by walking after their own lusts. And first, scoffers here do not signifie those whom confi­dence joyn'd to a good natural wit, hath taught to give and play E upon every man they meet with, which in a moderate use is called [...], facetiousness, in an immoderate scurrility. But scoffers here are of a more special stamp, those who deal out their scoffs only on God and Religion. [...]. The word in the original signifies to mock, to abuse, and that either in words, and then 'tis rendred scoffing, or in our actions, when we promise any man to perform a business, and then deceive his expectation, and then 'tis rendred deluding. So Matth. ii. 16.Matth. II. 16. when Herod saw he was mocked, [...], that he F was deluded by the magicians. So that in the first primitive sense, scoffers must signifie those who either laugh at God, or else delude him in not performing what he expects, and they by their profession promised. In the secondary notion, to scoff, is by way of argument to oppose any truth contumeliously or bitterly, as Solomon begins [Page 245] A his discourse of the Atheists scoffs,Wisd. II. 1. Wisd. ii. 1. The ungodly said rea­soning with themselves, and these are said to set their mouth against Heaven, managing disputes, which have both sting and poyson in them; the first to wound and overthrow the truth spoken of, the other to infect the auditors with a contrary opinion. And these ra­tional scoffs, for which Socrates antiently was very famous, are ordinarily in form of question, as in the Psalmist often, Where is now their God? i. e. Certainly if they had a God he would be seen at B time of need, he would now shew himself in their distress. In which they do not only laugh at the Israelites for being such fools as to worship him that will not relieve them, but implicitely argue, that indeed there is no such God as they pretend to worship. And just in this manner were the scoffers in my Text, who did not only laugh, but argue, saying, Where is the promise of his coming? verse 4.Verse 4. perswading themselves, and labouring to prove to others, that what is spoken of Christs second coming to judgment was C but a meer dream, a [...], a bugbear, or fable to keep men in awe, and therefore laugh at it, as the Athenians did at the resur­rection, Acts xvii. 32. and when they heard of the resurrection of the dead, some mocked, &c. i. e. disputed sarcastically and con­tumeliously against it, that certainly there was no such matter. And thus also is the same word used of those which joyned their rea­son and malice to disprove Christs omnipotence, Matth. xxvii. 42. where they reviled and mocked him, saying, He saved others, D himself he cannot save. In which speech the bitterest part of the scoff was the reason there used, plausible enough amongst ignorant Jews, that surely if he had any power, he would make use of it for himself.

Thirdly, to scoff is sometimes without words or actions to shew a contempt or neglect of any body. So Herods mocking of Christ, is set as an expression that he did not think him worthy talking with, Luke xxiii. 11. He set him at nought, and mockt him, E and sent him back to Pilate, he would not vouchsafe to take notice of him, nor to be troubled with the examination of so poor contemp­tible a fellow.Rhet. [...]. 2▪ And so in Aristotle, not to know a mans name, not to have taken so much notice of him, as to remember what to call him, is reckoned the greatest neglect, the unkindest scoff in the world, and is ordinarily taken very tenderly by any one who hath deserved any thing at our hands. So that in brief (to gather up what we have hitherto scatter'd) the scoffers here meant, are F those, who promising themselves to Gods service, do delude him when he looks to find them amongst his servants, i. e. remain er­rand Atheists under a Christian profession, who by letting loose either their wits to prophane jests, or their reason to heathenish con­ceits and disputings, or their actions to all manner of disobedience, demonstrate that indeed they care not for God, they scarce re­member [Page 246] his name,Psalm X. 4. Neither is he in all their thoughts, Psalm. x. 4.A

In the next place, walking af [...]er their own lusts, is giving them­selves liberty to follow all the directions of corrupt polluted na­ture, in entertaining all conceits and practises which the pride of their understadings and rankness of their affections shall propose to them in opposition to God. And this without any reluctancy or twinge of conscience, walking on as securely and confidently, as if it were indeed the right high-way.

So that now you have seen the outside of the Text, and lookt it B over in the gross, 'tis time to survey it more particularly in its parts, and those are two: 1. The sin of Atheism, and the subjects in which it shews it self, There shall come in the last dayes scoffers. 2. The motive and impellent to this sin, a liberty which men give themselves, to walk after their own lusts. And first of Atheism, and the subjects in whom it shews its self, In the, &c. Where you may note that the words being in a form of a prophecy, do note a sort of people which were to come in respect of St. Peter, who writes it.C And though in its first aspect it refer to the period of the Jewish Na­tion, and destruction of Jerusalem; takes in the parallel state of things under the last age, and dotage, and declination of the world. Accordingly we see at the 24. of St. Matthew, the prophe­cy of both, as it were interwoven and twisted into each other; so that what St. Peter saith shall be, we may justly suspect is fulfilled amongst us, his future being now turned into a present, his prophecy into a story. In the Apostles times, when Christianity was in the D cradle, and wanted years and strength to move, and shew it self in the world, there were but very few that would acknowledge it, many sects of Philosophers, who peremptorily resolved themselves against this profession, joyn'd issue with the Apostles in assiduous disputation, as we may find in the 17. of the Acts. Amongst those the Epicureans did plainly deny that there was any God that governed the world, and laught at any proof that Moses and the Prophets could afford for their conviction. And here a man might E think that his prophecy was fulfilled in his own dayes, and that he needed not to look beyond that present age for store of scoffers. Yet so it is, that the infidelity which he foresaw should in those last ages reign confidently in the world, was represented to him in a larger size and uglier shape, then that of the present Philosophers. The Epicurean unbelief seem'd nothing to him, being compared to this Christian Atheism, where men under the vizard of religion and profession of piety, are in heart arrant Heathens, and in their fairest F carriages do indeed but scoff, and delude, and abuse the very God they worship. Whence the note is, that the profession of Christiani­ty is mixed with an infinite deal of Atheism, and that in some de­gree above the Heathenism of the perversest Philosophers. There were in St. Peters time Epicureans, and all sects of scoffers at Chri­stianity, [Page 247] A and yet the scoffers indeed, the highest degree of Atheism was but yet a heaving; it would not rise and shew it self till the last daie.

'Tis worth observing what variety of stratagems the Devil hath alwaies had, to keep us in defiance with God, and to nourish in us that hostility and enmity against Heaven, which is so deep and predominant in himself. He first set them a work to rebel and fortifie themselves against God, and make themselves by building B of a Tower so impregnable, that God himself could not be able to disperse them. Gen. xi. 4. Afterwards, when by the punishment and defeating of that design, the world was sufficiently instru­cted, that no arm of flesh, no bodily strength could make resist­ance against Heaven; when the body could hold out in rebellion no longer, he then instructs the inward man, the soul to make its approaches, and challenge Heaven. Now the soul of man consist­ing of two faculties, the Understanding and the Will, he first deals C with the Understanding, and sets that up against God in many monstrous fashions; first, in deluding it to all manner of Idola­trous worship, in making it adore the Sun, the Moon, and the whole Host of Heaven, which was a more generous kind of Ido­latry. Afterwards, in making them worship Dogs and Cats, O­nions and Garlick, for so did the Egyptians; and this was a more sottish stupid affection, a man would wonder how the Devil could make them such fools. Afterward he wrought still up­on D their understanding, in making them (under pretence of two laudable qualities, admiration and gratitude, admiration of any kind of vertue, and gratitude for any good turn) to deifie and wor­ship as gods any men which had ever done, either their Nation, or private persons any important good or favour. So that every Heros or noble, famous man, as soon as he was dead was worshipt. 'Twere long to shew you the variety of shifts in this kind, which the Devil used to bring in the [...] of the Gentiles, i. e. their E worshipping of many Gods. In brief, this plot lasted thus till Christianity came into the world, and turn'd it out of doors, and at Christs Resurrection all the gods of the Heathen expired. How­ever the Devil still stuck close to that faculty of the soul, which he had been so long acquainted with, I mean the understanding, and seeing through the whole world almost the Doctrine of Christ had so possest men, that he could not hope to bring in his Heathen gods again, he therefore hath one design more on the understand­ing: F seeing 'tis resolved to believe Christ in spight of heathen­ism; he then puzzles it with many doubts about this very Christ it is so possest with. He raises up in the first ages of the Church variety of Heresies concerning the union of his natures, equality of his person with the Father, and the like: and rung as many changes in mens opinions as the matter of faith was capable [Page 248] of. There was no truth almost in Christianity, but had its Here­tick A to contradict and damn it. Now since at last, reason and truth, and the power of Scripture having out-lived in a good degree fun­damental error in opinion, hath almost expuls'd the Devil out of the head, or upper part of the soul, the Understanding, his last plot is on the heel, i. e. the Will and Affections; and that he hath bruised terribly,Gen. III. 15. according to that prophecy, Gen. iii. 15. He deals mainly on our manners, and strives to make them, if it be possible, sinful beyond capability of mercy. And this design hath B thrived with him wonderfully: he hath wrought more opposition against God, more heresie against Christ in our lives, then ever he was able to do in our doctrine. In a Kingdom, where the custom of the Country and education hath planted purity of faith in the understanding, he there labours to supplant and eradicate charity and devotion in the will; and crucifies Christ more confidently in our corrupt heathenish practises, then ever the Jews did in their incredulity. And on this plot he hath stuck close, and insisted a C long while, it being the last and most dangerous stratagem that the policy of Hell can furnish him with, to corrupt, and curse, and make abominable a sincere belief by an Atheistical conversation. And this doth prove in general, that 'tis the Devils aim, and from thence probably the Christians curse, to have more hostility against God in our Wills, and so to be more horrible Atheists, then ever the Heathen had in their Understandings. Now that we may the more distinctly discover the Christian Atheist, who is very ortho­dox D in his opinion, very heretical in his practice; we will ob­serve how every part of his life, every piece of his conversation doth directly contradict his doctrine, and pluck down, and de­face the very fabrick of godliness, expunge those very notions of piety, which Reason and Scripture hath erected in the soul. And first,

He is in his knowledge sufficiently Catechiz'd in the knowledge of Scripture, and is confident that all its dictates are to be believ'd,E and commands practis'd. But if you look to find this assent con­firmed by his practice, and exprest in his carriage, you are much mistaken in the business. Is he such a fool as to order his life ac­cording to the rigour of them? No, no doubt, 'tis not one mans work to believe the Scripture and obey it. Suppose I should tell you, that there are but a few of you that read Scripture to that purpose, that observe any edict of piety or virtue, only because the Scripture hath commanded it. There be many restraints that F keep unregenerate men from sinning, a good disposition, religious education, common custom of the place or times where we live, human laws, and the like; and each or all of these may curb our forwardness, and keep us in some order. But who is there amongst us, that being tempted with a fair, lovely, amiable vice, which [Page 249] A he may commit without any regret of his good nature, scandal to his former carriages, fear or danger of punishment, either future or present, or any other inconvenience. Who is there, I say, that from the meer awe and respect that he bears to Scripture, retires and calls himself off from that sin which he had otherwise faln in­to? If I should see all manner of conveniences to sin in one scale, and the bare authority of the Scriptures in the other quite out-weighing all them with its heaviness, I should then hope that our B hearts were catechiz'd as well as our brains in the acknowledg­ment of this truth, that Scripture is to be believed and obeyed. But I much fear me, if I should make an enquiry in every one of our hearts here single, the greatest part of the Jury would bring in an evidence of guilt, that in any our most entire obediences some other respect casts the scales: and this is one piece of direct Atheism, that though our Understandings affirm, yet our Will and affections deny that Scripture is for its own sake to be obeyed.

C Secondly, Our brains are well enough advised in the truth of the doctrine of Gods Essence and Attributes, our Understandings have a distinct conceit of awe and reverence, to answer every notion we have of God; and yet here also our conversation hath its po­stures of defiance, its scoffs and arts of reviling, as it were to de­face and scrape out every of these notions out of our Wills, and to perswade both our selves and others, that that knowledge doth on­ly [...]. float in our brains, but hath no manner of weight to sink it D deep into our hearts; to glance at one or two of these: we believe, or at least pretend to, we do so, the immensity, i. e. the ubiquity and omnipresence of God, that he indeed is every where, to fill, to see, to survey, to punish, and yet our lives do plainly proclaim, that in earnest we mean no such matter; we shut up our hearts against God, and either as the Gadarens did Christ, being weary of his pre­sence, fairly entreat, or else directly banish him out of our coasts, because he hath been or is like to be the destruction of some Swine, E i. e. beastial affections in us. And in sum, those bodies of ours, which he hath markt out for his Temples, we will scarce allow him for his Inn to lodge with us one night. Again, can we expect to be credited, when we say we believe the ubiquity and omnipre­sence of God, and yet live and sin as confidently, as if we were out of his sight, or reach? Do we behave our selves in our out-ra­ges, in our luxury, nay, even in our gravest devotions, as if God were within ken? Without all doubt in every minute almost of F our lives we demonstrate that we doubt either of his omnipresence to see, or else his justice to punish us: for those very things which we dare not to venture on in the sight of an earthly Magistrate that may punish us, nay, of a spy that may complain of us, nay, of an enemy that will upbraid us, nay, of a friend that will check and admonish us; we never doubt, or demur, or delay to practise in [Page 250] private, or the dark, where still God is present to oversee and A punish. And if this be not a scoffing, a deluding, a meer con­temning of God, to do that without any fear or regret in his sight, which we never offer to attempt before a man, nay, a friend, I know not what may be counted Atheism. In like manner, we ac­knowledge God to be [...], all-sufficient; and if we should be examined in earnest, we would confess that there is no ability in any creature to bestow or provide any good thing for us: and yet our will here also hath its ways and arguments of contradiction.B Our whole life is one continued confutation of this piece of our faith, our tremblings, our jealousies, our distrusts, our carefulness, our worldly providence, and importunate carking, our methods and stratagems of thrift and covetousness, and the whole business of our lives in wooing, and solliciting, and importuning every power of nature, every trade and art of the world, to succour, to assist and provide for us, are most egregious evidences that we put no trust or confidence in Gods all-sufficiency, but wholly depend and re­ly C upon the arm of flesh, both to raise and sustain us. This very one fashion of ours, in all our distresses, to fly to and call upon all manner of second causes, without any raising or elevating our eyes or thoughts toward God, from whom cometh our help, plainly shews that God still dwells abroad in tents: we have seen or heard of him, but have not yet brought him home into our hearts, there to possess, and rectifie, and instruct our wills, as well as our understandings.D

Thirdly, The whole mystery of Christ articulately set down in our Creed we as punctually believe, and to make good our names, that we are Christians in earnest, we will challenge and defie the fire and fagot to perswade us out of it: and these are good resolu­tions, if our practices did not give our faith the lye, and utterly renounce at the Church door whatsoever we profest in our pews. This very one thing, that he which is our Saviour, shall be our Judge, that he which was crucified, dead, and buried, sits now at the E right hand of God, and from thence shall come to judge the world; this main part, yea, sum of our belief, we deny and bandy against all our lives long. If the story of Christ coming to judgment, set down in the xxv.Mat. XXV. 30. of Matthew after the 30. verse, had ever entred through the doors of our ears to the inward closets of our hearts, 'tis impossible but we should observe and practise that one single duty there required of us. Christ there as a Judge exacts and calls us to account for nothing in the world, but only works of mercy, and F according to the satisfaction which we are able to give him in that one point, he either entertains or repels us; and therefore our care and negligence in this one business, will prove us either Chri­stians or Infidels. But alas! 'tis too plain, that in our actions we never dream either of the judgment or the arraignment: our stu­pid [Page 251] A neglect of this one duty, argues us not only unchristian but un­natural. Besides our Alms-deeds, which concern only the outside of our neighbour, and are but a kind of worldly mercy, there are many more important, but cheaper works of mercy, as good coun­sel, spiritual instructions, holy education of them that are come out of our loyns, or are committed to our care, seasonable reproof, according to that excellent place, Lev xix. 17.Lev. XIX. 17. Thou shalt not hate thy brother in thine heart, but in any wise reprove him: a care of car­rying B our selves that we may not scandal, or injure, or offer vio­lence to the soul and tender conscience of him that is flexible to follow us into any riot. These and many other works of mercy in the highest degree, as concerning the welfare of other mens souls, and the chief thing required of us at the day of judgment, are yet so out-dated in our thoughts, so utterly defaced, and blotted out in the whole course of our lives, that it seems we never expect that Christ in his Majesty as a Judge, whom we apprehend, and C embrace, and hug in his humility as a Saviour. Beloved, till by some severe hand held over our lives, and particularly by the dai­ly study and exercise of some work of mercy or other, we demon­strate the sincerity of our belief, the Saints on Earth, and Angels in Heaven will shrewdly suspect, that we do only say over that part of our Creed, that we believe only that which is for our turn, the sufferings and satisfactions of Christ, which cost us nothing, but do not proceed to his office of a Judge, do not either fear his D judgments, or desire to make our selves capable of his mercies. Briefly, whosoever neglects or takes no notice of this duty of exer­cising works of mercy, whatsoever he brags of in his theory or specula­tion, in his heart either denies or contemns Christ as Judge, and so destroys the sum of his Faith, and this is another kind of secret Atheism.

