Part 2. CHAPTER IV.
James Dodson
How we are in Christ dying, and crucified in him. 2. A twofold crucifying of us with Christ. 3. A discourse of mortification. 4. The actings of the mortified. 5. That we are to be mortified in our affections to everything that is not God, &c.
We legally died & suffered for sin in Christ, although many of us for whom he died, were not then born, and neither we nor our sins had any being.
It is objected, that we was not born, nor had we any being, when Christ died, then we died not in Christ, nor could we rise, ascend to heaven, nor sit in heavenly places with him?
Ans. But 1. in Physical actions there is required the real existence of the worker. Not so in legal actions, for as we had no being, who now believe, when Christ died, so our sins had no being; How then could our sins, that were not, deserve punishment? Yet I desire to believe that Jesus Christ, 1 Pet. 2:24. his own self bare our sins in his own body on the tree. And that he was wounded for our transgressions, and bruised for our iniquities, who now live, Isai. 53:5. and they cannot deny this, who teach that CHRIST died for the sins of the world, none excepted. And the child in the womb, when the father is absolved from treason is really and in Law restored to his father’s inheritance: And the sucking child may be Crowned a King, and take possession of a Kingdom, and take the oath of loyalty of the subjects in the person of another, though physically he neither do, nor know what is done, but sleep in the arms of the nurse. So we legally in CHRIST satisfied, our nature in Christ was crucified, and we, though not born, did satisfy and suffer satisfactory punishment in Christ. Heb. 1:3. Having by himself purged our sins, he sat down on the right hand of the Majesty on high. Heb. 9:28. So Christ was once offered to bear the sins of many. And in him we were (legally) crucified, and dead to the Law: As Gal. 2:19. so as Christ once being dead and crucified, the head and members, whole Mystical Christ is dead to the Law, and Christ can die no more, for he cannot satisfy and pay the debt twise [two times]: And so are we in him dead to hell, to wrath, to Law-vengeance.
CHRIST willeth not that we answer plea’s that he hath answered, and that by unbelief, we trouble ourselves with debt that he hath paid.
Satan raises a discussed plea against the conscience, thou art a sinner, and under the curse of the Law. There is no answer to that, but by believing I was with Christ, crucified, and am dead to the Law and died to death first and second. For Christ suffered mystical, Christ legally satisfied, and so did I in him. (I speak not now of personal suffering with, or for Christ) and therefore that is a plea of Satan’s forging, and taken away. And unjust summons may be answered by non-compearance, and by the appeal of faith to Christ who having paid the debt sits Judge upon his own debts, which he himself paid, and therefore cannot suffer these for whom he died to suffer for his proper debt, which once he paid. The husband cannot endure the wife to be imprisoned for the debts which he made his own and fully satisfied.
Obj. 2. All men must die and return to dust, and so must sinners, as the Law requires, therefore Christ died not for thee?
Ans. [Faustus] Socinus, and [Johannes] Crellius object the same, which Satan doth.[1] For that death in the hew and colour of Law-wrath is holden before a believer now and then under doubting as a temptation. For we suffer not death such as Christ suffered, to wit, for sin, watered and affected with the curse of the Law; nor must we measure death from body or bulk of departing, but from the salt, and worst of death, which is the curse, and that being removed, we never die, Joh. 11:26; Joh. 5:24. no more look upon death in the Law, for there it reigns, but in Christ, and in him death is dead and removed; the formal demeriting power is removed, when the Law is satisfied: And a believer being dead to the Law is dead to the curse and to the worst of death, as Christ is dead, to it now.
We depose CHRIST (with reverence to his holiness) from his office of Mediator, when we embark, having once believed in him, in a new plea with the Law.
Obj. 3. But the conscience of the believer, suppose there were no devil, challenges him of sin, and therefore that he is under a curse?
Ans. The conscience may be the factor and deputy of Satan in that also, for it is the deposing of Christ from his Office of Mediator in satisfying and answering by his death all the demands of the Law, there is none but Christ, when the Law demands blood and the torments of the second death, can plead anything on the contrary. Rom. 3:19. We know that what things soever the Law speaks, it speaks to these that are under the Law: but the Law speaks not then to a believer, for he is under grace, and so is not in terms of treating or parleying with the Law. Christ was crucified and the believer is legally crucified with Christ, buried and risen again with Christ.
1. Then the Law is not his judge, it spake to Christ and condemned him and put him to death, when he was under the Law, and condemned you in him, now you say, Christ is not condemned and crucified, when ye enter in a new treaty with the Law to receive a new sentence from it, and thus ye undo what Christ hath perfectly done.
2. To hearken to conscience componing [composing] and making another paction with the Law than Christ hath made, is to take the plea that Christ hath embarked in, off his hand; ye are to stand still and be silent, and believe that Christ’s dying, and your dying in him, is a closing of a satisfactory bargain with the Law. Christ condemned sin in the flesh, by taking on his flesh the curse due to us for sin, & for sin, that is, for sins cause, that it might be taken away, he sent his Son to die, Rom. 8:3. and judge and condemn sin.
We are not to act of new a plea with the Law, being now in another kingdom and freed from the Law.
3. This is to misstate a question well debated and discussed by Christ; for he being the end and perfection of the Law, hath silenced, and satisfied the Law, and to what use can it serve to make a new plea and a bastard controversy with a satisfied party, or to hearken to conscience which craves in the name of mistaken Law well paid debts, and this is but Satan abusing the Law, and feigning Letters of Caption in the name of the Law, to trouble the quieted conscience of a believer. But its safest to say, I stand to what Christ hath done and suffered to fulfill the Law, and I believe I was crucified in him, judged, and condemned legally in Christ: and what can you seek more of an ill-doer? He is condemned, crucified, hanged on a tree, and so is justice quieted.
We are not to desire a Law-wakening under Gospel-deadness.
Some raise the devil and a storm in the soul and cannot calm it again: It is not good to provoke, irritate, and waken a sleeping dog. There is quietness and peace of believing what Christ hath done as well done, and comfortably to rest on his deed by faith. Hence a case of some, who, because they are under deadness and security, desire a wakening of conscience, and Satan hath taught some to commit some heinous guiltiness, that they may fall in the hand of justice, and so be wakened, and Satan gives them their fill of it. Hence, we had rather take a Law-way which is not God’s way, as lie under deadness; there may be a legal looking upon deadness, whereas it is a Gospel-sin that we should be humbled for, and in which we should not please ourselves; but no man freed from the Law and brought out of prison, should be willing or desirous to return to the dungeon again. We should let God guide us under a fever, and not be our own Physicians, but be quiet at Christ’s part, if he be pleased to cure by contraries, and to quicken me by deadening me, or to make a soul humble by smiting with a spirit of pride: its good, we are to submit.
We sinned in Adam, though we had neither being nor hand in making Adam either our natural or Law-head, so may we be legally crucified with Christ our surety, though we had no hand in appointing Christ to be our surety.
Obj. How could we be in Christ as in our surety (for saith Arminius) we did not give nor appoint Christ to be our Cautioner or Surety?
