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A26892 A Christian directory, or, A summ of practical theologie and cases of conscience directing Christians how to use their knowledge and faith, how to improve all helps and means, and to perform all duties, how to overcome temptations, and to escape or mortifie every sin : in four parts ... / by Richard Baxter. Baxter, Richard, 1615-1691. 1673 (1673) Wing B1219; ESTC R21847 2,513,132 1,258

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your help or liberty to do it afterward when that once or few times doing it were like to hinder you from doing it any more it would be your duty then to forbear it for that time unless in some extraordinary case For even for the life of an Oxe or an Asse and for Mercy to mens bodies the rest and holy work of a Sabbath might be interrupted much more for the souls of many Again I warn you as you must not pretend the interest of the end against a peremptory absolute command of God so must you not easily conclude a command to be absolute and peremptory to that which certainly contradicts the End nor easily take that for a Duty which certainly is no means to that good which is the end of duty or which is against it Though yet no seeming aptitude as a means must make that seem a duty which the prohibition of God hath made a sin § 26. Direct 15. It is ever unseasonable to perform a lesser duty of Worship when a greater Direct 15. should be done Therefore it much concerneth you to be able to discern when two duties are inconsistent which is then the greater and to be preferred In which the Interest of the end must much direct you that being usually the greatest which hath the greatest tendency to the greatest good § 27. Direct 16. Pretend not one part of Gods Worship against another when all in their Direct 16. place and order may be done Set not Preaching and Praying against each other nor publick and private Worship against each other nor internal Worship against external but do all § 28. Direct 17. Let not an inordinate respect to man or common custome be too strong a byas to Direct 17. pervert your judgements from the Rule of Worship nor yet any groundless prejudice make you distaste that which is not to be disliked The errour on these two extreams doth fill the World with corruption and contentions about the Worship of God Among the Papists and Russians and other ignorant sort of Christians abundance of corruptions are continued in Gods Worship by the Majus fidei impedimentum ex inve●era●â consuetudine proficiscitur Ubique consuetudo magnas vires habet sed in barbaris longe maximas quippe ubi rationis est minimum ibi consue●udo radices profundi●●imas agit In omni natura motio eò diuturnio● ac vehemen●ior quo magis est ad unum determina●a Ios. Acosta de I●d l. 2. p. 249. meer power of custome tradition and education and all seemeth right to which they have been long used and hence the Churches in South East and West continue so long overspread with ignorance and refuse reformation And on the other side meer prejudice makes some so much distaste a prescribed form of Prayer or the way of Worship which they have not been used to and which they have heard some good men speak against whose judgements they highlyest esteemed that they have not room for sober impartial reason to deliberate try and judge Factions have engaged most Christians in the World into several parties whereby Satan hath got this great advantage that instead of Worshipping God in Love and Concord they lay out their zeal in an envious bitter censorious uncharitable reproaching the manner of each others Worship And because the interest of their Parties requireth this they think the interest of the Church and Cause of God requireth it and that they do God service when they make the Religion of other men seem odious when as among most Christians in the World the errours of their modes of Worship are not so great as the adverse parties represent them except only the two great crimes of the Popish Worship 1. That it 's not understood and so is See Bishop Ier. Tailours late Book against Popery souleless 2. They Worship bread as God himself which I am not so able as willing to excuse from being Idolatry Judge not in such cases by passion partiality and prejudice § 29. Direct 18. Yet judge in all such Controversies with that reverence and charity which Direct 18. is due to the universal and the Primitive Church If you find any thing in Gods Worship which the primitive or universal Church agreed in you may be sure that it is nothing but what is consistent with acceptable Worship For God never rejected the Worship of the primitive or universal Church And it is not so much as to be judged erroneous without great deliberation and very good proof We must be much more suspicious of our own understandings § 30. Direct 19. In circumstances and modes of Worship not forbidden in the Word of God affect Direct 19. not singularity and do not easily differ from the practice of the Church in which you hold Communion nor from the commands or directions of your lawful Governours It 's true if we are forbidden with Dan. 3. Act. 4. 17 18. 5. 28. Daniel to Pray or with the Apostles to speak any more in the name of Christ or are commanded as the three witnesses Dan. 3. to Worship Images we must rather obey God than man and so in case of any sin that is commanded us But in case of meer different modes and circumstances and order of Worship see that you give authority and the consent of the Church where you are their due § 31. Direct 20. Look more to your own hearts than to the abilities of the Ministers or the Ceremonies Direct 20. or manner of the Churches Worship in such lesser things It is Heart-work and Heaven-work that the sincere believer comes about and it is the corruption of his heart that is his heaviest burden which he groaneth under with the most passionate complaints A hungry soul enflamed with Love to God and man and tenderly sensible of the excellency of common truths and duties would make up many defects in the manner of publick administration and would get nearer God in a defective imperfect mode of Worship than others can do with the greatest helps When Hypocrites find so little work with their Hearts and Heaven that they are Jam. 3. 15 16 17. taken up about words and forms and ceremonies and external things applauding their own way and condemning other mens and serving Satan under pretence of Worshipping God CHAP. III. Directions about the Christian Covenant with God and Baptism § 1. THough the first Tome of this Book is little more than an explication of the Christian Covenant with God yet being here to speak of Baptism as a part of Gods Worship it is needful that I briefly speak also of the Covenant it self § 1. Direct 1. It is a matter of great importance that you well understand the nature Direct 1. of the Christian Covenant what it is I shall therefore here briefly open the nature of it and then speak of the Reasons of it and then of the solemnizing it by Baptism and next of our Renewing it
47. r. Caranza's p. 923. l. 8. r. Magirus l. 18. r. * Scho●cri p. 924. l. 7. r. 〈◊〉 l. 20. r. W●s●m●●cius l. 23. r. Colonius l. 42. r. Croyus p. 925. l. 20. r. Polydo ● l. 28. r Me●ap● * Exercitat p. 926. l. 2. r. Hi●o● of * Antinorians l. 5. r. * Po●●lington l. 8. r. G●rson Bucers p. 927. l. 32. 33. r. * S●ho●t●ji l. 34. ● * Do●●cer●lliu● l. 36. r. ●abritius Hildanus l. 42. r. U●i● p. 928 l. 10. for Hood r. * Ford l. 15. r. Heb. The third Chapter is mis-titled from p. 72. to 127. Also p. 510 523 772 802 and in Part 4. p. 12 176. PART 4. Ep. to the Reader p. 2. l. 2. r. here say p. 11. l. 3. r. pars im●●rans p. 16. Sect. 31. l. 8. r. very thing that p. 1● l. 23. r. in a night p. 32. l. 18. r. ●us u●lu● p. 33. Sect. 88. l. 7. r. tyrannicida p. 41. Sect. 7. l. 13. r. ●ontemn●r●t p. 47. Sect. 4. l. 9. del the● of p. 50. Sect. 4. l. 20. r. Co●●c●●nce from p. 80. Sect. 2. l. 1● r. unnec ssary to oc asion p. 87. l. 10. r. yo●●●●lai● p. 92. l. 11. r calleth p. 97. Sect. 4. l. 5. r. our own p. 99. Sect. 20. l. 6. r. Wa●● p. 106. l. 17. r. co●●●●i●e for l. ●2 del But l. 46. r. your p. 118. Sect. 27. l. 5. del the Law of p. 120. l. 36. r. i● * ye ●● p. 13● l. 22. r. * l●ss 〈◊〉 p. 139. Sect. 15. l. 18. r. was taken p. 162. l. 12. r. Take heed that their p. 165. l. 20. for in hypothesi r. * s●p●ositively p. 170. l. 4. r. better than p. 178. l. 3. r. that is l. 16 17. r. ●amiliarity l. antep r. we all p. 182. l. 2. r. is th●●●● l. 64. del you p. 197. l. 34. r. difficulty in the case whi h l. 58. r. me if I tell In the MARGIN p 4. l. ult r. dubitare p. 7. l. 54. r. * clamoribus l. 55. r. * perderet elementum p. 10. l. pen. r. I●do●um p. 70. l. antep r. Velocissimum mens p. 143. r. nostra ●oeda l. pen. r. amando cum p 207. r. 〈◊〉 p. 211. l. 〈◊〉 r supposuit ibid. r. subito p. 227. r. * si● alia nihil ibid. r. cum * m●tis p. 231. r offici●s p. 307. l. 2. r. * f 〈…〉 p. 354. r. Nullane p. 306. l. antep r. Vid● p. 402 r. resistat ibid. r. viscera ibid. t●●pior●s ibid. r. last b●i●g p. 〈◊〉 r. p●●●●o●o habamur p. 371. ● d●sperare p. 587. r * g●mitibus p. 700. l. pen ult r. * Fundamentum p. 715. l. ult r. 〈◊〉 1● Annot. b p. 745. l. antep r. binc atque inde l. pen. r. Nosse illum PART 4. p. 7. l. pen. r. regi poterit p. 8. l. 7. r. so●titi sunt p. 13. l. antep r. Quod mi●im● p. 21 l. antep si inter A Christian Directory THE FIRST PART CHRISTIAN ETHICKS OR DIRECTIONS FOR THE Ordering of the Private Actions of our Hearts and Lives in the work of Holy Self-Government unto and under GOD. By RICHARD BAXTER LONDON Printed by Robert White for Nevill Simmons at the Three Crowns near Holborn-Conduit 1672. A Christian Directory TOM I. Christian Ethicks The Introduction § 1. THE Eternal God having made Man an Intellectual and Free-agent able to understand and choose the good and refuse the evil to know Nov●rint universi quod pr●sens opus●ulum non aggredio● ut fidelium a●ribus prophanas aliquas vocum i●geram ●ovitates sed ut innoc●nt●r sobrie de alt●ssimo c. Ockam de Sacram. Alt. prolog In z●●o domus domini nunc persolvo d●bitum vile quidem sed fid●le ●t puto ami●um quibusque●gregiis Christi tyro●ibus grave vero importabile apostatis insipientibus quorum priores n● fallor cum lachrymis forte quae ex Dei charitate pro●●uunt alii cum t●istitia sed quae ex indignatione pusillanimitate deprehensae co●scientiae extorquetur illud excipient Gildas Prolog Excid Habet inquies Britanni● Rectores habet speculatores Quid tu n●gando m●tire disponis Habet inquam habet si non ultr● non citra numerun sed quia inclinati tanto pondere sunt pressi id●irco spatium respirandi non habent Praeoccupabant igitur se mutuo talibus objectionibus c. Gildas ibid. and love and serve his Maker and by adhering to Him in this life of tryal to attain to the blessed sight and Enjoyment of his Glory in the life to come hath not been wanting to furnish him with such Necessaries without which these ends could not succesfully be sought When we had lost our Moral capacity of pleasing him that we might enjoy him he restoreth us to it by the wonderful work of our Redemption In Christ he hath reconciled the world unto himself and hath given them a general Act of Oblivion contained in the Covenant of Grace which nothing but mens obstinate and final unwillingness can deprive them of To procure their Consent to this gracious Covenant he hath committed to his Ministers the Word of Reconciliation commanding us to beseech men as in the stead of Christ and as though God himself did beseech them by us to be reconciled unto God 2 Cor. 5. 18 19 20. and to shew them first their sin and misery and proclaim and offer the true Remedy and to let them know that All things are now ready and by pleading their duty their necessity and their commodity to compell them to come in Matth. 22. 4. Luke 11. 17 23. But so great is the Blindness and Obstinacy of men that the greatest part refuse Consent being deceived by the pleasures and profits and honours of this present world and make their pretended necessities or business the matter of their excuses and the unreasonable reasons of their refusal negligence and delayes till death surprize them and the door is shut and they knock and cry for Mercy and Admittance when it is too late Matth. 25. 10 11 12. § 2. Against this Wilful Negligence and Presumption which is the principal Cause of the damnation of the ungodly world I have written many Books already But because there are many that profess themselves unfeignedly willing not only to be saved but also to be Christs Disciples to learn of him to imitate him and be conformed to him and to do the will of God if they could but know it I have determined by God's assistance to write this Book for the Use of such and to give them from Gods Word those plain Directions which are suited to the several Duties of their lives and may Guide them safely in their Walk with God to Life Eternal Expect not here copious and earnest Exhortations for that work I have done already and have now to do with such as say they are made willing and desire help against their Ignorance that Skill and Will may concurr