Fourthly, Our Creed leads us on to a belief and acknowledge­ment of the Holy Ghost; and 'tis well we have all conn'd his name E there, for otherwise I should much fear that it would be said of many nominal Christians, what is reported of the Ephesian Di­sciples, Acts xix. 2.Acts XIX 2. They have not so much as heard whether there be an Holy Ghost or no. But not to suspect so much ignorance in any Christian, we will suppose indeed men to know whatsoever they profess, and enquire only whether our lives second our professi­ons, or whether indeed they are meer Infidels, and Atheistical in this business concerning the Holy Ghost. How many of the ig­norant sort which have learnt this name in their Catechism or Creed, have not yet any further use to put it to, but only to make up the number of the Trinity, have no special office to appoint for him, no special mercy, or gift, or ability to beg of him in the bu­siness of their salvation, but mention him only for fashion sake, not that they ever think of preparing their bodies or souls to be [Page 252] Temples worthy to entertain him, not that they ever look after A the earnest of the Spirit in their hearts,2 Cor. l. 22. 2 Cor. i. 22. Further yet, how many better learned amongst us do not yet in our lives ac­knowledge him in that Epithet annext to his title, the Holy Ghost, i. e. not only eminently in himself holy, but causally, producing the same quality in us, from thence called the sanctifying and re­newing Spirit? How do we for the most part fly from, and aban­don, and resist, and so violently deny him, when he once appears to us in this Attribute? When he comes to sanctifie us, we are B not patient of so much sowreness, so much humility, so much non-conformity with the world, as he begins to exact of us, we shake off many blessed motions of the Spirit, and keep our selves within garrison, as far as we can out of his reach, lest at any turn he should meet with, and we should be converted. Lastly, the most ordinary morally qualified tame Christians amongst us, who are not so violent as to profess open arms against this Spirit, how do they yet reject him out of all their thoughts? How seldom C do many peaceable orderly men amongst us, ever observe their wants, or importune the assistance of this Spirit? In sum, 'twas a shrewd speech of the Fathers, which will cast many fair out-sides at the bar for Atheists, That the life of an unregenerate man is but the life of an Heathen, Clem. Al. and that 'tis our regeneration only that raises us up [...],Strom. p. 281. from being still meer Gentiles. He that believes in his Creed the person, nay, understands in the Schools the Attri­butes and gifts of the Holy Ghost, and yet sees them only in the D fountain, neither finds nor seeks for any effects of them in his own soul; he that is still unregenerate, and continues still gaping and yawning, stupid and senseless in this his condition, is still for all his Creed and learning in effect an Atheist. And the Lord of Heaven give him to see, and endeavours to work, and an heart to pray, and his Spirit to draw and force him out of this condition.

Fifthly, Not to cramp in every Article of our Creed into this Discourse, we will only insist on two more. We say therefore E that we believe the forgiveness of sins, and 'tis a blessed confidence, that all the treasures in the world cannot equal. But do our selves keep equipage, and hand in hand accompany this profession? Let me catechize you a while. You believe the forgiveness of sins, but I hope not absolutely, that the sufferings of Christ shall effectually clear every mans score at the day of judgment: well then, it must be meant only of those that by repentance and faith are grafted into Christ, and shall appear at that great marriage in a F wedding garment, which shall be acknowledged the livery and co­lours of the Lamb. But do our lives ever stand to this explication, and restriction of the Article? Do they ever expect this beloved re­mission by performing the condition of repentance? Do we ever go about to make our selves capable of receiving this mercy condi­tionally [Page 253] A offer'd us? Nay, do we not by our wilful stupidity, and pertinacious continuing in sin, nullifie in respect of us all that satis­faction of Christ, and utterly abandon those means which must bring home this remission to us? The truth is, our faith runs only on general terms, we are willing to lay all our sins on Christs shoulders, and perswade our selves somewhat slightly and coldly, that he will bear them in the root, and in the fruit, in the bullion, and in the coyn, in the gross, and in the retail, i. e. both our ori­ginal B and our actual transgressions: but we never take any course to rest satisfied, that we in particular shall participate of this hap­piness. This requires the humiliation of the whole man, the spi­rit of bondage for a while, afterwards a second purity and virgi­nity of the soul recovered by repentance, and then a soberly ground­ed faith and confidence, and an expressing of it by our own forgi­ving of others. And till this piece of our Creed be thus explain­ed and interpreted in our conversation, we remain but confident C Atheists, not able to perswade any body that hears us that indeed we believe what we profess.

Sixthly and lastly, The resurrection of the body, and its consequent, everlasting life, is the close of our Faith, and end, and prop, and encouragement, and consummation of our hope; and yet we take most pains of all to prove our selves Infidels in this: our whole carriage, both in the choice and observance of our Religion shew that we do not depend on it, that we put no confidence in the re­surrection. D If we went on this assurance, we should contemn any worldly encouragement, and make the same thing both the ob­ject and end of our service. We should scorn to take notice of so poor a thing as profit or convenience is in a matter of so high im­portance, knowing and expecting that our reward shall be great in Heaven. This one thought of a resurrection, and an infinite reward of any faithful undertaking of ours, would make us dis­dain, and almost be afraid of any temporal recompense for our E worship of God, for fear it should by paying us before-hand de­prive us of that everlasting one. We should catch and be ambiti­ous of that expression of devotion, which were most painful and least profitable as to worldly advantage: and yet we in the stupidity of Atheistical hearts are so improvidently covetous, so hasty and impatient in our Religion, that unless some present gain allure and draw us, we have no manner of life, or spirit, or alacrity to this, as we count it, unprofitable service of God. The least incum­brance F in the world will fright us from the greatest forwardness, and nimbleness, and activity in Religion: and the least appearance of promotion, or other like encouragement, will produce and raise in us these affections and expressions of zeal, which the expectati­on of the resurrection could never work in us. Our Religion is some­what like that of the Samaritans before Christs time, either Jews or [Page 254] Heathens, Jos. Ant. Jud. l. 12. c. 7. l. 11. 8. according as their King Antiochus would have them, af­ter A Christs time were perpetually either Jews or Christians, accord­ing as the Romans, their new Lords and Masters either threatned, or granted priviledge to the Jews. If there were any thing to be gotten by the profession, they would be as solemn Christians as any. So when the Goths and Vandals over-run Italy, and (whether upon good affection or compulsion from God, I know not) spared them that fled to the Basilica in Rome, the place where the Chri­stians exercised: then, I say, they which formerly persecuted B the Christians, now bore them company very friendly to their Churches, and to save their lives fled to the Temple for a refuge, which before they abomin'd; and made use of Christianity for their safe-guard, which they would not own for their Religion, and hurried to that Sanctuary for their lives, which they would not visit for their Souls. The condition of our Religion is like that which is upbraided to Ephraim, Hos. X. 11. Hos. X. 11. Ephraim is like an Heifer that lo­veth to tread out the Corn. 'Twas prohibited by the law to muzzle C the Ox or Heifer that treadeth out the Corn; 'twas allowed them to feed as long as they did the work, and that made Ephraim love the toil so well, because that at the very time he performed the labour, he enjoy'd the fruit of it; had, as we say, his wages in his hand; had some present emolument that would ingratiate his work to him; was not left to such a tedious expectation, to so long a date as to wait for his reward till the resurrection: those were too hard terms for him, he could not endure to be ty'd so D long up to the empty rack, or feed upon the bit. And thus hasty are we in the exacting of our reward for our service of God: we will never set our hands to it, unless we may make our conditi­ons: we are resolved not to be such fools, as to serve God for nought, to spend the quickest of our spirits in a sowre crabbed profession, and expect our thanks at dooms-day. This plainly demonstrates, that however our theory be possest, our practice places no trust, no confidence, no assurance in that part of our Creed, the resurrection. E Again, 'twas an excellent argument to perswade doubtful Chri­stians in the youth and non-age of the Church, of the certainty of the resurrection, that religious men, and those whom undoubt­edly God loved, were full of sufferings in this world, and lived and died many of them without any expression of Gods favour to them, which made them certainly to conclude, that no doubt God hath some other course to exhibit himself in the riches of his mercy to them; and seeing there was no hope but in another F world, Verily there should be a reward for the righteous, doubtless there is a God that judgeth the Earth: and by this argument we may try our selves for the sincerity of our faith in this business. If we can be patient to endure afflictions here, and not complain or grumble for a respite and deliverance, but keep all our hopes to be accom­plisht, [Page 255] A defer all our happiness to be performed to us at the re­s [...]rrection, and though God kill us, yet trust in him, and be able to see through death, in a trust That our Redeemer lives, and that with these eyes we shall behold him, then may we chear up, and per­swade our selves on good grounds, that our hearts and lives do assent to the resurrection,Ecclus. XXXVIII. 20. which our tongues brag of: Take no hea­viness to heart, but drive it away and remember the end. But if this consideration cannot digest the least oppression of this life, cannot B give us patience for the lightest encumbrance, but for all our Creed we still fly out into all outrages of passion and extacies of impatience, we plainly betray our selves men of this present world, whose happiness or misery is only that which is tempora­ry, and before our eyes, are not able by the perspective of faith to behold that which easily we might, all our wants relieved, all our injuries revenged, all our wounds bound up in the day of the resurrection: but all our life long we repine and grumble, and C are discontented as men without hope; and whilst we do thus, what do we but act the part of these Atheists here in my Text, scoffing and saying, Where is the promise of his coming, in the next verse to my Text. This very impatience and want of skill in bearing the brunts of this our warfare, is but a piece of cowardly Atheism, either a denying or mocking at the resurrection. Every sigh is a scoff, every groan a gibe, every fear a sly art of laughing at the stupidity of those who depend upon the fulfilling of the promise D of his coming. Lastly, say we what we will, we live as if there were no resurrection, as Sadduces, if not as Atheists; all our de­signs look no further then this life, all our contrivances are de­feated and frustrate in the grave; we manage our selves with so little understanding, that any spectator would judge by our acti­ons, that 'tis no injury to compare us to the beasts that perish and ne­ver return again. Certainly if we had any design upon Heaven or another life, we would here make some provision for it, Make E our selves friends of our unrighteous Mammon, that when we fail, they may receive us into everlasting habitations, i. e. use those good things that God hath given us with some kind of providence, that they may stand us in stead when we have need of them, i. e. not only as instruments to sin (for that is to get us more enemies) but as har­bingers to be sent before us to Heaven. 'Twas a bitter Sarcasm of the fool to the Abbot on his death-bed, that the Abbot deserved his staff, as being the verier fool of the two, that being straight F to die, to remove his Tent to another world, he had sent none of his houshold-stuff before him. The truth is, we live generally as men that would be very angry, much displeased if any should perswade us there were a resurrection, the very mentioning of it to us might seem to upbraid our ordinary practices, which have nothing but the darkness of death, and silence of the grave to coun­tenance [Page 256] them. I may justly say, that many ignorant Heathens, A which were confident there was nothing beyond this life, expect­ed certainly with death to be annihilated, and turn again into a perpetual nothing, yet either for the awe they bore to vertue, or fear of disgrace after death, kept themselves more regularly, lived more carefully then many of us Christians. And this is an horrid accusation, that will lye very heavy upon us, that against so many illuminated understandings the ignorance of the Gentiles should rise up in judgment, and the learned Christian be found B the most desperate Atheist. I have been too large upon so rigid a Doctrine as this, and I love, and pray God I may always have oc­casion to come up to this place upon a more merciful Subject: but I told you even now out of Lev. xix. 17. that 'twas no small work of mercy, 'twas the most friendly office that could be performed any man, to reprehend, and as the Text saith, Not to suffer sin up­on thy neighbour, especially so sly a covert lurking sin as this of Atheism, which few can discern in themselves. I shall now come C to Application, which because the whole Doctrine spoke morally to your affections, and so in a manner prevented Uses, shall be only a recapitulation and brief knitting up of what hitherto hath been scattered at large.

Seeing that the Devils policy of deluding, and bewitching, and distorting our Understandings, either with variety of false gods, or heresies raised upon the true, is now almost clearly out-dated, and his skill is all bent to the deforming of the Will, and defacing the D character of God, and the expression of the sincerity of our faith in our lives, we must deal with this enemy at his own weapon, learn to order our munition according to the assault, and fortifie that part most impregnably, toward which the tempest binds and threatens. There is not now so much danger to be feared from the inrode of Hereticks in opinion as in practice, not so much Atheism to be dreaded from the infidelity of our brains, as the Heathenism and Gentilism of our lusts, which even in the midst of a Christian E profession deny God even to his face. And therefore our chiefest Frontiers and Fortifications must be set up before that part of the soul, our most careful Watch and Centinel placed upon our affe­ctions, lest the Devil enter there and depopulate the whole Chri­stian, and plant the Atheist in his room. To this purpose we must examine what seeds are already sown, what treachery is a working within, and no doubt most of us at the first cast of the eye shall find great store, unless we be partial to our selves, and bring F in a verdict of mercy, and construe that weakness, which indeed signifies Atheism.

When upon examination we find our lives undermining our be­lief, our practices denying the authority of Scripture, and no whit forwarder to any Christian duty upon its commands. When we [Page 257] A find Gods essence and Attributes reviled and scoffed at in our con­versation, his omnipresence contemned by our confidence in sinning, and argued against by our banishing God out of all our thoughts, his all sufficiency doubted of by our distrusts, and our scorn to de­pend upon it. When we perceive that our carriages do fall off at this part of our belief in Christ, that he shall come again to be our Judge, and by our neglect of those works especially of mercy, which he shall then require of us, shew that indeed we expect him B not, or think of him as a Judge, but only as a Saviour. When we observe our Wills resisting the gifts, and falsifying the Attribute, whilst our Creed confesses the Person of the Holy Ghost, and see how little, how nothing of the sanctifying spirit, of the earnest of our re­generation is in our hearts, and we still stupidly sensless of the want. When we believe forgiveness of sins, and that only upon condition of repentance, and yet abhor so much as to hear or think of the performing of it, or to make good that mercy to others which our C selves challenge of God. Lastly, when we prove to our selves, and all the world beside, by our requiring of a pre­sent reward for all our goodness, and ruling our Religion to our earthly profit, by our impatience of any affliction, by our heathenish neglect and stupidity, and riot, that we do not in earnest look for the resurrection to life. When, I say, by a just, but exact survey and inquest we find these so many degrees of secret Atheism in us, then must we shrift, and purge, and cleanse, and rinse our souls from these D dregs of Heathenism; then must we humble our selves below the dust, and not dare to look the veriest Gentile in the face, 'till we have removed this plague from us. And do thou, O Lord, assist our endeavours, and by the violence of thy Spirit force and ravish us in our lives, as well as belief, to a sincere acknowledgment and expression of every minute part of that Religion which is purely Christian, that we may adore thee in our hearts as well as our brains, and being sancti­fied throughout, from any tincture, or colour, or suspition of irreligion E in either power of our souls, we may glorifie thee here, and be glorified by thee hereafter.

