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A03343 CLII lectures vpon Psalme LI preached at Ashby-Delazouch in Leicester-shire / by that late faithfull and worthy minister of Iesus Christ, Mr. Arthur Hildersam. Hildersam, Arthur, 1563-1632. 1635 (1635) STC 13463; ESTC S122925 1,242,509 854

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will do nothing because they have no love unto nor care of the soules of poore sinners whether they sinke or swim but say in their hearts with Cain Genes 4.9 Am I my brothers keeper Or as the chiefe Priests to Iudas Mat. 27.4 What is that to us see thou to that Secondly they will do nothing because there is in their heart no hatred of any sin A certaine signe of an ungracious heart Psal. 36.4 He abhorreth not evill Thirdly They will do nothing because there is in them no love to God nor zeale to his glory Ps. 97.10 Ye that love the Lord hate evill For thus standeth the stipulation and contract betweene God and his people that are in covenant with him God bindeth himselfe on his part that he will be a friend to our friends and an enemy to our enemies Exod. 23.22 I will be an enemy to thine enemies and an adversary to thine adversaries So doe Gods people for their part bind themselves to God that they will love them that he loveth and hate them that he hateth Psal. 139.21 22. Doe not I hate them O Lord that hate thee and am I not grieved with those that rise up against thee I hate them with a perfect hatred I count them mine enemies Fourthly and lastly They will do nothing to further the punishment of lewd men because they have no faith to beleeve Gods word threatnings that these sins being winked at unpunished will bring Gods curse and judgments upon the whole town upon the whole land What made the king people of Nineveh so zealous in reforming their land Ion. 3.8 Let every man turne from his evill way from the violence that is in his hands The reason is given ver 5. The people of Nineveh beleeved God that which hee had threatned against the land by the ministery of Ionah And what made good Iosiah so zealous in reforming his land 2 Chr. 34.33 He tooke away all the abominations out of all the countryes that pertained to the children of Israel The reason is given verse 27. That when he had heard what curses God in his law had threatned against the land for such sins his heart was tender and he did humble himselfe before God he undoubtedly beleeved Gods word and threatning And doubtlesse on the other side the infidelity and atheisme that is in mens hearts is the cause why no man sheweth any zeale gainst sin no man seeketh to have it punished Lecture XXXVII on Psalme 51.3 Octob. 17. 1626. THe second sort that are to be reproved by this doctrine are such as having authority to enjoyne publike repētance to scandalous sinners for the satisfying of the congregation when they are detected presented unto them refuse or neglect to do it This reproofe I will be briefe in because they that offend in this kind are not here present to heare me Yet it is profitable for you to heare somewhat of it that you may take notice of one chiefe cause why sin so aboundeth every where be affected with it and pray heartily unto God for the reformation of this great evill We see that now adayes this publike acknowledgement of scandalous sins in the congregation is almost grown quite out of use And this fault is imputed by some to our whole Church to the discipline of it but they are to blame and do great wrong to our Church that judge and speake so The Canons of our Church Can. 26. straitly charge every minister that he shall not in any wise admit to the communion any of his flocke which bee openly knowne to live in sin notorious without repentance And the booke of common prayer in the Rubricke before the communion commandeth that if any be an open and notorious evill liver so that the congregation by him is offended the minister shall call him and advertise him in any wise not to presume to the Lords table till he hath openly declared himselfe to have truly repented that the congregatiō may therby be satisfied which were asore offended So that you see the lawes and discipline of our Church require that open scandalous sinners should do open publike repentance yea give power to the minister to repell keep back such from the communion that refuse to doe it Where is the fault then may you say Surely in the covetoūsnes corruption of those officers that are put in trust with the execution and exercise of the discipline of our Church who when they seeke themselves only not the reformation of any thing that is a misse amōg Gods people and by their illegall commutations of repentance doe neglect the use of publike repentance in the Church of God Of such that abuse the trust cōmitted to them by our Church to their owne gaine wee may justly complaine as the Lord doth Hosea 4.8 They eate up that is feed on and live by the sinnes of Gods people