As the Athenians that condemned Socrates to death and then lamented it and erected a Bra●en Statue for his Memorial Acosta saith that he that will be a Pastor to the Indians must not only resist the Devil and the flesh but must resist the custome of men which is grown powerful by time and multitude and must oppose his breast to receive the darts of the envious and malevolent who if they see any thing contrary to their prophane fashion they cry out A Traytor an Hypocrite an Enemy Li. 4. c. 15. p. 404. It seems among Papists and Barbarians the Serpents seed do hiss in the same manner against the good among themselves as they do against us dye Or think whether they will not change their minds when death hath sent them into that world where there is none of these deceits And think whether thou shouldst be moved with that mans words that will shortly change his mind himself and wish he had never spoke such words § 7. 3. Observe well whether their own Profession do not condemn them and whether the very thing that they hate the godly for be not that they are serious in Practising that which these malignants themselves profess as their Religion And are they not then notorious Hypocrites To profess to believe in God and yet scorn at those that diligently seek him Heb. 11. 6. To profess faith in Christ and hate those that obey him To profess to believe in the Holy Ghost as the Sanctifier and yet hate and scorn his sanctifying work To profess to believe the day of Judgement and everlasting torment of the ungodly and yet to deride those that endeavour to escape it To profess to believe that Heaven is prepared for the Godly and yet scorn at those that make it the chief business of their lives to attain it To profess to take the holy Scriptures for Gods Word and Law and yet to scorn those that obey it To pray after each of the Ten Commandments Lord have mercy upon us and encline our hearts to keep this Law and yet to hate all those that desire and endeavour to keep them What impudent hypocrisie is joyned with this malignity Mark whether the greatest diligence of the most godly be not justified by the formal profession of those very men that hate and scorn them The difference between them is that the Godly Profess Christianity in good earnest and when they say what they believe they believe as they say But the ungodly customarily and for company take on them to be Christians when they are not and by their own mouths condemn themselves and hate and oppose the serious Practice of that which they say they do themselves believe PART II. The Temptations whereby the Devil hindereth mens Conversion with the proper Remedies against them § 1. THE Most Holy and Righteous Governour of the world hath so restrained Satan and all our enemies and so far given us Free-will that no man can be forced to sin against his will It is not sin if it be not positively or privatively voluntary All our enemies in Hell or Earth cannot make us miserable without our selves nor keep a sinner from true Conversion and Salvation if he do it not himself no nor compell him to one sinful thought or word or deed or omission but by tempting and entising him to be willing All that are Graceless are wilfully Graceless None go to Hell but those that chose the way to Hell and would not be perswaded out of it None miss of Heaven but those that did set so light by it as to prefer the world and sin before it and refused the holy way that leadeth to it And surely man that naturally loveth himself would never take so mad a course if his reason were not laid asleep and his understanding were not wofully deluded And this is the business of the Tempter who doth not drag men to sin by violence but draw and entice them by Temptations I shall therefore take it for the next part of my work to open these Temptations and tell you the Remedies § 2. Tempt 1. The first endeavour of the Tempter is in General to keep the sinner asleep in sin so that T●●pt 1. ●e shall be as a dead man that hath no use of any of his faculties that hath eyes and seeth not and ears but heareth not and a heart that understandeth not nor feeleth any thing that concerneth his peace The light Ephes 2. 1. Col 2 13. 1 Co● 15. 35. 1 Tim. 5. 6. Joe● 1. 5. that shineth upon a man asleep is of no use to him His work lyeth undone His friends and wealth and greatest concernments are all forgotten by him as if there were no such things or persons in the world You may say what you will against him or do what you will against him and he can do nothing in his own defence This is the case that the Devil most laboureth to keep the world in even in so dead a sleep that their Reason and their Wills their fear and hope and all their powers shall be of no use to them That when they hear a Preacher or read the Scripture or good Books or see the holy examples of the godly yea when they see the Grave and know where they must shortly lie and know that their souls must stay here but a little while yet they shall hear and see and know all this as men asleep that mind it not as if it concerned not them at all never once soberly Considering and laying it to heart § 3. Direct 1. For the Remedy against this deadly sin 1. Take heed of sleepy opinions or Doctrines Direct 1. and conceits which tend to the Lethargie of Security 2. Sit not still but be up and doing Stirring tends to shake off drowziness 3. Come into the light Live under an awakening Minister and in wakening company that will not sleep with you nor easily let you sleep Agree with them to deal faithfully with you and promise them to take it thankfully 4. And meditate oft on wakening considerations Think whether a sleepy soul beseem one in thy dangerous condition Canst thou sleep with such a load of sin upon thy soul Canst thou sleep under the thundering threatnings of God and the Curse of his Law with so many wounds in thy Conscience and Ulcers in thy soul If thy body were sick or in the case of Iob yea if thou hadst but an aking Tooth it would not let thee sleep And is not the guilt of sin a thing more grievous If Thorns or Toads and Adders were in thy Bed they would keep the waking And how much more odious and dangerous a thing is sin If thy body want but meat or drink or covering it will break 2 Tim. 2. 26. thy sleep And is it nothing for thy soul to be destitute of Christ and Grace A condemned man will be easily kept awake And if thou be unregenerate thou art already condemned
John 3. 18. 3. 5. Thou sleepest in Irons in the captivity of the Devil among the walking judgements of God in a life that is still expecting an end in a Boat that is swiftly carried to eternity just at the entrance of another world and that world will be Hell if Grace awake thee not Thou art going to see the face of God to see the world of Angels or Devils and to be a companion with one of them for ever And is this a place or case to sleep in Is thy Bed so soft thy dwelling so safe God standeth over thee man and dost thou sleep Christ is coming and death is coming and judgement coming and dost thou sleep Didst thou never read of the foolish Virgins that slept out their time and knockt and cryed in vain when it was too late Matth. 25. 5. Thou mightest wiselyer sleep on the Pinnacle of a Steeple in a Storm than have a soul asleep in so dangerous a case as thou art in The Devil is awake and is rocking thy Cradle How busie is he to keep off Ministers or Conscience or any that would awake thee None of thy enemies are asleep and yet wilt thou sleep in the thickest of thy foes Is the battle a sleeping time or thy race a sleeping time when Heaven or Hell must be the End While he can keep thee asleep the Devil can do almost what he li●t with thee He knows that thou hast now no use of thy eyes or understanding or power to resist him The Learnedst Doctor in his sleep is as unlearned actually as an Ideot and will dispute no better than an unlearned man This makes many learned men to be ungodly they are asleep in sin The Devil could never have made such a drudge of thee to do his work against Christ and thy soul if thou hadst been awake Thou wouldst never have followed his whistle to the Ale-house the Play-house the Gaming-house and to other sins if thou hadst been in thy wits and well awake Read Prov. 7. 23. 24. I cannot believe that thou longest to be damned or so hatest thy self as to have done as thou hast done to have a lived Godless a Graceless a Prayerless and yet a merry careless life if thy eyes had been opened and thou hadst known and feelingly known that this was the way to Hell Nature it self will hardly go to Hell awake But it 's easie to abuse a man that is asleep Thou hast Reason but didst thou ever awake it to one hours serious Consideration of thy endless state and present case O dreadful judgement to be given over to the Spirit of slumber Rom. 11. 8. Is it not high time now to awake out of sleep Rom. 13. 11. When the light is arisen and shines about thee When others that care for their souls are busily at work When thou hast slept out so much precious time already Many a mercy and perhaps some Ministers have been as Candles burnt out to light thee while thou hast slept How o●t hast thou been called already How long wilt thou sleep O sluggard Prov. 6. 9. 10. Yet thou hast thundering calls and allarums to awake thee God calls and Ministers call Mercies call and judgements call and yet wilt thou not awake The voice of the Lord is powerful full of Majesty breaketh the Cedars shaketh the Wilderness and yet cannot it awake thee Thou wilt not sleep about far smaller matters at meat or drink or in common talk or Market But O how much greater business hast thou to keep thee awake Thou hast yet an unholy soul to be renewed an ungodly life to be reformed an offended God to be reconciled to and many thousand sins to be forgiven Thou hast death and judgement to prepare for thou hast Heaven to win and Hell to scape Thou hast many a needful Truth to learn and many a holy duty to perform and yet dost thou think it time to sleep Paul that had less need than thou did watch and pray and labour day and night Acts 20. 31. 1 Thess. 3. 10. O that thou knewest how much better it is to be awake While thou sleepest thou losest the benefit of the Light and all the mercies that attend thee The Sun is but as a clod to a man asleep The world is as no world to him The beauty of Heaven and Earth are nothing to him Princes friends and all things are forgotten by him So doth thy sleep in sin make nothing of health and patience time and help Ministers Books and daily warnings O what a day hast thou for everlasting if thou hadst but a heart to use it What a price hast thou in thine hand Prov. 10. 5. Sleep not out thy day thy harvest time thy tide time They that sleep sleep in the night 1 Thess. 5. 7. Awake and Christ will give thee light Rom. 13. 12. Ephes. 5. 14. Awake to righteousness and sin not 1 Cor. 15. 34. O when thou seest the Light of Christ what a wonder will it possess thee with at the things which thou now forgettest What joy will it fill thee with and with what pity to the sleepy world But if thou wilt needs sleep on be it known to thee sinner it shall not be long If thou wilt wake no sooner death and vengeance will awake thee Thou wilt wake when thou seest the other world and seest the things which thou wouldst not believe and comest before thy dreadful Judge Thy damnation slumbereth not 2 Pet. 2. 3. There are no sleepy souls in Heaven or Hell all are awake there and the day that hath awakened so many shall waken thee Watch then if thou love thy soul lest thy Lord come suddenly and find thee sleeping Mark 13. 34 35 36 37. What I say to one I say to all Watch. § 4. Tempt 2. If Satan cannot keep the soul in a sleepy careless inconsiderate forgetfulness he would Tempt 2. make the unregenerate soul believe that there is no such thing as Regenerating Grace but that it is a fancied thing which no man hath experience of and he saith as Nicodemus How can these things be John 3. 4. He thinks that natural conscience is enough § 5. Direct 2. But this may be easily refuted by observing that Holiness is but the very Health and Direct 2. rectitude of the soul and is no otherwise supernatural than as Health to him that is born a Leper See 2 Cor. 5. 17. Gal. 6. 15. Gal. 4. 19. Joh. 3. 3. 5. 6. Matth. 18. 3. 1 Pet. 1. 23. It is the rectitude of Nature or its disposition to the use and end that it was made for Though Grace be called supernatural 1. Because it is not born with us and 2. Corrupted Nature is against it 3. And the End of it is the God of Nature who is above Nature 4. And the Revelation and other means are supernatural as Christs incarnation resurrection c. Yet both Nature and Scripture and experience tell you