Now to him which hath elected us, hath, &c.

The XVII. Serm.

2 Pet. III. 3.‘Scoffers walking after their own lusts.D

IT is an excellent observation of Aristotles, that rich men are naturally most contumelious, most gi­ven to abuse and deride others,C. 15. which he ex­presses thus, in the seventh of his Pol. [...]. The contentment which they en­joy in the continuance of their worldly happi­ness,E the perpetual rest, and quiet, and tranqui­lity, which their plenty bestows on them, makes them contemn and despise the estate of any other man in the world. Upon this con­ceit saith the same Aristotle, ( [...],) that their happi­ness is elevated infinitely above the ordinary pitch; that whatever contentments any other sort of people can glory or delight in, is but some imaginary, slight, poor happiness that men are fain to solace themselves withal, to keep them from melancholy, all far enough F below the size of their felicity, which all agreeable circumstances have conspired to make exactly complete. Hence it is that you shall ordinarily observe the rich man, in this confidence of his opi­nion, that no man is happy but himself, either contemn or pity the poverty, and improvidence, and perhaps the sottishness of such [Page 259] A spirits, that can rejoyce or boast in the possession of wisdom, know­ledge, nay even of Gods graces; no object is more ridiculous in his eye, then either a Scholar or a Christian, that knows not the value of riches: for saith Aristotle, 2 Rhet. c. 16. [...]. Money is reckoned the price of all things else, that which can easily purchase what­ever else we can stand in need of; and therefore the rich man if he could think Learning and Religion worth any thing, having his B money by him (which is in effect every thing) thinks he can call for them when he pleases. In the mean, he hath more wit then to forsake his pleasures, and go to school to the Stoick, to divest him­self of his robes, and put on the sowerness, the rigid, sad beha­viour which the profession of Wisdom or Christianity requires. He is better pleased in his present pomp, then to go and woo that mi­sery and ruggedness, which the severity of discipline looks for. Let silly beggars boast of the contents of Wisdom or hopes of Hea­ven, C at mihi plaudo domi, his coffers at home are better compani­ons then all the melancholy of books, or sullen solaces of the spi­rit. He hath learnt by experience, that he ought to pity and con­temn these fictions of delight which the Poets fetch from the fortu­nate islands to delude, and cozen, and comfort beggars: his glory, and pride, and riches, are happiness indeed, and whatever else the poverty of the world can boast of, are objects not of his envy but his scorn.

D What we have hitherto noted to you concerning the rich man is applyable on the same grounds to any fort of people which have fixt upon any worldly content, and resolved upon some one object, beside which they will never value or prize any thing. Thus the Epicure or voluptuous man, who hath set up his Idol lust, to whom he owes all his sacrifice, and from whom he expects all his good fortune, that hath fixt his Pillars, and cast his Anchor, and is per­emptorily constant in his course, that he is resolved for ever to E walk in. This man I say, being possest with an opinion of the hap­piness which he is placed in, like the Sun in his pride, rejoyces to run his course, and scorns any contrary motion that he meets or hears of, and only observes the wayes of vertue, and religion, to hate and laugh at them: and the farther he walks, the deeper he is engaged in this humor of self-content, and contempt of others, of security, and scoffing. For this is the force and implicite argument, covert­ly contained in the close of these words, There shall come in the last F dayes, scoffers, &c. i. e. this resolution to walk on in their own lusts, hath brought them to this pitch of Atheism, to scoff and deride both God and Goodness. There shall, &c.

We have heretofore divided these words, and in them obser­ved and handled already the sin of Atheism, together with the sub­jects in which it works, Christians of the last times, noted from [Page 260] this prophetick speech, There shall come in the last dayes scoffers. We A now come to the second particular, the motive, or impellent to this sin, a liberty which men give themselves, and a content which they take to walk after their own lusts.

The second chapter of the Wisdom of Solomon, is an excellent de­scription of the Atheist: and though it be of Apocryphal authority, yet 'tis of most divine Canonical truth. I could find in my heart, nay, I can scarce hold from reading, and paraphrasing the whole chapter to you: 'tis so solid, so strong, so perfect a discourse B upon this theme, it contains so many strains of Atheistical reason, in opposition to godliness, and the root, and growth, and ma­turity of this tree of knowledge, and death, that the clear under­standing of that one place might suffice without any enlargement of proofs or expressions. But for brevity sake, and on promise that you will at your leisure survey it, I will omit to insist on it: only in the end of the 21. verse, after all the expressions of their Athe­istical counsels, you have the reason, or motive, or first worker of C all, For their own wickedness hath blinded them: their stupid perse­verance in those dark wayes, in that black Tophet on earth, habitu­ate custom of sinning, had so thickned their sight, had drawn such a film over their eyes, that in the judgment of divine affairs, they were stark blind: they could see nothing in all the mystery of godliness which was worth embracing: and therefore had no em­ployment, but to walk on after their own lusts, and to scoff at those that were so foolishly friendly to them, as to call them out of their D way: they were well enough acquainted with their own paths, they could walk them blindfold, and therefore had more wit then for­sake the road for a nearer by-way. The issue of all is this, that a voluptuous course of life is a great promoter and advancer of Atheism: there had never been so many scoffers in the Christian world, had there not been also those that were resolute to walk after their own lusts.

In the first verse of the Psalms, there be steps, and rounds, and E gradations of a sinner specified, 1. Walking in the counsel of the un­godly, 2. Standing in the way of sinners, 3. Sitting in the seat of the scorner. The two first being degrees in his motion, several stages of his journey to this [...], or top pitch of sinning in the last. Walking in the counsel of the ungodly is the first entrance to his course: and he that hath such a rise as this, hath a great advan­tage of all other sinners; he will perform his race with speed, and come suddenly to his goal. This deliberate walking in the wayes,F and with the companions and contrivers of ungodliness, this par­taking and prosecuting of the counsels, the enjoying this familia­rity with sin, proves a strong engagement to continue and perse­vere, and delight in its acquaintance. Yet because walking is a laborious motion, and will tire the sinner in time, he is fain to [Page 261] A betake himself to an easier posture, and that is standing in the way of sinners, continuing in a still, sober, quiet, stupid tranqil­lity of sinning, standing like a Mercury's post in the midst of a rode, never removed or stirred an inch, though never so justled by the passengers. Let all the contrary vertues never so thwart and cross him, he hath fixed his station, and neither force, nor allurements shall make him move. Yet because standing also is a painful po­sture, with which the valiantest legs will at last be nummed, if not B tyred, he hath in the last place his chair of ease and state, and here he sets up his rest, here he sins with as much Majesty as de­light. 1. In cathedrâ, as a feat of greatness, lording it, and sin­ning imperiously, commanding every spectator to follow his exam­ple of scoffing at God and goodness. 2. In cathedrâ, as a seat of authority, sinning doctorally, and magisterially, by his practise de­fining the lawfulness of these scoffs, even setting up a school of Atheism. And 3. in cathedrâ, as a seat of rest, and ease, and plea­sure, C which he is resolved never to rise out of, which he hath re­posed himself in, that he may laugh at ease, and without any pains or trouble, or charges blaspheme God for ever. And for the most part indeed he proves as bad as his resolution, having once given himself this licence of laughing at and deriding Religion, he seldom ever recovers himself to a sober countenance, like men whose cu­stom of scoffing hath made wry-mouthed, he lives and continues, and for the most part dyes scoffing. He comes as it were laughing D into hell, and seldom forsakes this habit of prophaneness, till hor­ror hath put smiling out of date. There is not a sin in the world that sits closer to him which hath once entertained it, and he that is once a merry Atheist, seldom, if ever proves a sad sober Chri­stian. He is seated in his chair of scorning, and contemns the mercy of that spirit that should take him out of it. Thus you see, that walking in the steps, and standing in the way, i. e. following the commands of their own lusts, they are soon arrived to the E pitch of Atheists, to the chair of scorners, and then there is but little preferment more that they are capable of, unless they will strive with Lucifer for preeminence in hell, or else challenge Rab­shakeh to rail, or Julian to blaspheme. But this is the highest de­gree of scoffers, and I hope the devil hath but few such valiant, bold, forward Champions in the world, since Julian or Lucian's time. And therefore I hope I have prickt no mans conscience here, whilst I have spoke of them: but I have formerly proved, F that there be some lower, tamer, secret degrees of Atheism, which every man may chance to spy in some angle or corner of his soul, some implicite artificial wayes of scoffing, or aba­sing God, which most of us are guilty of: and 'twill be wor­thy our pains to shew how these seeds are warmed, and cherished, and animated by a licentious life. [...] Hippocrates observes of the [Page 262] Scythians that they do not swathe themselves, nor bind in their loins A with any kind of girdle, but go with their bodies very loose, that they may ride the easier, which is the only exercise they use: and from hence, saith he, they grow so corpulent and fleshy, so bread and bulky, that they are both ugly and unweildy, an eye-sore to others, and cumbersome to themselves: those accessions which in other people extend themselves proportionably in length, and breadth, in height as well as bulk, in them grow all into thick­ness: so that you shall see a Pygme in stature, as big as a Gyant in B the girt. Thus is it with those whose affections are not ruled, and restrained in order, and within limits, are not swathed and kept in, have not some set terms of temperance, and other vertues, be­yond which they suffer not themselves to fly out. If I say, these affections within us be by the owners left ungirt to their own free­dom, they will never grow upward toward Heaven: they will still be dwarfish, of small growth in Religion: but yet like those Scythians, they will run into a strange bulk and corpulence, into C some unweildy mishapen forms of Atheisin, or the like. Cer­tainly they will grow into a greater breadth then the reasonable soul will be able to manage: unless the spirit vouchsafe to come down and contract, and call it into bounds, it will encrease be­yond all proportion, beyond all acknowledgment of God or Re­ligion. We are used to say in nature, that all moist things are apt to be conteined in other terms, but hardly in their own: the water is easily cooped up in a glass or bucket, where there are D bounderies to keep it in, but being let loose on a table or a floor, it flyes about and never stayes again till it meet with some Ocean, or hollow place which may inclose, and bestow the consistency on it which it has not of it self. Thus may you see a river whilst it is kept within the channel, go on in its stream and course very soberly and orderly, but when it hath over-swelled the banks which before kept it in, then doth it run about the pastures, scorns to be kept within any compass. Thus is it with the soul of man,E if it be ordered within terms and bounds, if it have a strict hand held over it, if it be curb'd and brought to its postures, if it have reason and grace, and a careful tutor to order it, you shall find it as tame a creature as you need deal with: it will never straggle or stray beyond the confines which the spirit hath set it; the rea­son is, because though it be in it self fluid, and moist, and ready to run about like water, yet Deus firmavit Aquas, God hath made a firmament betwixt the waters,Gen. l. 7. as he did, Gen. i. 7. i. e. he hath F establisht it, and given it a consistency, that it should not flow or pour it self out beyond its place. But if this soul of man be left to its own nature, to its own fluid, wild, incontinent condition, it presently runs out into an Ocean, never stayes, or considers, or con­sults, but rushes head-long into all inordinacy, having neither the [Page 263] A reins of reason nor God to keep it in, it never thinks of either of them, and unless by chance or by Gods mercy it fall into their hands, 'tis likely to run riot for ever. Being once let loose it ran­ges, as if there were neither power on earth to quell, nor in Hea­ven to punish it. Thus do you see how fluid, how inconstant the soul is of its own accord, how prone it is, how naturally inclined to run over like a stream over the banks, and if it be not swathed, and kept in, if it be left to the licentious condition of it self, how B ready is it to contemn both Reason and God, and run head-long in­to Atheism. Nay we need not speak so mercifully of it, this very licentiousness is the actual renouncing of Religion, this very walk­ing after their own lusts, is not only a motive to this sin of scoffing, but the very sin it self.

A false Conception in the womb is only a rude, confused, ugly Chaos, a meer lump of flesh, of no kind of figure or resemblance, gives only disappointment, danger, and torment to the Mother. C'Tis the soul at its entrance which defines, and trims, and polishes into a body, that gives it eyes, and ears, and legs, and hands, which before it had not distinctly and severally, but only rudely altoge­ther with that mass or lump. Thus is it with the Man, till Religi­on hath entred into him as a soul to inform, and fashion him, as long as he lives thus at large, having no terms, or bounds, or limits to his actions, having no form, or figure, or certain motion defined him, he is a Mola, a meer lump of man, an arrant Atheist: you D cannot discern any features or lineaments of a Christian in him; he hath neither eyes to see, nor ears to hear, nor hands to practise any duty that belongs to his peace. Only 'tis Religion must take him up, must smooth and dress him over, and according to its Etymon, must religare, swathe and bind up this loose piece of flesh, must animate and inform him, must reduce him to some set form of Christianity, or else he is likely after a long and fruitless travel to appear a deformed monstrous Atheist. But not to deal a­ny E longer upon Simile's, lest we seem to confound and perplex a truth by explaining it, I told you the licentious voluptuous life was it self perfect Heathenism. For can you imagine a man to be any but a Gentile, who hath abandoned all love, all awe, all fear, all care of God (any one of which would much contract and draw him into compass) who hath utterly put off every garb of a Christian, who hath enjoy'd the reins so long, that now he is not sensible, or at least contemns the curb or snaff [...]le if he be but F check't with it, gets it in his teeth and runs away with it more fierce­ly. The Heathen are noted not so much that they worshipt no God at all, but that they worshipped so many, and none of them the true. Every great friend they had, every delight and pleasure, e­very thing that was worth praying for, straight proved their God, and had its special Temple erected for its Worship. So that do but [Page 264] imagine one of them every day worshipping every God whom he A acknowledged, in its several Oratory, spending his whole life, and that too little too, in running from one Temple to another, and you have described our licentious man posting on perpetually to his sensual devotions, worshipping, adoring, and sacrificing every mi­nute of his life, to some Idol-vanity, and bestowing as much pains and charges in his prophane heathenish pleasures, as ever the Gen­tiles did on their false gods, or the most supererogating Papist on their true.

B

We are wont to say in Divinity,Wigg: in Jam. secundae quest. 1. Art. 5. p. 27, 28. and that without an Hyperbole, that every commission of sin is a kind of Idolatry, an incurvation, and bending down of the soul to some creature, which should al­wayes be erect, looking up to Heaven, from whence it was infused, like water naturally inclined to climb and ascend as high as the fountain, or head from whence it sprang. And then certainly a licentious life is a perpetual Idolatry, a supineness, and proneness, and incurvation of the soul to somewhat that deserves to be called C an Idol, i. e. either in St. Pauls acceptation of it, nothing (an Idol is nothing, 2 Cor. VIII. 4. 1 Cor. viii. 4.) or else in the most honourable signi­fication, only an Image, or some rude likeness or representation of God. We are the Image of God our selves, and whatsoever is below us, is but an imperfect draught of him, containing some lineaments, some confused resemblances of his power which crea­ted them, have no being of their own, but only as shadows which the light doth cast. And therefore every love, every bowe, every D cringe which we make to any creature, is the wooing and wor­shipping of an Image at best, in plain terms of an Idol, nothing. What degree then of Idolatry have they attained to, who every mi­nute of their lives bow down and worship, make it their trade and calling for ever to be a solliciting some pleasure or other? Some exquisite piece of sensuality to bless and make them happy, which have no other shrines to set up, but only to their own lust, to which they do so crouch, and creep, and crawl, that they are never able to E stand up right again: like those trees which the Papists talk of, which by bowing to our Ladies house, when in walks by the wood toward Loretto, have ever since stood stooping. Thus do you see how the latter part of my Text hath overtook the former: the walking after his own lusts, becomes a scoffer, the licentious man pro­ceeded Atheist, and that with ease, his very voluptuous life is a kind of Atheism, and the reasons of this are obvious, you need not seek or search far for them.