and lift up their soule as it is in the originall that is earnestly desire and long after for so much that phrase signifieth as we shall find Ier. 22.27 Deut. 24.15 unto their iniquities They earnestly desire that sin may increase among the people that so their fees and gaine may increase See the foulnesse of the sins of these men in three points First They sin against God and his glory in being a chiefe cause of the increase of sin in all places and consequently that religion thriveth not the best preaching that is doth so little good in any place When the Lord speaketh of the great care and paines hee tooke to make his Vineyard and Church fruitfull hee saith Esay 5.2 hee fenced it and gathered out the stones thereof If Gods Vineyard have no fence but every swine and dog may approach to the holy things of God to the Sacraments and priviledges of Gods people without restraint if these stones of offence these scandalous sinners be not taken out how should the Lords Vineyard be fruitfull unto him Certainly the neglect of discipline is the cause why these stones doe multiply as they doe why sin doth so increase in all places For the hope of impunity hath great force to encourage and embolden men in sin Ecclesi 8.11 Because sentence against an evill worke is not executed speedily therefore the heart of the sonnes of men is fully set in them to doe evill and for pecuniary punishment it hath no such force to reforme them and bring them unto repentance at least to restraine from sin as the bringing of them to open shame hath It is open punishment of which the Lord speaketh so oft in his law Deut. 22.21.22 24. and elsewhere oft so shalt thou put away evill from among you And this is noted for a chiefe use and benefit of Magistrates Iudg. 18.7 to put to shame for sin Fill their faces with shame saith David Psal 83.16 that they may seeke thy name O Lord. Secondly Those that against intent of Law and Canon privily compound for mens
that he looked for no comfort Therefore is this oft mentioned as the justest and soundest ground of all true comfort Comfort yee comfort yee my people saith your God it is the Lords speech to his servants and messengers Esa. 40.1 2. speake ye comfortably to Ierusalem How should we do that may Gods servants say Cry unto her that her warrefare is accomplished that her iniquity is pardoned No sound comfort can be had till then and when once that is knowne nothing can make a mans state uncomfortable So speaketh our Saviour to the poore man that had the palsie when he saw him dejected in mind and uncomfortable he saith not sonne be of good comfort thy palsie hath left thee thou that couldst not have come hither if foure men had not brought thee Marke 2.3 shalt be able to take up thy bed and walke home without any helpe but how doth he comfort him Matth. 9.2 Sonne be of good comfort thy sinnes are forgiven thee So when he would comfort Mary Magdalene that was so full of trouble of mind and sorrow that she was able with her teares to wash his feet Luke 7.38 he saith unto her vers 48. Thy sinnes are forgiven thee As if he had said thou hast no such cause to weep so thou hast cause to be comfortable and cheerefull for thy sins are forgiven This peace of God that is the comfort and joy that riseth from the knowledge of the pardon of our sins and reconciliation with him is said Phil. 4.7 to passe all understanding No heart can conceive how comfortable and blessed a thing that is but that which hath felt and enjoyed it Thirdly The man that truly knoweth what sin is desireth and longeth after nothing so much as the pardon of his sin is not so earnest and importunate with God in any suit as in this If God should now have said to David as after he did unto his sonne Solomon 1. Kings 3.5 Aske what I shall give thee Certainly this should have beene his petition Lord that my sins may be forgiven yea see how earnest he is here with God for this To such men Christ who is our propitiation and only meanes to procure and purchase our pardon is pretious as the Apostle speaketh 1. Pet. 2.7 To you that beleeve he is precious yea so precious that in comparison of him and of Gods favour through him they esteeme basely of every thing else Phil 3.8 I do count all things but dung that I may win Christ. Fourthly and lastly The man that truly knoweth what sin is thinks he hath even enough when he hath gotten his pardon though God should deny him all things else and saith of it as Iacob when he was sure Ioseph was still living Gen. 45.28 It is enough Yea he counts himselfe to be a happy man if once he have obtained this So we see David here maketh this his only suit and saith in another place that this is enough even to make a man happy Psalm 32.1 2. Blessed is the man whose transgression is forgiven whose sinne is covered blessed is the man unto whom the Lord imputeth not iniquity Nothing can make that man miserable whose sins are forgiven Now the reasons and grounds of this Doctrine are principally two being taken from the true and sound consideration of the nature of sinne And for the nature of it we will goe no further then to that description that David maketh of it in these two verses and to those two comparisons whereby he doth here resemble it First he compareth sin to debt in these words verse 1. Blot out my transgressions Our sins are our debts as our Saviour teacheth us to call them and account of them in the fift petition of the Lords prayer Matth. 