that will rule them and not ●e ruled by them that will not suffer them to take their pleasure nor enjoy their riches but hold them to a life which they cannot endure and even undo them in the world he is then no longer a guest for them Whereas if Christ had been received as Christ and Truth and Godliness deliberately entertained for their welldiscerned Excellency and Necessity the deep rooting would have prevented this Apostacie and cured such Hypocrifie § 4. But alas poor Ministers find by sad experience that all prove not Saints that flock to hear them and make up the crowd nor that for a season rejoyce in their light and magnifie them and take their parts The blossom hath its beauty and sweetness but all that blossometh or appeareth in the bud doth not come to perfect fruit Some will be blasted and some blown down some nipt with ●●osts some eaten by Worms some quickly fall and some hang on till the strongest blasts do cast them down some are deceived and poysoned by false Teachers some by worldly cares and the deceitfulness of riches become unfruitful and are turned aside The lusts of some had deeper rooting then the Word And the friends of some had greater interest in them than Christ and therefore they forsake him to satisfie their importunity some are corrupted by the hopes of preferment or the favour of man some feared from Christ by their threats and frowns and choose to venture on damnation to scape persecution And some are so worldly wise that they can see reason to remit their zeal and can save their souls and bodies too and prove that to be their duty which other men call sin if the end will but answer their expectations And some grow weary of truth and duty as a dull and common thing being not supplyed with that variety which might still continue the delights of Novelty § 5. Yet mistake not what I have said as if all the affection furthered by Novelty and abated by Commonness and use were a sign that the person is but an Hypocrite I know that there is something in the Nature of man remaining in the best which disposeth us to be much more passionately affected with things when they seem New to us and are first apprehended than when they are old and we have known or used them long There is not I believe one man of a thousand but is much more delighted in the Light of Truth when it first appeareth to him than when it is trite and familiarly known and is much more affected with a powerful Minister at first than when he hath long ●ate under him The same Sermon that even transported them at the first hearing would affect them less if they had heard it preach'd an hundred times The same Books which greatly affected us at the first or second reading will affect us less when we have read them over twenty times The same words of Prayer that take much with us when seldom used do less move our affections when they are daily used all the year At our first conversion we have more passionate sorrow for our sin and love to the godly than we can afterwards retain And all this is the case of learned and unlearned the sound and unsound though not of all alike Even Heaven it self is spoken of by Christ as if it did participate of this when he saith that Joy shall be in Heaven over One sinner that repenteth more than over ninety and nine just persons that need no repentance Luke 15. 7 10. And I know it is the duty of Ministers to take notice of this disposition in their hearers and not to dull them with giving them still the same but to profit them by a pleasant and profitable variety Not by preaching to them another Christ or a new Gospel It is the same God and Christ and Spirit and Scripture and the same Heaven the same Church the same faith and hope and repentance and obedience that we must preach to them as long as we live Though they say we have heard this an hundred times Let them hear it still and bring them not a new Creed If they hear so oft of God and Christ and Heaven till by Faith and Love and Fruition they attain them as their end they have heard well But yet there is a grateful variety of subordinate particulars and of words and methods and seasonable applications necessary to the right performance of our Ministry and to the profitting of the flocks Though the Physicion use the same Apothecaries Shop and Dispensatory and Drugs yet how great a variety must he use of compositions and times and manner of administration § 6. But for all this though the best are affected most with things that seem new and are dulled with the long and frequent use of the same expressions yet they are never weary of the substance of their Religion so as to desire a change And though they are not so passionately affected with the same Sermons and Books or with the thoughts or mention of the same substantial matters of Religion as at first they were Yet do their Iudgements more solidly and tenaciously embrace them and esteem them and their wills as Resolvedly adhere to them and use them and in their lives they practise them better than before Whereas they that take up their Religion but for Novelty will lay it down when it ceaseth to be New to them and must either change for a Newer or have none at all § 7. And as unsound are they that are Religious only because their education or their friends or the Laws or judgement of their Rulers or the Custom of the Countrey hath made it necessary to their Reputation These are Hypocrites at the first setting out and therefore cannot be saved by continuance in such a carnal Religiousness as this I know Law and Custom and education and friends when they side with Godliness are a great advantage to it by affording helps and removing those impediments that might stick much with carnal minds But truth is not your own till it be received in its proper evidence nor your faith divine till you believe what you believe because God is true who d●th reveal it nor are you the Children of God till you Love him for himself nor are you truly Religious till the Truth and Goodness of Religion it self be the principal thing that maketh you Religious It helpeth much to discover a mans sincerity when he is not only Religious among the Religious but among the prophane and the enemies and scorners and persecutors of Religion And when a man doth not pray only in a praying family but among the prayerless and the deriders of fervent constant prayer And when a man is heavenly among them that are earthly and temperate among the intemperate and riotous and holdeth the truth among those that reproach it and that hold the contrary When a man is not carried only by a stream of
as you have no need § 5. As for Play books and Romances and idle Tales I have already shewed in my Book of Self-d●nyal how pernicious they are especially to youth and to frothy empty idle wits that know not what a man is nor what he hath to do in the world They are powerful baits of the Devil to keep more necessary things out of their minds and better Books out of their hands and to poyson the mind so much the more dangerously as they are read with more delight and pleasure and to fill the minds of sensual people with such idle fumes and intoxicating fancies as may divert them from the serious thoughts of their salvation And which is no small loss to rob them of abundance of that precious time which was given them for more important business and which they will wish and wish again at last that they had spent more wisely I know the fantasticks will say that these things are innocent and may teach men much good like him that must go to a Whore-house to learn to hate uncleanness and him that would go out with Robbers to learn to hate Theevery But I shall now only ask them as in the presence of God 1. Whether they could spend that time no better 2. Whether better Books and practices would not edifie them more 3. Whether the greatest Lovers of Romances and Playes be the greatest Lovers of the Book of God and of a holy life 4. Whether they feel in themselves that the Love of these vanities doth increase their love to the Word of God and kill their sin and prepare them for the life to come or clean contrary And I would desire men not to prate against their own experience and reason nor to dispute themselves into damnable impenitency nor to befool their souls by a few silly words which any but a sensualist may perceive to be meer deceit and falshood If this will not serve they shall be shortly convinced and answered in another manner Direct 17. TAke heed that you receive not a Doctrine of Libertinism as from the Gospel nor conceive Direct 17. of Christ as an encourager of sin nor pretend free grace for your carnal security or sloth For this is but to set up another Gospel and another Christ or rather the Doctrine and works of the Devil against Christ and the Gospel and to turn the Grace of God into wantonness § 1. Because the Devil knoweth that you will not receive his doctrine in his own Name his usual Siquis est hoc robore ani●●t atque hoc indole virtu●s a● continenti● ut resp●at omnes vo 〈…〉 omnem●●● vitae ●uae ●●rs●m ●a●●●● co 〈…〉 aequalium fludia non ●udi non convivia delectant nihil in vita expe●endum putet nisi quod est cum laude honore conjun●tum hunc mea sententia divinis quibusdam bonis instructum atque ornatum puto Ci● p●o Cal. method is to propound and preach it in the name of Christ which he knoweth you reverence and regard For if Satan concealed not his own Name and Hand in every temptation it would spoil his game And the more excellent and splendid is his pretence the more powerful the temptation is They that gave heed to seducing Spirits and Doctrines of Devils no doubt thought better of the Spirits and the Doctrines especially seeming strict for the Devil hath his strictnesses as forbidding to marry and abstinence from meats which God hath created to be received with thanksgiving 1 Tim. 4. 1 3. But the strictnesses of the Devil are alwayes intended to make men loose They shall be strict as the Pharisees in Traditions and vain Ceremonies and building the Tombs of the Prophets and garnishing the Sepulchres of the Righteous that they may hate and murder the living Saints that worship God in Spirit and in truth Licentiousness is the proper Doctrine of the Devil which all his strictness tendeth to promote To receive such principles is pernicious but to father them upon Christ and the Gospel is blasphemous § 2. The Libertines Antinomians and Autonomians of this age have gathered you too many instances The Libertine saith The Heart is the man therefore you may deny the truth with your tongue you may be present at false Worship as at the Mass you need not suffer to avoid the speaking of a word or subscribing to an untruth or error or doing some little thing but as long as you keep your hearts to God and mean well or have an honest mental reservation and are forced to it by ther● rather than suffer you may say or subscribe or swear any thing which you can your selves put a lawful sense upon in your own minds or comply with any outward actions or customs to avoid ●ffence and save your selves The Antinomians tell you that The Moral Law is abrogated and that the Gospel is no Law and if there be no Law there is no Governour nor Government no duty no sin no judgement n● punishment no before they are born or repent or believe that their sin is pardoned 〈…〉 that God t●●k them as suffering and fulfilling all the Law in Christ as if it had been they that di● i● in ●i● that we are justified by faith only in our consciences that justifying faith i● but t 〈…〉 we are justified that every man must believe that he is pardoned that he may 〈…〉 ed in ●is c●●science and this he is to do by a Divine faith and that this is the sense of the A●ti●le I beli●●●● the forgiveness of sins that is that my s●ns are forgiven and that all are forgi 〈…〉 it that it is legal and sinful to work or do any thing for salvation that sin once pa 〈…〉 ssed and lamented or at least we need not ask pardon of sin daily or of one 〈…〉 t that 〈◊〉 are no punishments and yet no other punishment is threatned to believers for their sins and consequently that Christ hath not procured them a pardon of any sin after believing but prevented all necessity of pardon and therefore they must not ask the pardon of them nor do any thing to obtain it that fear of Hell must have no hand in our obedience or restraint from sin And some add that he that cannot repent or believe must comfort himself that Christ repented and believed for him 〈…〉 a contradiction Many such Doctrines of Licentiousness the abusers of Grace have brought forth And the Sect which imitateth the Father of Pride in affecting to be from under the Government of God and to be the Law-givers and Rulers of themselves and all others which I therefore call the Antonomians are Licentious and much more They equally contend against Christs Government and for their own They fill the world with Wars and bloodshed oppression and cruelty and the ears of God with the cryes of the Martyrs and oppressed ones and all that the spiritual and holy Discipline of Christ may be suppressed and
