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works, that they may be rooted out, destroyed, and have place in us no more. This shall certainly be brought about by the death of Christ; there will virtue go out from thence to this purpose. Indeed all supplies of the Spirit, all communications of grace and power are from hence, as I have elsewhere shewed. Thus the apostle states it; Rom. vi. 2. is the case proposed that we have in hand; How shall we that are dead in sin live any longer therein?' Dead to sin by profession; dead to sin by obligation to be so; dead to sin by a participation of virtue and power for the killing of it; dead to sin by union and interest in Christ, in and by whom it is killed; how shall we live therein? This he presses by sundry considerations, all taken from the death of Christ, in the ensuing verses. " This must not be: ver. 3. Know you not that so many of us as were baptized into Jesus Christ were baptized into his death?' We have in baptism an evidence of our implantation into Christ; we are baptized into him; but what of him are we baptized into an interest in? His death, saith he; if indeed we are baptized into Christ, and beyond outward profession, we are baptized into his death. The explication of this, of one being baptized into the death of Christ, the apostle gives us, ver. 4. 6. Therefore we are buried with him by baptism into death; that like as Christ was raised up from the dead by the glory of the Father, even so we also should walk in newness of life. Knowing this, that our old man is crucified with him that the body of sin might be destroyed, that henceforth we should not serve sin.' This is, saith he, our being baptized into the death of Christ; namely, our conformity thereunto. To be dead unto sin, to have our corruptions mortified, as he was put to death for sin; so that as he was raised up to glory, we may be raised up to grace and newness of life. He tells us whence it is that we have this baptism into the death of Christ, ver. 6. and this is from the death of Christ itself; Our old man is crucified with him, that the body of sin might be destroyed;' ovVEσTavρún, 'is crucified with him;' not in respect of time, but causality; we are crucified with him, meritoriously, in that he procured the Spirit for us, to mortify sin; efficiently,

z Communion with Christ, chap. 7, 8.

in that from his death virtue comes forth for our crucifying, in the way of representation and exemplars we shall assuredly be crucified unto sin, as he was for our sin. This is that the apostle intends; Christ by his death destroying the works of the devil, procuring the Spirit for us, hath so killed sin, as to its reign in believers, that it shall not obtain its end and dominion.

Then act faith on the death of Christ, and that under these two notions: First, In expectation of power; secondly, In endeavours for conformity". For the first, the direction given in general may suffice; as to the latter, that of the apostle may give us some light into our direction; Gal. iii. 1. Let faith look on Christ in the gospel as he is set forth dying and crucified for us. Look on him under the weight of our sins, praying, bleeding, dying: bring him in that condition into thy heart by faith; apply his blood so shed to thy corruptions; do this daily. I might draw out this consideration to a great length, in sundry particulars, but I must come to a close.

I have only then to add the heads of the work of the Spirit in this business of mortification, which is so peculiarly ascribed to him.

[2.] In one word: this whole work which I have described as our duty, is effected, carried on, and accomplished by the power of the Spirit, in all the parts and degrees of it; as

1st. He alone clearly and fully convinces the heart of the evil and guilt and danger of the corruption, lust, or sin to be mortified. Without this conviction, or whilst it is faint, that the heart can wrestle with it, or digest it, there will be no thorough work made. An unbelieving heart (as in part we have all such) will shift with any consideration, until it be over-powered by clear and evident convictions: now this is the proper work of the Spirit, he convinces of sin;' John xvi. 8. he alone can do it; if men's rational considerations, with the preaching of the letter, were able to convince them of sin, we should, it may be, see more convictions than we do. There comes by the preaching of the word and appre

a Philip. iii. 10. Col. iii. 3. 1. Pet. i. 18.
b 1 Cor. xv. 31. 1 Pet. i. 16. v. 1, 2. Col. i. 3.

hension upon the understandings of men that they are sinners, that such and such things are sins, that themselves are guilty of them; but this light is not powerful, nor doth it lay hold on the practical principles of the soul, so as to conform the mind and will unto them, to produce effects suitable to such an apprehension. And therefore it is, that wise and knowing men, destitute of the Spirit, do not think those things to be sins at all, wherein the chief movings and actings of lust do consist. It is the Spirit alone that can do, that doth this work to the purpose. And this is the first thing that the Spirit doth in order to the mortification of any lust whatever; it convinces the soul of all the evil of it; cuts off all its pleas, discovers all its deceits, stops all its evasions, answers its pretences, makes the soul own its abomination, and lie down under the sense of it. Unless this be done all that follows is in vain.

2dly. The Spirit alone reveals unto us the fulness of Christ for our relief, which is the consideration that stays the heart from false ways, and from despairing despondency; 1 Cor. ii. 8.

3dly. The Spirit alone establishes the heart in expectation of relief from Christ; which is the great sovereign means of mortification, as hath been discovered; 2 Cor. i. 21.

4thly. The Spirit alone brings the cross of Christ into our hearts, with its sin-killing power; for by the Spirit are we baptized into the death of Christ.

5thly. The Spirit is the author and finisher of our sanctification; gives new supplies and influences of grace for holiness and sanctification, when the contrary principle is weakened and abated; Eph. iii. 16-18.

6thly. In all the soul's addresses to God in this condition, it hath supportment from the Spirit. Whence is the power, life, and vigour of prayer? Whence its efficacy to prevail with God? Is it not from the Spirit? He is the Spirit of supplication promised to them, 'who look on him whom they have pierced,' Zech. xii. 10. enabling them to pray with sighs and groans that cannot be uttered;' Rom. viii. 16. This is confessed to be the great medium or way of faith's prevailing with God. Thus Paul dealt with his temptation,

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whatever it were; I besought God that it might depart from me. What is the work of the Spirit in prayer, whence, and how it gives us in assistance, and makes us to prevail, what we are to do that we may enjoy his help for that purpose, is not my present intendment to demonstrate.

€ 2 Cor. xii. 8,

OF

TEMPTATION:

THE

NATURE AND POWER OF IT;

THE

DANGER OF ENTERING INTO IT;

AND

THE MEANS OF PREVENTING THAT DANGER:

WITH

A RESOLUTION OF SUNDRY CASES

THEREUNTO BELONGING.

Because thou hast kept the word of my patience, I will also keep thee from the hour of temptation, which shall come upon all the world, to try them that dwell upon the earth.--REV. iii. 10.

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