6.12 Forgive us our debts First The obedience God requireth of us in his Law is no more but just and due debt we are bound and ought to performe it and in case we performe it not the penalty and curse which the law inflicteth is most justly due unto us We stand bound to performe either the one or the other To this obligation every mans conscience hath set his hand and seale and will acknowledge it and say Amen unto it one day God requireth in his Law that so soone as his people should come into the land of Canaan the curses of this law this bond and obligation should be read in the hearing of them all men women children and that all of them should say Amen to it Deut. 27.26 Cursed is he that confirmeth not all the words of this Law to doe them and all the people shall say Amen The copy and counterpane of this bond betweene God and us every man hath in his owne conscience which will acknowledge it to be most true and just as the Apostle speaking even of heathen men saith Rom. 2.15 which shew the worke of the Law written in their hearts Secondly These debts of ours though we be apt to forget yet the Lord will never forget The Lord hath sworne by the excellency of Iacob saith the Prophet Amos 8.7 Surely I will never forget any of their works Hee keepeth a debt booke wherein he hath set downe in writing every one of them Esa. 65.6 Behold it is written before me And our owne conscience also scores up every one of our sinnes and sets downe the time and place when and where we committed them and so came into Gods debt further and further And though it be like a sealed and clasped booke for a time that we cannot looke into it which maketh us thinke wee are little or nothing in Gods debt yet these bookes will one day bee opened Revelation 20.12 I saw the dead small and great stand before God and the bookes were opened and the dead were judged out of those things which were written in the Bookes according to their workes and then it will appeare our debt bookes agree fully with Gods debt bookes our scores with his scores According as the Apostle saith Rom. ●15 ●6 that the consciences of men shall beare witnesse with God in the day when God shall judge the secrets of men by Iesus Christ. Thirdly These debts of ours if we get not in time a discharge and Qui●● est from them will be exa●t●d every one o● them at our hands The Lord I tell you is such a creditor as will looke to have his owne Eccles. 1.9 Know thou that for all these things God will bring thee to judgement And 1● 14 The Lord shall bring every worke into judgement with every secret thing whether it be good or evill Fourthly these debts of ours are growne to such a huge summe as we are never able to satisfie and pay them and therefore they are compared to a debt of ten thousand talent● Matth. 18.24 a summe which there was never any merchant or King in the World so rich as was able to pay it Fiftly Now consider well of this reason To an honest
by any authority of man hee did open penance and made publike and particular acknowledgement of his sin Matth. 2● 3 4. but hee never had the grace to goe to God in secret and lay open his sins before him Secondly This publike confession of sin to a congregation is not of that absolute necessity that secret confession unto God is So that though we may boldly say no man hath truly repented nor can hope to find mercy with God that confesseth no● his sins unto God Prov. 28.13 Hee that covereth his sins shall not prosper but who confesseth and forsaketh them shall have mercy Yet can we not say but many a one whose sins have beene publike and notorious to the congregations where they have lived have truly repented of these sins and obtained assurance of the pardon of them though they never made publike confession of them unto the Church The sins of that woman of whom wee read Luke 7. were publike and notorious all the towne where she lived tooke notice what the lewdnes of her life had bin as appeareth verse 37.39 and that woman certainly did repent as appeareth by the teares that she out of love to Christ shed so aboundantly verse 38. and she attained also to sound assurance of the pardon of her sins for our Saviour giveth his word for that verse 48. and verse 50. telleth her her faith had saved her and biddeth her goe in peace Yet we find not that either she ever made publike confession to the congregation or that our Saviour enjoyned either her or that woman taken in