denying or contempt of the Wisdom of God as if he had unwisely made us a Law which is unmeet to Rule us 5. It is a setting up of our f●lly in the place of Gods Wisdom and preferring it before him as if we were wiser to know how to Govern our selves and to know what is fittest and best for us now to do than God is 6. It is a contempt of the Goodness of God as he is the maker of the Law As if he had not done that which is Best but that which may be corrected or contradicted and there were some Evil in it See Plutarcks Tract entitled That vice is sufficient to make a man wretched Si non ipso honesto movemur ut viri boni simus sed utilitate aliqua atque fructus callidi sumus non boni fi emolumentis non suapte natura virtus experitur vana erit virtus quae malitia rectè dicitur P. scal p. 744. to be avoided 7. It is a preferring our Naughtiness before his Goodness as if we would do it Better or choose better what to do 8. It is a contempt or denial of the Holiness and Purity of God which sets him against sin as Light is against Darkness 9. It is a violation of Gods Propriety or Dominion robbing him of the use and service of that which is absolutely and totally his Own 10. It is a claiming of Propriety in our selves as if we were our own and might do with our selves as we list 11. It is a contempt of the gratious Promises of God by which he allured and bound us to obedience 12. It is a contempt of the dreadful Threatnings of God by which he would have restrained us from evil 13. It is a contempt or denial of the dreadful day of Judgement in which an account must be given of that sin 14. It is a denying of Gods Veracity and giving him the lie as if he were not to be believed in all his Predictions Promises and Threats 15. It is a contempt of all the present Mercies which are innumerable and great by which God obligeth and encourageth us to obey 16. It is a contempt of our own afflictions and his Chastisements of us by which he would drive us from our sins 17. It is a contempt of all the Examples of his Mercies on the obedient and his terrible judgements on the disobedient men and Devils by which he warned us not to sin 18. It is a contempt of the person office sufferings and grace of Jesus Christ who came to save us from our sins and to destroy the works of the Devil being contrary to his bloodshed authority and healing work 19. It is a contradicting fighting against and in that act prevailing against the sanctifying office and work of the Holy Ghost that moveth us against sin and to obedience 20. It is a contempt of Holiness and a defacing in that measure the Image of God upon the soul or a rejecting it A vilifying of all those Graces which are contrary to the sin 21. It is a pleasing of the Devil the enemy of God and us and an obeying him before God 22 It is the fault of a Rational Creature that had Reason given him to do better 23. It is all Willingly done and Chosen by a free-agent that could not be constrained to it Voluntarium est omne peccatum Tolle excusationem Nemo peccat invitus Martin Dunilens de Morib Nihil iuterest quo animo facias quod fecisse vitiosum est quia ●cta cernuntur animus non videtur Id. ibid. 24. It is a robbing God of the Honour and Pleasure which he should have had in our Obedience and the Glory which we should bring him before the world 25. It is a contempt of the omnipresence and omniscience of God when we will sin against him before his face when he stands over us and seeth all that we do 26. It is a contempt of the Greatness and Almightiness of God that we dare sin against him who is so Great and able to be avenged on us 27. It is a wrong to the Mercifulness of God when we go out of the way of mercy and put him to use the way of Justice and severity who delighteth not in the death of sinners but rather that they obey repent and live 28. It is a contempt of the attractive Love of God who should be the End and Felicity and Pleasure of the soul. As if all that Love and Goodness of God were not enough to draw or keep the heart to him and to satisfie us and make us happy or he were fit to be our full delight And it sheweth the want of Love to God For if we Loved him rightly we should willingly obey him 29. It is a setting up the sordid creature before the Creator and dung before Heaven as if it were more worthy of our Love and Choice and fitter to be our Delight and the Pleasure of sin were better for us than the Glory of Heaven 30. In all which it appeareth that it is a practical Atheism in its degree A taking down God or denying him to be God and a practical Idolatry setting up our selves and other creatures in his stead 31. It is a contempt of all the means of Grace which are all to bring us to obedience and keep us or call us from our sins Prayer Sacraments c. 32. It is a contempt of the Love and Labours of the Ministers of Christ a disobeying them grieving them and frustrating their hopes and the labours of their lives 33. It is a debasing of Reason the superiour faculty of the soul and a setting up of the flesh or inferiour faculties like setting-dogs to Govern men or the horse to rule the rider 34. It is a blinding of reason and a misusing the noblest faculties of the soul and frustrating 〈…〉 them of the use and ends which they were made for And so it is the disorder monstrosity sickness or death of the soul. 35. It is in its measure the Image of the Devil upon the soul who is the Father of sin and therefore the moss odious deformity of the soul And this where the Holy Ghost should dwell and the Image and delight of God should be 36. It is the moral destruction not only of the soul but of the whole Creation so farr as the Creatures are appointed as the Means to bring or keep us unto God For the Means as a Means is destroyed when it is not used to its End A ship is useless if no one be carried in it A watch as such is useless when not used to shew the hour of the day All the world as it is the Book that should teach us the will of God is cast by when that use is cast by Nay sin useth the Creature against God which should have been used for him 37. It is a contradicting of our own Confessions and Professions a wronging of our Consciences a violation of our Covenants
●●l C●●is c. 1. revelations without any credible seal or Divine attestation and obtruded on the world by the power of the sword 2. And God hath given the world sufficient preservatives against them in the nullity of the proof of them and the evident foppery of the writings and the things themselves So that honesty and diligence will easily escape them § 18. Direct 15. Observe the supernatural effects of the Gospel upon the souls of believers How it Direct 15. planteth on man the Image of the Holy God Powerfully subduing both sense and the greatest interest Pre●as fundamentum est omnium v●●tutum 〈◊〉 p●o 〈◊〉 of the flesh to the will of God and making men Wise and Good and putting an admirable difference between them and all other men And then judge whether it be not Gods seal having his Image first upon it self which he doth use and honour to be the instrument of imprinting his Image upon us § 19. Direct 16. Mark well the certain Vanity of all other Religions that prevail on the earth Idolatry Direct 16. and Mahometanism which openly bear the mark of their own shame have shared between them allmost all the rest of the earth For meer Deisme is scarce any where in Possession and Iudaism hath no considerable inheritance and both of them as sensibly confuted by mans corruption necessity and desert § 20. Direct 17. Mark the great difference between the Christian part of the world those that receive Direct 17. Christianity seriously and in sincerity and all the rest Those that are farthest from Christianity are Zeaopho● reporteth Cyrus as sa●ing If all my familiars wrre ●ndued with piety to God they would 〈…〉 evil to one an● the and to m● l. 8. furthest from piety honesty civility or any laudable parts or conversations Most of them are beastly and ungodly And the rest are but a little better And ignorance and bruitishness cannot be the perfection of a man Nay among professed Christians the multitudes that have but the Name and hate the Nature and Practice of it are like Swine or Wolves and some of the worst near kin to Devils When all that receive Christianity practically into their hearts and lives are heavenly and holy and in the same measure that they receive it their sins are all mortified and they are devoted to God and possessed with Justice Charity and Patience to men and are carried up above this world and contemn that which the rest do make their felicity and delight So that if that ●e Good which doth Good then is the Goodness of the Christian faith apparent to all that have any acquaintance reason and in partiality to judge § 21. Direct 18. Bethink you what you should have been your selves if you had not been Christians Direct 18. Yea what would yet be the consequent if you should fall from the Christian faith Would you not look at the life to come as doubtful And resolve to take your pleasure in the world and to gratifie P●e●a●e ad●er●●s Deos ●ub●●●●a ●ides 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 human● gener●● 〈…〉 v● u●●●●●●a to●●a u●●ecess●●● Cic●o ●d Na● D●o 1. the flesh and to neglect your souls and to venture upon allmost any vice that seemeth necessary to your ca●nal ends Christianity hath cleansed and sanctified you if you are sanctified And if which God forbid you should forsake Christianity it is most likely you would quickly shew the difference by your dirty fleshly worldly lives § 22. Direct 19. When you see the evidence of Divine Revelation and authority it is enough to silence Direct 19. your doubts and cavils about particular words or circumstances For you know that God is True and Infallible and you know that you are silly ignorant worms that are utterly at a loss when you have ●ot one at hand to open every difficulty to you And that all arts and sciences seem full of difficulties and contradictions to ignorant unexperienced novices § 23. Direct 20. Allow all along in your learning for the difficulties which must needs arise from Direct 20. the translation ambiguity of all humane language change and variety of words and customs time place and other circumstances and especially from your own unacquaintedness with all these That so your own infirmities and ignorance and mistakes in reasoning may not be ascribed to the truth § 24 Direct 21. Understand the proper use of holy Scripture and so how far it is Divine that so you Direct 21. be not tempted to unbelief by expecting in it that which never was intended and then finding your causeless expectations frustrate It is not so Divine as to the terms and style and order and such modal and circumstantial matters as if all the exactness might be expected in it that God could put into a Book Nor is it intended as a system of Physicks or Logick or any subservient sciences or arts But it is an Infallible Revelation of the will of God for the Government of the Church and the conducting men to life eternal And it is ordered and worded so as to partake of such humane infirmity as yet shall no way impeach the Truth or efficacy of it but rather make it more suitable to the generality of men whose infirmity required such a style and manner of handling So that as a child of God hath a Body from Parents which yet is of God but s● of God as to partake of the infirmities of the parents or rather as Adam had a body from God but yet from Earth and accordingly frail but a soul more immediately from God which was more pure and divine so ☞ Scripture hath its style and language and method so from God as to have nothing in it unsuitable to its ends but not so from God as if he himself had shewed in it his own most perfect wisdom to the utmost and as if there were nothing in it of humane imperfection But the Truth and Goodness which is the soul of Scripture is more immediately from God The style and method of the penmen may be various but the same soul animateth all the parts It is no dishonour to the Holy Scriptures if Cicero be preferred for purity of style and phrase and oratory as for other common uses But certainly it is to be preferred as to its proper use that being the best style for an Act of Parliament which is next to the worst in an Oration The means are for the end § 25. Direct 22. Consider how great assistance Apparitions and Witch-crafts and other sensible Evidences Direct 22. of Spirits conversing with mankind do give to faith Of which I have written in the forementioned Treatises and therefore now pass it over § 26. Direct 23. Consider what advantage faith may have by observing the nature and tendencie of Direct 23. the soul and its hopes and fears of a life to come together with the superior glorious worlds which See m● Book
into the causes of all the oppressions rapines cruelties and inhumanity which have made men so like to Devils Look into the corrupted lacerated Churches and enquire into the cause of their contentions divisions usurpations malignity and cruelty against each other And you will find that Pride and Worldliness are the Causes of all When men of a Proud and Worldly mind have by fraud and friendship and Simony Usurped the Pastorship of the Churches according to their Minds and E●ds they turn it into a Malignant Domination and the Carnal worldly part of the Church is the great enemy and Persecutor of the spiritual part and the fleshly Hypocrite as Cain against Abel is filled with envy against the serious believer even out of the bitter displeasure of his mind that his deceitful Sacrifice is less respected What Covetousness hath done to the advancement of the pretended Holy Catholick Church of Rome I will give you now but in the words of an Abbot and Chronicler of their own Abbas Urspergens Chron. p. 3●● Vix remansit aliquis Episcopatus sive dignitas Ecclesiastica vel et●am Parochialis Ecclesiae quae ron fie●et litig●osa Romam deduceretur ipsa causa sed non manu vacua Gaude mater nostra Roma quon●am aperiuntur cataractae thesaurorum in te●ra ut ad te cons●uant rivi aggeres nummo●um in magna copia Laetare super iniquitate filiorum hominum quon●am in recompensationem tantorum malorum datur tibi prec●um Jocundare super adjutrice tua discordia quia erupit de puteo infernalis abyssi ut accumulentur tibi multa pecunia●um praemia Habes quod semper sitisti decanta Canticum quia per malitiam hominum non p●● tuam Religionem orbem vicist● Ad te trahit homines non ipsorum devotio aut pura Conscientia sed s●●lerum multiplicium perpetratio litium decisio precio comparata Fo●tun Galindas speaking of Pope Paul the fifth his love to the Iesuites for helping him to money saith Adeo praestat acquirendarum pecuniarum quam animarum studiosum peritum esse apud illos qui cum animarum Christi sanguine redemptarum in se curam receperint vel quid anima sit nesciunt vel non pluris animam hominis quam piscis faciunt