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2. He is also a King, by many unquestionable titles: by nature and birth, as the only Son of God, &c.; by divine designation and appointment, for God hath made him Lord and Christ, &c.: also by merit and purchase, &c. This topic enlarged on.

3. He is likewise a Priest, and that much above an ordinary one: he hath obtained a more excellent function, says the Apostle to the Hebrews, than any other priest had this head dilated on.

IV. The consideration of these things ought to beget in us a practice answerable to the relations between him and us, grounded thereon.

If Jesus be such a Prophet, we must with docile mind hearken to his admonitions, believe his doctrine, and obey what he teaches.

If he be a King, we must hold fast our due allegiance to him, pay him reverence, and submit to his laws, &c. If he be a Priest, we must with sincere faith and hope apply ourselves unto him for, and rely on, his spiritual ministry in our behalf, &c.

In short, if Jesus be Christ, let us be Christians; Christians, not only in name, but in very deed and reality, &c. Conclusion.

And in Jesus Christ, &c.

SERMON XX.

THAT JESUS IS THE TRUE MESSIAS.

JOHN, CHAP. V.-VERSE 37.

And the Father himself, which hath sent me, hath borne witness of me.

JESUS, our Lord, here and in the context doth affirm that Almighty God, his Father, had granted unto him several kinds of extraordinary attestation, sufficient to convince all well-disposed persons, unto whom they shall be discovered, that he truly was that Messias, whom God before all beginning of time had designed, and frequently by his prophets had promised to send for the reformation of the world and salvation of mankind : to represent those several ways of divine attestation with some reflexions on them, serving both to the confirmation of our faith, and improving our affection and our reverence thereto, is my chief design at this time.

But first, in preparation to what we shall say concerning those particulars, and for declaration of the divine wisdom in this manner of proceeding, I shall assign some reasons why it was requisite that such attestations should be afforded to our Lord.

1. The nature of the Messias's office required such attestations; for since he was designed to the most eminent employment that ever was or could be committed to any person; since

he was to reveal things no less great and important than new and strange; since he was to assume a most high authority unto himself; since he was to speak and act all in the name of God; since also all men under great penalties were obliged to yield credit and obedience to him, there was great reason that God should appear to authorise him; that he should be able to produce God's hand and seal to his commission; for that otherwise he might have been suspected of imposture; his doctrine might have been rejected, his authority disclaimed, and his design frustrated, without great blame, or however without men's being convincible of blame: for well might the people suspect that person, who, professing to come in such a capacity an extraordinary agent from heaven, brought no credentials thence, (no evidence of God's especial favor and assistance ;) well might they reject that new doctrine, which God vouchsafed not by any signal testimony to countenance; well might they disclaim that authority, which offering to introduce so great innovations (to repeal old laws, to cancel settled obligations, to abolish ancient customs; to enact new laws and rules, exacting obedience to them from all men) should not be able to exhibit its warrant, and show its derivation from heaven: well might such peremptory assertions and so confident pretences, without confirmations answerable in weight, beget even in wise men distrust and aversation. The reasonableness and excellency of his doctrine, the innocence and sanctity of his life, the wisdom and persuasiveness of his discourse would not, if nothing more divine should attend them, be thoroughly able to procure faith and submission; they would at best have made his precepts to pass for the devices of a wise man, or the dictates of a good philosopher. They were therefore no unreasonable desires or demands (if they had proceeded from a good meaning, and had been joined with a docile and tractable disposition) which the Jews did make to our Lord; 'Master, we would see a sign from thee; what sign therefore dost thou do, that we may see, and believe thee? what dost thou work? what sign dost thou show to us, that thou doest these things?' that is, how dost thou prove thy doctrine credible, or thy authority valid, by God's testimony and warrant? This challenge our Lord himself acknowleged somewhat

reasonable; for he not only asserts the truth of his doctrine and validity of his commission by divine attestation, (in words and works,) nor only exhorts them to credit him on that account, but he also plainly signifies that his bare affirmation did not require credit, and that if he could produce no better proof, they were excusable for disbelieving him: 'If,' saith he, 'I witness of myself, my witness is not true;' not true, that is, not credible; or not so true, as to oblige to belief: and, ‘If I do not the works of my Father, (that is, works only imputable to God's extraordinary power,) believe me not;' that is, I require no belief from you: yea, he farther adds, 'If I had not done the works among them, which no man else had done, they (the incredulous people then) had not had any sin;' that is, had not been culpable for unbelief. It was then from the nature of the Messias's office and undertaking very necessary that he should have attestations of this kind; and our Lord himself, we see, declines not, but aggravateth his pretences with this necessity.

2. The effects which the Messias was to produce did require extraordinary attestations and assistances from God. He was to achieve exploits of the greatest difficulty conceivable; far surpassing all that ever was by any person undertaken in the world before he was to vanquish all the powers, and to confound all the policies of hell; he was to subdue and subjugate all the world; to make the greatest princes to stoop, and to submit their sceptres to his will; to bring down the most haughty conceits, and to break down the most stubborn spirits, and to tame the wildest passions of men; he was to expel from their minds most deeply rooted prejudices, to banish from their practice most inveterate customs, to cross their most violent humors, to thwart their interests, to bear down their ambitions, to restrain their covetous desires and their voluptuous appetites; he was to persuade a doctrine, and to impose a law, very opposite to the natural inclinations, to the current notions, to the worldly advantages, the liberties, emoluments, and enjoyments of all, or of most, or of many people; he was, in short, so to reform the world, as in a manner quite to alter the whole frame of it, and all the course of affairs therein; things which surely it were a madness to enterprise, and an impossibility to accom

plish, without remarkable testimonies of the divine presence, especial aids of the divine power, and large influences of the divine Spirit, communicated to him; without, as St. Peter phraseth it, God were with him ;' these things were not effectible by means natural and ordinary, by human wit or eloquence, by good behavior or example, by the bare reason or plausibility of doctrine, by the wise conduct or industrious management of the design; no, such means have by many experiments appeared insufficient to bring about much lesser matters; nothing under the wisdom of God directing, the power of God assisting, the authority of God establishing and gracing his endeavors in an eminent and evident manner, could enable the Messias to bring these mighty things to pass.

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3. We farther consider that the Christ' was designed to present himself first to the Jews, (in the first place impart ing the declarations of God's will and gracious intentions to them, his ancient friends and favorites;) that is, to a people wholly addicted to this sort of proof, and uncapable of conviction by any other: they did not, as did the Greeks, seek wisdom,' but required a sign,' as St. Paul observed of them they were not so apt to inquire after the intrinsic reasons of things, as to expect testimonies from heaven; nothing else was able to persuade them; so our Lord expressly saith; 'Jesus said unto them, If you do not see signs and prodigies, you will nowise believe :' in consequence of which disposition in them, we see by passages in the New Testament that they expected and believed the Messias should come with such attestations and performances; so their importunate demanding of signs on all occasions from our Lord doth signify, and so those words in St. John do imply; And many of the people believed on him, and said, When Christ cometh, will he do more miracles than these, which this man doeth?' where we may observe both their expectation of miraculous works from the Messias, and the efficacy which such works had on them. The condition also of the Gentiles, unto whom his design in the next place did extend, seemed to require the same proceedings: for all other methods of instruction and persuasion had before often been applied to them by philosophers and by politicians, for instilling their notions and recommending their laws; they

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