adultery Iohn 8.11 or Zacheus Luke 19.9 or any other penitent sinner that he did convert to goe and make this publike confession of their sins which doubtlesse hee would have done if this had bin of absolute necessity and that without it there could bee no true repentance nor comfortable assurance gotten of the pardon of such publike and notorious sins Thirdly It is not fit and expedient that any should make or offer himselfe to make this publike confession of his sinne in the congregation that is not required to doe it by the discipline of the Church For all things in the Congregation should bee done decently and in order 1 Cor. 14.40 And there are masters of the assemblies appointed of God Ecclesi 12.11 according to whose direction all things are to be ordered that are done in the publike assemblies and not according to the spirit and devotion of any private man And this may seeme to be the reason why our Saviour enjoyned not this publike confession unto those notorious sinners I told you of before because through the extreame corruption of those times and neglect of the discipline of the Church it was not required but growne out of use in those dayes All this notwithstanding the point I taught you doth remaine a certaine and undoubted truth that they whose sins are publike and notorious scandalous and offensive unto the congregation ought to be willing to confesse their sins publikly when they shall bee required to doe it by the discipline of the Church yea I say more they ought to desire that they may doe it they should desire to make their repentance as publike and notorious as their sinnes have beene The truth of this will appeare 1. By the practise of sundry of Gods servants 2. By the reasons that moved them to do it and upon which this their practise was grounded And for the first we have the example first of three publike persons two great Kings and an Apostle such as of all others were most bound to be tender of their reputation and good name such as because they were subject to no superiour power that could enjoyne it unto them tooke it upon themselves and did voluntarily make publike acknowledgements of their sins to the Church of God David was one of these Kings whose example we have in this Psalme And Solomon his son was another who after hee had fearefully and scandalously fallen made the booke called Ecclesiastes wherein hee doth as publikely professe his repentance to the whole Church as his father did in this Psalme The Apostle that did thus was blessed Paul who doth oft take occasion publikely to confesse his sinne This hee did before a great multiude Acts 22.4 I persecuted this way unto death binding and delivering into prisons both men and women Thus hee did againe in every solemne audience before Festus and Agrippa Actes 26.11 I punished them oft in every Synagogue and compelled them to blaspheme and being exceedingly mad against them I persecuted them even unto strange Cities Thus hee did againe in that Epistle hee wrote unto the Corinthians 1 Corinthians 15.9 I am not worthy to bee called an Apostle because I persecuted the Church of God And in that to Timothy 1 Tim. 1.13.15 I was a blasphemer and a persecutor the chiefe of all sinners You see he cared not 1. How many witnesses he had of his confession and repentance 2. Nor what manner of persons they were great or small good or bad friends or enemies 3. He thought he could never make this publike confession too often 4. Nor that he could disgrace himselfe too much in it or speake too odiously of his sin And these are the three publike persons I told you of Wee have also an example of a private person which though it bee not of so great authority as the other three yet it is in this respect as fit as any of them to give us direction in this case because he made his publike profession of his repentance being enjoyned to doe it by the authority of the Church or rather by authority of the Apostle who gave order to the Church in this case by that Divine Commission and warrant hee had received from God This man I speake of was the incestuous person in Corinth who being for his scandalous sin censured excommunicated by the Church according to that direction the Apostle gave 1. Cor. 5.4 did give that satisfaction to the Church by the profession of his repentance as the Apostle was faine to intreat them to forgive and receive and comfort him as you may see 2. Cor. 2.6.8 Now the reasons that have moved Gods people thus to publish their repentance even before men for their publike and scandalous sins have bin principally three They have done it 1. Out of a respect unto God 2. Out of a respect unto themselves 3. Out of a respect unto other men First They have done this out of a respect unto God and his glory whom by their sin they have dishonoured This reason Ioshuah pressed Achan with Ioshuah 7.19 when he perswaded him to make open confession of his sin not onely to the Lord but also to him and to the whole congregation My sonne I pray thee give glory to the Lord God of Israel For as by our sinnes wee dishonour God specially by the sins committed in the Church 2 Samuel 12 14. and the more open