quod credo suum officium Piscatum quendam esse aliquando per strepitum inaudierint quibus propterea gratior fuerit qui Animam auri cum Paracelso quam animam Saxoniae Electoris invenisse nuntiet Arcan Soci Iesu. pag. 46. Lege ibid. I●struct secret de Iesuitarum p●axi Et Ioh. Sarisbur l. 7. c. 21. de Monach. Potentiores ditiores favore vel mercede recepta facilius absolutione ex●nerant peccatis alienis humeros supponentes jubent abire in tunicas vestes pullas quicquid illi se commisisse deplorant Si eis obloquet●s Religionis inimicus veritatis diceris impugnator hand It is the departing of the heart from God to creatures See the malignity of it before Good men have been overtaken with heinous sins but its hard to find where Scripture calleth any of them Covetous A heart secretly cleaving most to this present world and its prosperity is the very killing sin of every hypocrite yea and of all ungodly men 2. Worldliness makes the Word unprofitable and keepeth men from believing and repenting and coming home to God and minding seriously the everlasting world What so much hindereth the Conversion of sinners as the love and ca●es of earthly things They cannot serve God and Mammon Their treasure and hearts cannot be chiefly be both in Heaven and Earth They will not yield to the terms of Christ that love this world They will not forsake all for a treasure in Heaven In a word as you heard The love of money is the root of all evil and the Love of the Father is not in the lovers of the world 3. It destroyeth holy meditation and conference and turneth the thoughts to worldly things And it corrupteth Prayer and maketh it but a means to serve the flesh and therefore maketh it odious to God 4. It is the great hinderance of mens necessary preparation for death and judgement and stealeth away their hearts and time till it is too late 5. It is the great cause of contentions even among the nearest relations and the cause of the Wars and calamities of Nations and of the woful divisions and persecutions of the Church when a worldly generation think that their worldly interest doth engage them against self-denying and spiritual principles practices and persons 6. It is the great cause of all the injustice and oppression and cruelty that rageth in the world They would do as they would be done by were it not for the love of money It maketh men perfidious and false to all their friends and engagements No vows to God nor obligations to men will hold a Lover I●m ● 1. 2 3 4 5. 1 Iohn ● ●● of the world The world is his God and his worldly interest is his rule and law 7. It is the great destroyer of Charity and Good works No more is done for God and the poor because the Love of the world forbids it 8. It disordereth and pro●aneth families and betrayeth the souls of Children and Servants to the Devil It turneth out prayer and reading the Scripture and good books and all serious speeches of the li●e to come because their hearts are taken up with the world and they have no rel●sh of any thing but the provisions of their flesh Even the Lords own Day cannot be reserved for holy works nor a duty performed but the world is interposing or diverting the mind 9. It temp●eth m●n to sin against their knowledge and to forsake the truth and fit themselves to the rising side and save their bodies and estates whatever become of their souls It is the very price that the D●vil gives for souls With this he bought the soul of Iudas who went to the Pharis●es with a What will you give me and I will deliver him to you With this he attempted Christ himself 2 Tim 4. 10. Matth. 4. 9. All these will I give thee if th●u wilt fall down and worship me It is the cause of Ap●●●●acy and unfaithfulness to God And it s the price that sinners sell their God their Conscience and their salvation for 10. It depriveth the soul of holy communion with God and comfort from 1 ●im 6. 17 1● him and of all foretaste of the life to come and finally of Heaven it self For as the Love of the world keepeth out the Love of God and Heaven it must needs keep out the hopes and comforts Christs Sheep mark is 〈◊〉 on the Sheep that are shor● When the H●ece groweth long the Mark wears out which should arise from holy love It would do much to cure the love of money and of the world if you knew how pernicious a sin it is § 35.
thy meditations And though these thoughts be not the sweetest 8. 〈…〉 and wants yet thy own folly hath made them necessary If thou be dangerously sick or but painfully sore thou canst scarce forget it If poverty afflict thee with pinching wants thy Thoughts are taken up with cares and trouble day and night If another wrong thee thou canst easily think on it And hast thou so often wronged thy God and Saviour and so unkindly vilified his mercy and so unthankfully set light by saving Grace and so presumptuously and securely ventured on his wrath and yet dost thou find a scarcity of matter for thy meditations Hast thou all the sins of thy youth and ignorance to think on and all the sins of thy rashness and sensuality and of thy negligence and sloth and of thy worldliness and selfishness ambition and pride thy passions and thy omissions and all thy sinful thoughts and words and yet art thou scanted of matter for thy thoughts Dost thou carry about thee such a body of death so much selfishness pride worldliness and carnality so much ignorance unbelief averseness to God and backwardness to all that is spiritual and holy so much passion and readiness to sin and yet dost thou not find enough to think on Look over the sins of all thy life see them Thus Evil may be made the object and occasion of good It is good to meditate on evil to hate it and avoid it Keep acquaintan●● with Conscience and read over its Books and it will furnish your thoughts with humbling matter in all their aggravations as they have been committed against knowledge or means and helps against mercies and judgements and thy own vows or promises in prosperity and under affliction it self in secret and with others in thy general and particular calling and in all thy relations in every place and time and condition that thou hast lived in thy sins against God directly and thy injuries or neglects of man sins against holy duties and sins in holy duties in prayer hearing reading Sacraments meditation conference reproofs and receiving of reproofs from others thy negligent preparations for death and judgement the strangeness of thy soul to God and Heaven Is not here work enough for thy Meditations certainly if thou think so it is because thy heart never felt the bitterness of sin nor was ever yet acquainted with true Repentance but the time is yet to come that Light must shew thee what sin is and what thou art and what thou hast done and how full thy heart is of the Serpents brood and that thy sin must find thee out Dost thou not know that thy sins are as the Sands of the Shore or as the hairs upon thy head for number and that every sin hath deadly poyson in it and malignant enmity to God and holiness and yet are they not enough to keep thy Thoughts from being idle Judge by their language whether it be so with penitents Psal. 51. 2 3. Wash me throughly from my wickedness and cleanse me from my sin for I acknowledge my transgressions and my sin is ever before me Psal. 40. 12. For innumerable evils have compassed me about mine iniquities have taken hold upon me so that I am not able to look up they are more than the hairs of my head therefore my heart faileth me Psal. 119. 57. I thought on my ways and turned my feet unto thy testimonies True Repentance is thus described Ezek. 36. 31. Then shall ye remember your own evil ways and your doings that were not good and shall loath your selves in your own sight for your own iniquities and for your abominations Yea Gods forgiving and forgetting your sins must not make you forget them Ezek. 16. 60 61 62 63. I will establish to thee an everlasting Covenant Then thou shalt remember thy ways and be ashamed And I will establish my Covenant with thee That thou maist remember and be confounded and never open thy mouth any more because of thy shame when I am pacified towards thee for all that thou hast done saith the Lord God of Hosts § 9. Direct 9. Be not a stranger to the methods and subtleties and diligence of Satan in his Temptations Direct 9. to undo thy soul and thou wilt find matter enough to keep thy thoughts from idleness He is 9. Satans Temptations thinking how to deceive thee and destroy thee and doth it not concern thee to think how to defeat him and escape and save thy self If the hare run not as fast as the dog he is like to dye for it O that thy eyes were but opened to see the snares that are laid for thee in thy nature in thy temperature and passions in thy interests thy relations thy friends and acquaintance and ordinary company in thy businesses and possessions thy house and goods and lands and cattel and tenants and servants and all that thou tradest with or hast to do with in thine apparel and recreations in thy meat and drink and sleep and ease in prosperity and adversity in mens good thoughts or bad thoughts of thee in their praise and in their dispraise in their benefits and their wrongs their favour and in their falling out in their pleasing or displeasing thee in thy thinking and in thy speaking and in every thing that thou hast to do with Didst thou but see all these temptations and also see to what they tend and whither they would bring thee thou wouldst find matter to cure the idleness or impertinencies of thy thoughts § 10. Direct 10. The world and every creature in it which thou daily seest and which revealeth to Direct 10. thee the great Creator might be enough to keep thy Thoughts from idleness If Sun and Moon and Stars if Heaven and Earth and all therein be not enough to employ thy thoughts let thy idleness have some excuse I know thou wilt say that it is upon some of these things that thou dost employ them Yea but dost thou not first destroy and mortifie and make nonsense of that on which thou meditatest Dost thou not first separate it from God who is the life and glory and end and meaning of every creature Thou killest it and turnest out the soul and thinkest only on the Corps or on the Creature made another thing as food for thy sensual desires As the Kite thinketh on the Birds and Chickens to devour them to satisfie her greedy appetite Thus you can think of all Gods works so far as they accommodate your flesh But the World is Gods book which he set man at first to read and every Creature is a Letter or Syllable or Word or Sentence more or less declaring the name and will of God There you may behold his wonderful Almightiness his unsearchable Wisdom his unmeasurable Goodness mercy and compassions and his singular regard of the sons of men Though the ungodly proud and carnal wits do but play with and study the shape and comeliness and order
of the world III. If laying the hand on the Book and Kissing it be unlawful for any special matter or manner forbidden more than other significant acts it is for some of the reasons named by you which now I will answer I. Object It savoureth of the Romish superstition Answ. 1. Not at all Prove that if you can 2. Superstition is the feigning of things to be Pleasing or Displeasing to God which are not and using or disusing them accordingly whatever be the Etymologie of the word Superstitum Cultus or supra Statutum c. it is certain that the common use of it among Heathens as Plutark at large and Christians was for an erroneous undue fear of God thinking this or that was displeasing or pleasing to him to be done or to be avoided which was not so but was the conceit of a frightned mistaking mind Therefore to say that God is displeased with this signification of the mind when it is not so nor can be proved is superstition And this is not the solitary instance of Satans introducing superstition under pretense of avoiding superstition 3. The sense of the Law is to be judged of by the Law and by the notorious doctrine and profession of the Law-makers and of the Land which here renounceth the superstitious use of it But I confess I was more afraid that the Papists had too much derogated from the Scripture than given too much to it And they profess that they swear not by a creature Vid. Perer. ubi sup in Gen. 24. 2. Object But Paraeus c. in Gen. 24. 