F

For first, this walking in their own lusts, notes an habit gathered out of many acts: he hath walked there a long while, and there­fore now hath the skill of it, walks on confidently, and carelesly without any rub or thought of stopping. And contrary to this the worship of God, of which Atheism is a privation, is an [Page 265] A holy, religious habit of Piety and Obedience. Now we know two contrary habits cannot consist or be together in the same sub­ject. An habit and its opposite privation are incompetible, light, and darkness at the same time, though they may seem to meet some­times, as in twilight: but for two opposite positive habits, never any mans conceit was so bold or phantastical as to joyn them: you cannot imagine one, but you must remove the other. You may suppose a man distempered or weak, which is a privation of health, B and yet suppose him pretty healthy, as long as his natural strength is able to overcome it; but can you suppose a man in a violent feaver actually upon him, and yet still imagine him in perfect health? Thus is it with a sinner, who hath given himself over to the tyranny, and impotency of his lusts, he hath utterly put off all degrees, all sparks of any habit of Religion, according to that of our Saviour, You cannot serve God and Mammon, where Mam­mon signifying in a vast extent the god of this World, imports all C lusts, all earthly vanities, which any habituate sinner deifies.

Secondly, Every habit notes a delight, an acquiescence, and joy in enjoying of that which through many actions, perhaps some brunts and rubs he hath at last arrived to. Now this delight and contentation, that is may be compleat, is impatient of any other incumbrance, which at any time may come in to interrupt or dis­order it. If any thing so happen, 'tis never quiet, till it have re­moved it. The Scholar that hath all his life laboured, and at last D attained to some habit of knowledge, and then resolves to enjoy the happiness and fruits of learning, in the quiet and rest of a per­petual contemplation, is impatient if any piece of ignorance cross or thwart him in his walk, he'l to his books again, and never rest till he hath overcome and turned it out. Thus doth the sensual man being come to the [...], and pitch, and enter'd into the Pa­radise of his worldly joys, if he do but meet with any jar, if he feel any pluck or twinge from his conscience, any grudge or com­punction E of the spirit within him, any spark or heat, or warmth of religious fear in his breast, he'l never rest till he hath aban­dored it, he is impatient of such a qualm of godliness, he must needs put it over, he is sick at heart till he hath disgorged himself of this choler, and then returns securely godless to his walk, having banished God out of all his thoughts. Thus shall you see the Atheist on his humor, for want of some compunction at hone, grumble at every godly man or action which they saw in F the street.Wisd. II. 14. In the 2. of Wisdom at the 14. He is grievous unto us to b [...]old, he was made to reprove our thoughts; and they do not return to their content, they are not pleased again till they have gotten him into their inquisition, to examine him with despitefulness and torture, ver. 19. Thus do they abhor and stifle, and strangle every godly action in others, or motion in themselves, because [Page 266] the holiness of the one is an exprobration to their prophaneness,A and the other was a pang of conscience, made as it were on purpose by God to reprove their thoughts.

Thirdly, This walking in the Text, though it be with some mo­tion, yet it is a slow one, a kind of walking in ones sleep, or that of a melancholy man, that can walk till he be wet through, and not mark that it rained. I say, it notes here an heavy, drowsie, unactive habit exprest by the Psalmist by sitting in a chair, as we shewed you: it notes a kind of churlish resoluteness, to walk B on whatever come in his way; he is grown even a passive to his lusts, he doth not so much act as suffer them, he walks on snorting in his road, do what you can, you shall neither turn nor wake him. Now this slow, drowsie, unactive habit begets a kind of numbness in him, a sluggish, sullen stupidity over all his faculties, that even a spur or goad cannot rouze him; all the pores as it were and passages, and entries to the soul are so stopped, and bung'd up, all his affections are grown so gross and brawny, so hardned C and incrassate, that no air or breath from Heaven can pierce it. He that tells him of Religion, or God, or Vertue, is as he that wa­keth one from a sound sleep: he that telleth such a fool a tale of Wis­dom, speaketh to one in a slumber, and when he hath told his tale, he will say, What is the matter? Ecclus. xxii. 8. Thus do you see, 1. The repugnance and inconsistence of a voluptuous life and Religion, 2. The delight, 3. The stupidity of this habit. Each of which have made a place for the Libertine, and set him in the D chair of the scorner. And all this while me thinks I have but talkt to your ears: Now that your hearts and affections may par­take of the sound, that the softer waxy part of you, may receive some impression from this discourse, let us close all with an Application.

And first from the guilt and dangerous condition of a licentious life, to labour by all means possible to keep out of it. He that is once engaged in it, goes on with a great deal of content, and in the midst of his pleasures on the one side, and carnal security on E the other, his Understanding, and Will, and Senses are lull'd into a lethargy, nay the very phancy in him is asleep, which in other sleeps is most active: he never imagines, never dreams of any fear, or danger, either God, or Devil. O what a lamentable woful estate is it to be thus sick beyond a sense of our disease, to be so near a spiritual death, and not so much as feel our weakness! Oh what an horrid thing it were to pass away in such a sleep, and never observe our selves near death, till Satan hath arrested beyond F bail, to sleep on and snort, as men without dread or danger, ill the torments of Hell should awake us! You cannot imagine how easie a thing it is for an habituate sinner to fall into the Devils pavs, before he thinks of it, as a melancholy man walking in the dark may be drowned in a pit, and no man hear him complain that he is faln.

[Page 267] A Again, We are wont to say that custom is another nature, and those things which we have brought our selves up to, we can as ill put off, as our constitution, or disposition. Now those things which spring from the nature of any thing, are inseparable from the subject; banish them as oft as you will, usque recurrent, they will return again as to their home, they cannot subsist any where else, they dwell there. So wallowing in the mire being a condition natural to the Swine, can never be extorted from them: wash B them, rinse them, purge them with Hyssop, as soon as ever they meet with mire again, they will into it. Their swinish nature hath such an influence on them, that all care or art cannot forbid, or hinder this effect of it. So that a customary sinner, who hath as it were made lust a part of his nature, hath incorporated pro­phaneness, and grafted it into his affections, can as hardly be rid of it, as a subject of his property; 'tis possible for fear, or want of opportunity sometime to keep him in, and make him ab­stain: C the load-stone may lye quiet, whilst no iron is within ken, or it may be held by force in its presence; but give it materials and leave to work, and it draws incontinently. So for all his tempo­rary forbearance, upon some either policy or necessity, the ha­bituate sinner hath not yet given over his habit. Leave him to him­self, give him room and opportunity, and he will hold no longer. If he be once advanced to this pitch of sin to be walking after his own lusts, he may possibly be driven back with a storm, or thunder: D but he will hardly give over his walk, he'l forward again as soon as ever the tempest is over. Nay farther, even when he wants objects and opportunities, he will yet shew his condition, he will betray the desire and good affection he bears to his old lusts; his discourse or fashions argue him incontinently bent, even when he is at the stanchest. As Aristotle observes of the fearful man, that even when no formidable object is near, he falls into many frights: so the voluptuous mans phancy is perpetually possest with E the meditation of his own ways, when some disease or necessity will not let him walk. In brief, unless this second nature be quite taken out of him, and another holy spiritual nature created in its room, unless a stronger come and bind this Devil and dispossess him of it, he hath small hopes of getting himself out of his domi­nion, and tyranny: there is a great deal more stir in the convert­ing of one customary sinner, then of a thousand others, 'tis not to be accomplished without a kind of death, and resurrection, with­out F a new Creation of another nature. So that (if we should judge of Gods actions by our own) the Spirit should seem to be put to more pains and trouble with this one habituate, then in the ordinary business of converting many a tamer sinner. This is enough by the desperateness of the cure to move you to study some art, some physick of prevention, lest when it is grown upon you, [Page 268] it be too late to enquire for remedies. How should we dare to A entertain and naturalize such an evil spirit within us, which if ever he be ravisht out of us again, cannot without tearing, and torturing, and rending even our whole nature in pieces? If we must needs be sinful, yet let us keep within a moderation, let us not so follow the Devils works, as to transubstantiate our selves into his nature; let us not put off our manhood with our integrity, and though we cannot be Saints, let us keep our selves men? 'Tis a degree of innocence not to be extreamly wicked, and a piece B of godliness not to be Atheists. Our lust is an infinite thing, said a Philosopher,( [...], Iambl.) and he that walks after it hath an endless journey: there is no hope that he that hath so far to go, will ever have leisure to sit still. And therefore I say if we must needs sin, yet let us not engage our selves to sin for ever: if our being men lays a necessity of sinning on us, let our care to stay whilst it is possible for us, prove that we do not sin like Devils, whose sin is their glory, and their resolution peremp­tory,C never to give over sinning; and so may ours seem, and in all likelihood prove to be, if we give our selves liberty to walk after our own lusts.

Secondly, If our lusts be such dangerous paths to walk in, and this in that very respect as they are our own in opposition to Gods commands, if they are the straight direct way to Atheism, nay Atheism it self: then what care and circumspection is required at every setting down of our feet, at every entrance on any acti­on,D lest there be a Serpent in the way, some piece of prophane­ness in every enterprize we enter on of our selves? How ought we to fear, to suspect, and balk any way that is our own? For where it is Atheism to walk, there surely 'tis a sin to tread: and where we have once ventured to tread, we shall be shrewdly tempted to walk; every step we have safely taken being an encou­ragement to a second. Verebar omnia opera mea, saith Job, I feared all my works: whatever action I could entitle my self to, me­thought E there was some danger in it, I was afraid it was not right as it should be, I should never be able to justifie it. This is an excellent trial of all our serious deliberate actions, to mark whe­ther they are our own or no, whether we went about them on our own heads, without our warrant or directions from God: if we did, 'tis much to be doubted there is some poyson, some guilt in them, something that deserves to be feared, and fled from. This very suspecting of our own ways, will alien us from our own F lusts, will bend us nearer to God, and never suffer us to dare to venture where he hath not secured us; will joyn us as it were in an engine to God himself, where the lower wheels never begin to move without the example and government of the higher. If you can but perswade your self to fear your own ways, 'twill be [Page 269] A a good stop of your progress to Atheism. I am confident the De­vil will never get you to walk in your own lusts.

Thirdly, If walking in our own lusts be direct Atheism, what shall we think of them who make it a piece of Religion, and holy policy to do so? Beloved, there be some learned Catechised Atheists, who upon confidence of an absolute eternal predestination of every man in the world that shall ever possibly be saved, set up their rest there, and expect what God will do with them. 'Tis to no pur­pose B to hope God will alter the decree, they are resolved to leave all to God, and if they perish, they perish. Mark with me, is not this a religious Atheism to attribute so much to God as to be­come careless of him, so to depend as never to think on him, and by granting his decree in our understanding, to deny his God­head in our conversation? He that lives negligently on confi­dence that his care may be spared, that if there be any salvation for him, God will work it out without his fear or trembling: he C that believes Gods election so absolute, that himself hath nothing to do in the business, whilst he expects mercy, makes himself uncapa­ble of it, and though he acknowledge a resurrection, lives as though he looked to be annihilated. Certainly he that expects God should send him a fruitful harvest, will himself manure the ground; he that hopes, will labour, according to that, 1 Joh. iii. 3. He that hath this hope in him purifies himself, &c. So that whosoever relyes on God for salvation, and in the midst of his hopes stands idle, D and walks after his own lusts, by his very actions confutes his thoughts, and will not in a manner suffer God to have elected him, by going on in such reprobate courses.

Lastly, If it be this confident walking after our own lusts, which is here the expression of Atheism, then here's a comfort for some fearful sinners, who finding themselves not yet taken up quite from a licentious life, suspect, and would be in danger to de­spair of themselves as Atheists. 'Tis a blessed tenderness to feel E every sin in our selves at the greatest advantage; to aggravate and represent it to our conscience in the horridst shape, but there is a care also to be had, that we give not our selves over as despe­rate; Cain ly'd when he said his sin was greater then could be ei­ther born or forgiven. When the Physicians have given one over, [...],Philop. 1. de an. nature hath its spring and plunge, and some­times quits and overcomes the disease. If thou art in this dangerous walk, and strivest and heavest, and canst not get out of it, yet F sorrow not as one without hope: this very regret and reluctan­cy, this striving and plunging is a good symptome. If thou wilt continue with a good courage, and set thy self to it to the pur­pose, be confident thou shalt overcome the difficulty. If this sin be a walking, then every stop is a cessation, every check a de­gree to integrity, every godly thought or desire a pawn from God [Page 270] that he will give thee strength to victory: and if thou do but nou­rish A and cherish every such reluctancy, every such gracious mo­tion in thy self, thou maist with courage expect a gracious calm deliverance out of these storms and tempests. And let us all labour, and endeavour, and pray that we may be loosed from these toyls and gins, and engagements of our own lusts, and being entred into a more religious severe Course here, then the Atheism of our ways would counsel us to, we may obtain the end, and rest, and consummation, and reward of our Course here­after.B

Now to him which hath elected us, &c.

The XVIII. Serm.