out-casts bewray not him that wandereth What out-casts meaneth hee Let mine out-casts dwell with thee Moab be thou a covert to them from the face of the spoyler Let all men therefore take heede what oathes they take let no man thinke himselfe tyed in conscience to doe any thing that is evill because he hath bound himselfe by an oath to doe it but when a man hath bound himselfe by his oath to doe that that is lawfull as to detect to present to those in authority such as hee knowes to bee offendors let him take heed how hee breake that oath Every lawfull oath is a great bond unto the conscience Numb 30.2 If a man sweare an oath to binde his soule with a bond David maketh this one of the speciall markes to know him by that shall goe to heaven Psal. 15.4 He that sweareth to his owne hurt and changeth not Though after he hath taken his oath he shall perceive that the keeping of it will procure him such enemies as may doe him much hurt yet dareth he not change his minde but will keepe his oath And Solomon maketh this a speciall note of a godly man that he feareth an oath Eccles. 9.2 which words are not to be understood of private and voluntary oathes onely but chiefely of those oathes that are taken before a magistrate for they are the greatest and heaviest oathes a godly man is afraid of such oathes afraid to take them and afraid to breake them when he hath taken them See a notable example of this both in Abrahams servant who asmuch as he loved and respected his master before he would take the oath that his master ministred unto him is carefull first to know and consider with himselfe whether he might be able to keepe it or no Gen 24 5-9 And in those spies that Ioshuah sent to view Iericho who would not bind themselves by oath to Rahab rashly though shee had saved their lives till they got her consent to such an interpretation and to limit it with such conditions as they might bee able to keepe it Iosh. 2.17.21 See also an example of this feare to breake their oath after they had taken it Iosh. 9.20 And alas if this bee a note to know a godly man by how few godly men have we then in these dayes What cause have we to complaine with David Psalme 12.1 Helpe Lord for there is not a godly man left How many oathes are ministred daily to Churchwardens Constables jurors and witnesses at every Assise and Sessions in every Court Baron and Leet in every Commission whereby men bind themselves to doe things that are lawfull enough yea oft such as tend much to Gods glory and the good of the Common-wealth and no man regardeth them any more then the taking up of a straw they thinke it is no more then the laying on the hand and kissing of the booke Tush thinks every man the taking of these oathes is a matter of nothing all my neighbours have taken them before me and made no reckoning of them O but remember that the holy Ghost saith hee that hath any goodnesse in him will feare these oathes And there is great reason for it An oath is not to be estemed of according to the matte● wherein it is taken which in our account may seeme somtime triviall and small nor according to the person of the man unto whom or before whom it is taken though whatsoever the person be that ministreth the oath unto us the authority to minister an oath is derived to him from the supreame magistrate but according to the greatnesse and dreadfull majesty of God in whose name and before whom in a speciall manner for the magistrate is his Deputy and in his stead 2 Chron. 9.8.19 6. Rom. 13.4 and the judgement and course of justice is the Lords Deutero 1.17 the oath is given Therefore an oath specially taken by a magistrate is called an oath of the Lord Exodus 22.11 1 Kings 2.43 For every oath hath a curse implyed in it And the Hebrew word Alah that signifieth an oath signifieth a curse also an oath with a curse Therefore it is said of Gods people when they bound themselves by an oath Nehemiah 10.29 they entred into a curse and into an oath to walke in Gods Law So Iudges 21.18 The children of Israel had sworne saying Cursed bee hee that giveth a wife to Benjamin When you therefore take an oath specially before a magistrate you wish that if it bee not true which you speake in an oath assertory if you performe not that which you speake in an oath promissory Gods curse may light upon you and pursue you And bee you sure of this that if you performe not your part God will performe his if you doe not that which you bind your selves to do by your oath God will bring that curse upon you which you have wished to your selves as hee did bring upon the Iewes that curse which they wished to themselves Matthew 27.25 All the people said his bloud bee upon us and upon our children and his bloud wee see hath lyen