2. saith Non absque superstitione fit cum super crucifixum aut codicem Evangelii digitis impositis juratur ut fit in Papatu Answ. 1. But that same Act which in Papatu is superstitious because of superstitious conceits and ends is not so in all others that have none such 2. It is no new thing to be quick in accusing our adversaries But Paraeus addeth not a syllable of proof And if he had it must have been such as toucht not us or else invalid Object Some good men have scrupled it Answ. 1. Ten thousand to one such have not scrupled it 2. They are not our Gods nor Law 3. The Quakers and the old Anabaptists and they say Origen scrupled yea condemned all swearing or all imposed Oaths And if we avoid all as sin which some good men have scrupled we shall make superstition a great part of our Religion And when on the same grounds we have but practised all as Duty which some good men have taken for Duty we shall quite out-go the Papists He that readeth Beda Boniface and abundance such pious writers will soon see that Godly or Fanatical Religious persons dreams visions strict opinions confident assertions and credulous believing one another with the hope of improving such things against Pagans and Jews for Christianity brought in almost all the Legends and superstitions of the Papists II. Object 2. Our Common-Law Commissions that give authority to examine persons direct it to be Object done super sacramenta sua per sancta Dei evangelia fideliter prestanda And in the form of Administrations in Ecclesiastical Courts the words are Ad sancta Dei Evangelia rite legitime jurati Whether these forms do not infer that in their first use at least persons either swore by the Evangelists or offended in that mode of swearing And our Common-Law calls it a Corporal Oath from touching the Book Answ. 1. To know the sense of our present Law it is not necessary that we know the sense of the Answ. first users of the form For the Law is not now the Kings Law that first made it He hath no Law that hath no Government but the Kings Law that now Reigneth and beareth his sense 2. To justifie our obedience to a Law it is not necessary that we prove every phrase in that Law to be fitly expressed 3. But examine it well and try whether it be not also fit and laudable 1. There are three things conjoyned in the Oaths in question 1. A testimony assertory or a promise 2. An Oath 3. An Imprecation The Assertory Testimony here is the first thing intended and the Oath and Imprecation are but as a means to make that Testimony or Promise valid 2. The published Doctrine of England in the 39. Articles the book of Ordination c. is that the Holy Scriptures contain all things necessary to Salvation as being Gods Law or Rule of our Faith and Life All our Duty to God is there commanded All the promises on which we hope are there contained All the punishments which the perjured or any sinner must feel and should fear are there threatned Therefore 3. The Laying on the hand and Kissing the book is an Action directly related to the Imprecation and not to the Oath but only by consequence as the Imprecation is subservient to the Oath as the Oath is to the Assertion So that this is the plain paraphrase of the whole I do believe that God the Ruler of all the world is the Iudge of secrets which are above mans judgement the searcher of hearts and the hater and avenger of perjury according to this his holy word by which he governeth us And to this God I appeal as to the truth of this my testimony consenting my self to lose all the benefit of his promises to the just and to bear all the punishments here threatned to the Perjured if I lie And what could be said more fitly 1. To own the Protestant doctrine that the Scripture is Gods perfect word that the evil to be feared and the good to be hoped for is all there contained and is all the fulfilling of that word 2. And to put the word in its due subordination to God And our ordinary form of swearing sheweth this So help you God and the Contents of this Book Whether you will call this swearing upon or by the Gospel or call it a corporal Oath or a spiritual Oath is only de nomine and is nothing to the matter thus truly described Sacramentum signifieth the Oath it self and Ad sancta evangelia is a fit phrase or if super sacramenta signifie the two Sacraments of the Gospel it can mean no more than As one that by the reception of the Sacrament doth profess to believe this Gospel to be true I do renounce the benefits of it if I lie And in this sense it hath been some mens custom to receive the Sacrament when they would solemnly swear III. Object Some seem to object against kissing the Book as having the greater appearance of giving Object too much to it or putting some adoration on it and because this Ceremony of kissing is held to be of later date than laying on the hand Answ. The Ceremony signifieth that I love and approve the Gospel and place the hope of my salvation Answ. in it And the publick Doctrine of the Kingdom before cited sheweth as a
a state of meer delight lest it prove but a fools Paradice to you See that you be furnished with Marriage-strength and patience for the duties and sufferings of a married state before you venture on it Especially 1. Be well provided against Temptations to a Worldly mind and life For here you are like to be most violently and dangerously assaulted 2. See that you be well provided with Conjugal affections For they are necessary both to the Duties and Sufferings of a married life And you should not enter upon the state without the necessary preparations 3. See that you be well provided with Marriage-prudence and understanding that you may be able to instruct and edifie your families and may live with them as men of knowledge 1 Pet. 3. 7. and may manage all your business with discretion Psal. 112. 15. 4. See that you be provided with Resolvedness and Constancy that you vex not your self and relations by too late repentings and come not off with a Had I wist or non putâram Levity and mutability is no fit preparative for a state that only death can change Let the Love and Resolutions which brought you into that state continue with you to the last 5. See that you be provided with a diligence answerable to the greatness of your undertaken duties A slothful mind is unfit for one that entereth himself voluntary upon so much business as a cowardly mind is unfit for him that listeth himself a Souldier for the Wars 6. See that you are well provided with Marriage-patience to beat with the infirmities of others and undergo the daily crosses of your life which your business and necessities and your own infirmities will unavoidably infer To Marry without all this preparation is as foolish as to go to Sea without the necessary preparations for your Voyage or to go to War without Armor or Ammunition or to go to work without Tools or Strength or to go to buy Meat in the Market when you have no money § 43. Direct 4. Take special care that fansie and passion over-rule not Reason and Friends advice in the choice of your condition or of the person I know you must have Love to those that you match with But that Love must be Rational and such as you can justifie in the severest tryal by the evidences of worth and fitness in the person whom you love To say you Love but you know not why is more beseeming children or mad folks than those that are soberly entring upon a change of life of so great importance to them A blind Love which maketh you think a person excellent and amiable who in the eyes of the wisest that are impartial is nothing so or maketh you overvalue the person whom you fansie and be fond of one as some admirable creature that in the eyes of others is next to contemptible this is but the Index and evidence of your folly And though you please your selves in it and honour it with the name of Love there is none that is acquainted with it that will give it any better name than LUST or FANCY And the marriage that is made by Lust and Fancy will never tend to solid Content or true Felicity But either it will feed till death on the fewell that kindled it and then go out in everlasting shame or else more ordinarily it proveth but a blaze and turneth into loathing and weariness of each other And because this passion of Lust called Love is such a besotting blinding thing like the longing of a woman with child it is the duty of all that feel any touch of it to kindle upon their hearts to call it presently to the tryal and to quench it effectually and till that be done if they have any relicts of wit or reason to suspect their own apprehensions and much more to trust the judgement and advice of others § 44. The means to quench this Lust called Love I have largely opened before I shall now only How to cure Lustful Love remember you of these few 1. Keep asunder and at a sufficient distance from the person that you dote upon The nearness of the fire and fewel causeth the combustion Fancy and Lust are enflamed by the senses Keep out of sight and in time the Feavor may abate 2. Overvalue not vanity Think not highly of a Silken Coat or of the great Names of Ancestors or of Money or Lands or of a painted or a spotted face nor of that natural comeliness called beauty Judge not of things as children but as men Play not the fools in magnifying trifles and overlooking inward real worth Would you fall in Love with a Flower or Picture at this rate Bethink you what work the Pox or any other withering sickness will make with that silly beauty which you so admire Think what a spectacle death will make it And how many thousands once more beautiful are turned now to common earth And how many thousand souls are now in Hell that by a beautiful body were drowned in lust and tempted to neglect themselves and how few in the world you can name that were ever much the better for it what a childish thing it is to dote on a Book of tales and lyes because it hath a beautiful gilded cover and to undervalue the writings of the wise because they have a plain and homely outsides 3. Rule your thoughts and let them not run masterless as fansie shall command them If Reason cannot call off your thoughts from following a lustful desire and imagination no wonder if one that rideth on such an unbridled Colt be cast into the dirt 4. Live not idly but let the business of your callings take up your time and employ your thoughts An idle fleshly mind is the carkass where the Vermine of Lust doth crawl and the nest where the Devil hatcheth both this and many other pernicious sins 5. Lastly and chiefly forget not the concernments of your souls Remember how near you are to Eternity and what work you have to do for your salvation Forget not the presence of God no● the approach of death Look oft by faith into Heaven and Hell and keep Conscience tender and then I warrant you you will find something else to mind than Lust and greater matters than a silly carkass to take up your thoughts and you will seel that Heavenly Love within you which will extinguish earthly carnal Love § 45. Direct 5. Be not too hasty in your choice or resolution but deliberate well and throughly Direct 5. know the person on whom so much of the comfort or sorrow of your life will necessarily depend Where Repentance hath no place there is the greater care to be used to prevent it Reason requireth you to be well acquainted with those that you trust but with an important secret much more with all your honour or estates and most of all with one whom you must trust with so much of the comfort of your lives and your
to your souls and bodies to be bred too high and fed too full and daintily than to be bred too low and fed too hardly One tendeth to pride and gluttony and wantonness and the overthrow of health and life and the other tendeth to a humble mortified self-denying life and to the health and soundness of the body Remember how the earth opened and swallowed all those rebellious murmurers that grudged against Moses and Aaron Num. 16. Read it and apply it to your case And remember the story of rebellious Abs●lom and the folly of the Prodigal Luke 15. and desire not to be at your own dispose nor be not eager to have the vain desires of your hearts fulfilled While you contented●y submit to your Parents you are in Gods way and may expect his blessing but when you will needs be Carvers for your selves you may expect the punishment of Rebels § 5. Direct 5. Humble your selves and submit to any labour that your Parents shall appoint you to Direct 5. Take heed as you love your souls lest either a proud heart make you murmur and say This work is too low and base a drudgery for me Or lest a lazy mind and body make you say This work is too hard and toilsome for me Or lest a foolish playful mind do make you weary of your Book or labour that you may be at your sports and say This is too tedious for me It is little or no hurt that is like to befall you by your labour and diligence but it is a dangerous thing to get a habit or custome of idl●ness and voluptuousness in your youth § 6 Direct 6. Be willing and thankful to be instructed by your Parents or any of your Teachers but Direct 6. especially about the fear of God and the matters of your salvation These are the matters that you are born and live for These are the things that your Parents have first in charge to teach you Without knowledge and h●liness all the riches and honours of the world are nothing worth and all your pleasures Read M● T●o W●i●s 〈…〉 e book for ●ittle Children Ma● 9 36. 1● 14. 16. will but undo you O what a comfort is it to understanding Parents to see their children willing to learn and to love the Word of God and lay it up in their hearts and talk of it and obey it and prepare betime for everlasting life If such children die before their Parents how joyfully may they part with them as into the arms of Christ who hath said that of such is the Kingdom of Heaven Matth. 19. 14. And if the Parents die first how joyfully may they leave behind them a holy seed that is like to serve God in their generation and to follow them to Heaven and live with them for ever But whether they live or die what a hear-breaking to the Parents are ungodly children that love not the word and way of God and love not to be taught or restrained from their own licentious courses § 7. Direct 7. Patiently submit to the correction which your Parents lay upon you Consider that Direct 7. God hath commanded them to do it and that to save your souls from Hell and that they hate you if they correct you not when there is cause and that they must not spare for your crying Prov 13. 24. 22. 15. 29. 15. 