Two discourses I. of the punishment of sin in hell, demonstrating the wrath of God to be the immediate cause thereof : II. proving a state of glory for just men upon their dissolution / by Tho. Goodwin ...

About this Item

Title
Two discourses I. of the punishment of sin in hell, demonstrating the wrath of God to be the immediate cause thereof : II. proving a state of glory for just men upon their dissolution / by Tho. Goodwin ...
Author
Goodwin, Thomas, 1600-1680.
Publication
London :: Printed by J.D. for Jonathan Robinson ...,
1693.
Rights/Permissions

To the extent possible under law, the Text Creation Partnership has waived all copyright and related or neighboring rights to this keyboarded and encoded edition of the work described above, according to the terms of the CC0 1.0 Public Domain Dedication (http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/). This waiver does not extend to any page images or other supplementary files associated with this work, which may be protected by copyright or other license restrictions. Please go to http://www.textcreationpartnership.org/ for more information.

Subject terms
God -- Wrath.
Hell.
Cite this Item
"Two discourses I. of the punishment of sin in hell, demonstrating the wrath of God to be the immediate cause thereof : II. proving a state of glory for just men upon their dissolution / by Tho. Goodwin ..." In the digital collection Early English Books Online 2. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/A41537.0001.001. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed May 25, 2024.

Pages

Page 115

THE PUNISHMENT OF SIN in HELL.

SECT. II.

The dreadfulness thereof, argued from all, and each of the Par∣ticulars, treated of in the former Section.

HEB. 10. 31.

It is a fearful thing to fall into the Hands of the Living God.

THe second thing, at first propound∣ed to be handled, was the dread∣fulness of this Punishment. It is a fearful thing to fall into the hand of the li∣ving

Page 116

God. Which being an inference from the foregoing words, and not a simple affirmation only, do come in with an amazing kind of implication, wherein the Apostle leaveth it to our own Thoughts, to conceive of, and is as if he had said, How dreadful must it needs be! which I leave to your own Thoughts to conceive of, I not being able (says he) to utter or express the Terror of it.

Hence the genuine and natural way of handling this part, is to set it forth by way of Inference or Corollary, from that former Point, which we have dispatch'd. I shall therefore accordingly draw forth Demonstrations, of the dreadfulness thereof, from those fore-cited Scriptures, or Grounds already laid in the fore-gone Section: which doth afford sufficient Topicks unto this Head.

Page 117

SECT. I.

The first Head of Demonstrations from this in General: That it is a falling into the Hands of God immedi∣ately.

FIrst, let us take the main Doctrine it self, as in the General it is ut∣tered here, That it is a falling into the Hands of God Himself, and not of Crea∣tures only: And a being punish'd from his Presence, and the Glory of his Power, im∣mediately, as 2 Thess. 1. 9. And then ex∣tend and widen your apprehensions, to take in how fearful this must be, which I shall demonstrate, by a comparative Gra∣dation, raised thus.

I. If it were but a giving us up into the Hands of meer Creatures to afflict, and they assisted by God, but with the com∣mon and ordinary concurrence of his Power, which joins with, and upholds the Agency of all things in their work∣ings; whether in comforting us or in di∣stressing of us: this is the lowest degree

Page 118

of supposition. And yet consider how dreadful this Supposition would render to our Thoughts, such a punishment to be: if God should be but as the looker on, and withal the setter of them on: or (as in the Scripture phrase, Mat. 18. 34.) but only deliver us up to these Tormentors. As when it is termed a being cast into a Lake of Fire and Brimstone, suppose it were a Lake of material corporeal Fire only, wherein thy Body is cast; and thy Soul, no otherwise to suffer than by what the Spirits of that Body it is united to, and dwells in, is by that Fire made sensible of. And suppose withal, the Spirits thereof were kept up, in their utmost sensibleness, of what torment that Fire could inflict; and thy Body continually flaming, (as the Bush in Exodus) and yet never burnt up, how terrible is it for Flesh and Blood to think but this of it! Or, to use another comparison, If a Man were bound Hand and Foot with his Mouth set open, and were cast into a Pit, wherein, as in the Apostles Sheet, let down from Heaven, were all manner of Creeping things, Toads, Serpents of all sorts, fiery Scorpions, Cockatrices, Vipers, Adders, Snakes, &c. Flies, Hornets, Lice, Pismires and Frogs, &c And that these should bite and sting thee, with exquisite Pain and Tor∣ment;

Page 119

also creep in at thy Mouth, down into thy Inwards, gnaw and swell thee there. How did but one sort of these Creatures, when sent by God, afflict Pha∣raoh and all the Aegyptians? A Man in this case, should endure not only the Pains mentioned, but beyond them the torture which Antipathy, cotrariety and natural abhorrency Works, which is of all other most exquisite, and turns nature backward (as of Jordan it is said) into a recoyl, and wresteth it against it self, and throws it off its hinges. I need not instance, how by this way of Antipathy, a Cock makes a Lion roar, a Mouse the Elephant to tremble, a Serpent or a Toad, a Spider, sets the whole of nature in Man into an inconsistency; a Man knows not how to bear up, sustain himself, or be himself. But besides what Pains or Tor∣ments, these, or any of these, can inflict.

II. Let us proceed in our Supposition a step further. If God should so far fur∣ther assist, as to set his Wisdom a-work, and that only to find out and invent, what mixture of Torments from Crea∣tures, would be most exquisite of all o∣thers. As if a King (whose Wrath is compared to the roaring of a Lion, who yet sets but others to Torment) should

Page 120

but order ten Men to invent Torments for one poor Man (as the Sicilian Tyrants did.) Hence, Majus tormentum siculi non invenire Tyranni. And then consider, for the exaggeration of this unto your Thoughts.

1. That the nature of Man is so fram∣ed, as it is capable to recieve discomfort, as well as comfort from every Creature: the least Creature hath a sting in it, as well as Honey, unto something or other, in Man's Nature, if it be applyed and turned against it. 2. God knows all the Ingre∣dients in the Creatures Natures; as also it is said, he knows our frame, and so there with the suitableness of Sense in Man's Nature thereunto. Think then what Punishment from their mixture, can he invent and temper; and put all the Venoms, (the dregs) into one Cup, as the Psalmist speaks: And as by some lesser proportion we may estimate this, by what those that know the secrets of Nature can effect, above what other Men, as Solomon did. Now 3. Raise up your apprehensions from these two steps of comparison thus first laid: If, (as the Psalmist says,) He that made the Eye, shall not he see? speaking of that infinite Omnis∣cience in God Himself, above what is in the Creatures: Say I then in this case, if

Page 121

the Creatures, that God hath made, may thus be supposed able to work anguish to a Man, Dolour and Misery: what then can God, the great God, that made all these himself, immediately inflict? As the Prophet Isaiah slighteth the Aegyptians and their Assistance, Isa. 31. 3. Thus, Their Horses are Flesh, not Spirit, and the Aegyptians that ride them are Men, and not God. So we may of all these Suppositi∣ons, and still say, these are but of what Creatures can do; who are Creatures, and not God; Flesh and not Spirit.

III. That we may yet heighten the dreadfulness of this immediate Hand of God, let us make a third Supposition, beyond the former; that God not only should use his ordinary concurrence with Creatures, but (as sometimes he hath done) arm those Creatures with his own Wrath, over and above the activity of their ordinary Sphere of Workings; heating that Sword of created Powers he strikes with, red hot in the Furnace of his fiery Indignation: And so intending the power of Creatures beyond their Strength; yet still so as to use them as the sole Instruments of that anguish wrought: conveying his Anger with them but as at second hand. And so, as the Man so

Page 122

afflicted, is sensible, not of the Stroke of the Creatures only, but of God, and his Wrath accompanying and seconding it, through them. This would be yet more dreadful than the former, and yet still fall short of what the Doctrine hath held forth, that Himself is the Avenger, and strikes immediately.

1. This latter is more dreadful to sup∣pose than the former; yea, is not a bare supposition; for if God conveys his Wrath with the least Affliction, and in his Providences fight against a Man, and the Heart is thereby made sensible of his Wrath therein: this, as it often falls out, so it useth wonderfully to enflame and rage in Man's Spirit: even as a poy∣soned Arrow useth to do the Flesh, which it self alone would only pierce and wound, (but as it is an Arrow;) but if further dipp'd in Poyson, or as the A∣postle's comparison is, Eph. 6. made a fiery Dart, it works a further Anguish and Torment. Now there is no Creature, but if armed with God's Wrath, or if it be but a Messenger, and a Representer of God's Anger, but it is infinitely more dreadful than of it self otherwise it is. What is less than the shaking of a Leaf, which seems it self to tremble? But if

Page 123

God send faintness of Heart, and Ter∣ror with it, and by it, into a Man's Heart, the very Sound of the shaking of a Leaf chaseth them, Lev. 26. 36. Every Grass-blade, burnished with God's Wrath, strikes terror into the Heart, as that fla∣ming Cherub did into Adam's. This is experimented in Men troubled in Mind, unto whom, Iratum{que} refert quaelibet herba Deum. Every Creature presents an an∣gry God, and strikes trembling of Heart into them. They fear where no fear is. The Light, which of all Creatures is the most amiable and pleasantest, yet to a Spirit wounded the Beams thereof are dreadful; and when it is day, he wisheth it were night, and that Darkness might for ever cover him; and why should the Light arise, says he, to disclose my Re∣bellion against my Maker? Thus Job, Job 4. 20. Wherefore is the Light given to him that is in misery? Even as on the contrary, to a Soul God's Face shines on, every Creature strikes up comfort and gladness into it. He hears the Thun∣der, (which made Caligula tremble,) 'Tis my Father's Voice, says he: views the Stars; these are mine, saith he. The greatest Afflictions to such an one do turn into Joy, knowing he hath a Trea∣sury of Love in the Bosom of his Father

Page 124

that sent them. The perfect contrary is here.

2. This latter Supposal of God's arm∣ing the Creatures with his displeasure, and conveying it by them, falls yet lower, and is less than God's immediate Wrath from himself; even as God's Love con∣veyed by Ordinances and Means, is a a far lower Dispensation than the imme∣diate Communication thereof from him∣self. God's power, tho never so great, yet in working by and through an In∣strument, is abated, lessened, stinted in working. You may have read and heard (perhaps) the comparison be∣tween God's Power and the Creatures, in respect of Torment, thus expressed: That the one is, but as if a Child should strike a Blow, in comparison of a Giant: But to the case in hand, I have used to raise it thus: A Giant that can of him∣self give a great Blow immediately, if he yet should take but a Straw to strike withal, the Stroke would prove but small; and yet it would be greater than if a Child should strike with it; Why? because his Power is limited and enerva∣ted by the Instrument he strikes withal. Now what are all the Creatures, though in God's hand, but as Straws in a Giant's? And yet how terrible is his Wrath when

Page 125

conveyed by them? I conclude this with allusion to that Speech of Rehoboam, 1 Kin. 12. 10. The weight of God's little Finger is heavier than that of the whole Creation: And if they be able, or God by them, to scourge us with Whips, then God himself immediately with Scorpions.