heavy upon all that people and nation ever since When Zedekiah had broken his oath to the King of Babylon see what the Lord saith of him Ezekiel 17.15 Shall hee prosper Shall hee escape that doth such things Shall hee breake the covenant and bee delivered And verse 18. Seeing hee despised the oath hee shall not escape Know you therefore that these oathes which you make so light account of will lye heavy upon you one day They will bring Gods curse into your houses Zachary 5.4 I will bring foorth the curse saith the Lord of hostes and it shall enter into the house of him that sweareth falsely by my name and it shall remaine in the midst of his house and shall consume it with the timber thereof and the stones thereof Yea these oathes so commonly taken and broken in all places have brought and will further bring Gods curse upon the whole land Iere. 23.10 Because of swearing the land mourneth And thus have I finished the first part of my answer to this objection and shewed you that they that by office and oath are bound to enquire and present to the magistrate these lewd offendors and do it not are chiefly guilty of their sins But now for the second part of my answer I say that these are not only guilty of the blasphemies and whoredoms drunkennes wherby God is dayly dishonored provoked amongst us but this contagion is spread farther then so there are very few or none of you that have not this way drawn upon your selves the guiltines of these sins made them your own because you have neglected to do that that in you lieth to bring these offendors to open shame punishment Notable good lawes have beene made of late yeeres against swearing breach of the Sabbath and drunkennes but they do little or no good at all because nobody wil have any hand
to be good for thee he will be a sheild to thee when the evill day shall come In the time of trouble he will hide thee in his pavillion as David speaketh Ps. 27.5 When a thousand shall fall at thy side and ten thousand and at thy right hand as the Prophet speaketh Ps 91.7 he can so hide thee that the judgement shall not touch thee Thus he did hide diverse when he sent his destroying Angell to smite the city and other parts of the land with the pestilence and thus he can hide thee when he shall send his destroying Angell to smite our land with the bloudy sword if it please him Nay thus he will hide thee if he shall see that good for thee he will be a sheild unto thee Pro. 2.7 He is a buckler to them that walke uprightly But if he will not be a sheild he will certainely be a sunne unto thee he wil be a comforter to thee in that day Vnto the upright there ariseth light in the darknesse saith the Prophet Psal. 112.4 As when there was palpable darkenesse in all the land of Egypt all the children of Israel had light in their dwellings Exod. 10.23 So in times of greatest misery and perplexity that shall come upon the land certainely God will be a sunne to them that walke uprightly to the upright there shall arise light in darkenesse they shall find comfort in God even in that day yea more then then ever before Thus you have seene how God will doe good to them that are upright in heart in outward things But that is not all he will be better to them then so he will do good to them also in spiritual things Three speciall blessings of this kind hee hath promised them First Such shall never fall away nor loose his favour and grace O continue thy loving kindnesse saith the Prophet Psal. 36.10 and a propheticall prayer hath the nature of a promise as I told you before unto them that know thee and thy righteousnesse to the upright in heart And Psal. 112.6 Surely he shall not be moved for ever Thou art oft much disquieted with the feare of this that thou shalt never be able to hold out to the end thou fearest that thou maist fall that thou shalt fall before thou dyest labour to be upright in heart and God will continue his loving kindnesse unto thee he will love thee to the end surely thou shalt never be moved Though the seed was lost upon all the other three sorts of hearers though they all fell away and lost those beginnings of grace they had received yet he that had an honest and good heart as our Saviour speaketh Luke 8.15 he kept it If thy heart be not ●ound thou that makest profession of the truth with greatest forwardnesse and zeale maist become a Papist before thou diest and a persecuter of that truth which thou now professest and thou that seemest to be most reformed and sanctified in thy life maist prove a most profane and debaushed man The Prophet speaking of those Israelites that perished in the wildernesse who though they had made a most zealous profession as you may read Deut. 5.27 Speake thou unto us all that the Lord our God shall speake unto thee and wee will heare it and doe it yet afterward became some of them grosse Idolaters some of them beastly adulterers the Prophet I say giveth the reason of this Psal. 78.37 why they were not more stedfast in his covenant for their heart saith he was not right with him and verse 8. They were a generation that set not their heart aright and whose spirit was not stedfast with God even then when they made the best shewes their heart was never right Thou canst not be sure to be preserved from any sinne how foule soever it be and how much soever thy heart seemeth now to abhorre it pay thou shalt be sure to fall fearefully one way or other if thy heart be not upright 2 Chron. 