None but the godly know the throne of grace.
The next thing that I am to handle is to show you that it is the privilege of the godly to distinguish from all thrones whatsoever this throne of grace. As I told you, I gathered this from the apostle in the text, for that he only maketh mention thereof, but gives no sign to distinguish it by; no sign, I say, though he knew that there were more thrones than it. 'Let us come boldly,' saith he, 'to the throne of grace,' and so leaves it, knowing full well that they had a good understanding of his meaning, being Hebrews (Heb 9:1-8). They are now also enlightened from what they were taught by placing the ark of the testimony and the mercy-seat in the most holy place, of which, in particular, the apostle did then count it, not of absolute necessity, distinctly to discourse. Indeed the Gentiles, as I have showed, have this throne of grace described and set forth before them, by those tokens which I have touched upon in the sheets that go before—for with the book of Revelation the Gentiles are particularly concerned—for that it was writ to churches of the Gentiles; also the extraordinary things prophesied of there relate unto Gentile-believers, and to the downfall of Antichrist, as he standeth among them.
But yet, I think that John's discourse of the things attending the throne of grace were not by him so much propounded, because the Gentiles were incapable of finding of it without such description, as to show the answerableness of the antitype with the type; and also to strengthen their faith, and illustrate the thing; for they that know, may know more, and better of what they know; yea, may be greatly comforted with another's dilating on what they know. Besides, by the word doth, the Holy Ghost always gives the perfect description of things; therefore, we should have recourse to complete our knowledge. I mean not, by what I say, in the least to intimate, as if this throne of grace was to be known without the text, for it is that that giveth revelation of Jesus Christ: but my meaning is, that a saint, as such, has such a working of things upon his heart, as makes him able by the Word to find out this throne of grace, and to distinguish it to himself from others. For,
First, the saint has intense guilt of sin upon his conscience, especially at first; this makes him better judge what grace, like grace, is, than others who are not sensible of guilt. What it was to be saved was better relished by the jailor when he was afraid of and trembled at the apprehensions of the wrath of God than ever it was with him all his life before (Acts 16:29-33). Peter then also saw what saving was, when he began to sink into the sea: 'Lord, save me,' said he, I perish (Matt 14:30). Sin is without a sense of which a man is not apprehensive what grace is. Sin and grace, favour and wrath, death and life, hell and heaven, are opposites, set off, or out, in their evil or good, shame or glory, one by another. What makes grace so good to us, as sin in its guilt and filth? What makes sin so horrible and damnable a thing in our eyes, as when we see there is nothing that can save us from it but the infinite grace of God? Further, there seems, if I may so term it, to be a kind of natural instinct in the new creature to seek after the grace of God; for so saith the Word, 'They that are after the flesh, do mind the things of the flesh; but they that are after the Spirit, the things of the Spirit' (Rom 8:5). The child by nature nuzzles in its mother's bosom for the breast; the child by grace does by grace seek to live by the grace of God.
All creatures, the calf, the lamb, &c., so soon as they are fallen from their mother's belly, will by nature look for, and turn themselves towards the teat, and the new creature doth so too (1 Peter 2:1-3). Guilt makes it hunger and thirst, as the hunted hart does pant after the water brooks. Hunger is directed to bread, and thirst is directed to water; yea, it calls bread and water to mind. Let a man be doing other business, hunger will put him in mind of his cupboard, and thirst of his cruse of water; yea, it will call him, make him, force him, command him, to bethink what nourishing victuals is, and will also drive him to search out after where he may find it, to the satisfying of himself. Talk to such a one sets the stomach and appetite a craving; yea, into a kind of running out of the body after this bread and water, that it might be fed, nourished, and filled therewith. Thus it is by nature, and thus it is by grace; thus it is for the bread that perisheth, and for that which endureth to everlasting life. But,