Having thus considered how the im∣mediateness of God's working doth com∣paratively exceed that of the Creatures, or of himself by the Creatures: In the

Fourth place, Let us go on more sadly, in a positive way, to consider, What his immediate Power is; what the Strength of those hands is which Men must fall into. And how may this amaze you? As it is said of God's Wisdom, There is no end of it, no searching of his Ʋnder∣standing; so nor of his Power. And how can I discover or unbare that Arm before you? I begin to do it thus: God had begun to enter into a Contest with Job, and touched him but with his little Finger; and Job soon felt him, and cries out: If I speak of Strength, or think that way to grapple with him, He is strong, Job 9. 19. If but his little Finger be so strong, as Job found it, what is his Fist, which Ezekiel next sets

Page 126

forth his Strokes of his Wrath by? And what God himself there speaks, against covetous and bloody Men, Ezek. 22. 13, 14. do you apply to every Sin you live and go on in. Says God, I will strike with my Fist at thy dishonest Gain. And can thy Heart endure, or thy Hands be made strong, in the Day in which I shall have to do with thee? Let every one that heareth or readeth this, who yet go on in their Sins, consider with them∣selves: Am I able to stand it out, and encounter this God? And encounter him thou must, if thou goest on in thy Sins. Or can my Heart endure? say thou. The Apostle puts the very same consideration upon the Corinthians Spi∣rits, when guilty of Idolatry. (And 'tis the same case of uncleanness, or any other known Sin) Do you provoke the Lord to Jealousy? Are you stronger than he? 1 Cor. 10. 22. As if he had said: Do you not consider what a powerful God you have to do withal, and that immediately? Can you grapple with him, think you? or make your part good with him? Hear yet further, by what way it is that the Apostle sets forth to us the Strength of God, and let us make a further estimate thereby, as to the matter in hand. The Apostle in

Page 127

the same Epistle, though upon another occasion, Chap. 1. 25. had said, That the Weakness of God is stronger than the Strength of Men. In which Speech, he evidently puts our thoughts upon ma∣king of a measure of what is to be ac∣counted more or less, stronger or weaker in God, in respect of the putting forth his Power by what the Scriptures do ex∣press of him, after the similitude of Man, as in Job the comparison is of his little Finger; and in Ezekiel, of his Fist: whereof the one is weaker (in Man) and the other stronger. Now in Man, what is weaker than his Breath? which will scarce blow away a Straw (and his weakness is usually expressed by this, that his Breath is in his Nostrils.) Now estimate the Strength of God according unto what is said in the Scriptures of God, (and that as to this point of de∣stroying us) after the manner of Men. By the very Breath of his Nostrils we are consumed, Job 4. 9. His Power is such, that he needs put forth no more (as it were) to destroy us. His very Weak∣ness is enough. Job had in the same verse, first said, By the Blast of him we perish: but because a Blast imports some forcibleness, the utmost might of what is in a Man's Breath, and it is a Man's

Page 128

putting forth his Breath with a more than ordinary violence; therefore by way of Diminution and Correction he adds, By the Breath of his Nostrils; that is, (still measuring it, as spoken, after the simili∣tude and manner of Men) by the most ordinary and weakest putting forth of his Power. And yet we see if he puts forth no more, he blows us to Destructi∣on, when his intent is to destroy: And why? For of us the Scriptures use a comparison suitable thereto, in saying that We are but as the Dust of the Bal∣lance, Isa. 40. 15. Yea, all the Nations (put all together) are but as the small Dust of the Ballance: As that little that is left in the Ballance, when what is weighed is taken forth, which is easily blown away with a Man's Breath. Again, yet lower, in Man; his Nod is of less force than his Breath: and yet, Lo, at the rebuke of his Countenance we perish, Psal. 80. 16. He can look on one that is proud, and abase him; and his Eye can cast about Rage and Destruction, Job 40. 11, 12, 13. He had said before, ver. 9. Hast thou an Arm like God? He riseth from the Power of his Nod, the weak∣ness of his Power, unto the Power of his Arm: And so may we, from his Looks to his Breath, from that to his

Page 129

little Finger, from that to his Fist, from that to his Arm and Hands, in which his Strength is said to lie, Luke 1. 51. O think how dreadful then it must needs be, to fall into those Hands, (as here in the Text,) into those Hands, I say, that measure the Waters in the hollow of them, that span the Hea∣vens, and at the same time compre∣hend also all the Dust of the Earth in one grasp, as one of us doth a little Pebble. And verse 15. Takes up the Isles as a very little thing; as you would do Hazel-nut-shells out of a Pail of Water. Now for thee, a poor Grashopper, to be taken into those hands, and to be grip'd and crush'd, and squeezed with the might thereof. But the Scripture expressions go further yet, to have this God like a Mill-stone fall upon thee with his whole weight, which is Christ's comparison, Mat. 21. 44. Thy Wrath lies hard upon me, said Heman. You see in Summer little green Flies, creeping upon green leaves, which if a Man doth but touch, they die: such a slight Creature art thou in comparison to this God. Or further, (as Job's com∣parison is) that this Great and Mighty God should run upon thee as a Mighty Giant, with his full force, the utmost of

Page 130

his Force, as a Man doth upon his Ene∣my; yet so Job speaks of it, Chap. 16. 14. And in another place, the same Job, that he should take thee about the Neck, and throttle thee. O what do we, poor Potsheards of the Earth, striving with our Maker? as Isaiah speaks, chap. 45. 9. Or, as Christ spake from Heaven, will Flesh think to kick and spurn against such Iron Pricks and Pikes, which run up into the Soul, whilst it strikes upon them.

And that we may yet further have a through sensibleness of our obnoxious∣ness and exposedness to this Great God, let us withal consider his absolute Sove∣reignty over us, as well as his Power. What an inconsiderable portion doth any one Soul (and every one is singly to deal with him for his own particular) bear unto this Infinity of Being and Glo∣ry; to whom not one Nation, but all Nations; and not only all Nations that are now extant in the World, but that ever have been, or shall be, are counted as nothing, yea, less than nothing. What a little thing is this Island of ours, to the whole Body of Nations? And yet all Isles are to him but a little thing, as Isaiah speaks. Lord, think thou, what am I to Thee! or any Man! that thou

Page 131

shouldest regard him! Yea, and being sinful, why should any Man (as he is of himself) think that God should have any stick or demurr within him, to with∣hold himself from destroying him every moment? For lo, even the greatest of Men, that have been of greatest Wis∣dom, Parts, (being Sinners) he hath in his distance and greatness laid them aside, and regarded them not at all, Job 38. last: He regards not the Wise in Heart. What is all or any Excellency in thee to him?

There is therefore no way but to turn unto him, and seeing you must fall into his hands, prevent him by putting your selves into his hands. This great Arm of his may be held: Isa. 27. 5. Let them take hold of my Strength; Fury is not in me. There is an Arm also of another one, that is, Christ, who can deal with God for thee, and overcome him. [Isa. 53. 1. To whom is the Arm of the Lord (so he termeth Christ) revealed?] Thus you have seen and heard something of the Greatness of this God, and that but in general, as he is the Author of this Punishment, and thereby this Punish∣ment aggrandized unto us, and yet how little do we know of him? as Job speaks.

Page 132

§. II.

The second Head of Demonstrations, from the Capacity of the Soul, the Subject of this Punishment: And from this, that it is the Destruction of the Soul.

II. SUbjoin hereunto the consideration of what is the eminent Subject of this Punishment, the Soul of Man; and that the Issue of this Punishment is no less than the Destruction of that Soul. And these two (which I join together) will afford further Reflections, to help us to conceive of the fearfulness of this Punish∣ment. And the Consideration hereof cometh in most pertinently next unto the foregoing, wherein the Power of the Agent was spoken to; but now in this the Capacity of the Subject or Patient, and the Receptivity thereof of Impressi∣ons from this Worker.

That the Soul is the immediate Ves∣sel of this Wrath, that I spake to afore, Mat. 10. 28. Fear not them that kill the Body, but are not able to kill the Soul: but rather

Page 133

fear him which is able to destroy both Soul and Body in Hell. The former part of which words evidently import: 1. That the Soul alone, and immediately in it self, and not only in respect of what it suffers with or from the Bodies suffering, is the Subject of this Punishment, tho the Body also is: And 2. Christ con∣cludes, that it is the Destruction of both Body and Soul.

You know also the Rule, That the Measure of every Agent's working upon another must be taken from the Capacity of the Subject which the Impression is made upon, as well as from the Power of the Agent that works. Fire works more fiercely upon Oil and Brimstone, than upon Stones, or upon Dust or Sands. You may discern this in the parts of your own Body: Rheum falling upon the Lungs doth not torture so, as falling up∣on a Tooth, a Joint, or Eye. How al∣so are the inward parts capable of more exquisite Torment, as by the Stone, &c. bred in them, than the outward are, by any Cuttings or Wounds?