1 Tim. I. 15.‘Of whom I am the chief.’

D THE chief business of our Apostle St. Paul in all his Epistles is, what the main of every Preacher ought to be, Exhortation. There is not one doctrinal point but contains a precept to our Understanding to believe it, nor moral dis­course, but effectually implies an admonish­ment to our Wills to practise it. Now these Exhortations are proposed either vulgarly in E the downright garb of precept,1 Tim. IV. 11. as, These things command and teach, &c. or in a more artificial, obscure, enforcing way of Rhetorick, as, God forbid that I should glory, Gal. VI. 14. save in the cross of Christ, whereby the world is crucified to me, and I unto the world; which though in words it seems a protestation of St. Pauls own resolution, yet in effect is a most powerful exhortatory to every succeeding Christian to glory only in the cross of Christ, and on it to crucifie both the world and himself. This method of reducing St. Paul to Exhortation I observe F to you for the clearing of my Text. For this whole verse at the first view seems only a meer Thesis or point of belief, that Christ came into the world to save sinners, illustrated and applied by the speaker as one, and the chief of the number of those sinners to be saved. But it contains a most Rhetorical powerful Exhortation to both Under­standing and Will; to believe this faithful saying, That Christ came, [Page 272] &c. and to accept, lay hold of, and with all our might to embrace A and apply to each of our selves this great mercy, toward this great salvation bestowed on sinners, who can with humility confess their sins, and with faith lay hold on the promise. And this is the business of the Verse, and the plain matter of this obscure double Exhortation to every mans Understanding, that he believe that Christ, &c. to every mans affections, that he humble himself, and teach his heart, and that his tongue to confess, Of all sinners, &c. This Text shall not be divided into parts (which were to disorder B and distract the significancy of a Proposition) but into several considerations; for so it is to be conceived either absolutely as a profession of St. Paul of himself, and there we will enquire whe­ther and how Paul was the chief of all sinners. Secondly, respe­ctively to us, for whom this form of confessing the state and apply­ing the salvation of sinners to our selves is set down. And first, whether and how Paul was the chief of all sinners, where we are to read him in a double estate, converted and unconverted, exprest C to us by his double name Paul and Saul, Paul an Apostle of Jesus Christ, Saul a Persecutor, mad against the Christians; and that both these estates may be contained in the Text, although penn'd by Paul regenerated, may appear, in that the Pronoun [...] I, sig­nifying the whole compleat person of Paul, restrains not the speech to his present being only, but considers also what he had been; more especially set down at the 13. verse, Who was before a blasphemer, &c. So then Paul in his Saul-ship being ablasphemer,D a persecuter and injurious, and in sum, a most violent, perverse, malicious unbeliever, was a chief sinner, rankt in the front of the Devils army; and this needs no further proof or illustration. Yet seeing that that age of the world had brought forth many other of the same strain of violent unbelief, nothing inferiour to Saul, as may appear by those many that were guilty of Christs death (as Saul in person was not) and those that so madly stoned St. Stephen whilst Saul only kept the witnesses clothes, Acts VII. 58. and as the Text E speaks, was consenting unto his death; seeing, I say, that others of that age equalled, if not exceeded Sauls guilt, how can he be said above all other sinners to be the chief. I think we shall not wrest or enlarge the Text beside or beyond the meaning of the Holy Ghost or Apostle, if in answer unto this we say that here is in­tended not so much the greatness of his sins above all sinners in the world, but the greatness of the miracle in converting so great a sinner into so great a Saint and Apostle. So that the words shall F run, Of all sinners that Christ came into the world to save, and then prefer to such an eminence, I am the chief, or as the word primarily signifies [...], I am the first, i. e. Paul was the chief of all converts, and Paul was the first, that from so great a persecuter of Christ was changed into so great, so glorious an [Page 273] A Apostle. For so it follows in the verses next after my Text, For this cause I obtained mercy, that in me first Christ Jesus might shew forth all long suffering, &c. The issue of all is this, that Saul un­converted was a very great sinner, yet not the greatest of sinners absolutely, but for ought we read in the New Testament, the great­est and first that was called from such a degree of infidelity; a blas­phemer, a persecuter, to so high a pitch of salvation, a Saint, an Apostle, yea, and greater then an Apostle; whence the observati­on B is, that though Saul were, yet every blasphemous sinner can­not expect to be called from the depth of sin to regeneracy and sal­vation. Although Saul being [...], the chief of sin­ners, was called and saved; yet Saul was also in another sense, for ought we read [...], and perhaps the last that from so great a riot of sin obtained so great salvation. Wherefore, O sinner, be not presumptuous from Pauls example, but from Pauls single example begin to suspect thy state, and fear that such a miracle of salvati­on C shall not be afforded thee. There hath been an opinion of late reviv'd, perhaps original among the Romans, that the greatest sin­ner is the more likely object of Gods mercy, or subject of his grace then the mere moral man, whom either natural fear, or the like, not spiritual respects hath restrained from those out-rages of sin. The being of this opinion in the primitive Romans, and the false­ness of it is sufficiently prov'd by that expostulation of St. Paul, Shall we continue in sin, Rom. VI. 1. that grace may abound? God forbid. In an­swer D to some, who, hearing that Christ came into the world to save sinners, thought that the excess of sin was the best qualification, and only motive to provoke and deserve a more abundant grace and certain salvation. As if that spirit which once to manifest its power called Saul in the midst of his madness breathing out threatnings and slaughters against the Church, would not call any but those who had prepared themselves by the same degree of madness, but required that men should make themselves almost E Devils that they might be called into Christians, as if that God which could out of stones, John XI. 39. could not also out of men raise up chil­dren unto Abraham; as if that Christ which raised up Lazarus, being dead four dayes, and as they thought stinking in his grave, could not as easily have heal'd him whilst he was yet alive: whereas we read that Christ dealt more on the cures of the impotent, then resurrections of the dead; that is in a spiritual application heal'd more from the bed of languishment, of their weaknesses and disea­ses, F then he raised out of the graves of trespasses and sins, though some also hath he out of death quickned to exalt the power and miracle of his mercy. Yet hath not this doctrine too, been most confidently maintained among some of our times? That there is more hope of the debauch'd man, that he shall be called or saved, then of the mere moral, honest man, who yet is in the state of unre­generacy. [Page 274] Have not some men defining this moral man by the for­mal A hypocrite set him in the greatest opposition to Heaven? As if that degree of innocence, or rather not being extremely sinful, which a moral care of our wayes may bestow on us, were a great­er hindrance then promotion toward the state of grace, and the natural man were so much the further from God, the nearer he were to goodness, and no man could hope to come to Heaven but he that had knockt at Hell gates. I confess indeed that the Holy Ghost where he means to inhabit hath no need of pains to prepare him a B room, but can at his first knock open and cleanse, adorn and beau­tifie the most uncouth, ugly, and unsavory heart in the world. That omnipotent convincing Spirit can at the same instant strike the most obdurate heart, and soften it, and where it once enters cannot be repuls'd by the most sturdy habituate sin, or Deval. I confess likewise, that some have been thus rather snatch'd then call'd, like the fire-brands out of the fire, and by an extasie of the Spirit inwardly in a minute chang'd from incarnate Devils into in­carnate C Saint. So was Mary dispossest of seven Devils, who was after so highly promoted in Christs favour, that she had the honor to be the first witness of the resurrection.Mark XVI. 9. So that Gadarene who had intrencht and fortified himself among the Tombs, and was gar­rison'd with an army of Devils, so that he brake fetters and chains, and could not be tam'd or kept in any compass, yet in a minute at Christs word sent forth a legion of Fiends sufficient to people and destroy a Colony of Swine. And so was Paul in my Text, in a D minute at Christs call delivered of a multitude of blasphemous malicious spirits, and straight became the joy of Angels, the A­postle of the Gentiles. Yet mean time, these miraculous, but rarer examples must not prescribe and set up, must not become a rule and encourage any one to Sauls madness on confidence of Pauls con­version, to a more impetuous course of sinning, that he may become a more glorious Saints. 'Tis a wrong way to Heaven to dig into the deep, and a brutish arrogance to hope that God will the more E eagerly woo us, the further our sins have divorc't us from him. If some (as hath been said) have been caught or strucken in the height of their rebellions, or in the fulness of the evil spirit called to a wane (as diseases in the [...], or top-pitch, are wont to decay and weaken into health again) if there have been some of these, as my Apostle, rais'd from the depth of sin, as Lazarus from the stench of the grave, yet these in respect of others more softly and ordinarily called, are found few in number; and such F as were appointed for the miracles as well as the objects of Gods mercy. Hence it is, that a strange disorder hath most times ac­companied this extraordinary conversion of more violent out­ragious sinners. Our Apostle (to go no farther) was to be cast into a trance, and his regeneration not to be accomplisht without a [Page 275] A kind of death and resurrection, whereas others who are better mo­rally qualified, or rather are less hardned in the sins of unregene­racy, do answer at the softest knock or whispering'st call of the Spirit, and at his becken will come after him. More might be said of this point, how St. Paul was most notably converted; that he had the alleviation of ignorance, for which cause (as he sayes him­self) he found mercy, and that others are not probably to expect the like miracle, who have not those insuperable prepossessions B from custom and religion, but that this is not the business of the Text, but a praecognoscendum or passage to the clearing of it. Briefly there­fore to conclude this note, Paul is the chief example mentioned in Scripture, and there be not many, though some more, that were called from the height of impiety, from the gall of bitterness, to this mystical third Heaven, or so high degree of Saint and Apostle. The more ordinary course of Gods proceeding (if we may possi­bly judge of the Decree by events and examples) is to call such C to the state of grace, and so consequently of glory, who have passed their unregeneracy most innocently, and kept themselves least polluted from the stains of habituate wickedness, that is, have lived as much as natural men can do, in the plainest, honestest course of morality, it being presupposed that among all other mo­ral vertues they have purchased humility, the best (if there be a­ny preparative) for the receiving of grace. Mean while we are not to be mistaken, as if we thought Gods purposes tyed to mans D good behaviour, or mans moral goodness to woo and allure Gods Spi­rit, as that the Almighty is not equally able to sanctifie the foulest soul by his converting grace, and the less polluted, or that he re­quires mans preparation: but our position is, that in ordinary cha­ritable reason we ought to judge more comfortably, and hope more confidently of a meer moral man naturally more careful of his wayes, that he shall be both called and saved, that God will with his Spirit perfect and crown his morally good, though imperfect E endeavours, then of another more debauch't sinner utterly negli­gent of the commands of either God or Nature. Which position I have in brief proved, though nothing so largely as I might, in con­futation of them who do utterly condemn unregenerate morality, and deject it below the lowest degree of prophaneness, as if they would teach a man his way to Heaven by boasting arrogantly, what Paul converted confesses humbly, I am the nearer to Christs Sal­vation, because of all sinners I am the chief. The Use in brief F of this Thesis shall be for those who not as yet find the power of the regenerating spirit in them (for I am to fear many of my au­ditors may be in this case, and I pray God they feel, and work, and pray themselves out of it) the Use, I say, is for those who are not yet full possessors of the spirit, to labour to keep their unregeneracy spotless from the greater offence, that if they are not yet [Page 276] called to the preferment of Converts and Saints, the second part of A Heaven, that earthly City of God, that yet they will live orderly in that lower regiment, wherein they yet remain, and be subject to the law of nature, till it shall please God to take them into a new Common-wealth under the law of grace, to improve their natural abilities to the height, and bind their hands and hearts from the practice and study of outragious sins, by those ordinary restraints which nature will afford us; such as are a good disposition, educa­tion, and the like; not to leave and refer all to the miraculous B working of God, and to encrease our sins for the magnifying of the vertue in recalling us. God requires not this glory at our hands that we should peremptorily over-damn our selves, that he may be the more honoured in saving us. His mercy is more known to the world then to need this woful foil to illustrate it. God is not wont to rake Hell for converts, to gather Devils to make Saints of; the Kingdom of Heaven would suffer great violence, if only such should take it. If Saul were infinitely sinful before he proved an C Apostle (though by the way we hear him profess,Acts XXIII. 1. he had lived in all good conscience) yet expect not thou the same miracle, nor think that the excess of sins is the cue that God ordinarily takes to convert us. The Fathers in an obedience to the discipline and pe­dagogy of the old Law possest their soule in patience, expecting the prophecied approach of the new, did not by a contempt of Moses precipitate and hasten the coming of the Messias. Cornelius liv'd a long while devoutly,Acts X. i. and gave much alms, till at last God D call'd him, and put him in a course to become a Christian: and do thou, if thou art not yet called, wait the Lords leisure in a sober moral conversation, and fright not him from thee with unnatural abominations. God is not likely to be wooed by those courses which nature loaths, or to accept them whom the world is ashamed of. In brief, remember Saul and Cornelius; Saul, that he, not ma­ny, were called from a profest blasphemer; Cornelius, that before he was called, he prayed to God alway: and do thou endeavour to E deserve the like mercy, and then in thy prayer confess thine unde­serving, and petition grace, as grace, that is not as our merit, but as his free-will favour, not as the desert of our morality, but a stream from the bounty of his mercy, who (we may hope) will crown his common graces with the fulness of his Spirit. And now, O powerful God, on those of us which are yet unregenerate, be­stow thy restraining grace, which may curb and stop our natural inordinacy, and by a sober, careful, continent life, prepare us F to a better capability of thy sanctifying Spirit, wherewith in good time thou shalt establish and seal us up to the day of redemption. And thus much concerning Saul unconverted, how of all sinners he was the chief, not absolutely, that he surpassed the whole world in rankness of sin, but respectively to his later state, that few or [Page 277] A none are read to have been translated from such a pitch of sin to Saint-ship. Now follows the second consideration of him be­ing proceeded Paul, i. e. converted, and then the question is, Whether, and how Paul converted may be said the chief of all sin­ners.