23. 13 14. 19. 18 It is not their delight but for your own necessity Avoid the fault and you may escape the correction How much rather had your Parents see you obedient than hear you cry It is not long of them but of your selves that you are corrected Be angry with your selves and not with them It is a wicked child that instead of being better by correction will hate his Parents for it and so grow worse Correction is a means of Gods own appointment and therefore go to God on your knees in prayer and intreat him to bless and sanctifie it to you that it may do you good § 8. Direct 8. Choose not your own company but use such company as by your Parents is appointed Direct 8. you Bad company is the first undoing of a Child When for the love of sport you choose such play-fellows as are idle and licentious and disobedient and will teach you to curse and swear and lie and talk filthily and draw you from your Book or duty this is the Devils High-way to Hell Your Parents are fittest to choose your company § 9. Direct 9. Choose not your own Calling or Trade of life without the choice or consent of your Parents Direct 9. You may tell them what you are most inclined to but it belongeth more to them than to you to make the choice And it is your part to bring your wills to theirs Unless your Parents choose a Calling for you that is unlawful and then you may with humble submissiveness refuse it But if it be only inconvenient you have liberty afterward to change it for a better if you can when you are from under their dispose and government § 10. Direct 10. Marry not without your Parents consent Nay if it may be let their choice determine Direct 10. first of the person and not your own Unexperienced youth doth choose by fancy and passion when your experienced Parents will choose by judgement But if they would force you to joyn your selves to such as are ungodly and like to make your lives either sinful or miserable you may humbly refuse them But you must remain unmarried while by the use of right means you can live in chastity till your Parents are in a better mind But if indeed you have a flat necessity of marrying and your Parents will consent to none but one of a false Religion or one that is utterly unfit for you in such a case they forfeit their authority in that point which is given them for your edification and not for your destruction And then you should advise with other friends that are more wise and faithful But if you suffer your fond affections to contradict your Parents wills and pretend a necessity that you cannot change your affections as if your folly were uncurable this is but to enter sinfully into that state of life which should have been sanctified to God that he might have blest it to you § 11. Direct 11. If your Parents be in want it is your duty to relieve them according to your ability Direct 11. yea and wholly to maintain them if there be need For it is not possible by all that you can do that ever you can be on even terms with them or even requite them for what you have received of them It is base inhumanity when Parents come to poverty for children to put them off with some short allowance and to make them live almost like their servants when you have riches and plenty for your selves Your Parents should still be maintained by
Christ and his Disciples But walk with the most Holy and blameless and charitable that live upon that truth which others talk of and are seeking to please God by the wisdom which is first pure and then peaceable and gentle Jam. 3. 17 18 when others are contending for their several sects or seeking to please Christ by killing him or censuring him or slandering him in his servants Ioh. 16. 2 3. Matth. 25. 45. 40. Direct 8. § 8. Direct 8. Keep a just account of your Practice Examine your selves in the end of every day and week how you have spent your time and practised what you were taught and judge your selves before God according at you find it Yea you must call your selves to account every hour what you are doing and how you do it whether you are upon Gods work or not And your hearts must be watcht and followed like unfaithful servants and like loitering Scholars and driven on to every duty like a dull or tired horse § 9. Direct 9. Above all set your hearts to the deepest contemplations of the wonderful Love of God Direct 9. in Christ and the sweetness and excellency of a holy life and the certain incomprehensible glory which it tendeth to that your souls may be in Love with your dear Redeemer and all that is holy and Love and obedience may be as natural to you And then the practice of holy doctrine will be easie to you when it is your delight § 10. Direct 10. Take heed that you receive not ungrounded or unnecessary prejudices against the Direct 10. person of the Preacher For that will turn away your heart and lock it up against his doctrine And therefore abhor the spirit of uncharitableness cruelty and faction which alway bendeth to the suppressing or vilifying and disgracing all those that are not of their way and for their interest And be not so blind as not to observe that the very design of the Devil in raising up divisions among Christians is that he may use the tongues or hands of one another to vilifie them all and make them odious to one another and to disable one another from hindering his Kingdom and doing any considerable service to Christ. So that when a Minister of Christ should be winning souls either he is forbidden or he is despised and the hearers are saying O he is such or such a one according to the names of reproach which the Enemy of Christ and Love hath taught them CHAP. XX. Directions for profitable Reading the holy Scriptures § 1. SEeing the diversity of mens tempers and understandings is so exceeding great that it is impossible that any thing should be pleasing and suitable to some which shall not be disliked and quarrelled with by others and seeing in the Scriptures there are many things hard to be understood which the unlearned and unstable wrest to their own destruction 2 Pet. 3. 16. and the Word is to some the savour of death unto death 2 Cor. 2. 16. You Mar. 4. 24. have therefore need to be careful in Reading it And as Christ saith Luke 8. 18. Take heed how you hear so I say Take heed how you read § 2. Direct 1. Bring not an evil heart of Unbelief Open the Bible with holy Reverence as the Book Direct 1. Read Chap. 3. Dir. 1. and against Unbelief Tom. 1. of God indited by the Holy Ghost Remember that the Doctrine of the New Testament was revealed by the Son of God who was purposely sent from Heaven to be the Light of the world and to make known to men the Will of God and the matters of their salvation Bethink you well if God should but send a Book or Letter to you by an Angel how reverently you would receive it How carefully you would peruse it and regard it above all the Books in the world And how much rather should you do so by that Book which is indited by the Holy Ghost and recordeth the doctrine of Christ himself whose authority is greater than all the Angels Read it not therefore as a common Book with a common and unreverent heart but in the dread and Love of God the Author Direct 2. § 3. Direct 2. Remember that it is the very Law of God which you must live by and be judged by at last And therefore read it with a full Resolution to obey what ever it commandeth though flesh and men and Devils contradict it Let there be no secret exceptions in your heart to baulk any of its Precepts and shift off that part of obedience which the flesh accounteth difficult or dear § 4. Direct 3. Remember that it is the Will and Testament of your Lord and the Covenant of most Direct 3. full and gracious Promises which all your Comforts and all your hopes of pardon and everlasting life are built upon Read it therefore with Love and great delight Value it a thousand fold more than you would do the letters of your dearest friend or the Deeds by which you hold your Lands or any thing else of low concernment If the Law was sweeter to David than honey and better than thousands of Gold and Silver and was his delight and meditation all the day O what should the sweet and pretious Gospel be to us Direct 4. § 5. Direct 4. Remember that it is a Doctrine of unseen things and of the greatest Mysteries and therefore come not to it with arrogance as a Iudge but with Humility as a Learner or Disciple And if any thing seem difficult or improbable to you suspect your own unfurnished understanding and not the sacred Word of God If a Learner in any Art or Science will suspect his Teacher and his Books when ever he is stalled or meeteth with that which seemeth unlikely to him his pride would keep possession for his ignorance and his folly were like to be uncurable Direct 5. § 6. Direct 5. Remember that it is an Universal Law and Doctrine written for the most ignorant as well as for the curious and therefore must be suited in plainness to the capacity of the simple and yet have matter to exercise the most subtile wits and that God would have the style to sav●ur more of the innocent weakness of the instruments than the matter Therefore be not offended or troubled when the style d●th seem less polite than you might think beseemed the Holy Ghost nor at the plainness of some parts or the mysteriousness of others But adore the wisdom and tender condescension of God to his poor creatures § 7. Direct 6. Bring not a carnal mind which savoureth only fleshly things and is enslaved to those Direct 6. sins which the Scripture doth condemn For the carnal mind is enmity against God and neither is nor can be subject to his Law Rom. 8. 7 8. And the things of God are not discerned by the meer natural man for they are foolishness to him and they must be spiritually
§ 30. 1. Your duty with your hearts consisteth in these particulars 1. That you do your best in the close Examination of your hearts about your states and the sincerity of your Faith Repentance and Obedience To know whether your hearts are true to God in the Covenant which you are to renew and seal Which may be done by these enquiries and discerned by these signs 1. Whether Marks of Sincerity you truly lothe your selves for all the sins of your hearts and lives and are a greater offence and burden to your selves because of your imperfections and corruptions than all the world beside is ☜ Ezek. 6. 9. 20. 43. 36. 31. Rom. 7. 24. 2. Whether you have no sin but what you are truly desirous to know and no known sin but what you are truly desirous to be rid of and so desirous as that you had rather be perfectly freed from sin than from any affliction in the world Rom. 7. 22 18 24. 8. 18. 3. Whether you Love the searching and reforming light even the most searching parts of the Word of God and the most searching Books and searching Sermons that by them you may be brought to know your selves in order to your setled peace and reformation Iohn 3. 19 20 21. 4. Whether you truly love that degree of Holiness in others which you have not yet attained your selves and love Christ in his children with such an unseigned love as will cause you to relieve them according to your abilities and suffer for their sakes when it is your duty 1 Iohn 3. 14 16. 1 Pet. 1. 22. 3. 8. Iames 2. 12 13 14 15. Matth. 25. 40 c. 5. Whether you can truly say that there is no degree of Holiness so high but you desire it and had rather be perfect in the Love of God and the obedience of his Will than have all the riches and pleasures of this world Rom. 7. 18 21 24. Psal. 119. 5. Matth. 5. 6. and had rather be one of the Holiest Saints than of the most renowned prosperous Princes upon earth Psal. 15. 4. 16. 2. Psal. 84. 10. 65. 4. 6. Whether you have so far laid up your treasure and your hopes in Heaven as that you are resolved to take that only for your portion and that the hopes of Heaven and interest of your souls hath the preheminence in your hearts against all that stands in competition with it Col. 3. 1 3 4. Matth. 6. 20 21. 7. Whether the chiefest care of your hearts and endeavour of your lives be to serve and please God and to enjoy him for ever rather than for any worldly thing Matth. 6. 33. Iohn 5. 26. 2 Cor. 5. 1 6 7 8 9. 8. Whether it be your daily desire and endeavour to mortifie the flesh and master its rebellious opposition to the Spirit and you so far prevail as not to live and walk and be led by the flesh but that the course and drift of your life is spiritual Rom. 8. 1 6 7 8 9 10 13. Gal. 5. 17. 21 22. 9. Whether the world and all its honour wealth and pleasure appear to you so small and contemptible a thing as that you esteem it as dung and nothing in comparison of Christ and the Love of God and Glory and are Resolved that you will rather let go all than your part in Christ and which useth to carry it in the time of tryal in your deliberate choice Phil. 3. 7 8 9 13 14 18 19 20. 1 Iohn 2. 15. Luke 14. 26 30 33. Matth. 13. 19 21. 10. Whether you are resolved upon a course of holiness and obedience and to use those means which God doth make known to you to be the way to please him and to subdue your corruption and yet feeling the frailties of your hearts and the burden of your sins do trust in Christ as your Righteousness before God and in the Holy Ghost whose grace alone can illuminate sanctifie and confirm you Acts 11. 23. Psal. 119. 57 63 69 106. 1 Cor. 1. 30. Rom. 8. 9. Iohn 15. 5. 2 Cor. 12. 9. By these signs you may safely try your states § 31. 