Now the Soul of Man is capable of more exquisite Impressions from God's hand, in that it is an intelligent Spirit, and in the substantial Faculties of it as∣simulated to him, made in his Image,

Page 134

a Spirit as God is, that hath an Under∣standing, and other Faculties, to receive and take in from him what he is pleased to pour forth into it by them; and is accordingly more sensible thereof, than the Senses of the Body are or can be sup∣posed to be from Creatures. The Pro∣phet Nahum seems to have considered this, chap. 1. v. 5, 6. When setting out God's Wrath to Men in the effects of it, he first considers, how it works upon inanimate Creatures, that are at such a distance (in respect of the kind of their being) from God's: It kindleth a Fire, says he, which maketh the Hills to melt, and the Eaath is burnt up at his presence: yea, the World, and all that dwell therein, (which he will one day burn up with Fire.) Now from these the Prophet in∣fers and raiseth up our thoughts. Doth he work thus upon insensible Creatures, as the Hills, and the Earth, and the whole World? Do the Elements melt with fervent heat? Are the Heavens shrivel'd up as a Scrole of Parchment afore him, by the violence of that Fire which he sends forth? Consider then, O consider, ye Sons of Men, how will the Fire of his Wrath work upon your intellectual Souls? And as unto this Scope and Co∣herence with the former, I understand

Page 135

what follows, verse 6. Who can stand a∣fore his Indignation? who can abide in the fierceness of his Anger? He here turneth his Speech, and applieth it to Men. For the Souls of Men being in their beings and kind nearer of kin to him, Spirits, as he is the great Spirit, and the Father of Spirits, which were made only for God, and to be filled with God, have accordingly a more intimate sense of his Workings on them. And 'tis as if he had said, If then he sends forth such a Fire as melts and dissolves the Earth, Mountains of Iron or Brass; how much more will it be able to melt Wax? And such are Mens Souls to God, compara∣tively to other Creatures. Christ speak∣ing of his Soul, when he had thus to do with God, in the Day of his Anger, Psal. 22. 14. (that Psalm was all made of him) My Heart is melted like Wax, it is melted in the midst of my Bowels. And towards this Sence doth Sanctius seem to understand that Complaint of Job's, uttered to his Friends concerning those Terrors of God, which he felt within him, Job 6. 4, 11. verses compared; Is my Strength the Strength of Stones? Or is my Flesh, my Nature or Constitution, of Brass, that I should be able to en∣counter with this Indignation of the

Page 136

Almighty? Stones and Brass have no sense in them, (or but a dull sense, if their Opinion should hold true, de sen∣su rerum,) they have no Blood nor Spi∣rits to make them sensible of these Ar∣rows of God's Anger he had spoken of, vers. 4. Ay, but Job meaneth to say, I have a Soul made of other Metal, suited to God, the great Spirit, whose Arrows I feel, which is exquisitely sensible of all his Actings. Take the Statue of a Man made of Brass, or cut out of Stone, and slash and cut him, and he feels it not; but cut the same Limbs that answer to these in a living Man, made of Flesh and Blood, with the same knife, and what Torture is it? You may see this, and aggravate it to your selves, by what in∣ferior Spirits to this great Father of Spi∣rits, as Angels and Devils, can work up∣on Man's Soul, that is a Spirit like them∣selves, being yet inferior to them. When Saul had but one evil Spirit sent from the Lord, how distracted and terrified was he, tho in the midst of the enjoi∣ments of a Kingdom? 1 Sam. 16. 14. Also that great Apostle, that had his Spi∣rit fortified, as having been newly feast∣ed with the Joys of Heaven, and that not as at a distance only, but as a Specta∣tor, that stood by, present there, 2 Cor. 12.

Page 137

Yet one Angel, Satan buffeting him, he was so disturbed and put to it, as he knew not what to do, or how to bear it: only God told him, My Grace is sufficient for thee. Well, but do Mens Souls in Hell fight with Flesh and Blood, yea, or with Principalities and Powers chiefly? No, that is but whilst they are the Rulers of this World, as there 'tis added. And yet if these Spirits have such power over our Spirits to buffet and terrify them; what hath God the Father of them?

Again, consider how the Soul is capa∣ble of more Joys and Sorrows, than the Bodily Senses are, and this by how much it doth exceed them in its Eminency and Capacity. The Soul is able to drink up all the Pleasures the whole Creation can afford the Bodily Senses, or they bring in: to drink them up (I say) even at one Draught, and yet would in the midst of it, still cry, Give, Give. Now as it is in the Body of a Man, look whatever part is capable of more Pleasure, it is also ca∣pable more of Pains: So the Soul pro∣portionably; look how capable it is of greater Joys (as it is from God) it is as much of Sorrows also, unto the same ex∣tention and intention of them.

Add II. As to this Point, That as the Soul is thus vastly capable of more Sor∣row

Page 138

and Anguish; So further, that these Souls to be punisht are filled with Sin, and in that respect termed Vessels of Wrath fitted to Destruction, Rom. 9. 22. Take a Barrel of Wood; and of it self it will burn as it is Wood: but if withal it be Pitcht within, and full of Tar and com∣bustible Matter, it will burn more rage∣ingly. Of unfruitful Branches, Apostati∣zing from Christ, it is said John 15. 6. That they are cast into the Fire, and they are burned, that is, they burn to purpose; make a mighty Fire. That Clause [And they are burned] is added by way of Aux∣esis or Emphasis, else it needed not. We see when Sins were but laid upon Christ by Imputation, who in himself was separate from Sinners, and had no Con∣science of Sin, how yet the Anger of God against Sin dealt with him, as undertaking to be a Surety for Sin. And can you drink, says Christ, the Cup that I am to drink of, that is, so as to bear it and not be overcome with it? Now in Luke 23. 31. you may see, how Christ infers from his Sufferings, as being the Sufferings of one who had not been himself personally guilty of Sin, what therefore, with diffe∣rence, those in whom Sin is inherent, must expect. Weep for your selves (says he) for if they do those things to the green

Page 139

Tree, what will be done in the Dry? that is, who are fit combustible Matter for the Fire; and as the Prophet says, are as Stubble fully dry, Nahum. 1. 10. And of the terribleness of God's Anger, he had afore discoursed (as was even now obser∣ved) in all that Chapter.

Again III. In the Soul, some Faculties are more capable of Anguish from his Wrath than other; even as in the Body some Parts are more of Pain. If a Man would avoid a scalding drop to be let fall upon any Part, of all other he would fence his Eye. You see how a Mote, a Flie troubleth it: a scalding drop of Oyl would much more. So it is in the Facul∣ties of the Soul. You read there is the Spirit of the Mind, Eph. 4. 23. Now God will wound, even that, and aims at it, in this Punishment. A wounded Spirit who can bear? (says Solomon) If a Man's Flesh be torn and cut, he may yet bear up himself, but if his Bones be broken, who can stand? Now the immediate Stroaks of God are so compared by Da∣vid, as unto the breaking of the Bones, in comparison of other dealings of God with, and Inflictions from God to∣wards us.

Page 140

The next thing which I mention but as an Appendix to this Head, is, that it is the Destruction of the Soul. So, Christ and the Apostle again and again. They are said to be lost: and though Men may Metaphysically dispute, that it is better to Be, though in Hell, than not to Be: Yet Christ hath said, it were better not to have been born. I shall say no more as to this Head, than what the Apostle expresseth this by, in the 1 Tim. 6. 9. in saying, [That Men are drowned in Perdition and Destruction] one would think, for him to have expressed Death and Destructi∣on, it might have been enough to have said, that a Man were drown'd, or sunk down to the bottom of Waters, or the like Materials that would suffocate a Man: But to say he is drowned in Perdition it self, or that Perdition and Destruction are the Pit, the Lake, he is plunged into; what can be said beyond it? And yet here, he is not content with one single Word to express that by neither, as to have said drowned in Perdition, but must double it: and add another Word [De∣struction] also. Destroyed, therefore over, and over: Drowned over Head and Ears, as we say, and all that is in them, drowned and sunk into Perdition; the whole Soul:

Page 141

yea, the whole Man. No part above Water. Destroyed with a double Destru∣ction: both for Object double, and also for the Subject of it, both Body and Soul: So Christ says.

§. III.

A third Head, of Demonstrations: drawn from the final Causes formerly mentioned: As 1. The Glory of God. 2. The Manifestation of his Power.

THe third Head, that affords matter of Exaggeration to our Thoughts, whereby to infer the fearfulness of this Punishment, is taken from the Ends, or Final Causes mentioned in that first Secti∣on. The Ends, I say, which God hath in, and is provoked by, unto this Punish∣ment. And as I then singly argued from each of them the immediateness of God's Hand therein; so now I shall from each of the same, The dreadfulness here∣of. There were three Attributes of God in Special, and his Glory in Common, which God aimeth at the Manifestation of, in this ultimate Guerdon or Reward for Sin. 1. The Manifestation of the

Page 142

Glory (that's in Common;) then parti∣cularly, 1. Of his Power. 2. The satis∣fying of his Justice. 3. Of his Wrath. The Scriptures I then had recourse to, do specify all these. I shall speak to these in this Section, and to the other in the following.

1. In General, that he aimeth at his Glory in it (which is God's general aim, and is common to these and all other At∣tributes) is evident. His Glory, (as it is to be manifested to us) is but the result or shine of all or any of his Attributes manifested. In that place of Prov. 16. 4. The Lord hath made all things for himself, that is, for his Glory (for that is himself: My Glory I will not give to another) it fol∣lows, yea even the wicked for the day of evil. The day of evil there is the day of Punish∣ment: the Wicked themselves also making and preparing themselves by Sin thereto; but so as thereupon God manifests his Glory upon them, as well as upon all things else; which he hath made in their several seasons and kinds. And Solomon doth mention this of Punishment as one Eminent Instance of all things else, what∣ever, that are for his Glory, and which will be ordered then by him, thereunto in a special manner: And because (it be∣ing

Page 143

so great an evil) Men might think o∣therwise; Yea, but says Solomon, God seeks and will have a Glory out of this Punishment, as well as out of all things else; of which ye all acknowledg, that God made them for himself. And so in that 2 Thess. 1. 9. They are said to be punisht from the Glory of his Power, that is, from his Power, glorifying himself on them, as I afore expounded it. And as, it is for the Glory of this his Power, so by the same reason of all, or any of those other Attributes, he is pleased to put forth therein.

I shall premise two Maxims, from whence fore-laid the Inference, for the dreadfulness of this will more readily rise, in an infinite height, unto our more serious and sober Apprehensiions.

The first: That all things which God doth for his own Glory, he will perform them like himself, that is, like God: and so make the utmost of every thing, that that subject Matter, whatever it be, will afford of Glory to him. This Rule is ascertained to us, as from the Nature of God; so from that saying of the Apostle, Rom. 1. 21. where he condemns the Gentiles, that they glorified him not as God, that is, in such a manner as was worthy of him; they came not up to that height

Page 144

of Glory, so great a God must have gi∣ven unto him from Creatures. Now if it be the Sin of Creatures, that they fall short in glorifying God as God; then be assured that if God himself undertakes and professeth to do a thing for his Glo∣ry, he will, in the whole of it, and issue thereof, either glorify himself as God, or never begin to essay or meddle with it, but would have let it alone, for ever.

2. From hence, take this also along with you, to carry it in your view; through each particular that follows: That then, if God seeks to glorify himself in a way of Punishment, that Punishment must be answerably great and proportioned to raise up a Glory unto God, such as shall glori∣fy him, As God, in that way. For it is the Punishment or the Judgment it self which he executes (as the Psalmist says) out of which this Glory must spring. This Punishment, as it is a Punishment, is that, wherein God will be glorified as God. That is, it is the Soil which this Crop of his Glory is to grow up out of, and the Crop or Harvest of Glory can be but what the fertility of that Soil, as such, affords: These things in general fore-laid.

Now, 3. The greatness or vast comings in of that Glory, God reckons upon from

Page 145

this, may rise up in your view, by these Particulars.