Ans. Its evil arguing of Arminius or Satan, who would make the union either natural or legal betwixt us and Christ, weak, far off, general, and such as is betwixt Christ and Pagans and all the world: But this reason is naught, for we sinners were not born and very nothing, when God made the first Adam our father and head in Law as in nature, nor had we any hand or action in substituting the first Adam in his place, and yet we sinned in Adam, and his sin is ours, by divine imputation. But can any deny but Christ on the Crosse did act the cause of many believers not born? This is peculiar to this dispensation, that the creditor, not the debtor, appoint both the Law-head, and the Evangelic Surety. The Surety had from us a Cautionary, sponsory, and deputed nature, but no subscribed commission from us, it was in the heart of the Creditor by grace efficacious to obtain our consent, and to make a sort of legal marriage assuming our nature before we either knew our husband, or gave consent to the marriage-Covenant. As the Advocate speaks in the person of the Client absent and sleeping, and when the Client hears and sees how his cause is promoted, he both assents unto, and renders thanks and praises to the Advocate: and so the absent and far off Client not knowing anything does act in the Advocate. And how many answers doth our Advocate in Heaven make for sinners on earth in his pleadings, of which we know not in particular anything? Nor doth Christ speak or plead for believers as a private man, nor appear in his Name as it were, but in our person.
All the requisites to a real satisfaction are in Christ’s dying for us.
Neither is there a feigning of a person here, or a borrowed and feigned redemption, there be these five here.
1. A Redeemer Christ.
2. Persons redeemed, sinners.
3. A Lord from whom we are redeemed, the Lord Jehovah, not simply, as God, he is the party from whom we are redeemed, but God as the offended Law-giver, who had us liable to eternal punishment.
4. There was a price, the life and blood of God, which though not profitable to God (for that is extrinsical to satisfaction real) yet an abundant compensation to justice for declarative glory taken from God which is the nature of real satisfaction.
5. There is here a God just, true, holy, unchangeable, to whom the price is paid. Nor does Christ sustain the person of the enemy Satan from whom we are redeemed, for he is but the lictor who then had no right to detain us, we are redeemed from evils of sin and punishment: Nor doth Christ in suffering sustain the person of God. Hence, from our being crucified with Christ crucified, something is to be said in a practical way of our mortification; for mortification flows originally from Christ’s death, we being crucified in him and with him, Gal. 2:20.
What mortification is.
Q. What is mortification?
A. It is a deadening of the whole powers and inclinations of the soul in their bentness and operations, in order to things forbidden by the Law of God, or in things indifferent and commanded. Hence, not the affections only, but the understanding and mind must be deadened. And therefore this is no mortification until sin original be subdued in its damnation by Christ’s death, and in its dominion by the Spirit of Sanctification. A tree is not withered while standing on its root, bulk and branches are green and flourishing: Its much to know the withdrawing of sap and life from the root and the vital parts of old Adam. The ebbing of a River is not the drying up of it; the new birth only is mortification.
Mortification comes from Christ’s death as from a real cause and from a real new principle procured by the death of Christ.
Q. 2. Since mortification comes only from Christ’s death, what is the influence of Christ’s death herein?
Ans. The influence is real, ad modum causae physicae [in the form of a physical cause], the merit of blood hath bought us from our vain conversation, 1 Pet. 1:18. Christ dying doth merit by blood the Spirit, and infused grace, which deadens the whole life of sin. Evangelic Arguments from ten heavens, from ten Gospels working morally and in a suasory way, cannot more work mortification then touching can make a real change on a dead corps; we was legally dead and crucified in Christ, and with Christ, when he died, many not being born then: But in the infusing of the life of God, Christ applies the real principle of mortification. Now the redemption from a vain conversation, 1 Pet. 1:18. from the present evil world, Gal. 1:4. is as real and proper a bargain, except we follow Socinus, as redemption from the wrath to come.
Gospel arguments how and upon whom they work.
2. Christ’s death hath an influence moral and suasory to work mortification: As 1 Pet. 1:16. Be holy. 17. Pass the time of your sojourning in fear. For ye are bought with his blood from your vain conversation. And 1 Pet. 5:1, 2. Christ hath suffered in the flesh, therefore be mortified to your lusts, and serve them not, as the Gentiles do: So Col. 3:1, 5.
But the action moral of the Gospel doth not work upon the natural man: for like works upon the like; carnal reason upon a carnal spirit; and spiritual Arguments upon a renewed man; as an Argument from a painted feather works upon a child, more than an Argument from an inheritance, which no doubt will work upon a man come to age, and yet neither the one nor the other works upon a renewed mind to remove him off Christ his rock.
When reason is green, adherence, to a course by persuasion is unstable.
Hence it is, 3. that Acts of Omnipotency are used as Moral Arguments: also, God works in you to will and to do, therefore work out your salvation. And choosing, redeeming, calling, justifying, quickening, converting, are brought in as causes in Scripture, both real and moral; but they work morally on reason, where there is an impression of faith and principle of life. The Gospel works on an unrenewed man to persuade him almost to be a Christian: Ye may persuade a youth to a course, and get his word, consent, and write; but because reason is green and young, he falls off it again, but a man of judgement shall stand to it: yet if he be not renewed, reason is also green and raw before a spiritual temptation.
Four sorts of considerable actings in one mortified.
Quest. What are the actings of a mortified man?
Ans. No actings. 2. Slow actings and lent [i.e., long drawn out]. 3. Actings indifferent. 4. Closing with contrary providences, reproaches, work not on mortification to fire the man. Psal. 35:12. They speak mischievous things. 13. But I as a deaf man, heard not. David feared to be the reproach of the foolish: Such a case, though from God, would raise a cry in a child of this world. Psal. 39:9. I was dumb, I opened not my mouth, because thou did it.
1. No actings are in the mortified at most moving objects.
A mortified man is dead to the voice of men-singers and women-singers, and musical instruments of all sorts, Eccles. 2:8. and houses, gardens, vineyards, orchards, great possessions, cattle, treasures, gold, silver, are all as music to a dead man: and repenting Solomon now mortified, looks on them as a wise man upon experienced vanity and vexation of spirit. Will he sing and dance at a shadow? Except a mad man, none will do that.
The motions of grace are quiet & slow.
2. If anything, without a child of God, work upon him, they move him not much: Psal. 131:2. Surely I have behaved and quieted myself, as a child that is weaned of his mother, my soul is even as a weaned child. Acts 20:24. None of these things move me: I make not much reckoning of bands. Peter, 1 Pet. 4:12. will have the saints not to think burning quick, strange, graces motions are quiet, slow, modest, there is not much fire in the spirit of a weaned child: A mortified soul is as a sea that hath no winds, nor low ebbings, nor high spring tides. Grace stirs leisurely and lently [slowly] toward all things, except to God: were there ten Paradises offered to it, it cries not, a dying man’s pulse beats weakly. Grace shouts at nothing, wonders at, and admires nothing; weeps slowly, laughs slowly, sings weakly, eats slowly, drinks not wantonly, feasts, and yet trembles and fears, whether it be the outward or the inward man. David says it well. Ps. 62:2. He only is my Rock—I shall not greatly be moved. The believers [sic] sings, and yet he is not wanton; and weeps, and yet is not sad; dies, and yet lives; is fervent in the cause of God, and yet stayed and composed in spirit.
