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cry out at last of its vanity and vexation Men promise themselves a heaven upon earth; but when they come to enjoy it, it flies from them. He that has any regard to the work of the Lord, may easily see, that the very end of them is to take down our idols, to make us weary of the world, and seek our rest in him. Where does he cross us most, but where we promise ourselves most content? If you have a child you dote upon, it becomes your sorrow. If you have a friend you trust in, and judge unchangeable, he becomes your scourge. Is this a place or state of rest? And as the objects we here enjoy are insufficient for our rest, so God, who is sufficient, is here little enjoyed. It is not here that he hath prepared the presence-chamber of his glory. He hath drawn the curtain between us and him. We are far from him as creatures, and farther as frail mortals, and farthest as sinners. We hear now and then a word of comfort from him, and receive his love-tokens, to keep up our hearts and hopes; but this is not our full enjoyment. And can any soul that hath made God his portion, as every one hath that shall be saved by him, find rest in so vast a distance from him, and so seldom and small enjoyment of him? Nor are we now capable of rest, as there is a worthiness must go before it. Christ will give the crown to none but the worthy. And are we fit for the crown, before we have overcome? or for the prize, before we have run the race? or to receive our penny, before we have worked in the vineyard? or to be rulers of ten cities, before we have improved our ten talents? or to enter into the joy of our Lord, before we have well done as good and faithful servants? God will not alter the course of justice to give you rest before you have laboured, nor the crown of glory till you have overcome. There is reason enough why our rest should remain till the life to come. Take heed then, Christian Reader, how thou darest to contrive and care for a rest on earth; or to murmur at God for thy trouble and toil, and wants in the flesh. Doth thy poverty weary thee? thy sickness, thy bitter enemies, and

unkind friends? It should be so here. Do the abominations of the times, the sins of professors, the hardening of the wicked, all weary thee? It must be so, while thou art absent from thy rest. Do thy sins, and thy naughty distempered heart, weary thee? Be thus wearied more and more. But under all this weariness art thou willing to go to God thy rest? and to have thy warfare accomplished? and thy race and labour ended? If not, complain more of thy own heart, and get it more weary, till rest seem more desirable.

§ 17. I have but one thing more to add, for the close of this chapter,-that the souls of believers do enjoy inconceivable blessedness and glory, even while they remain separated from their bodies. What can be more plain than those words of Paul, We are always confident, knowing that whilst we are at home, or rather sojourning, in the body, we are absent from the Lord, (jor we walk by faith, not by sight.) We are confident, I say, and willing rather to be absent from the body, and be present with the Lord?(d) Or those, I am in a strait betwixt two, having a desire to depart, and to be with Christ, which is far better?(e) If Paul had not expected to enjoy Christ till the resurrection, why should he be in a strait, or desire to depart? Nay, should he not have been loth to depart upon the very same grounds? for while he was in the flesh, he enjoyed something of Christ.-Plain enough is that of Christ to the thief; "To-day shalt thou be with me in paradise."(f)-In the parable of Dives and Lazarus, it seems unlikely Christ would so evidently intimate and suppose the soul's happiness or misery presently after death, if there were no such matter.(g) Our Lord's argument for the resurrection supposes, that, God being not the God of the dead, but of the living, (h) therefore Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, were then living in soul.-If the blessedness of the dead that die in the Lord,(i) were only in resting in

(d) 2 Cor. v. 6, 8.
(g) Luke xvi. 19, 31.

(e) Phil. i. 23.
() Matt. xxii. 32.

(f) Luke xxiii. 43. (i) Rev. xiv. 13.