1. Had it not been that in comparison of other works of his, an infinitely ex∣ceeding Revenue of Glory would have arisen unto him from this, God would never have set his Heart or Hand to this work of all other: I say it again, He would never have set his Hand to this work of all other. For as he is Creator, he hath a love to all, and hates nothing that he hath made, he loves no such bloody work for it self; nor would have ever embrued his Hands in the Destruction of his Creature, had it not been for an ex∣ceeding weight of Glory; and as being justly provoked thereto, it becometh a just Prize, on that Hand presented to him: which he will be sure withal to manage and perform with the utmost Righteous∣ness. It is certain, that this is to him opus alienum, a work strange to his Na∣ture, as the Prophet speaks. He does not naturally, no nor willingly (says the Lamentations) afflict, or grieve the Chil∣dren of Men. Lament. 3. 33. Mens Quar∣rellings and Cavils hereabout did put him long since to his Oath, and he hath clear∣ed himself by Oath in Ezekiel, As I live, I will not the Death of a Sinner, that is not simply, as if I delighted in it for it self,

Page 146

as a God that is cruel; (which was obje∣cted) and therefore I say peremptorily it must be an infinite mass of Glory, after much long-suffering and impenitency of Men, that moves him to it. And if so, then according to the Principles even now mentioned, do you that are impe∣nitent Sinners look to it, for ex vestro ca∣rio (I allude to Job's Speech, Skin for Skin) out of the Blood of your Souls, and their Destruction, shall this Tribute and Tax of Glory be raised, according unto what your sinfulness shall be found to have been. And oh then, do you col∣lect how fearful it is like to be! View it in a contrary, and indeed though an In∣stance far transcending the Proportion of this, yet in respect of holding some like∣ness to God's proceeding in this, will conduce to heighten our Thoughts about this. It is a Consideration that helps our Faith (and 'tis a great one) that for God to deliver up his own Son to Death, and for himself to bruise him, (you have it all in a short Saying, Isa. 53. 10. It pleased the Lord to bruise him) and that this should be the Object of his good Plea∣sure, there must have been some incom∣prehensible vast design of Glory to accrue there-from, to be attained by doing it; some high End and far transcending De∣sign

Page 147

that was to be the Issue and Product of it. Which as you know was the Glo∣ry of his Mercy and Love in the Salvati∣on of Men; Glory to God on High, Good Will to Men. And this is as great an Evidence and Argument to our Faith, that God is resolved to save Sinners, as can be given. For what hath been thus done to Christ is past recalling; not to be recompensed any other way than by saving many by the Knowledg of him, as God there speaks. Now as this Instance of the highest kind serves to evidence this thing to us, so though in a far lesser Pro∣portion, you may take somewhat alike Illustration, at least, in the Point in Hand; That certainly it must be a great surpas∣sing mass of Glory that will come in unto him by this Punishment for Sin, which should any way gain him to be so much as willing to it, against which, otherwise he hath so much in his own Nature; who had it withal in his absolute Power to have given effectual Grace to all, as well as to some; which latter all acknow∣ledg he hath done. Even as it was in his Power to have saved the World without Christ's Death, Mark 14. 36. Oh! ye Sons of Men, know and understand your God, and be moved thereby to turn un∣to him: and the more by this, that it

Page 146

〈1 page duplicate〉〈1 page duplicate〉

Page 147

〈1 page duplicate〉〈1 page duplicate〉

Page 148

must and will prove an infinite Punish∣ment that is coming upon you; because were it not an immense sum of Glory would accrue to him out of it, and that but upon your final impenitency: He that is a God so good in himself, would never else bring it upon you. And ac∣cording to that first Maxime premised, it must be the soreness of the Punish∣ment from whence that Glory must a∣rise.

2. Consider herewith, how that he hath reserved this, as his last work, in that other World: when this World shall come to be folded up as a Garment; and a final conclusion be put to all these other Dispensations and Works of Glory that are now on Foot. And as Solomon told us that he hath made the wicked for him∣self and for the day of evil; So Job also tells us, That the Wicked is reserved to the day of Destruction, and shall be brought forth at (or to) the day of Wrath: [Reserved] by God, till after all his other works of wonder are ended and gone, then to be brought forth as a Trophie of his Glory. Both themselves and all their Sins are re∣served till then, and laid up amongst God's Treasures, to be then made publick. The Salvation of his Elect, and the Destructi∣on of the Wicked, are the last and only

Page 149

Works that then remain, and do remain, and are purposely kept unto that time, when he means to shew himself to be God indeed; and to make all Men and Angels know that he is God. It is an Argument of the fearfulness of that Punishment the Devils shall undergoe, Jude 6. 2 Pet. 2. 4. That he hath reserved them in everlasting Chains unto the Judgment of the great day. It is a certain Rule, that God's latter works do still exceed and put down the former: So far, as the former shall not in compari∣son be remembred, Isa. 65. 17. Jer. 3. 16. When God would make his Apostles (as to this World) the greatest spectacle of Misery that (excepting what he made his own Son, who was the first-born a∣mong many Bretbren) he ever put upon Saints, Prophets or Martyrs, that had preceeded and were afore them. How doth the Apostle express his Design in it, 1 Cor. 4. 9. I think (says he) that God hath set forth us the Apostles [last] as it were Men appointed to Death, for we are made a Spectacle unto the World, and to Angels, and to Men. Alluding to those Gladiators, brought up last upon the Stage, as a Spectacle to the People. The thing I cite it for, is, that the greatest work in that kind, he appointed to be at last: As also, was that which immediate∣ly

Page 150

preceded it, the coming of his Son in the last days. And but this of punishing the Wicked is his last, and very last, of all that he will do for ever.

Especially let us withal, 3. Consider besides, how all his Actings and Works whereby to glorify himself for ever, shall be reduced and contracted to these two. He gives over all other of Providence, and Spiritual Dispensations by Ordinan∣ces, and sets down and betakes himself to these two alone. God hath nothing else to do in the other World. And he hath no other revenue of manifested Glory that remains extant; he lives and reigns eternally in or upon these two: And yet this is then, when he is resolved, to the ut∣most to be glorious. And yet all is but what comes out of these two Works, the Salvation of the Elect, and Destruction of the Wicked.

Again, 4. Consider these two are uni∣form Works, and unvarying; and with∣out shadow of turning: In this World he makes a variety and enterchange of Pro∣vidences; which are exercised in such Works as he sometimes takes up, and then lays down again, at Pleasure; he sets one thing against another as Solomon speaks. Eve∣ry Day and Age produceth a Variety and Alteration. And this is, because his Glo∣ry

Page 151

that appeareth but imperfectly in some one (as in this and that particular) may have an additional perfection in some o∣ther; that so, all that Variety, may like small pieces in Tapestry, make that piece of Work compleat. And yet we see how in this Mixture, and often, but in some one single Work or Piece, wrought and done but once, how much of God's Glo∣ry appears to the wonderment of Men and Angels. Whereas now this last work of punishing Wicked Men (as likewise that other of Salvation) are but as one continued Dispensation of one Woof, and uniform for ever, without Change, Variety or Interruption. The whole stream of God's Activity contracts it self unto, and runs in these two Channels and no more, in omne volubilis aevum: And how strong must you needs suppose these two Streams, each of them to be? when as the Manifestation of the Deity, doth now run so strongly in a thousand Rivo∣lets. This in General, from the Manife∣station of his Glory.

I named three Attributes in Particu∣lar, which God doth more eminently shew forth in this great, and last Work of His. 1. His Power. 2. Justice. 3. Avenging Wrath, to the end to gain

Page 152

a Glory to Himself out of all these.

1. His Power: That you have in two Places, Rom. 9. 22. What if God willing to shew his Wrath, and to make his Power known? His Power you see, is mention∣ed distinct from his Wrath, though in∣deed it will provoke to be the Power of his Wrath; But I shall distinctly speak of it. You have it also mentioned as that Attribute which shall be most glorified hereby, in 2 Thess. 1. 9. Who shall be pu∣nished with Destruction from the Glory of his Power. I afore spake some things of the greatness of God's Power, as in relati∣on to this Punishment, in shewing how fearful it is to fall into the Hands of God, in the first Head of Demonstration in this Section, I shall only here add,

1. This general Rule concerning it, That the drawing forth of Power or Acti∣vity by God in any work, is still, but what is proportionable and answerable to the work: that is, the effect shall be answerable in greatness to the Power that is said to be put forth. It is certain, God over-acts nothing. Now the Effect, wherein this Power of his is put forth, is here said to be Destruction. And therefore that De∣struction must be conceived proportion∣ed to the Power, that is said to be exert∣ed. There was never Work which God

Page 153

ever did, wherein he professed to shew forth a transcendency of Power, or of any other Attribute, but it was wonderful and glorious in its kind. All his Attributes are himself, and so as great as himself. This visible World, in its kind, what a glorious Building is it? Consisting of Heaven and Earth: and to what end was it that he professed he made it? You have it Rom. 1. 20. That by the Creation of the World, might be understood his eternal Power and Godhead. And if He that cre∣ated and raised up such Beings out of no∣thing, shall profess yet further, to make his Power known, and will use that Pow∣er, and put it forth in Destroying, to shew forth the Glory of it, How great will that Destruction be? which must bear a Proportion to such a Manifestati∣on, That after God hath in so great and so various Works preceeding this, suffici∣ently (as we might think) shewn himself God, in point of Power, or what a pow∣erful God he is; that yet after all as if in all these he had not given so full Proof or Demonstration of Power, and as not satisfyed with all the former, as not e∣nough: he should be after all, willing, as the Apostle says here at last, to begin a new Work, which should make the Ears of the whole Creation tingle, on purpose

Page 154

to make his Power known! This is it swallows up my Thoughts into Astonish∣ment, knowing both, that according to the rule afore given, His last Works or∣dained to shew forth any Attribute, must infinitely exceed the former, that served to the making known thereof. And that again puts a new amazement into my Thoughts, to think how, or wherein so much a greater proportion of Power should be spent. If it were barely to an∣nihilate, and bring the Creature to its first Nothing, there needs not an extensi∣on of Power; it were but withdrawing that Word of his Power that holds up, and bears up all things, Heb. 1. 3. and these, as all, would fall to nothing. But over and above, you read here, of such a De∣struction, as draws out his Power posi∣tively, and makes his Power known a∣fresh. Specially, when again I consider as to this Particular, that to destroy the well being of any thing, is in the ordina∣ry Experience, of us Creatures, more easy than to give Being. A Man that cannot make alive the least of Creatures, not the least Fly or Flea, can yet with an easy touch destroy them. I hinted a∣fore some respects, wherein this Destru∣ction might exceed, in respect of Power concurring to it, that of the Creation.