The actings of a mortified man in order to all created things, are indifferent, not peremptory, not so absolutely fixed but he can quit them for God.
3. The actings of mortification are indifferent, not fixedly bent upon anything but God, no not upon the Ark and spiritual comforts. Weeping David, 2 Sam. 15:25. saith to Zadok, carry back the Ark of God into the City, (better I want my comfort, then the Ark be taken) if I shall find favour in the eyes of the Lord, he will bring me again and shew me both it and his habitation. 26. But if he say, I have no delight in thee, here am I, let him do to me as seemeth good unto him. O how sweet, when for God, Moses can lay down his personal satisfaction in a share of life eternal. What if he tramp upon my eternal Crown, I should lay it down at his feet; and is not this mortification? Should he hide his face, for eternity, from me, and I never see him in his manifestations, so his glory shine in my everlasting sad desertion; there is required an indifferency to all created things without; no peremptory and absolute fixedness of the affection to any good, God excepted, is good: the contrary of this is an engaging of the heart more than is right to anything, give me children, or then I die, there should be a contented living without children, if God so will: love the creature, as if ye loved not, the Lord would have us hungering for the creature, and yet not eagerly desiring, and thirsting, and yet have a lent and well-ordered appetite to drink: love the child, but let the heart cleave leisurely to the child. Plowing, and no heart-labouring, buying and selling, and no heart-engaging to the bargain is best here. 1 Cor. 7. They that have wives should be as if they had none. 30. And they that weep, as though they wept not; and they that rejoice, as though they rejoiced not; and they that buy, as though they possessed not. In the acting of affections toward the things of this life, as father, mother, husband, wife, children, houses, gain, beauty, honour, and new bought farm, there would be a godly distance of the heart from the thing ye do: Loving, and no loving; rejoicing, and no rejoicing; weeping, and no weeping; speaks most mortification. We cannot do here, except sinfully we over-do, and the out-goings of the heart to the creature must be fiery, which is childish, whereas mortification is a gracious well composed grave temper of the aged in Christ.
Actings terminated on God may be fiery.
There is a fire-edge and a fervor or fever of affections even to spiritual objects that are created at the first conversion, for mortification does not so soon begin as the new heart. As for God, love as one that loves, desire and desire, and when he hides himself, weep as if you wept, so the weeping be terminated upon God, not upon his dispensations, to quarrel at, and censure his ways, but let the out-goings of the heart to God, and to Christ loved and longed for, be with fire, and full strength, Cant. 3:1, 2, 3, 4; Cant. 2:5; Ps. 42:1, 2, 3; Ps. 84:1, 2; Joh. 20:13; Luk. 7:38; Rev. 1:17.
Mortification sweetly closes with all providences.
4. Its mortification to have a heart closing with all providences. Phil. 1:21. To me to live is Christ, and to die is gain: To live is good, to die is good, because the Lord so wills, the Lords giving is to Job praising, and the Lords taking away is to Job praising. Phil. 4:12. I know both how to be abased, and how to abound: everywhere, and in all things I am instructed, both to be full and to be hungry, both to abound and to suffer need. If I die, it is good; if I live, it is good; if I be full, and rich, it is good; if I be hungry, and poor, it is good; if David be on the Throne, it is good, and he sings Psalms; if he be chased barefooted, and ashes on his head, by the ascent of Mount Olivet, it is good; he also praises and sings Psalms, 2 Sam. 15:30; Ps. 3:1, 2, 3. If he be at home in his house, it is good, he praises, Ps. 30; Ps. 101. If he be banished in the wilderness, and chased from the house of God, its good, he praises, Psal. 42; Psal. 63; Psal. 84. Nothing falls wrong to a mortified soul. The people cry Hosanna, Christ bids them rejoice, their King comes, Zech. 9:9. The wicked spits on his face, and plucks off the hair, that is good, Isa. 50:6. I gave them face and back to be doing their will. Heat to a gracious spirit is good, cold is good, joy is good, sorrow is good, health is good, sickness is good: Hezekiah gets a victory, the Assyrians are slain, that is good. Isaiah prophecies that all that are in his house, and his treasures shall be spoiled, and his children carried captive, good is the word of the Lord: Is spoil and captivity and the sword good? Yea Hezekiah closes with it, Isai. 39:8. Grace wonders at nothing, laughs at nothing, weeps at nothing but faintly, rejoices at nothing wantonly; closes with all, says Amen to all: for Christ was crucified for me, and I am crucified in, and with him.
Q. 3. What are the species or sorts of mortifications, that we may know the true mortification?
A. 1. Its hard to give the division of them logically:
Mortification or deadness merely natural, only because the Tools are broken & the horse wearied, hath nothing to do with the death of CHRIST.
There is (1.) a natural mortification, there is no fire in the affections of sucking infants to Crowns, Kingdoms, to treasures of Gold and Silver, that is not mortification, but virtually there is as much fire in a flint stone, though formally it be cold, as may burn twenty Cities. Concupiscence driven away from the aged, Eccles. 12. the hearth-stone is cold, and there is in it such a deadness to lusts, not because of deadness of sin Original, it lives, as the souls of the old men live, but because the tools are broken, the animal and vital spirits are weakened, the man loves the journey, but the horse is crooked and laid by: there is nothing of Christ’s death here.
2. Compelled mortification is not from Christ’s death.
(2.) There is a compelled mortification, sickness and withered arms and legs, and strong fetters in the prison, poverty and want, care for bread, and the armed man poverty that hath a sharp sword, necessity blunts the affections in their second acts, the man hath no mind of whoring: And many drink water, who through Christ crucifying, are not mortified to wine and strong drink.
[1.] There is often in this, an ignorance of CHRIST crucified, and no faith.
[2.] A reluctance to divine dispensation, and no gracious submission to God, which is in one crucified to the world.
3. Philosophic and bookish mortification not from Christ crucified.
(3.) There is a Philosophic mortification to the creatures, which are seen by the light of nature to be very nothing and most unsatisfactory to the natural man: but there is no supernatural deadness in the heart wrought by the death of Christ. Archimedes, and other great spirits, sick of love to know the nature, motion, and influence of the stars, and pained with a speculative disease of books, and to know much, do contemn and despise honour, gain, pleasure, the three idols, of ambitious, of covetous and voluptuous men; but there is no deadness, no blunting of the operations of the soul toward the idol world, flowing from the believed in crucified Lord of Glory, except you say that Plato, and Aristotle, and such, were crucified with Christ: Learning works not mortification.