'Twere too speculative a depth for a popular Sermon to discuss the inherence and condition of sin in the regenerate; the business will be brought home more profitably to our practice, if we drive B it to this issue, That Paul in this place intending by his own exam­ple to direct others how to believe the truth, and embrace, and fa­sten on the efficacy of Christs Incarnation, hath no better motive to incite himself and others toward it, then a recognition of his sins, that is, a survey of the power of sin in him before, and a sense of the relicks of sin in him since his conversion. Whence the note is, That the greatness of ones sins makes the regenerate man apply himself more fiercely to Christ. This faithful saying was therefore C to Paul worthy of all acceptation, because of all sinners he was the chief. St. Paul, as every regenerate man, is to be observed in a treble posture, either casting his eyes backward, or calling them in upon himself, or else looking forward and aloof; and according­ly is to be conceived in a treble meditation, either of his life past, or present state, or future hopes. In the first posture and meditati­on you may see first Paul alone, who was before a blasphemer, a persecuter and injurious; secondly, all the regenerate together: D For when we were in the flesh the motions of sin did work in our members, &c. and many the like. In the second posture and me­ditation you may observe him retracting an error, Acts XXIII. Acts xxiii. de­precating a temptation with earnest and repeated intercessions, 2 Cor. xii. 7.2 Cor. XII. 7. fighting with and harrasing himself, beating down his body, and keeping it in subjection, lest while he preacht to others he himself might be a cast-away, 1 Cor. IX. 27. 1 Cor. ix. 27. &c. In the third po­sture we find him, Rom. vii. 25. where after a long disguise he cries E out,Phil. III. 13. I thank God through Jesus Christ our Lord. And again, Phil. iii. 13. most evidently, Forgetting those things that are behind, and reaching out to those things which are before, I press toward the mark, &c. like a racer in the heat of his course whose eyes desires to an­ticipate his feet, and enjoy the goal before he reach it. These three carriages of the regenerate man fully prove our observation: for if either of the two former sights could afford him any content; if either his former or present state did not sufficiently terrifie him, F he would not be so eager on the third, it being the folly of humane pride and self-love to contemn any forraign aid as long as it finds either appearance or hope of domestick. If in the view of his for­mer life he should find any thing either good or not extremely bad and sinful, he would under-prize the mercy of that Saviour that redeem'd him from so poor a guilt; if he could observe in his [Page 278] present state any natural firmness or stability, any inherent purity,A any essential justice, he might possibly sacrifice to his own nets, and reckoning himself in perfect peace with God, neither invoke and seek, nor acknowledge a Mediatour. But when in his former life he shall find nothing but the matter and cause of horrour and amaze­ment, nothing but hideous ghastly affrightments, yea, and a bo­dy of damnation: when in hope to mend himself, and ease his fears, he shall fly to the comfort of his present converted state, and yet there also espy many thorns of temptations, 2 Cor. XII. 7. how can he but be B frighted out of himself? How can he but fly from the scene of those his torments, and seek out and importune the mercy of a Saviour, which may deliver him out of all his fears? After the ex­ample of our Apostle in my Text, where he does more perempto­rily apprehend Christ, and more bodily believe, That he came in­to the world to save sinners, because of all sinners he was chief, ma­king his own sinfulness (being the object and external motive of Gods mercy) an argument and internal motive of his own faith C and confidence.I. The plain meaning of this Thesis is, that among men things are not alway valued according to the merit of their na­ture, for then each commodity should be equally prized by all men, and the man in health should bestow as much charges on phy­sick as the diseased: but each thing bears its several estimation by its usefulness, and the riches of every merchandize is encreased ac­cordingly as men to whom it is proferred do either use or want it. Moreover, this usefulness is not to be reckoned of according to D truth, but opinion, not according to mens real wants, but accord­ing to the sense which they have of their wants; so a man distra­cted, because he hath not so much reason about him as to observe his disease, will contemn Hellebore, or any other the most preci­ons Recipe for this cure: and generally no man will hasten to the Physician, or justly value his art and drugs, but he whom misery hath taught the use of them. So then unless a man have been in some spiritual danger, and by the converting Spirit be instructed into E a sense and apprehension of it, he will not sufficiently observe the benefit and use of a deliverer: unless he feel in himself some stings of the relicks of his sin, some pricks of the remaining Amorite, he will not take notice of the want and necessity which he hath of Christs mediation. But when he shall with a tenderness of me­mory survey the guilt of his former state, from the imputation, not importunity whereof he is now justified, when he shall still feel with­in him the buffetings of Satan, and sensibly observe himself not ful­ly F sanctified, then, and not before, will he with a zealous earnest­ness apprehend the profit, yea, necessity of a Saviour, whose as­sistance so nearly concerns him.II. The second ground of this positi­on is, That an extraordinary undeserved deliverance is by an affli­cted man received with some suspition: the consideration of the [Page 279] A greatness of the benefit makes him doubt of the truth of it, and he will scarce believe so important an happiness befaln him, because his misery could neither expect nor hope it. Hence upon the first notice of it he desires to ascertain it unto his sense, by a sudden possession of it, and not at all to defer the enjoying of that mercy which his former misery made infinitely worthy of all acceptation. Thus may you see a ship-wrackt man recovered to some refuge, cling about, and almost incorporate himself unto it, because the fortune B of his life depends on that succour. The new regenerate man find­ing in the Scripture the promise of a Redeemer, which shall free him from those engagements which his former bankrupt estate had plung'd him in, cannot delay so great an happiness, but with a kind of tender fear and filial trembling, runs (and strives as the Disciples to the Sepulchre) to assure his necessitous soul of this acceptable salvation: Matth. XX. 4. even sets upon his Saviour with a kind of violence, and will seem to distrust his promise, till his seal shall au­thorize C and confirm it. Thus did the greatness of the work of the unexpected resurrection beget in Thomas a suspition and incredulity, I will not believe, &c.John XX. 25. where our charity may conjecture, that he above all the rest was not absolutely resolved not to believe the re­surrection, but that he being absent at the first apparition, would not take so important a miracle upon trust, but desired to have that demonstrated to his sense, which did so nearly concern his faith; that so by putting his finger into the print of the nails, and D thrusting his hand into his side, he might almost consubstantiate and unite himself unto his Saviour, and at once be assured of the truth and partake of the profit of the resurrection. Hear but the voice of the Spouse, and any further proofs shall be superfluous, where in violence and jealousie of love she importunes the Eternal pre­sence of the Beloved,Cant. VIII. 6. Set me as a seal upon thy heart, as a seal upon thine arm, for love is strong as death, jealousie as cruel as the grave: the coals thereof are coals of fire which hath a vehement flame. She E had before often lost her beloved, which made her so fiercely fasten on him,Cant III. 4. for having roused him, ruit in amplexus, she rusht into his embraces, she held him and would not let him go. Thus you see the jealousie and eagerness of love produc'd by either a former loss, or present more then ordinary want of the object, both which how pertinent they are to the regenerate man, either observing his past sins, or instant temptations, this discourse hath already made ma­nifest. The Use of this Thesis (to wit, that the greatness of ones F sins makes the regenerate man apply himself more fiercely to Christ) is first by way of caution, I. that we mistake not a motive for an efficient, an impulsive for a principal cause. For where we say, It makes him apply himself, &c.] we mean not that the encrease of sin produces faith formally, but only inciteth to believe by way of instruction, by shewing us what distress we are in, and conse­quently [Page 280] in what a necessity of a deliverer. The meditation of our A sinful courses may disclose our misery, not redress it; may ex­plore, not mend a sinner, like a touchstone to try, not any way to alter him. It is the controuling Spirit which must effectually re­new our spirits, and lead us to the Christ which our sins told us we had need of. The sense of sin may rouze the soul, but it is the Spi­rit of God that layes the toils; the feeling of our guilt may beat the waters, but it is the great fisher of our souls which spreads the nets, which entraps us as we are in our way to Hell, and leads us B captive to salvation. The mere gripings of our Conscience being not produced by any Pharmacon of the spirit, but by some distemper arising from sin, what anxiety doth it cause within us? What pangs and twinges to the soul? O Lord, do thou regenerate us, and then thy Holy Spirit shall sanctifie even our sins unto our good; and if thy grace may lead us, our sins shall pursue and drive us unto Christ. Secondly, by way of character, how to distinguish a true convert from a false. A man which from an inveterate desperate malady C shall meet with a miraculous unexpected cure, will naturally have some art of expression above an ordinary joy; you shall see him in an extasie of thanksgiving and exultancy, whilst another, which was never in that distress, quietly enjoys the same health, and gives thanks softly by himself to his preserver. So is it in the distresses of the soul, which if they have been excessive, and al­most beyond hope of recovery, as the miracle must, so will the expression of this deliverance be somewhat extraordinary. The D soul which from a good moral or less sinful natural estate, is magis immutata quam genita, rather chang'd then regenerate into a spiri­tual, goes through this business without any great noise, the Spi­rit entring into it in a still small voice, Jo. XX. 22. or at a breathing: but when a robustous obdurate sinner shall be rather apprehended then cal­led, when the Sea shall be commanded to give up his ship-wrack't, and the Sepulchre to restore her dead, the soul surely which thus escapeth shall not be content with a mean expression, but will pra­ctice E all the Hallelujahs and Magnificats which the triumphant Li­turgies of the Saints can afford it. Wherefore, I say, if any one out of a full violent course of sinning conceive himself converted and regenerated, let him examine what a degree of spiritual exul­tancy he hath attained to, and if he find it but mean, and slight, and perfunctory, let him somewhat suspect that he may the more confirm the evidence of his calling. Now this spiritual exultancy of the regenerate consists both in a solemn humiliation of himself,F and a spiritual rejoycing in God his Saviour; both exprest in Maries Magnificat, where she specifies in the midst of her joy the lowliness of his handmaid, and in St. Pauls victory-song over death. So that if the conversion of an inordinate sinner be not accompani­ed with unwonted joy and sorrow, with a godly sense of his past [Page 281] A distress, and a godly triumph for his delivery; if it be not followed with a violent eagerness to fasten on Christ; finally, if there be not somewhat above ordinary in the expression, then I counsel not to distrust, but fear, that is, with a sollicitous, not suspicious trembling to labour to make thy calling and election sure: to pray to that Holy Spirit to strike our hearts with a measure of holy joy and holy sorrow, some way proportionable to the size of those sins, which in our unregeneracy reigned in us; and for those of us whom B our sins have separated far from him, but his grace hath called home to him, that he will not suffer us to be content with a distance, but draw us close unto himself, make us press toward the mark, and fasten our selves on that Saviour, which hath redeemed us from the body and guilt of this so great death. III. The third Use is of com­fort and confirmation to some tender souls who are incorporated in­to Christ, yet finding not in themselves that excessive measure of humiliation which they observe in others, suspect their own state, C and infinitely grieve that they can grieve no more. Whereas this doctrine being observed will be an allay to their sorrow, and wipe some unnecessary tears from their eyes. For if the greatness of sin past, or the plentiful relicks of sin remaining, do require so great a measure of sorrow, to expiate the one, and subdue the other; if it be a deliverance from an habituate servitude to all manner of sin, which provokes this extraordinary pains of expression; then certainly they who have been brought up with the spirit, which were D from their baptism never wholly deprived of it, need not to be bound over to this trade of sorrow, need not to be set apart to that perpetual humiliation which a more stubborn sin or Devil is wont to be cast out by. I doubt not but a soul educated in familia­rity with the spirit, may at once enjoy her self and it; and, so that if it have an humble conceit of it self, and a filial of God, may in earth possess God with some clearness of look, some sere­nity of affections, some alacrity of heart, and tranquility of spi­rit. E God delights not in the torment of his children, (though some are so to be humbled) yea, he delights not in such burnt offerings as they bestow upon him, who destroy, and consume, and sa­crifice themselves; but the Lords delight is in them that fear him filially, and put their trust, i. e. assurance, confidence in his mercy; in them that rejoyce, that make their service a pleasure, not an affliction, and thereby possess Heaven before they come to it. 'Tis observed in husbandry, that soil, laid on hard, barren, starved F ground doth improve it, and at once deface and enrich it, which yet in ground naturally fruitful, and kept in heart, and good case, is esteemed unnecessary and burthensome. You need not the application. Again, the husbandman can mend a dry, stub­born, wayward, fruitless earth, by overflowing of it, and on such indeed is his ordinary requisite discipline, to punish it for its [Page 282] amendment. But there is a ground otherwise well tempered, which they call a weeping ground, whence continually water soaks out, and this proves seldom fruitful (if our learned husbandmen ob­serve aright) whereof there is sometime need of draining, as well as watering. The application is, that your soul which either hath been naturally dry and barren, or else over-wrought in the busi­ness of the world, needs a flood of tears to soften and purge it. But the well temper'd soul which hath never been out of heart, but hath alwayes had some inward life, some fatness of, and nourishment B from the spirit, is rather opprest then improved by such an over­flow. The Christian is thereby much hindred in his progress of good works, and cannot serve the Lord with alacrity, that so per­petually hangs down his head like a Bulrush. Wherefore, the Coun­try rule is, that that ground is best which is mellow, which being crusht will break but not crumble, dissolve, but not excessively. Hence, I say, the habituate believer need not suspect his estate, if he find not in himself such an extremity of violent grief, and humilia­tion C as he observes in others; knowing that in him such a measure of tears would both soil the face of his devotion, and clog the exercise of it. His best mediocrity will be to be habitually hum­bled, but actually lively and alacrious in the wayes of godliness; not to be too rigid and severe a tyrant over his soul, but to keep it in a temper of Christian softness, tender under the hand of God, and yet man-like and able both in the performance of Gods wor­ship and his own calling. And whensoever we shall find our selves D in either extreme, either too much hardned, or too much melted, too much elevated, or too much dejected; then to pray to that Holy Spirit so to fashion the temper of our souls, that we neither fail in humbling our selves in some measure for our sins, nor yet too cowardly deject and cast down our selves, below the cou­rage, and comfort, and spiritual rejoycing which he hath prescri­bed us. O Holy Lord, we are the greatest of sinners, and there­fore we humble our selves before thee, but thou hast sent thy Christ E into the world to save sinners, and therefore we raise up our spirits again, and praise, and magnifie thy name. And thus much of this point, and in brief, of the first consideration of these words, to wit, as they are absolutely a profession of Paul himself, to which end we beheld him in his double estate, converted and un­converted. In his unconverted state we found, though a very great sinner, yet not absolutely greater then those times brought forth, and therefore we were to think of him relatively to his F future estate, and so we found him the greatest sinner that ever was called in the New Testament into so glorious a Saint. Whence we observe the rarity of such conversions, that though Saul were, yet every blasphemous sinner could not expect to be called from the depth of sin to regeneracy and salvation: and [Page 283] A this we proved both against the ancient Romans and modern Cen­sors of morality, and applied it to the care which we ought to have of keeping our unregeneracy spotless from any reigning sin. After­ward we came to Paul converted, where we balk't the discourse of the condition of sin in the regenerate, and rather observed the effect of it; and in it, that the greatness of his sin made (as Paul, so) eve­ry regenerate man more eagerly to fasten on Christ. Which being proved by a double ground, we applied first by way of caution, B how that proposition was to be understood; 2. by way of character, how a great sinner may judge of his sincere certain conversion; 3. by way of comfort to others, who find not the effects of humi­liation and the like in themselves, in such measure as they see in o­thers; and so we have past through the first consideration of these words, being conceived absolutely as St. Pauls profession of him­self, we should come to the other consideration, as they are set down to us as a pattern or form of confessing the estate, and applying the C salvation of sinners to our selves, which business requiring the pains, and being worthy the expence of an entire hour, we must defer to a second exercise.

Now the God which hath created us, hath elected, redeemed, called, justified us, will sanctifie us in his time, will prosper this his ordinance, will direct us by his grace to his glory. To him be ascribed due the ho­nour, the praise, the glory, the dominion, which through all ages of the world have been given to him that sitteth on the Throne, to the Holy Spirit, and Lamb for evermore.

The XIX. Sermon

1 Tim. I. 15.‘Of whom I am the chief.’

IN all Humane writings and Learning, there is a D kind of poverty and emptiness, which makes them when they are beheld by a judicious rea­der look starved and crest-faln: their speeches are rather puft up then fill'd, they have a kind of boasting and ostentation in them, and pro­mise more substance and matter to the ear, then they are able to perform really to the under­standing: whence it falls out, that we are more affected with them E at the first hearing, and, if the Orator be clear in his expression, we understand as much at the first recital, as we are able to do at the hundredth repetition. But there is a kind of Excellency in the Scripture, a kind of [...], or sublimity above all other writings in the world. The reading of every section of it leaves a sting in the mind, and a perpetual conceit of a still imperfect understanding of it. An intelligent man at every view finds in it a fresh mystery, and still perceives that there is somewhat beyond, not yet attain'd F to: like men digging in mines, the deeper he dives he finds the greatest treasure, and meets with that under ground, which looking on the outward turf, or surfice, he never imagined to have been there. This I observe unto you, to shew you the riches both of all, and especially of this Scripture, whereinto the deeper I dig, [Page 285] A the more oar I find: and having already bestowed one hour in the discussing of it, without any violence, or wresting, or wire-drawing find plenty of new materials.

We have already handled the Words at large in one consideration, as they are a profession of Paul himself; I will not repeat you the particular occurrents. We now without any more delay of pre­face come to the second consideration of them, as they are spoken by Paul respectively to us, i. e. as they are prescribed us for a form B of confessing the estate, and applying the salvation of sinners unto ourselves, teaching each of us for a close of our Faith and Devo­tion to confess, Of all, &c.

Where first the cadence or manner how Paul falls into these words, is worthy to be both observed and imitated: the chief and whole business of this verse being the truth, the acceptable truth of Christs Incarnation, with the end of it, the saving of sinners. He can no sooner name this word sinners, but his exceeding melting C tenderness abruptly falls off, and subsumes, Of all sinners, &c. If there be any thing that concerns sinners, I am sure I have my part in that, for of that number I am the chief. The note by the way briefly is, That a tender conscience never hears of the name of sinner, but straight applies it to it self. It is noted by Aristotle, the master of Human Learning, that that Rhetorick was very thin and unpro­fitable, very poor and like to do little good upon mens affections, which insisted on general matters, [...]. and descended not to particu­lars, D as if one should discourse of sin in general, and sinners with­out reference to this or that particular sin or sinner; and the rea­son of his note was, because men are not moved or stirred with this eloquence. The intemperate person could hear a declamation against vice, and never be affected with it, unles it stooped to take notice of his particular enormities, and so is it with other criminals. This reason of his was grounded upon the obdurateness of mens hearts, which would think that nothing concerned them, E but what was framed against the individual offender, all such being as dull and unapt to understand any thing that being applied might move or prick them, as men are to take notice of a com­mon national judgment, which we never duly weigh, till we smart under it in particular. This senslesness may also seem to have been amongst St. Paul's Corinthians, which made him use Aristotles counsel, in driving his speech home to their private pen­sons, 1 Cor. vi.Vers. 10, 11. Where telling them that neither fornicators nor F Idolaters, and the like, shall inherit the Kingdom of God; for fear they should not be so tender-conscienced as of their own accords to apply these sins to themselves, and read themselves guilty in that glass; he is fain to supply that office, and plainly tell them what otherwise perhaps they would not have conceived, and such were some of you, ver. 11. This sensless hard-heartedness or back­wardness [Page 286] in applying the either commands or threatnings of the A law to ones self, is by the Apostle called, [...], which we ordinarily translate a reprobate mind, but may be brought to signi­fie a mind without judgment, that hath no faculty of discerning, that cannot in a general threatning observe something that may con­cern the danger of his particular state: or as it may be rendred, a mind without sense, not apprehensive of those things which are manifestly proposed to them, like those walking Idols described by the Psalmist, Psalm CXV. Eyes have they and see not, ears and hear not, noses B and smell not, only beautiful carcasses of Christians, which have nothing but their shape and motion to perswade you that they live: unless we add this most unhappy symptom, which indicates a state more wretched far then death it self, that there is strength and vigour to oppose recovery, that amidst death there yet survives a hatred, and antipathy to life. In such a soul as this there is a perpetual reaction, an impatience of the presence of any thing which may trash, incumber, or oppress it: a judgment or denunciation is C but cast away upon it, it shall be sure to return unprofitably, and neither move nor mend it. This hath been, and much more might be observed to you, of the carriage of the hard, stupid heart toward either Scripture or Preacher, to the plain opening of this point; for you shall more clearly understand the tender heart by observing the obdurate, and learn to be affected aright with Gods law or punishments, by knowing and hating the opposite stubborn senslesness. Now in brief, this tender heart in the discovery of D a sin, or denunciation of a judgment needs not a particular, Thou art the man] to bring it home to his person. The more wide, and general the proposal is, the more directly and effectually is this strucken with it. In a common satyre or declamation against sin in general, it hath a suddain art of Logick to anatomize and branch this sin in general into all its parts; and then to lay each of them to its own charge; it hath a skill of making every passage in the Scrip­ture, a glass to espy some of her deformities in, and cannot so E much as mention that ordinary name of sin or sinner, without an extraordinary affection, and unrequired accusation of it self. Of all sinners, &c. The plain reason of this effect in the tender heart is, first because it is tender. The soft and accurate part of a mans body do suffer without reaction, i. e. do yield at the appearance of an enemy, and not any way put forward to repel him. These being fixt on by a Bee, or the like, are easily penetrated by the sting, and are so far from resisting of it, that they do in a manner F draw it to them, and by their free reception allure it to enter so far, that the owner can seldom ever recover it back again. Whereas on a dead carcase, a thick or callous member of the body, a Bee may fix and not forfeit her sting. So doth a tender heart never re­sist or defend it self against a stroke, but attenuates its self, layes [Page 287] A wide open its pores, to facilitate its entrance, seems to woo a threatning, to prick, and sting, and wound it sharply, as if it re­joyced in, and did even court those torments which the sense of sin or judgment thus produced.