Page 155

In the Creation there was but a single ex∣pence of Power, namely, of or meerly rai∣sing up out of Nothing: But in this a double. For the Wrath of God exerted in the fierceness of it, hath a tendency to bring, and would if no other Power in∣tervened, bring the Sinner unto nothing; as that speech of Jeremy doth imply, Cor∣rect me not in thine anger, lest thou bring me to nothing; as also that of Nahum, Who can stand in the fierceness of his Anger? so as under this his pressure of the Creature unto nothing, for God to uphold that Creature, in Being, is equivalent unto a continual educing it out of nothing again. Oh what Destruction must that then be in the Execution of it, in which God will positively put forth more Power than in Creating! and thereby after all other works of Power shewn, get himself the name among the whole Creation, of be∣ing a powerful God indeed: But of this Destruction more hereafter. Thus much for that of Power.

Page 156

§. IV.

Demonstrations taken from the satis∣fying God's Justice: Which is the second particular Attribute.

THe second Attribute is Justice, which he will to the utmost shew forth in this Punishment. So in the Text, The Lord shall judg his People. And 2 Thess. 1. 9. 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, they shall lay down, or pay a Punishment: And v. 6. It is a righteous thing in God to [recom∣pence] Tribulation, &c. And indeed God's Power herein is not put forth sim∣ply out of Soveraignty, or for it self, but is drawn out by Justice and Wrath, to execute what they are provoked un∣to. I afore gave this as one reason why God himself must execute this Punish∣ment, because else the Punishment will not come up to satisfy his Justice. But now I make use of the same, to infer the Dreadfulness thereof: That it is the falling into the hands, as of a potent God, so of a just God recompencing for Sin, and extending his mighty Power

Page 157

to inflict a Punishment, which should in Justice hold proportion with the deme∣rit of Sin, that so the exactness of his Justice might appear.

Now to heighten our Apprehensions of the Dreadfulness of this Punishment, from this particular: Consider,

1. The Infinite Demerit of Sin. Which is not enough known or considered by the miserable Subjects thereof; because indeed God himself, in his Holiness, and in his Greatness, is not known by them. Now because Men will not otherwise know, nor be sensible of Sin, in the Spiritual evil of it, against God; there∣fore it is that God is put upon it, thus to make Men know it; and what God himself is, for Men to sin against him, by such dreadful Effects, as in Justice shall hold proportion with their Sin, and the Desert thereof. And God profes∣seth, he will herein be exact, Heb. 2. 2. So, As every Transgression shall receive [a just Recompence] of Reward. Not such or such Sins, some few more eminent Sins only, but [every Transgression] shall have a Reward proportionate. He that is the Judg of all the World, shall not he be exact? as Abraham in another case, Gen. 17. Yes, in this ultimate Punish∣ment he will be sure to be, as Isaiah

Page 158

speaks, Chap. 28. vers. 17. To lay Judg∣ment to the Line, and Righteousness to the Plummet. As Carpenters do, when they would fit things one to another, and make things uniform and correspon∣dent, and square them adequately, to an hairs breadth, as we say. And thus will God do in Judging. He will bring his Line and his Plummet, take measure of the hainousness of every Sin, and mete a Punishment adequate thereto. And if so, then this Punishment how dreadful will it be? If thou wilt be se∣vere to mark what is done amiss, who will be able to stand? says the Psalmist. The Hainousness of Sin is measured by the Greatness of that Glory whereof it is the debasement; and that Debasement done to him, further measured by this, that it is, by so mean things, as we Crea∣tures are to God. And so is estimated by the worth of that Person against whom it it is committed, which there∣fore could by no other means be expi∣ated, but by the debasement and empty∣ing of as great a Glory, due to the Per∣son of the Son of God, appearing in our Nature, as one Person therewith. Sin, the Apostle tells us, Rom. 7. 13. is above measure sinful. And hence accordingly this Punishment is estimated to be above

Page 159

measure fearful. Thus Jer. 30. 11. and Isa. 27. 7, 8. God putting this very difference between his punishing godly Men, his own Children, and his punish∣ing wicked Men: Hath he smitten him, as he smote those that smote him? No; for he puts this difference in the 8th ver. He smites his own in measure. You may then take the Compass, the Magnitude, and Depth of it by this; that therefore oppositely his Punishing the other ex∣ceeds all measure. Sin is the Creatures proper work, and Punishment is God's work. [Vengeance belongeth unto me,] says the Text; he challengeth it as his. Now it is certain, God will shew him∣self as perfect and as exact in his Work, as Man and Satan have been in theirs; he will not be exceeded or out-gone by them. The Lord is known, says the Psalmist, by the Judgment that he execu∣teth, Psal. 9. 16. If the Creature be so wicked, as to bring forth so hainous an Evil (in genere moris) as Sin is, which is Malum Catholicum [a Catholick Evil] and accordingly hath the Name of all Evil given it, as virtually and transcen∣dently containing all that God or Man calls Evil; then be assured, that God, who is so just, will be as sure to bring forth, by way of return upon the Crea∣ture,

Page 160

a Punishment, that shall be in ge∣nere Poenae, in it's kind, Malum Catholi∣cum, an universal Evil also. And such Ezekiel terms it, speaking of the Evil of Punishment: It is an Evil, and an only Evil, Ezek. 7. 5. That is, such an Evil as shall be nothing but evil, and that shall contain the Spirit, the Quin∣tessence of all Evil in it. Therefore, Psal. 75. 8. In the hand of the Lord there is a Cup, and it is full of Mixture. As if an Artist, that knows the Nature of all Simples, should temper a Cup, that is full of all sorts of Poysons, and which is a Compound of the bitterest, loathsomest Ingredients this Earth puts forth. Even thus hath God strained the quintessence of all Evils into one Cup; and it follows there, The Wicked of the Earth must drink the dregs of it. Which Phrase also argues such a Mixture as this we speak of; the bitterest of all is at the bottom; and 'tis Eternity to the bottom, and they must not, nor shall not leave a drop, but suck out the Dregs, as the Prophet's Phrase is, Ezek. 23. 34. Thou hast a Cup of Abomination, and when thou hast fill'd up thy measure, then will God take measure of thy Cup, and fill the same proportion of Dregs and Mixture to thee, in a Cup of his tempering.

Page 161

2. Consider, that in the manifestation of this Attribute of Justice, there must of all other (next unto that of Mercy) be a more special Glory intended and designed by God himself, unto which this Punishment must bear an eminent proportion, as being the Matter wherein it appears. I said afore, that if God professed to manifest any Attribute of his whatever, it still hath been done in such Effects of Wonder, as all the Cre∣ation is set admiring of. Now of all other Attributes, these two of Justice and Mercy are the prime, which he sets the greatest value upon the manifestation of. And therefore still look how they are more eminent, or by how much the more eminently he intends to manifest them above other Attributes; by so much must the Effects, in and by which he manifesteth them, exceed and excell all other Works.

Now that these are the brightest Jewels in that Crown of his Glory, and which he intends most to embelish, may be seen in this: 1. That he hath chosen the choicest and most excellent of his Creatures, as the Stuff or Materials in which to set these forth; namely, Angels and Men, and Christ himself the Head of all. That look as curious Engravers,

Page 162

when they would shew their best Art, and chiefest Workmanship, they cull out the choicest Materials, as either precious Stones, Cedar, or Marble, to work up∣on; and so Embroiderers, the finest Stuff or Cloth for the Ground-work, they would embroider Gold or Pearls upon: Thus hath God singled forth Angels and Men, the chief of, and more noble Creatures (in the Stuff they con∣sist of) than the rest of his whole Cre∣ation. Power and Wisdom is seen in other Creatures, but Vindicative Justice, as also Grace and saving Mercy, only on Men and Angels. And, 2. Although he hath shewn forth more of Wisdom and Power in the Frame and Fabrick of Men and Angels, than in the whole of Heaven and Earth; yet still, comparatively, more of Justice and Mercy in these two, than that all, or any of the other Attributes, shewn forth in and upon them, comes unto. Whereof this is sufficient evidence, that they have the Name of Vessels of Mercy, and Vessels of Wrath, Rom. 9. You read no∣where, that they are termed Vessels of Power, or Vessels of Wisdom: which is a Token that they are fill'd with these, in that they carry away the Denomi∣nation, (which is usually à Principaliori,)

Page 163

as if no Attributes else in comparison seemed to appear: and yet how much of Power and Wisdom is seen in the Fabrick of Man, David tells us, I am wonderfully or fearfully made. So then, those that shall prove to be the mise∣rable Vessels of this his Wrath and Justice, shall be so fill'd with a Punish∣ment, whereby this Justice is made known, as shall deservedly bear the Name of Wrath and Judgment engra∣ven upon it, of all other Attributes. The Day in which he will judg the World, Acts 17. 31. is elsewhere called, the Day of Destruction, the Day of Wrath, the Day of Judgment, &c. It beareth its Denomination from this very Work we speak of.

And further, consider how he hath given out afore-hand, almost six thou∣sand years before, concerning this Work, above all Works else, and hath posted it upon Enoch's Pillars, (you know the Tradition I allude to) as you use to do Citations, Jude 14, 15. or as you do indicere diem, set a Day for the most solemn Works. Enoch, the seventh from Adam, prophesied hereof, saying, Behold, the Lord cometh with ten thousands of his Saints, to exe∣cute Judgment upon all, &c. And fur∣ther

Page 164

and besides, God speaks of Prepa∣rations to have been all along made by him, during the time of this World, against that Day. The Persons are a fitting, Rom. 9. The Punishment a preparing; prepared for the Devil and his Angels, even from their very first Fall. Now certainly God would never raise up in us, by such words given out by himself, so great expectations, if the Reality, the Execution, the Thing it self, should not answer to all these. Yea, after all his other Works of Won∣der finished and perfected, he profes∣seth to come on purpose to be glori∣fied. And in what? as well in ren∣dring Vengeance in the Destruction of Wicked Men, as in the glorifying his Saints, 2 Thess. 1. 6, 7, 8, 9, 10. Seeing it is a righteous thing with God, to recom∣pence Tribulation to them that trouble you: And to you that are troubled, Rest with us. When the Lord Jesus shall be revealed from Heaven, with his mighty Angels, in flaming Fire, taking Vengeance on them that know not God, and that obey not the Gospel of our Lord Jesus Christ: Who shall be punish'd with everlasting De∣struction from the Presence of the Lord, and from the Glory of his Power: When he shall come to be glorified in his Saints,

Page 165

and to be admired in all them that believe, in that day. He carries on the glorifying himself, and of his Power, in the one, as well as in the other.

Yea, and to render the Solemnity of this Work and Day yet greater, he calls a General Assembly of all Men and Angels, that are, or have been, or of Men that yet shall be, in either Worlds, to be present, and see the Exe∣cution.