4. Superstitious and religious mortification.
(4.) There is a religious or a madly superstitious mortification. The Monks (saith Luther [Com. on Gal. 6:14]) dreamed that the world was crucified unto them, and they unto the world, when they entered unto their Monasteries, but by this means Christ is crucified, not the world: Yea the world is delivered from crucifying, and is the more quickened by that opinion of trust they had in their own holiness and righteousness. Col. 2:23. In will-worship, in humility, and neglecting of the body; not in any honour to the satisfying of the flesh. There is much vain and counterfeit mortification; and Papists have as good warrant to sacrifice their lives to God, and to offer a bloody sacrifice unto God, under the New Testament, as to shed their own blood in whipping and scourging, and such bloody worship, hath the ground of mortification that Baals Priests had to launce themselves with knives to the effusion of blood. And the same may be said of pilgrimages, of voluntary poverty, in which (as Luther said) the world and all their lusts are quickened.
5. Pharisaical mortification.
(5.) Not unlike to this is the Pharisees mortification, in which they are not crucified with CHRIST, but alive and vigorously strong to self-righteousness, to merits, to dead works.
6. Civil mortification.
(6.) There is a civil or moral mortification which hath diverse branches.
As [1.] Seneca teacheth that nature is satisfied with water for drink, and a turse for a house, yet he was a covetous man himself. And shall Horatius Cocles [a Roman army officer who was a triplet whose other two brothers were killed in the conflict leaving him alone to manage the defense] be a mortified man, because he defended the Romans against the three Curiatii [the enemy triplets against whom Horatius defended the Romans] alone? Though the bloody Gallant killed his own sister [for mourning the three Curiatii after Horatius had killed them in battle]? And was the state mortified who pardoned him that bloody fact, for his gallant service? And Decius father and son who suffered so much for their Country, and loved it more than their own blood? And must Africanus Major, and Cato, who suffered for the liberty of the public, and Diogenes, who lived on herbs, be mortified men to the world? But what avails it to be dead to the bulk of a bit body of clay, and yet be alive to vain glory?
[2.] There is an occasional deadness rising from the sight of a father, a brother, a friend dead, not from the death of Christ. An unbeliever dies with this word, I would not live for all the world, and, we are like water spilt on the ground. The house is burnt, all spoiled, treasures, and the stock, by land and sea-robbers, are plucked away; and riches have wings. Hence, mortification transient for a time: but lusts fallen in a sown, are not dead, they rise again and live.
[3.] There is another transient mortification, as D. [John] Preston observes [Serm. 1. of mortification. p. 8 p. 9.], when the conscience is affrighted with Judgement, and some fire-flaught [burst] of restraining grace is up.
[4.] A good calm nature naturally either dull and stupid, or some clement and meek disposition, and free of the fire that often follows the complexion, and hampered in with teachers, parents, company, education, learning, seems a mortified nature. But that is true mortification, that flows from faith in a humbled crucified Saviour, and it is not to believe that Christ was mortified in our room and place, as Saltmarsh and Antinomians would say. Faith in Christ crucified is our mortification causatively, in radice [in the root], not formally.
Q. 4. To what things must we be crucified?
Answ. Gal. 6:14. To all things created, to the world; we condemn and despise and hate the world, and the world does value us nothing.
1. Mortification to self.
1. There is a deadness to self which was in Christ our samplar [example] of mortification, Ro. 15:1. Let us not please ourselves, but bear the infirmities of others. [v.] 3. For even Christ pleased not himself. Self loved and adored, and mortification do not consist, too much life in apprehension, and admiring self, argues deadness of deadness and of mortification. Was not Christ a noble self? Yet for the Lord, and his ransomed ones, Christ got above noble excellent self. It is true, there is a renewed spiritual self, a new I in the Saints, οὐκέτι ἐγὼ [it is no more I], Rom. 7:17. Now it is no more I that do it, but sin that dwells in me. Gal. 2:20. It is not I that lives, but Christ lives in me. Mortification sets us above new ἐγὼ renewed self, and regenerated and crucified I; it being a created excellency that we are not to adore.
2. Mortification to will.
2. Mortification requires a deadness to the will, as in Christ, not my will, but thy will be done: Much life in the will to created things, speaks little or no mortification. Christ excelled in this, Joh. 5:30. I seek not mine own will, but the will of him that sent me. O what court, and power, and life hath our will? And how soon the will is broken and dead, then is the man broken, dead and crucified with Christ.
Much will, much life, all will is no mortification.
Much will, much life of sin: See Joh. 5:40. Ye will not come. Luk. 19:14. We will not have this man to reign over us. See Mark 6:25; Mat. 1:19; Mark 15:15; Act. 24:27; Act. 25:9; Luk. 10:29; Rev. 22:17. All will, argues no mortification.
3. Mortification to life.
3. There is required deadness to our life, which was eminently in Christ, Mat. 20:28; 1 Tim. 2:6; Joh. 10:11. So Paul, Act. 20:24. Ye speak of bonds and affliction, But none of these things move me, neither count I my life dear to myself, so that I may finish my course with joy. To be mortified to life, is to hate the life, Luk. 14:26. for Christ. And Revel. 12. they overcame: mortification was their victory. v. 11. They overcame, for they loved not their lives unto death: Love of life is the life of sin when its not loved in God.
4. Mortification to wisdom.
4. We must be dead to wisdom, and to all the gifts of the mind, for the wisdom of the world is foolery, and God hath befooled it, when it comes in competition with the wisdom of the Gospel, 1 Cor. 1:18, 19. except we be dead to it, we cannot glory in the Lord. 27, 28, 29. Compared with v. 31.
5. Mortification to learning & books: there is a paper sickness for many books.
(2.) There must be a deadness to learning, to books, and book-vanity, Eccles. 12:12. There is no end of making many books, and much study is a weariness of the flesh. Eccles. 1:17. And I gave my heart to know wisdom, and to know madness and folly: I perceived that this also is a vexation of spirit. 18. For in much wisdom is much grief, and he that increaseth knowledge increaseth sorrow.[2] Paul spake more with Tongues then they all, 1 Cor. 14:18. but he was dead to that gift, he had rather have brought them nearer to Christ. 1 Cor. 4:10. We are fools, and hardly we can away with that; but we are fools for Christ’s sake, and for the interest of Christ and the Gospel, let us so be counted. Its nearness to Christ that makes us for him to be willing that what is most eminent in us be trampled upon, even shining wisdom, sciences, acts, eloquence, knowledge which puffeth up.
Yea there is (3.) required a deadness of the knowledge of Gospel-mysteries, 1 Cor. 13:2. Paul was not rude in knowledge, but he was dead to that, and would not glory in that.
And (4.) they are not crucified with Christ, not dead to opinions and sides, and to lead factions: I am of Paul, I am of Apollo, was no honour to Paul in his own esteem, 1 Cor. 1. What? was Paul crucified for you? or were ye baptized in the name of Paul? Who excels in learning, who admires not his own, the birth of his own mind? If it were but to hold there be ten new worlds in the Moon, and millions of worlds in the other side of this world? My brethren, be not many masters. Ah! we are not dead to the Chair, the Pulpit, everyone loves to be counted and called Rabbi. The blessed Man Christ confesses that he knows neither the day nor the hour of the Son of Mans coming; yet there are who dare define the time of his coming, and the day. The mind is a proud and haughty thing, and we are not dead to it; the mind is not mortified to the mind, 1 Cor. 8:1, 2.