12.14 He did evill because hee prepared not his heart to seeke the Lord that was the cause of all Rehoboams lewdnesse he professed the true religion and made excellent shewes of goodnesse for three yeares 2 Chron. 11.17 but he fell fearefully hee had no care of his heart his heart was never right The Apple that is rotten at the Core though it seeme never so beautifull will quickly putrifie and so will every professour that is unsound at the heart But if thy heart be upright feare not certainely thou shalt hold out and persevere to the end Secondly Such as are upright in heart shall have strength given them of God to endure any tryall he shall be pleased to bring them unto The eyes of the Lord saith the Prophet Hanani 2 Chron. 16.9 run to and fro throughout the whole earth to shew himselfe strong in the behalfe of them whose heart is perfect towards him When thou thinkest of the fiery triall that all Gods people may be brought unto thou tremblest much and fearest that so weake a wretch as thou art shall never be able to endure it But looke thou to thy heart that that be upright and sound and certainely though thou be so weake God will shew himselfe strong in thee when that triall shall come What a measure of strength and courage shall we find in the booke of Martyrs that a number of weake and simple women and children did shew in the time of that fiery triall More a great deale it is to be feared then would bee found now if the like triall should come Wee have much more knowledge now then they had but they had better hearts then we have Feare not thine owne weaknesse if thy heart be upright For as it is not any strength that is in thee that can make thee stand in such a triall In his owne might shall no man be strong saith Anna in her song 1 Sam. 2.9 if ever we be strong at such a time it must be in the Lord onely and in the power of his might as the Apostle speaketh Ephes. 6.10 so the sense we have of our owne weakenesse is no hinderance to the Lords strengthening of us but a furtherance unto it rather His power is made perfect in weakenesse 2 Cor. 12.9 As if he had said it useth to shew it selfe most in them that have most sense of their owne weakenesse Out of weakenesse saith the Apostle of the Martyrs in the time of Antiochus Hebrewes 11.34 they were made strong Thirdly and lastly Such as are upright in heart shall be sure to have a comfortable issue and a joyfull deliverance out of all their tentations Marke the perfect man saith David Ps 3● 37 and behold the upright for the end of that man is peace Thou art oft subject to grievous tentations and spirituall desertions that maketh thy life wearisome and burdensome unto thee Thy well-be●oved is gone thou hast no sense of Gods favour Thou art apt to say with Zion Esa 49.14
foure principally First The regenerate sinne against greater meanes of knowledge and obedience then other men doe and therefore their sinnes are greater more heinous and odious unto God then the sinnes of other men True it is that all wicked men doe sin against the meanes and that is that that doth aggravate the sinne of every man and will make him inexcusable as the Apostle speaketh Rom. 1.20 that he sinneth against the meanes God hath given him to keepe him from sinne But Gods people that live in his Church in the valley of vision as the Prophet calleth it Esa. 22.1 under the ministery of the Gospell enjoy farre greater and stronger meanes then all other men do For that is the power of God unto salvation as the Apostle calleth it Rom. 1.16 And proportionable to the greatnesse and excellency of the meanes that God vouchsafeth to any to keepe him from sinne is the greatnesse and heinousnesse of his sinne in the sight of God All men shall find one day that even the having of a sound ministery of the Word whether they profit by it or profit not even the having of such meanes will greatly increase the heinousnesse of their sinnes Whether they will heare or whether they will forbeare saith the Lord Ezek. 2.5 yet they shall know that there hath beene a Prophet among them As if he should say They shall know what it is to have had excellent meanes and not to be bettered by them So saith our Saviour of the Iewes that enjoyed his ministery Iohn 15.22 If I had not come and spoken unto them they had not had sinne that is their sinne had beene nothing in comparison of that that now it is but now they have no cloke no excuse for their sinne And