Again, a tender heart ordinarily meets with more blows, more oppressions then any other: its very passiveness provokes every ones malice; the fly and dust, as if it were by a kind of natural in­stinct, drive directly at the eye, and no member about you shall be B oftener rubb'd or disordered then that which is raw or distemper­ed; the reason being because that which is not worthy notice to a­nother part is an affliction to this, and a mote which the hand observes not, will torment the eye. So is it with the Conscience, whose ten­derness doth tempt every piece of Scripture to afflict it, and is more incumbred with the lest atome of sin or threat, then the more hard­ned sinner is with a beam or Mountain.

Thirdly, one that hath any solemn business to do will not pass C by any opportunity of means which may advantage him in it. One that hath a search to make, will not slip any evidence which may concur to the helping of his discovery, one that hath any Treatise to write, will be ready to apply any thing that ever he reads to h [...]s Theme or purpose. Now the search, the discourse, the whole im­ployment of a tender heart, is the enquiry after the multitude of its sins, and in sum the aggravation of each particular guilt, in and against it self, that so having sufficiently loaded it self, and being D tired with the weight and burthen of its sins, it may in some mea­sure perform the condition which Christ requires of them which come to him and be prepared to receive that ease which Christ hath promised to the weary and heavy laden. Matth. XI. 26. So then if the tender Conscience doth never repel, or reverberate any mention of sin, but doth draw out the sting of it to its length, if it be much affected with the lest atome of sin, and therefore meets with frequent disorders, if lastly it make its imployment to gather out of all the Scripture, E those places which may advantage her in the sight and sense of her sins: then certainly doth she never hear of the name of sinner, but straight she applies it to her self, which was the point we under­took to shew. The direct use of this Proposition is for a [...], or judgment of our estate. 'Tis observed in the body, that the rest of the senses may be distempered, and lost without impairing of it, but only the touch cannot, which therefore they call the sense of life, because that part or body which is deprived of feeling, F is also at deaths door, and hath no more life in it, then it hath reliques of this sense. So is it also in spiritual matters: of all o­ther symptomes this of senslesness is most dangerous, and as the Greek Physicians are wont to say of a desperate disease, [...], very very mortal. This feeling tenderness is necessa­ry to the life of grace, and is an inseparable both effect and argu­ment [Page 288] of it. Wherefore I say for the judgment of your selves, ob­serve A how every piece of Scripture works upon you. If you can pass over a Catalogue of sins and judgments without any regret, or reluctancy, if you can read Sodom and Gomorrah, Babylon and the Harlot Jerusalem, and not be affected with their stories, if thou canst be the Auditor of other mens faults without any sense or gri­ping of thine own, if the name of sin or sinner be unto thee but as a jest or fable, not worthy thy serious notice, then fear thy affecti­ons want of that temper, which the softning spirit is wont to be­stow B where it rests, and accordingly as thou findest this tender­ness increasing or waining in thee, either give thanks or pray: either give thanks for the plenty of that spirit which thou enjoy­est, or in the sense of thy wants importune it, that God will give us softned relenting hearts, that the recital of other mens sins may move us, other mens judgments may strike us, other mens repen­tance melt us with a sense, with a confession, with a contrition of our own. But above all, O Holy Spirit, from hardness of heart,C from an undiscerning, reprobate spirit, from a contempt, nay neg­lect, a not observing of thy Word, as from the danger of hell, Good Lord deliver us.

And thus much of this point, of this effect of a tender heart, noted to you out of the cadence of the words. I now come to ob­serve somewhat more real out of the main of the words themselves, Of whom, &c. We find not our Apostle here complementing with himself, either excusing or attenuating his guilt, but as it were D glorying in the measure of his sins, striving for preeminence above all other sinners, challenging it as his right, and as eager upon the preferment, as his fellow labourer Peter his successor for a Pri­macy (as he professes) of all Bishops, yea the whole Church; so our Apostle here, Of all sinners I am the chief. The note briefly is this, That every one is to aggravate the measure and number of his sins against himself, and as near as he can observe how his guilt ex­ceedeth other mens. This was St. Pauls practise and our pattern E not to be gazed on but followed, not to be discust, but imitated. In the discourse whereof I shall not labour to prove you the ne­cessity of this practise, which yet I might do out of Davids ex­ample in his penitential Psalms, especially 51. out of Nehemiahs confession, and the like, but taking this as supposed, I shall ra­ther mix doctrine, and reason, and use, altogether in prescribe­ing some forms of aggravating our selves to our selves, yet not de­scending to a particular dissection of sin into all its parts, but deal­ing F only on general heads, equally appliable to all men, briefly reducible to these two, 1. Original sin, or the sin of our nature, of which we are all equally guilty, 2. Personal sin, grounded in and terminated to each mans person. For Original sin, it is the Fathers complaint, and ought more justly to be ours of these times, [Page 289] A that there is no reckoning made of it, 'tis seldom thought worthy to supply a serious place in our humiliation, 'tis mentioned only for fashions sake, and as it were to stop Gods mouth, and to give him satisfaction, or palliate the guilt of our wilful rebellions, not on any real apprehension that its cure and remedy in Baptism is a con­siderable benefit, or the remanant weakness (after the killing venom is abated) were more then a trivial disadvantage. So that we have a kind of need of original clearness of understanding, B to judge of the foulness of original sin, and we cannot sufficiently conceive our los, without some recovery of those very faculties we forfeited in it. But that we may not be wilfully blind in a matter that so imports us, that we may understand somewhat of the nature and dangerous condition of this sin, you must conceive Adam who committed this first sin, in a doub'e respect, either as one particular man, or as containing in his loyns the whole nature of man, all mankind, which should ever come from him. Adams C particular sin, i. e. his personal disobedience is wonderfully aggra­vated by the Fathers, Aug. de Civ. 21. 12. 1. from his original justice, which God had bestowed on him, 2. from the near familiarity with God, which he enjoyed and then lost, 3. from the perpetual blest estate, which had it not been for this disobedience he might for ever have lived in, 4. from the purity and integrity of his Will, which was then void of all sinful desire,Ib. l. 14. c. 12. which otherwise might have tempted to this disobedience, 5. from the easiness of both remembring and ob­serving D the Commandment, it being a short prohibition, and only to abstain from one tree, where there was such plenty besides, 6. from the nature and circumstances of the offence by which the Fathers do refer it to all manner of most hainous sins,vid. Le [...]n. p. 143. making it to contain a breach of almost each moral law, all which were then written in the tables of his heart, and therefore concluding it to be an aggregate or mixture of all those sins which we have since so reiterated, and so many times sinn'd over. So then this E personal sin of Adam was of no mean size, not to be reckoned of as an every days offence, as an ordinary breach, or the meer eating of an apple. In the next place, as Adam was no private person, but the whole humane nature, so this sin is to be considered either in the root, or in the fruit, in its self, or in its effects. In its self, so all mankind, and every particular man, is, and in that name must humble himself as concerned in the eating of that fruit, which only Adams teeth did fasten on; is to deem himself bound to be F humbled for that pride, that curiosity, that disobedience, or whatsoever sin else can be contained in that first great transgressi­on▪ and count you this nothing to have a share in such a sin, which contains such a multitude of rebellions? T'is not a slight, perfunctory humiliation that can expiate, not a small labour that can destroy this monster which is so rich in heads, each to be cut [Page 290] off by the work of a several repentance. Now in the last place,A as this sin of all mankind in Adam is considered in its effects, so it becomes to us a body of sin and death, a natural disorder of the whole man, an hostility and enmity of the flesh against the spirit, and the parent of all sin in us, as may appear Rom. vii. and Jam. i. 14. Which that you may have a more compleat understanding of, consider it as it is ordinarily set down, consisting of three parts, 1. A natural defect, 2. A moral affection, 3. A legal guilt. 1. A guiltiness of the breach of the law, for these three (whatsoever you B may think of them) are all parts of that sin of our nature, which is in, and is to be imputed to us, called ordinarily original sin in us, to distinguish it from that first act committed by Adam, of which this is an effect. And first that natural defect is a total loss, and privation of that primitive justice, holiness and obedience, which God had furnisht the creature withal; a disorder of all the powers of the soul, a darkness of the understanding, a perversness of the will, a debility, weakness, and decay of all the senses, and C in sum, a poverty and destruction, and almost a nothingness of all the powers of soul and body. And how ought we to lament this loss with all the veins of our heart? to labour for some new strain of expressing our sorrow, and in fine to petition that rich grace, which may build up all these ruines? to pray to God that his Christ may purchase and bestow on us new abilities? that the second Adam may furnish us with more durable powers and lasting graces then we had, but forfeited in the first? The following part D of this sin of our nature, viz. A moral evil affection, is word for word mentioned Rom. vii. 5. For there the Greek words,Rom. VII. 5. [...], ordinarily translated motions of sins, and in the mar­gin the passions of sins, are more significantly to be rendred affections of sins, [...]. i. e. by an usual figure, sinful affections. That you may the better observe the encumbrances of this branch of this sin,Sub. pro A [...]jun. which doth so overshadow the whole man, and so sence him from the beams and light of the spiritual invisible Sun, I am to tell you that E the very Heathen that lived without the knowledge of God, had no conversation with, and so no instruction from the Bible in this matter, that these very Heathens I say, had a sense of this part of original sin, to wit, of these evil moral lusts and affections, which they felt in themselves, though they knew not whence they sprang.lambl. Pro­ [...]ept. p. 102. c. 17. Hence is it that a Greek Philosopher out of the ancients makes a large discourse of the unsatiable desire and lust which is in every man, and renders his life grievous unto him, where he F useth the very same word, though with a significant Epithet added to it, that St. James doth c. i. ver. 15. [...], infinite lust, Jam. c. 1. with which, as St. James saith, a man is drawn away and enticed, [...], so saith he, that part of the mind in which these lusts dwell, is perswaded and drawn, or [Page 291] A rather falls backward and forward, [...], which lust or evil concupiscence he at last defines to be, [...], an unsattable intemperance of the appetite, never filled with a desire, never ceasing in the prosecution of evil; and again he calls it,P. 136. [...], our birth and nativity derived to us by our parents, i. e. an evil affection hereditary to us, and de­livered to us as a legacy at our birth or nativity: all which seems B a clear expression of that original lust, whose motions they felt, and guest at its nature. Hence is it, that it was a custom among all of them, I mean the common Heathen, to use many ways of pur­gations, especially on their children, who at the imposition of their names were to be lustrated and purified with a great deal of superstition and ceremony, such like as they used to drive away a plague, or a cure for an house or City. As if nature by instinct had taught them so much Religion, as to acknowledge and desire C to cure in every one this hereditary disease of the soul, this plague of mans heart, as 'tis called 1 Kings viii. 38.1 Kings VIII. 38. And in sum the whole learning of the Wisest of them (such were the Moralists) was directed to the governing and keeping in order of these evil affections,Socrates, &c. which they called the unruly Citizens and common peo­ple of the soul, Max. Tyrius. whose intemperance and disorders they plainly ob­served within themselves, and laboured hard to purge out, or subdue to the government of reason, and vertue, which two we D more fully enjoy, and more Christianly call the power of grace, redeeming our souls from this body of sin. Thus have I briefly shewed you the sense that the very Heathen had of this second branch of original sin, which needs therefore no farther aggrava­tion to you but this, that they who had neither Spirit nor Scrip­ture to instruct them, did naturally so feelingly observe and curse it, that by reason of it they esteemed their whole life but a living death, Eurip. [...]; E and their body but the Sepulchre of the soul, [...], both which together are but a Peri­phrasis of that which St. Paul calls in brief the body of death. And shall we who have obtained plenty of light and instruction, besides that which nature bestowed on us with them, shall we, I say, let our eyes be confounded with abundance of day? shall we see it more clearly to take less notice of it? Shall we feel the stings of sin within us (which though they do but prick the regenerate, F prove mortal to the rest of us) and shall we not observe them? Shall we not rather weep those fountains dry, and crop this luxury of our affections with a severe, sharp sorrow and humiliation? Shall we not starve this rank, fruitful mother of Vipers, by deny­ing it all nourishment from without, all advantages of temptati­ons and the like, which it is wont to make use of to beget in us all [Page 292] manner of sin: let us aggravate every circumstance and inconveni­ence A of it to ourselves, and then endeavour to banish it out of us, and when we find we are not able, importune that strong assistant the Holy Spirit, to curb and subdue it, that in the necessity of re­siding, it yet may not reign in our mortal bodies; to tame and abate the power of this necessary Amorite, and free us from the activity and mischief, and temptations of it here, and from the punishment and imputation of it hereafter. And so I come to the third part, or branch of this original sin, to wit, its legal guilt, and this we B do contract by such an early prepossession, that it outruns all other computations of our life. We carry a body of sin about us, before we have one of flesh, have a decrepit, weak old man, with all his crazy train of affections and lusts, before even infancy begins. Be­hold saith the Psalmist, Psal. LI. 5. Psal. li. 5. I was shapen in iniquity, and in sin did my mother conceive me: as if guilt were the plastick power that formed us, and wickedness the Minera and Element of our being, as if it were that little moving point which the curious enquirers C into nature find to be the rudiment of animation, and pants not then for life, but lust, and endless death. So that the saying of St. James, Jam. l. 15. chap. i. 15. seems a description of our natural birth, When lust hath conceived, it bringeth forth sin, and sin when it is finished, bringeth forth death. Nor does this hasty inmate leave us when grown up: no, it improves its rancour against God and goodness, mixes with custom, passion, and example, and whatever thing is apt to lead us unto mischief, somenting all the wild desires of our in­ferior D brutal part, till it become at last an equal and profest enemy, making open hostility, setting up its sconces, fortifying it self with munition and defence, as meaning to try the quarrel with God, and pretending right to man, whom God doth but usurp. Thus shall you see it encampt, and settingup its banners for tokens, under that proud name of another law, Rom. vii. 23. I see another law in my members, warring against the law of my mind, and as if it had got the better of the day, bringing me into captivity to the law of sin,E which is in the members, i. e. unto its self. And shall we feel such an enemy within us, laying siege at God and grace in us, and fiercely resolving, whether by deceit or battery to captivate us unto himself, and shall we not take notice of him? Shall we not think it worthy our pains and expence to defeat him, or secure our selves? Beloved, that will be the best stratagem for the taking of this enemy, which is now adays most ordinary in sieges, to block up all passages, and hinder all access of fresh provision,F and so by denying this greedy devourer all nourishment from without, to starve and pine him into such a tameness, that he may be taken without resistance; which how really you may perform by these means of mortification and repentance prescribed you in Scripture, you shall better learn by your own practice then [Page 293] A my discourse. The fourth aggravation of this guilt is, that is, that its minera and fewel lurks even in a regenerate man,1 Cor. IX. 27. wretched, &c. and enforceth Paul into a conflict, a war against himself. And is it possible for one otherwise happy (as the regenerate man in­wardly surely is) to sleep securely, and never to try a field with the Author of its so much misery, or finding it to be within its self part of it self, not to think it a sin worthy repentance, and sorrow, by which Gods Holy Spirit is so resisted, so affronted, B and almost quelled and cast out? Fifthly and lastly, the guilt of it appears by the effects of it, 1. inclination, 2. consent to evil: for even every inclination to sin without consent is an irregularity and kind of sin, i. e. an aversion of some of our faculties from God; all which should directly drive amain to him and goodness. That servant which is commanded with all speed and earnestness, to go about any thing, offends against his Masters precept, if he any way incline to disobedience, if he perform his commands with any C regret or reluctancy. Now secondly, consent is so natural a con­sequent of this evil inclination, that in a man you can scarce discern, much less sever them. No man hath any inordinate lust, but doth give some kind of consent to it, the whole will being so infected with this lust, that that can no sooner bring forth evil motions, but this will be ready at hand with evil desires: and then how evi­dent a guilt, how plain a breach of the law it is you need not mine eyes to teach you. Thus have I insisted somewhat largely on the D branches of Original sin, which I have spread and stretcht the wider, that I might furnish you with more variety of aggravati­ons on each member of it, which I think may be of important use, for this or any other popular Auditory, because this sin ordi­narily is so little thought of, even in our solemnest humiliations. When you profess that you are about the business of repentance, you cannot be perswaded that this common sin, which Adam, as you reckon, only sinned, hath any effect on you. I am yet afraid E that you still hardly believe that you are truly, and in earnest to be sorry for it, unless the Lord strike our hearts with an exact sense, and profest feeling of this sin of our nature, and corruption of our kind. ‘And suffer us not, O Lord, to nourish in our selves such a torpor, a sluggishness and security, lest it drive us head­long to all manner of hard-heartedness to commit actual sins, and that even with greediness.’