6. Mortification to riches.
5. We are not dead to Mammon: O who is like Christ and refuses to be a rich King, Joh. 6? Paul, 2 Cor. 8:9. For ye know the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ, that though he was rich, yet for your sake he became poor: He had a greater mind then that he could live to riches. Paul, Acts 20:33. saith not I have sought neither silver nor gold, as the Godly judge, Whose ox have I taken, 1 Sam. 12:3. but I have coveted no man’s silver or gold, or apparel: The life of lust to riches is in the trusting in it. Job 31:24. If I have made gold my hope, or have said to the fine gold, thou art my confidence; Or, 25. have rejoiced because my wealth was great. Its true, a beggar and an extreme poor man that cannot have bread, is not troubled nor much tempted to seek a Kingdom and the millions and tons of gold that many rich ones have; but yet there are speculative desires and rolling waves and floods of wishes in the heart for these: and because hunger and want of bread is his door enemy lying between him and the hope of great riches, the man is neither mortified to the love of bread nor to the millions of gold that the heart is sick after. And as there be diverse kinds and species of pests, and they are not all of one kind, yet all contrary to the blood and the heat of life: So are there sundry kinds of unmortified lusts about riches according to the sickness of the desire.
The simple desire of riches is not the sin.
Obj. But is not the desire of food and raiment natural, how then is it faulty?
Ans. The desire simply is natural, and the Ants and the Conies do desire.
But the desire 1. beyond measure.
2. With a sinful doubting that they shall not have it, which reproacheth Omnipotency.
3. A desire wider than that of Ants and Conies, of that which is more nor sufficient, which would destroy and not feed but over-feed, is the faulty desire; as sickness desires drink more than sufficient, not for health, but to feed the disease, it is the desire of the disease rather than of the man diseased; and the forbidden desire is the sin.
Whether acts of covetousness may consist with mortification, and how.
Obj. 2. May not a child of God desire more than enough, how then is he mortified?
Ans. If the desire of more than enough come from the habit of covetousness, the man is not mortified to Mammon: all sinful habits in the child of God are broken, and lessened, and chased in to inclinations, or to the habit of Original corruption slackened and by grace subdued; but in every child of God there is sin dwelling and the flesh, Heb. 12:1; Rom. 7:17, 18; 1 Joh. 1:8, 10; Jam. 4:5; Gal. 5:17. and the old man, which is put off by degrees, Eph. 4:24; Col. 3:5, 10. which is a habit of corruption not in full vigor, but sickening, decaying, and a dying daily, but even a grown child of God from this broken and sick habit may, temptation invading, and the Lord withdrawing his influence of grace, may break out into gross acts of covetousness, adultery, murder, as is clear in David, Lot, Peter, Asa, and that saith that mortification is complete in none. And there is too oft a sort of sinful resurrection of the habit of sin and the flesh, so that David seems not to be David, but an adulterer, a murderer: As we see it is the same River that swells over its banks, that it was before, but the overflowing is from without, from the clouds and from excessive rain, the river also hath a receptive capacity in it self to exceed its banks and channel: So hath a child of God from strong temptation from without, and broken corruption from within, a more then his own ordinary quantity and swelling over his channel; To teach us that our mortification is a work not of day, but of our whole life. Neither would the wise Agur pray against riches, Prov. 30. if temptations contrary to mortification did not follow them.
7. Deadness to honour.
6. There is a necessity of deadness to honour, and to learn the noble and excellent art of self-contempt, that the Spirit shall teach us that spiritual lesson to be willingly tramped on, and the face spitted on, and the hair plucked off the cheeks, as our Blessed Lord went out and in the way met with spitting and shame, Isai. 50:6; Mat. 26:67; Mat. 27:26. O great word! Phil. 4:12. οἶδα δὲ ταπεινοῦσθαι, I have learned to be abased. 1 Cor. 4:[13]. Being reviled we blesse, being persecuted we suffer, being defamed we intreat, we are made as the filth of the world, and are as the off-scouring of all things unto this day. πάντων περίψημα, the sweepings of the house: Erasmus, the filth wiped off any thing. Valla, the filth that sticks to the shoes. The Syriac hath a word that noteth the dung of the belly [i.e., ܟܘܦܪܐ; כופרא]. As the condemned man tumbled into the sea as a sacrifice to Neptune from a steep place was called peripsema. So [Guilielmus] Budaeus thinks Paul alludes to heathen expiations.[3] And when they reproached me, David, Psal. 38:13. But I was as a deaf man that heareth not, as a dumb man that opened not his mouth. The sense and discerning of heat and cold, of railings, and applauses, would be dead: That is mortification, when the sense of hearing is dead to sounds, to music, and to pleasant songs, these are not delightful to a crucified or hanged man, when the life is out: Nor can all the sweet smells, flowers, roses, precious ointments, affect the smelling of a crucified man, nor all the fair and magnific palaces, meadows, gardens, rivers, mountains, hangings, painted pictures, work upon the sight or eyes of a crucified man. When the heart is ravished with honour, as the man who said the glory of Themistocles hindered him to sleep in the night, as little mortified as Themistocles who said sleep was taken from him, and he was raised out of his bed in the night by reason of the brave trophy and renown of the victory of Miltiades, that renowned man of Athens, who, as is known, with a 10000. Greeks, put to flight 60000. Persians. And Alexander the Great, his heart must have been waking at the sound of honour, who, when a messenger came running to him full of joy, said what should thou tell me, but that Homer is living again? for he thirsted for nothing so much as honour:[4] And how soft and very nothing is the spirit that is broken with riches or honour and pleasure? And often men judge themselves mortified, because they are dead, it may be to riches, but alive to ambition and desire of honour. As Nebuchadnezzar spared no charges for his gods, his pleasure, but he was alive to honour, Dan. 4:30. Is not this great Babylon, that I have built for the house of the Kingdom, by the might of my power, and the honour of my majesty?
Men may judge themselves mortified to honour, because they are deadened to riches, and not be mortified.
Satan doth often change Post-horses, and can seemingly deaden men to riches, when they are not mortified, and yet the heart is strongly vigorous to honour. When it was told Zeno that his ship, which he did trade withal, was broken: Well done, Fortune, (saith he) thou compels us to go within our cloak; he meant, To live upon the glory of virtue and learning, when riches are spent and gone, was well done.[5] But mortification, in the habit and root, is like the works of nature. The Sun equally enlightens the whole Air from the East to the West: Life comes in equally upon the whole Embryo and birth. Saving mortification goes through the whole soul.
All sins are not mortified with the like labour.
Christ merited by his death deadness to honour as well as to riches; Though in the actual subduing of lusts D. [John] Preston does well observe that there is not that labour required in subduing and mortifying all sins. For love of sin being the dominion, life and castle of sin, the more love to the heart-idol and to the right eye, the harder it is to be mortified. Some sins cleave to us as our hair and nails, as a custom of some sinful words, these are sooner mortified; and yet if mortification be not in the heart, these take life again, as hairs and nails cutted and shaven grow again. The trees in Winter are not dead: but there be master-devils and strongly rooted heart-darlings, pride, covetousness, to which we are mortified, with a huge greater deal of pains and wrestling, for they are to men as the eye and the right hand.