To conclude: It is therefore called the Great Day, as that, Reserved to the Judgment of the Great Day, Jude 6. and other Speeches. And why the Great Day? but from this Work of that Day, that shall be done upon it; which this Day shall then bring forth, and produce. As Days have their Stile and Denomination from the Work of the Day. Opus diei in die suo. So this (as was said) is called the Day of Destruction, Wrath, &c. And if so, then that Stile of Greatness must be from the Greatness of the Work that shall be done thereon. And so the Judgment of the Great Day, because great will the Judgment be that is to be executed on that Day.

Lastly; God hath in the mean time suffered his Glory to be debased, him∣self

Page 166

to be least regarded in the World, Sin and the Devil to carry all before them, and Sinners to have the Glory: relieving himself in the mean time, that he hath a Treasure of Glory to be broken up at that day, Rom. 2. 3. When he will come on purpose to be glorious. He hath suffered an Ecclipse of six thousand Years, that in the end he may break forth with a redoubled Glory. And all that Glory must come in this way, even from this Punishment he shall exe∣cute. And it must be a recovery of greater Glory, than he should have had by Man's Holiness, in that first State by Creation, or God would never have let Sin have come into the World; he meant not to be a Loser.

Page 167

§. V.

Demonstrations taken from the satis∣fying of Avenging Wrath; The third particular Attribute.

I Come next to argue this from the third Attribute, his Wrath: or if you will, his Power and Justice, as in∣tended, and heightned to extremities by Wrath: And though he will be just in what he doth; yet it is Justice put on by Wrath. He recompenseth Sin, not on∣ly as Rector Ʋniversi, Judg of all the World, and so upon the account of Publick Rules given forth, to vindicate the equity and righteousness of which, he punisheth the transgressions of them; but over and above he doth it, as re∣senting an Injury, a personal Affront given to himself, his Person; and this draws forth his Wrath and Vengeance on his own behalf.

As it is termed Vengeance, so Zeal, in Heb. 10. 27. and 1 Cor. 10. 22. Do you provoke the Lord to Jealousy? In Nahum 1. 2. See what a Conglomeration there

Page 168

is of Attributes and Effects. [God is jealous,] that's the first. He compares that in God unto that in Man, which, Solomon tell us, is the Rage of Man, Prov. 6. last. Again, 2. The Lord re∣vengeth, the Lord revengeth. That is the Effect; and he says it twice, as speaking of one who is enflamed with Anger. Then, 3. To shew how fiercely in re∣venging he executes it, even with Fury, he adds, The Lord revengeth, and is furi∣ous, who yet professeth elsewhere of himself, Fury is not in me; that is, of my self it is not, Isa. 27. 4. But as he is provoked by Sin and Impenitency, so Fury is in him. The Lord is furious. Then, 4. follows the Subject thereof, and what they are to him, whom his Fury waxeth so hot against, Enemies and Adversaries. [The Lord will take Venge∣ance on his Adversaries, and he reserveth Wrath for his Enemies.] Which accords with this Text: Vengeance is mine, I will recompence the Adversaries, verse 27. And, 5. If any urge: Yea, but is not God merciful, and slow to Anger? Yes, says he, v. 3. The Lord is slow to Anger. But he brings it in to shew, that in this case it is that very Patience of his, which in the issue works up unto that Fury: Laesa Patientia fit Furor. And then,

Page 169

6. He further warns them to consider, that in the execution of this Fury to the utmost, his Power comes to be engaged: The Lord is great in Power. And lastly, He will not at all acquit the Wicked, that lives and dies in his Sins: Which is a Clause or Proviso he still puts in, even when he speaks the greatest things of his Mercy. See Exod. 34. 6, 7.

And although the very reading this Description of God, as an Avenger, shews forth alone its own Dreadfulness, yet further to clear, and enlarge upon it, consider,

1. How it is Justice heightned by Wrath to a Fury, and all of these whet∣ting on, and drawing out the Greatness of Power. And to this purpose we find, as was observed, Power and Wrath joined, in Rom. 9. 22. and Psal. 90. Who hath known the Power of thine Anger? His Jealousy draws out his Strength, and his Power works in a way of Wrath. Take a Man, let his Blood, his Fury be up, and thereby all his Spirits ars inten∣ded and stirred, and he is able to strike a greater and heavier blow than at ano∣ther time. As Sampson in his Fury against the Philistims, he pulls down the Pillars of the House. Now bring this to God, and though his Power is

Page 170

the same, and not greater, when he exe∣cuteth Vengeance on his Enemies, than at all other times; yet being attributed to him after the manner of Men, it im∣ports to us something of Analogy, (whereby the working of his Power in such a case is set out) which it holds with what is in Men in the like case. And so shews, 1. That if ever he did or will upon any occasion, or can be supposed to shew forth Power and Strength, it will be in this, for he is in Fury; and in that Fury talks of the Greatness of his Power, which in Men in their Fury useth to be at the highest, and they shew forth their Strength in no Acts so much as those which they do in Fury.

2. That comparatively therefore unto other Works of his, wherein he shews forth Power, he is to be supposed to shew forth more of Power in this. Con∣sider therefore, if God shewed forth Power in creating the World, &c. Yet according to this Analogy, I may say of all those kind of Works whatever, (speaking after the manner of Men) that he did them cooly, as it were; but this he doth in Fury, and so may well be supposed to put forth more of Power in these, in that respect, than in those other.

Page 171

2. Avenging Wrath is more than sim∣ply Anger. A Man is angry with a Friend, and so is God often with his Children. And then he stirs not up all his Wrath, as Psal. 78. But the Butt and Mark, which Revenge shoots its Arrows at, is an Enemy, as both out of Nahum, and the 27th verse of this Chapter, was observed. And not only so, but such as are irreconcileable Enemies: for that is the state of Men in Hell, and the po∣sture of their Spirits there towards God, to be fixed in Malice. Now when Ven∣geance in God shall be extreme, who shall be able to bear it?

3. Justice hath a mixture of Pity mingled with it, but when 'tis a case of Revenge, there is a Decorum put upon the extremity of Justice. It is the revenge of an Injury. Which though in the Creature, who it self is a Subject of God's, (who only hath the Soveraignty of Power,) it is therefore in-glorious and unworthy, yet in God, who is the Supreme, in case of wrong and injury to himself, this hath a glory in it. Vengeance is mine, saith the Lord. No wonder then if it be termed Severity, Rom. 11. 23. and James 2. 13. expresly, Judgment without Mercy. And perhaps in that respect also it is, that, Rev. 14. 10. it is termed,

Page 172

Wrath without mixture, that is, pure Wrath which hath no mixture; Not a drop to cool ones Tongue. And again, Wrath to the uttermost, as 1 Thess. 2. 16. the Apostle speaks of that Wrath, which upon the Destruction of Jerusalem (the Type of the day of Judgment) befel that Nation. And so it is set forth in the Language of the Wrath at the great Day, as Grotius hath observed, which is Wrath to the uttermost. And as God is said to rest in his Love shewn to his Children; so his Wrath satisfies it self in accomplish∣ing Vengeance, Ezek. 7. 8, 9. I will ac∣complish mine Anger upon thee: and I will judg thee according to thy Ways, and I will recompence thee for all thine Abominations. And mine Eye shall not spare, neither will I have pity: I will recompence thee according to thy Ways, and thine Abominations that are in the midst of thee, and ye shall know that I am the Lord that smiteth. And therefore is often called a Sacrifice, as Mark 9. 49.

And this answers an Objection may be made. Did not David expresly choose rather to fall into the Hand of God than Man? 2 Sam. 24. 14. The answer is at hand in the same place, for his Mercies are great. That is David's Reason for it there. And so indeed the difference lies

Page 173

in chastising Anger, and avenging Wrath. And David there speaks of God's chasti∣sing his Children in this World, but in the World to come you see the case is al∣tered: It is the falling into the Hands of an Avenger, who in that execution pro∣fesseth to shew no Mercy: He that made them, will have no pity on them.

Lastly, consider how Wrath sets all that is in God against a Man, whets and shar∣pens the whole Activity of every Attri∣bute. What is the reason that in the Text when this dreadful execution is spoken of, the Attribute of the [living God] is mentioned rather than Power? &c. The Life of God speaks the whole of his Attri∣butes. The whole of his Nature and Godhead, as it is active and working: this Life imports. In Hell God draws out all his Forces, all his Attributes into the Field, whereof Wrath is the Leader and General. All his Perfections conspire either to stir up and enkindle Wrath, or to assist him in the Execution. How Power is drawn forth and intended I shewed afore. Wisdom, that marshals all into Order, sets both thy Sins in order in the view of thy Conscience, Psal. 50. 21. and sets his Terrors in Battel aray a∣gainst thee, 'tis Job's Expression, Chap. 6. 4. and the same Word in both places. And

Page 172

〈1 page duplicate〉〈1 page duplicate〉

Page 173

〈1 page duplicate〉〈1 page duplicate〉

Page 174

as it marshalls all, so whets on to Venge∣ance, Prov. 1. 25. Ye have set at naught all my Counsel, I will therefore laugh at your Calamity, I will mock when your fear cometh. 'Tis Wisdom speaks this, ver. 20. Be not deceived (says the Apostle) God is not mocked, Gal. 6. 7. it imports two things. 1. That Sinners think to illude and de∣ceive God. As what is it else to think to defer Repentance to the last, and then to come and flatter, and look to be sa∣ved, as if they had served him from the very first Moment of their Lives? they herein think to go beyond God. 2. That in such cases, God's Wisdom takes it and resents it to the height. Nothing adds unto Provocation more, in a Man that is Wise, than to perceive how another Man thinks to go beyond him, and impose up∣on his Wisdom. And it is Wisdom in a Man, that makes him he would not be mockt, deceived or trifled withal; this Principle riseth up in God's Heart, the Judg of all the World. Again, his Holi∣ness crys out to him against the Sinner: Thou art a pure God, and I can endure to behold no Iniiquty, and the Eyes of my Glo∣ry have been provoked by this Sinner con∣tinually. Then says Justice too, I must be satisfyed to the utmost Farthing, and have the last drop of Blood that is in their

Page 175

Souls; and this their Punishment execu∣ted on their own Persons, is all I shall have or can recover for all the dishonour hath been done thee. For Christ through their unbelief, hath not taken off one Farthing of their Debt, but all is left and remains upon their own Score. And I can no other way recover Glory, but by having it out of them: And therefore it is that an Eternity is required, because, but by an Eternity of Suffering, it is, that they can come to satisfy. Prov. 27. 20. Hell and Destruction are never full, or [satisfied] as the next Words shew the meaning to be. Then says Truth and Righteousness, their whole Lives have been contrary to my Love, the whole actings and the courses of them have been but a making a Lye, a Web of Hypocri∣sy, continually woven and vended. Rev. 22. 15. That love and make a Lye, and Rom. 3. 13. Their Tongues are full of falshood and deceit; and again, Give them their Portion with Hypocrites: whom of all else I hate, says Truth. Then boyls up Jea∣lousy, Every Creature hath been an Idol, and made their God, and set up in God's stead, and they have been enflamed with them (as of Idolaters the Prophet speaks.) Idols of Jealousy have all their Lusts been: and the Glory due to me hath been given

Page 176

to them. But you will say, will not Mercy at last speak a good Word for them? will it not allay and moderate all these? No, but turn as fiercely against them as any other Attribute, and plead, I indeed did a long while restrain all these other Attributes that were provok∣ed every Moment, [Whom God endured with much long suffering, says Rom. 9. 22.] And that they have lived so long free from Wrath, hath been by means of me; I waiting for their Repentance, which hath cost me Millions. I have spent Ri∣ches on them, in forbearance of them: All which now is to be reckoned to them in Wrath. You have it Rom. 2. 4, 5. They have despised the riches of his Goodness, and Forbearance, and long-Suffering, not know∣ing that the Goodness of God leadeth them to Repentance. But after their hardness and impenitent Heart, treasure up unto themselves Wrath, &c. And says Grace, I was pre∣sumed on, and made a stale to, and defen∣der of their Lusts; and was turned into Wantonness, Jude 4.