the grave, then a beast or a stone were as blessed; nay, it were evidently a curse, and not a blessing. For was not life a great mercy? Was it not a greater mercy to serve God and to do good, to enjoy all the comforts of life, the fellowship of saints, the comfort of ordinances, and much of Christ in all, than to lie rotting in the grave? Therefore some farther blessedness is there promised.-How else is it said, We are come to the spirits of just men made perfect?(k) Sure, at the resurrection, the body will be made perfect as well as the spirit. Does not scripture tell us, that Enoch and Elias are taken up already? and shall we think they possess that glory alone? Did not Peter, James, and John, see Moses also with Christ on the mount? yet the scripture saith, Moses died. And is it likely that Christ deluded their senses, in showing them Moses, if he should not partake of that glory till the resurrection?-And is not that of Stephen as plain as we can desire, Lord Jesus receive my spirit? (I) Surely, if the Lord receive it, it is neither asleep, nor dead, nor annihilated; but it is where he is, and beholds his glory.-That of the wise man is of the same import; The spirit shall return unto God who gave it.(m) Why are we said to have eternal life; and that to know God is life eternal; and that a believer on the Son hath everlasting life? or how is the kingdom of God within us? If there be as great an interruption of our life, as till the resurrection, this is no eternal life, nor everlasting kingdom.-The cities of Sodom and Gomorrah are spoken of as suffering the vengeance of eternal fire.(n) And if the wicked already suffer eternal fire, then no doubt but the godly enjoy eternal blessedness.-When John saw his glorious revelations, he is said to be in the spirit, and to be carried away in the spirit.(o) And when Paul was caught up to the third heaven, he knew not whether in the body or out of the body.(p) This implies, that spirits are capable of these glorious things, without the help of their bodies.-Is not so much implied when John says, I

(k) Heb. xii. 22, 23. (n) Jude ver. 7.

(Acts vii. 59.
(0) Rev. i. 10. iv. 2.

(m) Eccl. xii. 7.

(p) 2 Cor. xii. 2.

saw under the altar the souls of them that were slain for the word of God?(q)—When Christ says, Fear not them that kill the body, but are not able to kill the soul,(r) does it not plainly imply, that when wicked men have killed our bodies, that is, have separated the souls from them, yet the souls are still alive?-The soul of Christ was alive when his body was dead, and therefore so shall be ours too. This appears by his words to the thief, To-day shalt thou be with me in paradise; and also by his voice on the cross, Father, into thy hands I commend my spirit.(s) If the spirits of those that were disobedient in the days of Noah were in prison,(t) that is, in a living and suffering state; then certainly the separate spirits of the just are in an opposite condition of happiness. Therefore, faithful souls shall no sooner leave their prisons of flesh, but angels will be their convoy; Christ, with all the perfected spirits of the just, will be their companions; heaven will be their residence, and God their happiness. When such die, they may boldly and believingly say, as Stephen, Lord Jesus, receive my spirit! and commend it, as Christ did, into a Father's hands.

(9) Rev. vi. 9.
(s) Luke xxiii. 46.

(r) Matt. x. 28.
() 1 Pet. iii. 19, 20..

CHAP. V.

The great Misery of those who lose the Saint's Rest.

§ 1. The reader, if unregenerate, urged to consider what the loss of heaven will be. § 2. (I.) The loss of heaven particularly includes, 3. (1) The personal perfection of the saints; 4. (2) God himself; § 5. (3) All delightful affections towards God; § 6. (4) The blessed society of angels and glorified spirits. § 7. (II.) The aggravations of the loss of heaven:

8. (1) The understanding of the ungodly will then be cleared; 9. (2) also enlarged; § 10. (3) Their consciences will make a true and close application; § 11. (4) Their affections will be more lively; § 12-18. (5) Their memories will be large and strong. § 19. Conclusion of the chapter.

§ 1. IF thou, Reader, art a stranger to Christ, and to the holy nature and life of his people, who are before described, and shalt live and die in this condition, let me tell thee, thou shalt never partake of the joys of heaven, nor have the least taste of the saints' eternal rest. I may say, as Ehud to Eglon, I. have a message to thee from God;(u) that as the word of God is true, thou shalt never see the face of God with comfort. This sentence I am commanded to pass upon thee; take it as thou wilt, and escape it if thou canst. I know thy humble and hearty subjection to Christ would procure thy escape; he would then acknowledge thee for one of his people, and give thee a portion in the inheritance of his chosen.-If this might be the happy success of my message, I should be so far from repining, like Jonah, that the threatenings of God are not executed upon thee, that I should bless the day that ever God made me so happy a messenger. But if thou end thy days in thy

(u) Judges iii. 90

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