8. Deadness to injuries.
7. We are not soon dead to injuries. Our blessed Copy in this excels: Father, forgive them, for they know not what they do. And Steven, Act. 7:60. Lord lay not this sin to their charge, Colos. 3:13. Forgiving one another. Yea, but he wronged me, and injuries have a strong impulsion upon our spirits. I cannot forget it. If any man have a quarrel at any (saith he) let it fall: even as Christ forgave you, so do ye also. Shall not Socrates witness against us, who answered his friends, willing him to accuse before the Judge a vain youth who did smite him with his foot, If an Ass lift his heels against me, shall I lift my heels against the Ass? and the youth was so convinced that he hanged himself. And he said nothing to a multitude of reproaches casten upon him in the Theater, but, I am vexed with words in the Theater as in a great banquet.[6] But natural reason mortifies men to injuries, as cold water allays and for a time softens the pain of the child’s burnt finger, but the pain is the greater when the water is removed; Or as want of money mortifies a man to drunkenness, he drinks not excessively, not because the heart will not dare to sin, but because he cannot. The Word backed with influences from the death of Christ strongly mortifies to all sins.
9. Deadness to an office or a place of authority.
8. And the soul is not easily deadened to an office or place of a Prince, a Ruler, a Master, a Prophet, a Teacher. Abishai, 2 Sam. 16:9. Why should this dead dog curse my lord the King? Let me go over, I pray thee, and take off his head. David standeth not much upon cursing the lord the King. He is so mortified to that stile as he forgets it, and, v. 10. he saith, Let him curse, because the Lord hath said unto him, Curse David. He saith not, the Lord hath bidden him curse the lord King David. Answers thou the high Priest so? Its a great word. Christ was the Messiah, that is a great office of King, Priest and Prophet: but he was willing to forget his office, by way of taking much on him, that he might fulfill his office by way of suffering. As Rulers and such as are in place must so far be dead to their office and place, as they must be willing to bear in their bosom the reproaches of all the mighty people, and to have their footsteps, even as Rulers, reproached, Psal. 89. v. 50, 51. Places and office too often have an influence and strong enough on our unmortified hearts. But there are some providential sufferings that befall Rulers, as Rulers, against which they should be hardened, knowing that the Lord suffers in them.
10. Deadness to pleasure.
9. It should be our work to be deadened to pleasure. I have married a wife, and therefore, οὐ δύναιμαι ἐλθειν, I cannot come. This is the most lively lust. There is a mortified eye, Job 31:1. I have made a covenant with mine eye, why then should I look on a maid? Mortified eye-looks call for mortified heart-looks. Its an old sin, Gen. 3:6. And when the woman saw the tree that it was good for food, and that it was pleasant to the eyes,—she did eat. Mortified Joseph saw sin engraven on pleasure, Gen. 39:9. How then can I do this great wickedness, and sin against God?
11. Deadness to all the world.
10. There must be a deadened heart to all the three, to the world, 1 Joh. 2:15. Love not the world, nor the things of the world. If any man love the world, the love of the Father is not in him. 16. For all that is in the world, the lust of the flesh, the lust of the eye, and the pride of life, is not of the Father, but is of the world, Jam. 4:4. There is some life between the friends of the world and the world, and James doubteth not to call that enmity with God, and the three great Idols of the world, gain, glory and pleasure, cannot make any happy, which Heathens, Plutarch, Cicero, Seneca saw: and therefore they pressed a contempt of the world. For strength is the glory of the Elephant or the Bull rather than of man, and plucked away by age and time; And beauty is no less uncertain, being made up of quantity and colour, and the Rose and the Lilly hath more of it then man. Riches have wings, and render not the owner happy: Nobility is a borrowed good, and the Parents glory not ours: And honour is the opinion and esteem of men, and we yet cannot be dead to nothings, to shadows, to emptiness and to vanity: and fair buildings are well ordered dead stones.
12. Mortification to creature-comforts to multitude, friends, hosts, armies, chariots, horse, father, son, daughter, husband, to city, to our mother-country, &c.
11. They are not rightly mortified who are not deadened to creature-comforts, to father and mother, for they forsake, and the mother may forget the fruit of her own womb, but the Lord cannot forget his own, Psal. 27:10; Isa. 49:15.
(1.) My friends, Job 19:19. (2.) All my friends, (3.) All my inward (and dearest) friends, (4.) Abhor me. Forsaking is hard, but abhorring is most sad. Yea even in the Cause of God Paul is put to this, 2 Tim. 4:16. At my first answer no man stood with me, but all men forsook me.
[2.] So must the Church be dead to foreign forces, Hos. 14:3. Ashur shall not save us, we will not ride upon horses, and the people must be dead and sit still from help from Egypt, Isai. 30:7. For the Egyptians shall help in vain, and to no purpose: therefore have I cried concerning this, Your strength is to sit still. Sitting still is a ceasing from relying upon the Chariots and strength of Egypt, as being dead to them: For thus saith the Lord, the holy One of Israel, in returning and rest shall ye be saved, in quietness and in confidence shall be your strength: and ye would not.
And [3.] his people must cease from man whose breath is in his nostrils: for wherein is he to be accounted of? Isai. 2:22. and be dead to multitude: for, Psal. 33:16. No King is saved by an host, a mighty man is not delivered by much strength. 17. An horse is a vain thing for safety. The help of the creature substitute in the room of God, having the lustre of blue and purple, or clothed in scarlet, riding upon horses. Young men of desire, Ezek. 23:23. do easily dazzle our eyes, and when we are not renewed in the spirit of our mind, unsanctified hearts are weak in apprehending, and more weak in discerning of things.
[4.] So must there be a deadening of the husband to the wife, Job. 19:17. to servants, Job. 15:16. to sons, 2 Sam. 16. v. 11. of the mother to the daughter, of the daughter-in-law to the mother-in-law, Mic. 7:6. to blood-friends.
12. All the godly and zealous Prophets said Amen to the word of the Lord, even Christ with sighs and tears, to the extreme desolation and ruin of Jerusalem, Luk. 19:41; Math. 23:37, 38. and Jeremiah, Ezekiel, Isaiah, Micah, Hosea, &c. to the plowing of Zion as a field, to the sword, captivity, to the laying wast of the land without inhabitants, Isa. 5:9; Isa. 6:10, 11, 12; Jer. 9:1, 2, 3, 4; Jer. 16:1, 2, 3. &c. Mic. 3:12; Hos. 4:3; Hos. 5:6, 9, &c. There must be a deadening to our Country and Mother-Church, that the glory of justice may shine; yea to our fathers grave, our own bed, our own fireside.