And thus all in God, is set (as it were) a Fire against a Sinner, and (as I may so speak) do turn all in him into fury. And look as to God's People all in God is as∣simulated into Love towards them, and they live in and dwell in Love, and see

Page 177

nothing else, as it were in God, but Love: God is Love (says the Apostle) namely, to his own, 1 John 4. 16. Nothing else appears; or rather all that is in him, ap∣pears in that Hue, under that Dye, with that Tincture. So here on the contrary, all in God is turned into Fury: Laesa patientia fit furor. Though he is not so of Himself: Fury is not in me, says he, Isa. 27. but Sin hath made him such.

§. VI.

A Fourth Head of Demonstrations: drawn from those Instances both of Good and Bad Men, their having suffered these kind of Terrors in this Life.

A Fourth Head of Demonstrations, is taken from the Instances given both of Good and Bad Men. Which In∣stances, as I then alledged to prove the immediateness of God's inflicting it: So now I shall from thence present some In∣ferences of the fearfulness hereof. Do but sit down a little with Job and Heman, who were the Instances of Good Men:

Page 178

Or go to that Roll which the Scrip∣tures have recorded of Cain and Judas, and others, or which Ecclesiastical Stories, or present Examples of our Age have af∣forded, of Men in Horror: weigh and perpend their crys and roarings, and con∣sider what a sad Spectacle such Instances afford.

1. Of Good Men: Heman I insisted in afore, and acquainted you with his Com∣plaints as sad as Man can utter: I reserved that of Job, specially for this Place, as I then professed. All the while that he had but Afflictions common to Men; and al∣though he was every way surrounded with them, as being visited with a loath∣som Disease, his Body fill'd with Dolours and Pains, his Children lost, Servants destroyed by Fire from Heaven; his E∣state quite gone unto an Extremity of Poverty; his Wife abhorring his Breath, and tempting him to Blasphemy: All this while the Text tells us Chap. 2. 10. That in all this did not Job sin with his Lips, but was quiet and patient, as the Holy Ghost in the New Testament takes notice of him, Jam. 5. You have heard of the Pati∣ence of Job. Well, but God himself in the end came in upon him with his im∣mediate Wrath. And now will you hear of his Impatience too? He was not prickt

Page 179

to the quick till now. But then he be∣gins to Curse the day of his Birth, Chap. 3. 1, 2, 3. and at that rate talks all along that Chapter. For brevity let us only consult, his Lamentations in Chap. 6. ver. 2, 3, 4. Oh that my grief were throughly weighed, and my Calamity laid in the Bal∣lances together, for now it would be heavier than the Sand, therefore my words are swal∣lowed up. The rest that follows, I shall add by and by. What was it caused this sudden out-cry and alteration in Job's Spirit, from that still and sedate frame we left him in before? What was it the thoughts of his lost Estate, Children, Wife's unkindness, or the Pains of his Bones and Body, &c. or his downfal from a petty Kingdom? Did these begin now at length so sadly to return upon him, so as in the end, his Spirit should begin to take them in, and lay them at length to Heart, which at first he in an holy Gallantry had made so light of? Oh no, he had fully concocted and digested all that had been occasioned from all or any of these, and had quieted himself with one or two good Cordials, namely, that the Lord hath given, and the Lord hath taken, and blessed be the Name of the Lord, Chap. 1. 21. And again, shall we receive good from the hand of the Lord and not evil?

Page 180

Chap. 2. 10. which had carried away all that Sorrow might have been stirring in him from these. What might be the matter then, that was the cause of these so high disturbances? The next Words ver. 4. do enform us, For the Arrows of the Almighty are within me, the Poyson whereof drinks up my Spirits; The Terrors of God do set themselves in Array against me. Let us go on duly to weigh and consider these Passages of his.

Heman, he in his Horrors had com∣plained, Psal. 88. 7. That God's Wrath lay hard or heavy on him, and says no more of it: But Job here, He in like manner feeling the like weight thereof, goes a∣bout to express how heavy, and how great the burthen was of his Grief, that was caused thereby. And he calls for a mighty Scale to weigh it in: Such a Scale as might be large enough to contain all the Sands of the Sea. Oh that my Grief were throughly weighed, and my Calamities laid in the Ballance together! for now it would be heavier than the Sand of the Sea. His meaning is, that to have his Grief and Calamity put in one of the Scales, and the Sand of the Sea in the other, his Ca∣lamity would be infinitely heavier. His invention was heightned by what he re∣ally felt: The greatness of it made him

Page 181

Eloquent. (For as Love, so deep sense of Misery useth so to do.) And he pitch∣eth, as you see, upon the weightiness of Sand, to express it by, which is of all things the weightiest, as Solomon tells us, Prov. 27. 3. A Stone is heavy, and the Sand is weighty. Yea, and the Sand of the Sea: which, take both, those Sands within the Sea at the bottom of it, and those also scattered without on the Shoar, they do make an immence bulk and body condensated, if they were ga∣thered together into one heap: (as the Waters were into one place, when God made the Sea.) Job had a most sublime Fancy, as the high strains of that whole Book shew: And this is in view a compa∣parison vast and great enough, (one would think,) as could be used. But yet further observe, how he breaks off that attempt of his, to express it by this or by any such comparisons, though in appear∣ance never so hyperbolical. Which breaking off, his next Speech utters: My Words (says he) are swallowed up! As a small thing is swallowed up of a greater, as a drop of the Ocean, as one small scattered Sand would be, in the bulk of all those Sands of the Sea, when cast in among them: So, were all these his vast expressions and comparisons he had

Page 182

used, although thus great; (which yet from all Rhetoricians, would have had the name of Hyperboles, far exceeding the reality.) But yet in his sense and feeling were swallowed up by the thing it self. I feel my Words fall short, says he: so Broughton paraphraseth on those Words. And therefore he cuts himself off from using any more or higher decipherings of it, of any kind, if any could have been found, as being all but meer Metaphors, too light, and holding no weight with that far exceeding weight of Misery, he felt (as the Apostle on the contrary, comparing present Afflictions and the Glory to come together, speaks) but Job here, he gives it clean over as a thing un∣expressible. And in stead of all Essays that way, he chooseth rather to speak and shew the Cause thereof the same, which I in this Treatise have endeavoured to do. And thereby he sets forth in a Reality, the dreadfulness of it indeed; And more than by all things whatever, that his Grief could have been compared unto. This you have in these Words. [For the Arrows of the Almighty, are with∣in me,] he had sores without, in his Bo∣dy; and Afflictions in his outward Man or Condition; Fears without, and Ter∣rors within: he complains not, that you

Page 183

hear of them at all. Oh but they are these Arrows that are within me, (says he) the Arrows of the Almighty. That is, which none but an Almighty Hand could shoot, and shoot so deep: such Arrows, as could come out of no other Forge or Quiver. The Soul of a Man is a Spirit of a vast depth, and God, and God alone can shoot up into it, unto the Arrow Head. And yet again, besides the strength of the Arm that shoots them, and the forkedness of the Arrows themselves, they were all, as Arrows that are dipt in Poy∣son, envenomed with the guilt of his Sins (which as Chap. 13. 23. & 26. God had now set on upon his Soul, Thou ma∣kest me possess the Sins of my Youth:) Thus it follows in the next Words, [And the Poyson thereof drinks up my Spirit.] They do not only let out the Spirits, (which Wounds made by other Arrows use to do) but they drink them up. The Strength and Violence of the Venom of them, had such an Efficacy on his very Soul, and the very Spirit and Life thereof, as they drank all up. Again it follows, [And the Terrors of God have set themselves in array against me.] God drew forth his Wrath (as it were) into an ordered Ar∣my, into Rank and File, at once to fall upon him. If one Man had an whole

Page 184

Army set against him, and each armed Man therein were to shoot a Bullet, or an Arrow into him at once; and if withal we could make the Supposition, that that Man should have his Life still re∣newed after each Wound given, so as never to dye; and yet they still to renew to shoot all at once every moment: how dreadful is this to any ones Thoughts thereof? but yet these are but Men, not God, whose Arrows he says these were. Oh that he would destroy me! (says Job) that is, kill me out-right, so ver. 8, 9. Oh that I might have my Request! and that God would grant me the thing that I long for! Even that it would please God to de∣stroy me, and that he would let loose his Hand, and cut me off. Well, But Job, canst thou not stir up thy Spirits and har∣den thy self against all these present Sor∣rows? The Spirit of Man will bear its In∣firmity, if it be steel'd with resolution. To this Job himself gives answer by way of preoccupation, to this effect: That if Death indeed, or a being utterly cut off, should come upon me with all that Host of Fears (whereof elsewhere Job tells us Death is the King) I could harden my self against that; yea, and to endure the pains of the most exquisite Tortures any kind of Death could inflict: if thereby

Page 185

God would thus cut me off. Then indeed (if such News of Death were brought me) I should yet have comfort; yea, I would harden my self in Sorrow. So ver. 10. And let it be the worst Death, he can put me to, for so it follows, let him not spare. Oh but they are these Arrows of his own within me, these I cannot bear. So ver. 12. Is my Strength the Strength of Stones, or my Flesh Brass? that I should be able to endure, and bear up my self a∣gainst these Encounters? Oh no. Read on those his Expressions further roared forth by him, in Chap. 16. ver. 12, 13, 14. He hath broken me asunder: he hath also ta∣ken me by the Neck, and shaken me to peices, and set me up for his Mark. His Archers compass me round about, he cleaveth my Reins asunder, and doth not spare; He poureth out my Gall upon the Ground. He breaketh me with breach upon breach; he runneth upon me like a Giant. What should I instance in more, or how to comment on them!