for this cause he saith Mat. 11.24 that it should be more tolerable for Sodom in the day of judgement then for Capernaum The sinnes of Capernaum were more heinous and odious unto God then the sinnes of Sodom because they were committed against greater and stronger meanes then the other were Secondly The regenerate sinne against greater knowledge then other men doe and therefore their sinnes are greater and more heinous then other mens are True it is that all wicked men doe sinne against their knowledge and conscience for by the light of nature they know many things that they doe to be evill Iohn 1.9 Rom. 2.15 And this sinning against their knowledge and conscience is that that greatly increaseth the sinne of every naturall man Because knowing the judgement of God that they that commit such things are worthy of death saith the Apostle Rom. 1.32 yet they not onely doe the same but have pleasure in them that doe them This shall stop the mouth of all iniquity as the Psalmist speaketh Psal. 107.42 at the day of Iudgement when the bookes of conscience shall bee opened and men shall be judged according to that that is written therein Revel 20.12 But all that live in the Church sinne more against knowledge sinne against a farre greater light then any other man doth The light men have by nature is but a dimme light they that seeke God by that light do but grope after him as the Apostle speaketh Acts 17.27 The word is a farre clearer light and they that are instructed by it have a farre clearer knowledge then by any other meanes a man can have The commandement is a lamp saith Solomon Pro. 6.23 and the law is light And yet they that are inwardly inlightned by the spirit of God as all the regenerate are have a farre clearer light and knowledge of God then any man can have that enjoyeth the outward light of the word onely when in the hidden part the Lord hath made a man to know wisedome as David speaketh here For though the word be a most cleare light yet every naturall man hath such a vaile over his heart as he cannot cleerely discerne it but when the heart is once turned to the Lord and converted as the Apostle teacheth 2 Cor. 3.15 16. that evill is taken away The regenerate mans knowledge is farre greater and clearer then any other mans can bee and consequently his sin must needs be also greater then any other mans For the greater measure and degree of knowledge that any man hath the greater is his sin To him that knoweth to do well and doth it not saith the Apostle Iam. 4.17 to him it is sin What and to no body els yes but not so much to any other sin shall not be imputed and laid so heavy to the charge of any man as to him that hath sinned against his owne knowledge and conscience If you were blind saith our Saviour Iohn 9.41 ye should have no sinne that is nothing so much sin so hainous sin as now ye have The servant that knoweth his Lords will saith our Saviour Luke 12.47 and prepared not himselfe nor did according to his will shall bee beaten with many stripes And no marvell for all sins against knowledge are in some degree presumptuous sins and are committed with an higher hand and in more direct contempt of God then other sins are as appeareth by that opposition that is made betweene sins of ignorance and presumptuous sins both in Numb 15.27.30 and Psal. 19.12 13. Thirdly The regenerate sin against greater mercy and kindnesse they have received from God then other men do and therefore their sins are greater and more hainous then the sins of other men True it is there is no wicked man but he hath received much mercy and kindnesse from God The Lord is good to all saith the Psalmist Psalme 145.9 and his tender mercies are above all his workes And his sinning against this goodnesse and mercy of God is that that greatly increaseth the sin of every wicked man and will much aggravate his condemnation This is that that treasureth up wrath unto them against the day of wrath as the Apostle speaketh Rom. 2.4 5. But the mercies and kindnesses that God hath shewed to any wicked man are nothing if they be compared with that which he hath shewed to every regenerate soule They are but common mercies they are but as the crummes that fall from their masters table as that poore woman speaketh Matth 15.27 Remember mee ô Lord saith David Psalme 106 4 with the favour that thou bearest unto thy people The Lord hath shewed another manner of favour and love to his owne people he hath done more for the poorest wretch that is regenerate he hath given him more then all the world besides Hee hath given them his owne sonne To us a sonne is given Esa. 9.6 He hath given them a full and free pardon of all their sinnes Thou hast forgiven the iniquity of thy people thou hast covered all their sinne saith David Psalme 85.2 Hee hath given them his holy spirit Because yee are sonnes saith the Apostle Gal. 4.6 God hath sent forth the spirit of his son into your hearts He will give them the