13. The Lord will have Isaiah and the godly dead to Laws and Government, to vision and prophesying, when Judge and Prophet shall be taken away, Isa. 3:2. and children shall be their Princes, and babes shall rule over them, v. 4. and the vineyard broken, and the hedge spoiled. And he will have the godly dead to King and Priest and Law, 2 Chron. 15:3. Now for a long season Israel had been without the true GOD, and without a teaching Priest, and without law. Hos. 3:4; Hos. 10:3. And now shall they say, We have no King, because we feared not the Lord: what shall then a King do to us? Hence we must be mortified to everything created which the Lord may take from us.
14. And upon this account there is required a deadening of our hearts to shipping and trading with diverse mighty Nations, as we see in the case of Tyre, Ezek. 27. of Babylon, Rev. 18:11; 12, 13; Jer. 51. so are we to be mortified to fair houses, Isa. 5:8. stately cities, Isa. 14. to all the Cedars of Lebanon, that are high and lifted up: to all the Oaks of Bashan, to all the high mountains, to every high tower, to every fenced wall, to all the ships of Tarshish, to all the fenced cities: for the day of the Lord may be upon these, Isai. 2. to all fair Rivers, to Oxen, Horses, Chariots, fair acres of land, to Vineyards, to Olive trees, Ezek. 29:4, 5; Isa. 50:2; Exo. 7:19; Deut. 28:31, 40, 41, 51. to seed time and harvest, Deut. 28:38; Hag. 1:6. to corn, wine, oil, to cattle, increase of kine and flocks of sheep, Deut. 28:51, Amos 4:9. to Wine-trees, to Fig-trees, to seasonable rains, grass and fruitful fields, Joel 1:4, 5, 7, 10; Jer. 14:3, 4, 5, 6. to peace, safe down-lying and safe rising, Lev. 26:36. for in all the hand of the Lords anger is stretched out.
13. A deadness to Captain’s stoutness and valour in war, to birth.
15. The Lord would have us dead to valiant and to mighty men, to Captains, Isa. 3:1, 3, 4. Yea he makes true, Ps. 76:5. The stout-hearted are spoiled, they have slept their sleep, and none of the men of might have found their hands. 6. At thy rebuke, O God of Jacob, both the chariot and the horse are cast into a dead sleep: And therefore he will have us dead to courage in war. Who brings on faintness and terrour upon the spirit, when the sound of a shaking leaf shall chase men, Levit. 26:36. And when the Lord sends a trembling of heart, and failing of eyes, and sorrow of mind, Deut. 28:65?
16. We are called to be dead to honourable birth, blood, and noble Families, when Princes are filled with contempt, and these that were clothed in scarlet, embrace the dung-hill, Lam. 5:12; Isa. 40:23, 20.
14. A deadness to youth, pastime, play, laughter, to hunger, fulness.
17. And we must be dead to the vigorousness of youth, when we read Eccl. 12:1, 2, 3, &c. And Barzillai his complaint, 2 Sam. 19:35. Can I taste what I eat? Can I hear any more the voice of singing men and singing women? And why but this should make us dead to sports, pastime, dicing, gaming, dancing, feasting, chambering, wantonness, to all plenty and fullness, when God can remove the appetite, and give bread, or remove bread, and give the appetite. So as the Lord leaves that doom on you, Lev. 26:26. And when I have broken the staff of bread, ten women shall bake your bread in one oven, and they shall deliver you your bread again by weight, and ye shall eat and not be satisfied. So is Solomon dead to laughter, Eccles. 2:2. I said of laughter it is mad.
15. A deadness to Ordinances.
18. There is required a deadness to Ordinances, the Tabernacle is not God: David may be banished from it. The Temple is a Type of Christ, yet it is burnt with fire, and the Sanctuary profaned: And the Lord required a sort of lentness [slowness] or leisureliness of motion of the heart toward these, and will have his people in their exile resting upon this, Ezek. 11:16. Therefore say, thus saith the Lord God, although I have cast them far off from the heathen, and although I have scattered them among the countries, yet will I be to them as a little Sanctuary in the countries where they shall come. And they who remained still at Jerusalem reproached their poor captivated brethren, as hated of God, and gloried in themselves as Citizens and Inhabitants of Jerusalem, saying, v. 15. to the exiled brethren, Get you far from the Lord, unto us is this Land given in possession. They were not mortified in looking upon the Holy Land and City, but vainly gloried in it.
There be two things in Ordinances.
And therefore there are two things in Ordinances.
1. God that fills the Ordinances.
2. The external bulk of them. Mortification to God and his presence in Ordinances, is not that we here require, for the affections cannot be vigorous enough in following God. There may be a limiting and binding of God to means, to the Temple, Sanctuary, hearing, Seals, and a fleshly heat and liveliness to means, and bare and naked Ordinances; and in both these there is so far required a deadness, as there would be an holy submission to all these, when the Lord deprives us of Ordinances, and a retiring in to the fountain, to the Lord himself, that he may be all in all. So some cannot sleep except the Bible be under the head in the night: Some tie their faith and comfort so to one man, if he be not their Pastor nothing is right. But so much of CHRIST, or the substance of Gospel-promises must be neglected, as means and instruments. and Ordinances are Idolized: In a word, mortification calls for liveliness of affection to God in Christ, and a holy deadness to all things that are not God.
19. There is necessary here a deadness to works, for there be these defects in them. 1. They cannot save, Eph. 2. (2.) They were not crucified for you, let them not have the place and Chair of Christ. 3. They cannot quiet the conscience, because they cannot justify. Paul Preached from Jerusalem to Illyricum, laboured more abundantly than they all, was unrebukable, was conscious to himself of nothing, yet was he as dead to these as to very nothing, 1 Cor. 4:4. and to loss and dung, Phil. 3:8. Hence must we be dead to the idol of Godliness, for its not God.
20. And dead to Godly men, in point of confidence, we must not know the Man Christ after the flesh, 2 Cor. 5:16. nor any mere man, to cry man up as God, (every man is a liar) is contrary to Gospel-mortification.
16. Deadness to prayer.
21. It were good to pray much, and to be dead to prayer: One of the main causes why we cry and pray much and are not heard, Psal. 22:2; Psal. 69:1, 2, 3, is, because that which is proper to God the hearer of prayer, to wit, confidence and hope, we give to prayer which is not God. We pray to our own prayers and to our own wrestling often, rather than to God: and we believe praying does the business and works the charm, as if prayer were Omnipotency itself.
17. To faith and hope we pray to our own prayers.
22. Nor are we dead to faith and hope, but we believe in faith and in believing, and we hope in our own hoping in God. But was faith crucified for you? How many fetch peace, pardon and righteousness, not from Christ, but from their act of believing? Hence a case, whether some may not fervently pray and believe strongly, and yet be disappointed in the particular they pray for and believe they shall have? Certain it may be, especially when we are dead to Omnipotency and alive to praying and believing, and lay more weight on faith in God then on God, and on praying to God then on God himself. What Antinomians say unjustly we give to works, to wit, our peace with God, they and many unduly give to faith, not to Christ.