That which in the second place, is proper next to be done, is to provoke those that are secure Sinners, &c. and o∣thers also that are awakened, to raise but up their Thoughts from the Considerati∣on hereof, to infer and gather how dread∣ful this Punishment in Hell must be, a∣bove

Page 186

all, that these Dispensations can re∣present unto us. And this is most strong∣ly inferred from these Examples, whether they be the Examples of Good Men, as Job was; or bad Men, as Cain and Judas were, in both which I formerly instanced in. I shall make Inference from each of these apart, as in the first Section, I also did, in arguing from them, the immedi∣ateness, &c.

1. From these of good Men. If you consider that all these Terrors, wich Job and Heman endured from God, were yet all in Love, out of so solid and sub∣stantial a Love, permanent and abiding in God's Heart, all this while towards them; and that all these were but chasti∣sings of them for tryal, and to make them partakers of his Holiness. And besides, what manner of Anger was it towards them? It was but Anger, which Love stirred up: and those his Afflictions were accompanied and joyned, all with ever∣lasting kindness and thoughts of Peace all the while. According to that in Isa. 54. 8. In a little Wrath I hid my Face from thee, for a moment, but with everlasting kindness will I have mercy on thee, saith the Lord thy Redemer. Yea, those two known Cordial Recipes, so frequently made use of, and commonly taken by most Christians in

Page 187

their distresses; and cited by two Apo∣stles and Christ himself from Heaven, Happy is the Man whom God correcteth : Therefore despise not thou the chastning of the Almighty; were first spoken and directed unto this our Job, whilst in the midst of these Afflictions, in chap. 5. 17. And are par∣ticularly applyed to that his Condition, in the worst of it by the Holy Ghost, Jam. 5. 11. Yea and all this, that was upon Job, was in it self (how great soever it seemed to his sense) but the touch of God's little Finger, Job 1. 11. Oh think then how great will that Vengeance be, which is pure Wrath, Rev. 14. which is out of Fury, as was shewn: which is, the fiery Indignation of Patience abused; boyl'd up into Fury! This that befel them, is said to be but a little Wrath, and for a Moment. And yet (as also it is said Psal. 2. ult.) If God be angry but a little, who is able to abide it! then what will this last and extream Vengeance reserved for Hell be? These Chastisements of Job's and Heman's were in comparison of what awaits Men in Hell, but as Rods of Birch or Rushes, which we use to whip our Children withal, Psal. 89. 32, 33. Then will I visit their Transgressions with the Rod, and their Iniquity with Stripes: Neverthe∣less, my loving-kindness will I not utterly

Page 188

take from them, nor suffer my faithfulness to fail. These were all Rods of Mercies own gathering and making, the Stripes where∣of are not so deep, but they may be and were healed again, as in the same Book you also find it, chap. 5. 18. He maketh sore, and bindeth up; he woundeth, and his hands make whole: and so was Job in the Issue thus healed. And Heman likewise, and made thereby one of the wisest Men in the World. Yea, but these wherewith wicked Men in Hell are eternally lash'd and cut off, are Rods of Revenges making; Rods of Iron (as the Psalmist in that se∣cond Psalm speaks) to break them in pieces like a Potters Vessel, never to be set toge∣ther again or made whole. Again, those stroaks on the Children of God, are in measure, as Isa. 27. 7, 8. but of these in Hell, it may be, and is said, that Wrath cometh upon them without measure. Again, in the midst of these Corrections, he re∣members Mercy; but in this of Hell, there is Judgment without Mercy, Jam. 2. 13. In those other Stripes given his Chil∣dren, God himself is afflicted, and feels e∣very Stroak he gives them, as Jer. 31. 20. and Isa. 64. But in these in Hell, Vengeance and Justice do satisfy themselves in their deserved Dam∣nation. It is stiled a Sacrifice to him.

Page 189

Mark 9. 48, 49. compared, and elsewhere.

2. The same Inference, may be much more raised from those Instances given of bad Men, suffering in this Life the like Terrors, to these mentioned: If we but consider that when they fall and seize upon them in the greatest extremity, that yet then they are in comparison to what remains to them in Hell, but as the sip∣pings of the top of that Cup here, the Dregs whereof are reserved for them, there, to drink to the bottom, as Psal. 75. 8. In the Hand of the Lord there is a Cup, and the Wine is red: it is full of mix∣ture, and he poureth out of the same: but the Dregs thereof all the Wicked of the Earth shall wring them out, and drink them. Those Words he [poureth out of the same] and [but the Dregs thereof] are an opposition each to other; shewing how that in this Life, God promiscuously poureth forth the same from the upper part thereof, both upon good and bad. And that all that, is but the overflowings of what is uppermost; but the Dregs, the brackish bitter Stuff, is reserved for Hell. And the truth is, Men can bear but the sip∣pings thereof here. Should they drink but a little deeper, their Souls would be giddy, and reel out of their Bodies in a Moment. As the Joys of Heaven cannot

Page 190

be inherited by Flesh and Blood, so nor the Torments of the fulness of this Wrath. But in Hell their Bodies shall be nealed (as we speak of Glass) that they may endure this Fire. All the Terrors of Conscience here, are as is said of the Joys of the Saints, but the earnest-Pennies, Farthing-Tokens, in comparison to that great, immensely vast Treasure of Wrath to come, you have heard the Scriptures speak of. All here is but the Shadow of Death; and yet if that can wither Mens Souls so, what will the blackness of darkness do? as the Apostle speaks of this. The ut∣most threatned here, is, that The Anger of the Lord shall smoke against a Man, Deut. 29. It is but Smoke: but in Hell, it breaks forth into raging Flames of the fiercest Fires, that fill every Corner, and break out at all the Win∣dows of the Soul.

Page 191

§. VII.

The last Head of Demonstrations: That it is a falling into the Hands of the Living God: and what that further super adds to the dreadful∣ness of this Punishment.

THe fifth and last Head, which repre∣sents the dreadfulness of all this un∣to an infinity, is, that it is a falling into the Hands [of the living God,] The li∣ving God. The former exaggerations have been raised from falling into the Hands of the Great, Powerful, Just and Avenging God; but this further, of the Living God. Which of all other Attri∣butes, the Apostle hath singled forth to set out the dreadfulness of it by, and is therefore most of all to be heeded by us; as having as much weight in it, to the thing in Hand, as any of the other. [The Living God] notes out, not only God's Activity, and how the whole of his Life and Being is engaged and active in this Punishment (as was noticed)

Page 192

But further, both, that, 1. He shall execute this to Eternity, and 2. That during that whole space of Eternity, he will permanently continue, to inflict it. His being the Living God notes out 1. Eternity, 2. With a continuation of acting all that while: And so his being the Living God, both threatens and effe∣cteth, 1. an eternal, and 2. a continual Death in those that are the Subjects thereof. And to imply so much it is, that he hath that Denomination spe∣cially and so eminently given him here, when this Punishment is spoken of.

First, consider thy Soul is an immor∣tal Soul, as to the duration of it: and that this Great God is the Living God. And Sin in thee and the Injury of it to God is an eternal Stain, which Hell Fire cannot eat out, or satisfy God for, but in an Eternity of time. And therefore whilst God lives, and thou livest, he will inflict it on thee. That's one meaning.

Again, God's Life, as it is in himself a continual Act, so in its being attributed to him with respect to this Punishment, it imports his continued acting therein without cessation or intermission. For he doth it, as the Living God. Job, whilst he endured the Terrors of the

Page 193

Almighty, complains they were so un∣cessant, that God suffered him not to take Breath, Job 9. 18. he followed his Stroaks so thick, with one Breach (as he there speaks) upon another.

You have both these set forth in one and the same Scripture, Rev. 14. 10, 11. He shall drink of the Wine of the Wrath of God, and he shall be tormented with Fire and Brimstone in the presence of the Holy Angels, and in the presence of the Lamb: and the smoak of their Torment ascendeth up for ever and ever. And they have no rest Day nor Night. First, they have no rest Day nor Night; That shews they have no intermission. And then that the smoak of their Torment ascends up for ever, shews the Eternity. Yea and further, to strike out dull Hearts, with the sense of this Eternity, if one [ever] be not enough, another is added, [For ever and ever.] Which Eternity as you know, our Savi∣our is still careful to indigitate, when he speaks of Hell, in love and warning unto Mens Souls, that they might be moved by the moment thereof, to endeavour to escape it.

Now it being thus, this infinitely su∣peradds unto all the former. The for∣mer Heads have given Demonstration to us, wherein the substance of this great

Page 194

Punishment consists: And then comes in this, as the fatal and final rowling Stone upon the Grave or Sepulchre of Souls: And with the Grave, Hell is oft parral∣lel'd. Or these two imports thereof, are as two Mill-Stones hung about the Necks of those that are plunged into this Lake, to sink them down for ever: For these two things mentioned, do work in the Spirits of those that undergoe it, Perfect Fear: and perfect Despair. The Effects of both which make up a perfection of Misery in such a State.

1. Perfect Despair. Hope was given to reasonable and intelligent Natures (and in peculiar unto them) to be as a breathing hole in time of Misery, to keep up Life in such an one, whereby to sustain it self. And the reasonable Soul being in its duration Eternal, and having an Eternity of time to run through and sail over, hath this Priviledge (denied to Beasts) to take a prospect or fore-sight of time, that is yet to come, and if it can spy out any space or spot of time, in which it shall have happiness or ease, or out-live its Misery, it will not utterly die; yea it will harden it self against present Misery with this Thought, that however it shall not always be thus with me. But on

Page 195

the contrary here, by reason of this abi∣lity of fore-sight, it comes to pass, that a wretched Soul in Hell, viewing and turning over all the Leaves of Time to Eternity, both finds that it shall not out-live that Misery, nor yet can it find one space or moment of Time of Freedom and Intermission, having for ever to do with him who is the Living God. And then it dies and dies again, and sinks in∣to a Gulph of Despair, for the future, as well as it is swallowed up with present sense of Wrath.

2. Perfect Fear. Which these like∣wise cause, and keep up within that Soul; and that continually of all their Misery, that is yet to come. And the nature of Fear is, to out-strip a Man's Misery; and to take them up afore they come, as Hopes use to do our Com∣forts: So as by reason thereof, it comes to pass that the Soul is not only tor∣mented by what it at present feels, but with the thought of all that is to come; which still further strikes that Soul through and through. So as this Thought, that it will be with me thus for ever and ever, makes it compleatly miserable. Yea hereby, the Soul doth come all along in every in∣stant

Page 196

to endure and be possessed in Fears and Dreadful Apprehensions of all that Woe, that in Eternity is yet to come, as well as that at pre∣sent.

Notes

Do you have questions about this content? Need to report a problem? Please contact us.