And so I come briefly to a view of each mans personal sins, I am F the chief: where I might rank all manner of sins into some forms or seats, and then urge the deformity of each of them single and naked to your view, but I will for the present presume your un­derstandings sufficiently instructed in the hainousness of each sin forbidden by the Commandments. For others who will make more or less sins then the Scripture doth, I come not to swatisfie [Page 294] them, or decide their Cases of Conscience. In brief I will pro­pose A to your practice only two forms of confessing your sins, and humbling your selves for them, which I desire you to aggravate to your selves, because I have not now the leisure to beat them low, or deep to your consciences. Besides original sin already spoken of, you are to lay hard to your own charges, 1. your par­ticular chief sins, 2. all your ordinary sins in gross. For the first, observe but that one admirable place in Solomons Prayer at the dedication of the Temple.1 Kings VIII. 37. If there be in the land famine, &c. What­soever B plague, whatsoever sickness, what prayer or supplication soever be made by any man, or by all thy people Israel, which shall know every man the plague of his own heart, and spread forth his hand to this house, then hear thou in Heaven, &c. Where the condition of obtaining their requests from God is excellently set down, if they shall know, i. e. be sensible of, be sorry for, and confess to God every man the plague of his own heart, that is, in the bulk and heap of their sins, shall pick the fairest loveliest sin in the pack, the plague, i. e. C the pestilential, reigning, sweeping offence, on which all the lower train of petty faults do wait and depend, do minister and suppe­ditate matter to work. If, I say, they shall take this captain sin, and anatomize, and cut up, and discover every branch of him with­out any fraud or concealment before the Lord, and then sacrifice that dear darling, and with it their whole fleshy lust as an Holo­caust, or whole burnt-offering before the Lord: then will he hear from Heaven his dwelling place, and when he heareth, forgive even D their other concealed sins, because they have disclosed so entirely, and parted so freely from that. For there is in every of us one master sin that rules the rabble, one fatling which is fed with the choicest of our provision, one captain of the Devils troop, one the plague in every mans heart. This being sincerely confest and displaid, and washed in a full stream of tears; for the lower more ordinary sort, for the heap or bulk, we must use Davids pe­nitential compendious art,Psal. XIX. 12. Psal. xix. 12. who overcome with the E multitude of his sins to be repeated, folds them all in this prayer, Who can tell how oft he offendeth? &c. ‘And do thou, O Lord, work in us the sincere acknowledgment of, and contrition for both them, and the whole bundle of our unknown every days transgressions, and having purged out of us those more forward, known, notorious enormities, cleanse us also from our secret faults.’ And thus much be spoken of this Proposition, that, and how every man is to aggravate the measure and number of his sins F against himself. The whole Doctrine is, and in our whole discourse hath been handled for a store of Uses; for in setting down how you are to aggravate your sins, especially your original sin against your selves, I have spoken all the while to your affections, and will therefore presume that you have already laid them up in your [Page 295] A hearts to that purpose. Only take one pertinent Use for a close, which hath not been touched in the former discourse. If every one be to aggravate his own sins, and to reckon himself of all sinners the chief; then must no man usurp the priviledge to see or censure other mens sins through a multiplying glass, i. e. double to what indeed they are, as most men do now adays. What so frequent among those who are most negligent of their own ways, as to be most severe inquisitors of other mens? and to spy, and censure, and B damn a mote or atome in another mans eye, when their own is in danger to be put out by a beam? Hence is it that among Lay men the sins of Clergy are weighed according to the measure of the Sanctuary, which was provided for the paying of their Tithes, Lev. xxvii. 25H [...]ker p. 428. i. e. double the ordinary balance; and their own, if not under, at most according to the common weight of the Congregation. In a Minister every errour shall become an heresie, every slip a crime, and every crime a sacriledge, whereas beloved, he that means to C take out St. Pauls lesson, must extenuate every mans sins but his own, or else his heart will give his tongue the lye, when it hears him say, Of all, &c.

And so much of this Doctrine of aggravating our sins to our selves, which we are to perform in our daily audit betwixt us and our own consciences. There is another seasonable Observation be­hind in a word to be handled; this particle [...], of whom, hath a double relation, either to sinners simply, and so it hath been D handled already, or to sinners as they are here set down, to wit, those sinners which Christ came into the world to save: and so St. Paul here is changed from the chief of sinners to the chief of Saints, and then the Doctrine is become a Doctrine of comfort fit for a Conclusion, that he who can follow Pauls example and precept, can sufficiently humble himself for his sins, accept that faithful say­ing, and rightly lay hold on Christ, may assure himself that he is become a chief Saint, for so could Paul say, Of all sinners I am E the chief, and therefore of all those sinners that Christ came into the world to save, [...], I am the chief too. I shall not dis­cus this Point at large, as being too wide to be comprehended in so poor a pittance of time, but shew the condition of it briefly. He that by Gods inward effectual working is come to a clear sight and accurate feeling of his sins; that hath not spared any one mi­nute of circumstance for the discovery of them, not one point of aggravation for the humbling of himself, he that being thus pre­pared F for his journey to Christ with his burthen on his back, shall then take his flight and keep upon the wing, till he fix firmly on him, may be as sure that he shall die the death, and reign the life of a Saint, as he is resolved that God is faithful in his promises: then may he live with this Syllogism of confidence, not presumption in his mouth, 'Tis a faithful saying, that Christ came into the world to [Page 296] justifie, sanctifie, and save believing humbled sinners; but I find my A self an humble and believing, and consequently, a justified, san­ctified sinner, therefore 'tis as certain a truth, that I shall be sa­ved. And thus you see Pauls, I am the chief] interpreted by that assured perswasion, Rom. viii. 38. that neither death nor life, nor any creature shall be able to separate him, &c. I will not discuss the na­ture of this assurance, whether it be an act of faith or hope, only thus much, it seems to be derived or bestowed upon hope by faith, an expectation of the performances of the premises grounded up­on B a firm faith in them, and so to be either an eminent degree of faith, or a confirmed hope. The Use of this Point is, not to be con­tent with this bare assurance, but to labour to confirm it to us by those effects which do ordinarily and naturally spring from it. Such are 1.Heb. III. 6. joy, or glorying mentioned Heb. iii. 6. the confidence and rejoycing of your hope firm unto the end, 2. a delight in God men­tioned 1 Pet. I Pet. I. 3, 6. i. 3, 6. a lively hope, &c. wherein [...], you exult, you greatly rejoyce and are delighted, 3. a patient ad­hering C to God in a firm expectation of this state, even in the midst of all manner of worldly evils,Isa. VIII. 17. mentioned Isa. viii. 17. I will wait upon the Lord which hideth his face, and I will look for him, i. e. I will wait his leisure patiently, for I am sure he will uncover his face. And Job more plainly and vehemently, Though he kill me, Rom. VIII. 25. yet will I trust in him. So verbatim, Rom. viii. 25. then do we in patience wait for it, 2 Thes. III. 5. and 2 Thes. iii. 5. The patient waiting for Christ. Fourthly, as an effect of this patience, a silence and acquiescence D in the Will of God, without any desire of hastning or altering any effect of it.Ps. XXXVII. 7. So Psal, xxxvii. 7. Rest in the Lord, where the He­brew hath it, [...] be silent to the Lord and wait patiently for him, i. e. as the consequents interpret it, quarrel not with God for any thing that happens according to his will, but against thine, as the pro­sperity of the wicked, and the like. Fifthly, a confirmation of the mind, as making our hope the anchor of our soul, sure and stedfast, Heb. vi. 17.Heb. VI. 17. that we may thereby in patience possess our souls, Luke E xxi. 19.Luk. XXI. 19. And lastly, a desire of sanctifying our selves, according to that 1 Joh. iii. 3.1 Joh. III. 3. Every man that hath this hope in him purifies himself, even as Christ is pure. These six effects briefly set down, may be certain marks to you, by which you may judge how just grounds your assurance stands on, and whereby it is to be distinguished from presumption. ‘O Lord let the fulness of thy Holy Spirit overshadow us, and encrease our weaker faith into a richer mea­sure of assurance, and our more fearful hopes into a degree of F full perswasion and certain expectation of those visions that thou shalt reveal, and that blest estate that thou shalt bestow upon us, and lest our confidence may either be or seem but a presumption, work in us those effects of patience, of silence, of joy, of delight, of confirmation of mind, and above all a desire and ability of sanctify­ing our lives unto thee.’

[Page 297] A Thus have I with all possible haste made an end of these words, and at this time out of the cadence of them observed to you the ten­derness of St. Paul and every regenerate man, at the least mention of a sin or sinner, illustr [...]ted by the opposite hardness of heart, proved of soft, tender parts of our body, and made use of for a crisis or judg­ment of our estate and livelyhood in grace. Secondly, out of the words themselves we observed the necessity, and method of aggrava­ting our sins, especially original sin against our selves, which we made B use of against those that are more quicksighted in other mens estates and guilts then their own. Thirdly, we closed all with that comfor­table doctrine of assurance, discussed to you in brief with six effects of it proposed for an example to your care and imitation.

Now the God which hath created us, redeemed, called, justified us, will sanctifie in his time, will prosper this his ordinance to that end, will direct us by his grace to his glory. To him be ascribed due the honour, the C praise, the glory, the dominion, which through all ages of the world have been given to him that sitteth on the Throne, to the Holy Spirit, and to the Lamb for evermore.

FINIS.

A Catalogue of some Books printed for, and A sold by Robert Pawlett, at the Bible in Chancery-lane, near Fleetstreet.B

THE Whole Duty of Man, laid down in a plain and familiar way for the use of all, but especially the meanest reader; Necessary for all families; with private Devotions for several occasions.

The Gentlemans Calling, Written by the Author of the Whole Du­ty of Man.C

The Causes of the Decay of Christian Piety, Or an Impartial Sur­vey of the Ruins of Christian Religion, undermined by Unchristian Practice; By the Author of the Whole Duty of Man.

A Scholastical History of the Canon of the Holy Scripture; Or the certain and indubitate books thereof as they are received in the Church of England: by Dr. Cosin, Lord Bishop of Durham.

Divine Breathings, or a Pious Soul thirsting after Christ in One hundred excellent Meditations. D

Hugo Grotius de Rebus Belgicis, Or the Annals and History of the Low-Country Wars in English, wherein is manifested that the United Netherlands are indebted for the glory of their Conquests to the Valour of the English.

A Treatise of the English Particles; shewing much of the variety of their significations and uses in English: and how to render them in­to Latin, according to the propriety and elegancy of that language; with a praxis upon the same; by William Walker, B. D. Schoolmaster E of Grantham.

The Royal Grammer, commonly called Lillyes Grammar explained, opening the meaning of the Rules with great plainness to the under stand­ing of Children of the meanest capacity, with choice observations on the same from the best Authors: by W. Walker B. D. Author of the Trea­tise of English Particles.

A Treatise proving Spirits, Witches, and supernatural operations by F pregnant Instances and Evidences: by Meric Casaubon D. D.

A Catalogue of the names of all the Parliaments or reputed Parlia­ments from the year 1640.

A Narrative of some Passages in or relating to the Long Parlia­ment, by a Person of Honour.

Nemesius's Nature of Man, in English; by G. Withers Gent.

[Page] A Inconveniences of Toleration.

Tolleration Intollerable.

A Letter about Comprehension.

A Rationale on the Book of Common-prayer of the Church of Eng­land: by Anthony Sparrow Lord Bishop of Exon.

A Collection of Canons, Articles and Injunctions of the Church of England: by Anthony Sparrow Lord Bishop of Exon.

Golden Remains of the ever memorable Mr. John Hales of Eaton-Colledge, B &c. The second Impression with Additions from the Authors own Copy; also more Letters and Expresses concerning the Synod of Dort, from an Authentick hand, not before publisht.

Mr. Chillingworth's Reasons against Popery.

Book of Homilies appointed to be read in Churches.

Constitutions and Canons Ecclesiastical.

Episcopacy as establisht by Law in England, written by the special Command of the late King, by R. Sanderson late Lord Bishop of Lin­coln.

C Petavius's History of the World.

Military and Maritime Discipline.

The Bishop of Exons Caution to his Diocess against false doctrines: delivered in a Sermon at his Primary Visitation.

A Thanksgiving Sermon preach'd before the King: by J. Dolben D. D. Dean of Westminster, and Clerk of the Closet.

Bishop Brownrigs Sermon on the Gunpowder Treason.

A Letter to a Person of Quality concerning the Fines received by D the Church at its Restauration, wherein by the Instance of one of the richest Cathedrals, a fair guess may be made at the receipts and disburs­ments of all the rest.

A Narrative or Journal of the Proceedings of the Lord Holles and the Lord Coventry, Ambassadors Plenipotentiary for the Treaty at Breda: written by a Person of Quality concerned in that Ambassy.

A Narrative of the Burning of London, 1666. with an account of the Losses, and a most remarkable Parallel between it and MOSCO, both E as to the Plague and Fire.

Lluellyns three Sermons on the Kings Murder.

A Collection of the Rules and Orders now used in Chancery.

Iter Lusitanicum, Or the Portugal Voyage, with what memorable passages interven'd at the shipping, and in the Transportation of her Sacred Majesty Katherine Queen of Great Britain from Lisbon to England; by Dr. Samuel Hynde.

F A Charge given by the most Eminent and Learned Sir Francis Bacon; at a Sessions for the Verge, declaring the Jurisdiction there­of, and the offences therein inquirable as well by the Common Law as by several Statutes.

Mr. White's learned Tract of the Laws of England.

Graphice, Or the use of the Pen and Pensil in Designing, Draw­ing [Page] and Painting: by Sir William Sanderson Knight.

Hypocrates Aphorismes in English.

The Communicant instructed for worthy receiving the Lords Supper: by Tho. Tro [...]t, of Barkston near Grantham.

All sorts of Law Books.

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