18. Deadness to comforts and feeling.
23. We fail in being more alive to comforts then to God the comforter: the infant may at once both suck the breasts, and also sleep. And is one flower more to be smelled then the whole Garden? And shall feelings and raptures, and manifestations of God in his out-goings be courted and over-courted by us beyond the God of all comforts? There is need that the heart be deadened to sense, for feeling and sense is fiery and idolatrous; and were sense more mortified at the out-goings of faith, hope, love, it were good, for our faith should be the more lively and vigorous to lay hold on God.
How far we may be taken with feeling.
Q. Is it not lawful to be taken and feelingly delighted with the influences of God?
Ans. Sure, feeling of itself is not faulty, the fieriness and excessive fervor of feeling is faulty, especially when terminated upon created actings of love, faith, joy, desire, hope, and not upon influences as coming from the free Grace of God, otherwise, we are but sick and pained of love of our own gracious actings, because they are our own; and this is the sickness of selfishness. Ah! a Godhead, a Godhead is not known.
19. Deadness to the habit & stock of created grace.
24. Nor must we be, in a too lively way, taken with our own stock, nor trust in the habit of grace or the new heart: for grace in us is a created rose that spreads fair and broad and smells well, but it is not God nor Christ, that we may learn not to trust in ourselves, ἐφʼ ἑαυτοῖς, 2 Cor. 1:9. But why but we may trust in our renewed selves now furnished with a stock and infused habits, the excellent blossoms and blooms of heaven? Nay, not in ourselves thus fitted, but in God who raises the dead: for its not possible both to trust in renewed self and in God: And Paul never meant that any that professeth CHRIST, is to lean upon sinful self or upon lost and condemned self. And sure it is as selfy [selfish] to be alive to infused habits, as to misken [not know] Christ, and think, being once a convert, we can send our selves all the rest of the way to heaven without Christ, we need not Christ for a Guide or a Tutor, its within us may save us. And nothing can be more contrary to a living the noble and sure life of continual dependency by faith on the given Leader of the people, Jesus Christ, then to trust on habits of grace, they are not Christ.
20. Deadness to the sweetness of heaven.
25. Ah! who is that mortified as to be dead to the created sweetness of joy, and the right hand pleasures of God, and the formal beatitude of glory, and alive to the only pure objective happiness of glory? And yet that is mortification, to love and be sick and thirsty for heaven, not for the pleasures of the Garden, and the Streets of Gold, and the Tree of Life, and the River of Water of life, but for only God, the heaven of heavens: And therefore we cannot be alive to pure and the only abstracted and unmixed God head, except we be thus dead to heaven.
21. [Deadness] To the promises.
26. There is a deadness to the letter of the promise: The promise (saith M. [Isaac] Ambrose) [7] is but the Casket [Jewel box], and Christ the Jewel in it, the promise is but the field, Christ is the Pearl hid in it. Christ removed, the promise is no promise, or but sapless signs.
22. Deadness to the outshinings of God, to take aright absence & presence.
27. We must also be dead to the rays, out-shinings and manifestations of God to the soul here, and must transchange God in all presence and all love embracements, and no more: but he dead to the house of wine, to the lifted up banner of love, to love-kisses of Christ, to the love-banquets, and to the felt lying, as the beloved, all the night between the breasts: for these nearest communions are not God himself. There is required a godly hardness for receiving sparkles of hell and some draughts of sore trying wrath, and the hell of his most wise and righteous frownings, and necessary absence and night of hiding himself.
23. Deadness to fair providences of court, Godly Princes, miracles.
28. And should not the Church be dead to providences of fair weather, and Court, or the blessing of a godly King David, Hezekiah, and mortified to miraculous deliverances, dividing of the red sea, defeat of enemies, to confirmation of the truth by Martyrdom and sufferings to blood? He who is dead to himself and his body and ease, and hardened against contradictions of sinners, against torment of body, cold, imprisonment, sickness, death, and can in patience submit to all providences, is crucified with Christ, if God give or withdraw, he is dead to both.
24. To sapless will-worship.
28. All who are dead with Christ, are dead to all dead worship, sapless ceremonies, and formal worship, Col. 2:20; Gal. 4:9. and are lively in the serving of God, and fervent in spirit, serving the Lord: And rejoice in Christ Jesus, and have no confidence in the flesh, Phil. 3:3; Rom. 12.
FOOTNOTES:
[1] Socinus, de Servato. l. 2. c. 8. Quomodo igitur vice & loco nostri Christus est mortuus, si nos quo{que} perpetuo cidem mortis generi expositi sumus? [How, then, is Christ dead in our place and stead, if we have been perpetually exposed to the same race of death?] Crellius, adversus Grotium, c. 9. par. 9.
[2] Ptolemaeus Philadelphius King of Egypt gathered in the Bibliotheck of Alexandria 40000. books. ad luxuriam non ad utilitatem, ait Livius [for luxury, not for profit, says Livy], and they were all burnt. Serenus Sammonicus left in Testament to Gordianus junior three score and two thousand books. Petrarcha, Librorum larga copiae est operosa sed delectabilis sarcina, & animi jucunda distractio—libri quosdam ad scientiam, quosdam ad insaniam deduxere, dum plus hauriunt, quam digerunt: Vt stomachis, sic ingentis nausea saepius nocuit, quam fames [Petrarch, a large quantity of books is a painstaking but enjoyable package, and a distraction from the mind's delights—some have supervised books for science, some for insanity, while they absorb more than they digest.].
[3] Sis pro nobis peripsema [Be thou a reconciliation or propitiation for us.].
[4] Plutarchus De profectu virtutum [On the progress of virtue] lib. 11.5.237. Themistocles somnum sibi Miltiadis Tropheo adimi, eoque se excitari electo [he was sleep deprived for the Trophy of Miltiades, so that he was excited from his bed.]. Plutarch. ib. pag. 239. Quid mihi nunciaturus es, nisi Homerum revixisse? [What are you going to tell me, except that Homer has come back to life?]
[5] Plutarch. de capienda ex hostibus utilitate [of the advantage of the capture of the enemy], libel. n. 35. pag. 241. Zeno, cum nunciaretur navim ipsius qua negotiabatur, fractam: Bene facis, inquit, fortuna, quae nos intra palliolum compellis [when it was reported to him that the ship in which he was trading was broken, he said, “Thou art doing well, fortune, which force us within our cloak.”].
[6] Plutarch. lib. de liberis educandis [of educating children], moral. 1. n. 15. 20. pag. 17. An si me Asinus calce feriisset jussuni eratis, ut contra eum calcem impingerem? Omnibus hoc ei exprobrantibus, & calcitronem (adolescentem) appellantibus, suspendio vita se exuit. Nequaquam aegre fero (inquit Socrates) nam in Theatro, veluti in magno convivio, verbis vexor [“If an ass had kicked me, would you think it handsomely done to kick him again?” And yet the young man himself escaped not unpunished; for when all persons reproached him for so unworthy an act, and gave him the nickname ‘the kicker,’ he hanged himself. I am by no means annoyed, says Socrates, for in the theater, as in a great banquet, I am harassed (only) by words.].
[7] M. Isaac Ambrose, prima, media, ultima [first, middle, last]. life of faith, c. 9. Sect. 2. pa. 231.