2. When this is done you are also to try the strength and measure of your grace that you may perceive your weakness and know for what help you should seek to Christ And to find out what inward Corruptions and sinful inclinations are yet strongest in you that you may know what to lament and to ask forgiveness of and help against My Book called Directions for weak Christians will give you fuller advice in this § 32. 3. You are also to take a strict account of your Lives and to look over your dealings with God and men in secret and publick especially of late since the last renewal of your Covenant with Psal. 4. 4 5 6. God and to hear what God and Conscience have to say about your sins and all their aggravations Psal. 139. 23. 1 Cor. 11. 28. § 33. 4. And you must labour to get your hearts affected with your condition as you do discover it To be humbled for what is sinful and to be desirous of help against your weakness and thankful for the Grace which you discern § 34. 5. Lastly you must consider of all the work that you go to do and all the mercies which you are going to receive and what Graces are necessary to all this and how they must be used and accordingly look up all those Graces and prepare them for the exercise to which they are to be called out I shall name you the particulars anon § 35. II. Your duty towards God in your Preparation for this Sacrament is 1. To cast down your selves before him in humble penitent confession and lamentation of all the sins which you discover And to beg his pardon in secret before you come to have it publickly sealed and delivered 2. To look up to him with that Thankfulness Love and Ioy as becomes one that is going to receive so great a mercy from him And humbly to beg that grace which may prepare you and quicken you to and in the work § 36. III. Your duty towards others in this your preparation is 1. To forgive those that have done you wrong and to confess your fault to those whom you have wronged and ask them forgiveness and make them amends and restitution so far as in your power and to be reconciled to those with whom you are fallen out and to see that you love your neighbours as is your selves Matth. 5. 23 24 25 26 44. Iames 5. 16. 2 That you seek advice of your Pastors or some fit persons in cases that are too hard for your selves to resolve and where you need their special help 3. That you lovingly admonish them that you know do intend to communicate unworthily and to come thither in their ungodliness and gross sin unrepented of that you shew not such hatred of your Brother as to suffer sin upon
united your Heart unto himself and turned it from sin to Holiness from the world to God and from Earth to Heaven and made you a new creature to live for Heaven as you did for earth Surely this is not so small and indiscernable a work or change but he that hath felt it on himself may know it It is a great work to bring a sinner to feel his unrighteousness and misery and to apply himself to Christ for Righteousness and life It is a great work to take off the heart from all the felicity of this world and to set it unfeignedly upon God and to cause him to place and seek his happiness in another world what ever become of all the prosperity or pleasure of the flesh It is thus with every true Believer for all the remnant of his sins and weaknesses And may you not know whether it be thus or not with you One of these is your case And it 's now time to know which of them it is when God is ready to tell you by his judgement If indeed you are in Christ and his Spirit be in you and hath renewed you and sanctified you and turned your heart and life to God I have then nothing more than Peace and Comfort to speak to you as in the following Exhortation But if it be otherwise and you are yet in a carnal state and were never renewed by the spirit of Christ Will you give me leave to deal faithfully with you as is necessary with one in your condition and to set before you at once your sin and your Remedy and to tell you what yet you must do if you will be saved IV. And first will you here lay to heart your folly and unfeignedly lament your sinful life before the Lord Not only this or that particular sin but principally your fleshly heart and life that in the main you have lived to this corruptible flesh and loved and sought and served the world before your God and the happiness of your soul. Alas friend did you not know that you had an immortal soul that must live in joy or misery for ever Did you not know that you were made to Love and serve and honour your maker and that you had the little time of this life given you to try and prepare you for your endless life and that as you lived here it must go with you in heaven or hell for ever If you did not believe these things why did you not come and give your Reasons against them to some judicious Divine that was able to have shewed you the Evidence of their truth If you did believe them alas how was it possible that you could forget them Could you believe a Heaven and a Hell and not regard them or suffer any transitory worldly vanity to be more regarded by you Did you know what you had to do in the world and yet is it all undone till now Were you never warned of this day Did never Preacher nor Scripture nor book nor friend nor conscience tell you of your end and tell you what would be the fruit of sin and of your contempt and slighting of Christ and of his grace Did you know that you must Love God above the world if ever you would be saved and that you must to that end be partaker of Christ and renewed by his spirit and yet would you let out your heart upon the world and follow the bruitish pleasures of the flesh and never earnestly seek after that Christ and spirit that should thus renew and sanctifie you Do you not think now that it had been wiser to have sought Christ and grace and set your affections first on the things above and to have made sure work for your soul against such a day as this than to have hardened your heart against Gods grace and despised Christ and Heaven and your salvation for a thing of nought You see now what it was that you preferred before Heaven what have you now got by all your sinful Love of the world where now is all your fleshly pleasure Will it all now serve turn to save you from death or the wrath of God and everlasting misery will it now go with you to another world Or do you think it will comfort a soul in Hell to remember the wealth which he gathered and left behind him upon earth would it not now have been much more comfortable to you if you could say My dayes were spent in Holiness in the Love of my dear Redeemer and in the hearty service of my God in praising him and praying to him in learning and obeying his holy word and will My business in the world was to please God and seek a better world and while I followed my lawful trade or calling my eye was chiefly on eternal life Instead of pleasing the flesh I delighted my soul in the Love and praise and service of my Redeemer and in the hopes of my eternal blessedness and now I am going to enjoy that God and happiness which I believ'd and sought Would not this be more comfortable to you now than to look back on your time as spent in a worldly fleshly life which you preferred before your God and your salvation Christ would not have forsaken you in the time of your extremity as the world doth if you had cleaved faithfully to him You little know what peace and comfort you might have found even on earth in a holy life How sweet would the word of God have been to you How sweet would prayer and meditation and holy conference have been Do you think it is not more pleasant to a true Believer to read the promises of eternal life and to think and talk of that blessed state when they shall dwell with God in Ioy for ever than it was to you to think and talk of worldly trash and vanity If you had used the world as a traveller doth the necessaries of his journey the thought of heaven would have offorded you solid rational comfort all the way O little do you know the sweetness of the Love of God in Christ and how good a Christian findeth it when he can but exercise and increase his knowledge and faith and Love to God and thankfulness for mercy and hopes of Heaven and walk with God in a heavenly conversation Do you not wish now that this had been your course But that which is done cannot be undone and time that is past can never be called back But yet there is a sure Remedy for your soul if you have but a heart to entertain and use it God so loved the world Joh. 3. 16 18. that he gave his only begotten Son that whosoever Believeth in him should not perish but have everlasting life Iesus Christ being God and Man is the Mediator between God and man His death is a sufficient Sacrifice for our sins It is his Office to save all those that come to God by him Do but unfeignedly
is through the faith of Christ that being made conformable unto his death I may attain to the Resurrection of the dead and may by him be presented without spot or blemish My God thou hast encouraged my fearful soul by the multitude of thy mercies as well as by thy promises to trust thee and yield it self to thee Thou hast filled up all my dayes with mercy Every place that I have lived in and every relation and all that I have had to do with in the world are the witnesses of thy Love and mercy to me Thy eyes beheld my substance being yet imperfect and all my members were written in thy Book My parents were instructed by thee to educate me and all things commanded by thee to serve for my preservation comfort and salvation Thou hast brought me forth in a land and age of mercies and caused me to hear and see the things which others have not seen or heard The lines have fallen to me in pleasant places My life hath not been spent in a howling wilderness nor in banishment from thy Sanctuary or the communion of thy Saints nor hath it been wholly consumed in darkness and sorrow and unserviceable barrenness But often have I heard the joyful sound and I have gone with the multitude to the house of God and there have seen the light of thy countenance and drank of the Rivers of thy pleasure even of the waters of life and have been solaced with the voice of joy and praise How oft have I cryed unto thee in my trouble and thou hast delivered me out of my distresses When for my folly and transgression I was afflicted thou broughtst me out of darkness and the shadow of death Thou renewedst my age as Hezekiahs and causedst the shadow of my Dyal to go back and hast set me at liberty to praise thee for thy Goodness and declare thy Psal. 107. 8. 15 Psal. 50. 15. 2 Cor. 1. 9 10. Psal. 23. Psal. 139. 17 18. Heb. 13. 5. John 13. 1. Psal 57. 10. 108. 4. 36. 5. 103. 17. 136. Psal. 63. 3. Phil. 1. 23. Luke 2. 29 30. 2 Cor. 1. 2 3 4 5 7 8. works to the children of men In the day of trouble I called upon thee and thou didst deliver me that I might glorifie thee Thou causedst me to receive the sentence of death that I might trust in God that raiseth the dead My Shepheard hath led me in his pleasant pastures by the silent streams He restored my soul and conducted me in the paths of righteousness How pretious are thy thoughts unto me O God! how great is the summ of them If I should count them they are more in number than the sand And will that mercy now forsake me which hath abounded to me and supported me so long Thou hast said I will never fail thee nor forsake thee Having loved thy own that are in the world thou wilt love them to the end For thy mercy is great and reacheth to the Heavens and it endureth for ever O therefore when I awake let me be with thee And as thy loving kindness is better than Life and to depart and be with Christ is far better than the best condition upon earth so let thy servant depart in peace his eye of faith beholding thy salvation And when my earthly house of this tabernacle is dissolved let me have that building of God the house not made with hands eternal in the heavens Let my present burden of sin and suffering make me more earnestly to groan not to be unclothed but to be clothed upon that mortality may be swallowed up of life that being absent from the body I may be present with the Lord. And seeing this Cup may not pass from me and I must not look for the Chariot of Elias to carry me unto Heaven let thy Will be done and let me rest therein and let death be the gain and advantage of my soul And Phil. 1 21. 2 Cor. 4. 16 ●8 1 Kings 19. 4. while this outward man is perishing let the inner man be renewed from day to day For what am I better than my Fathers and all thy Saints and the generations of mankind that I should think of any other passage than this of Death to the world of immortality O let this fainting heart be glad and let my glory rejoyce and in Love and Ioy in Thankfulness and Praise let me pass into the world of Love and Ioy where Thanksgiving and Praise shall be my work for ever And though my flesh and heart will fail Psal. 73. 26. be thou the strength of my heart O God and my portion for ever Though I must walk through the valley of the shadow of death let me fear no evil But be thou still with me and let me be comforted by thy rod Psal. 23. 4 5 6. and staff Let the goodness and mercy which hath followed me thus far all my dayes receive me at the last that I may dwell with thee for ever For it is the will of my Redeemer that those which thou hast given him be with him where he is to behold the glory which thou hast given him And that his servants John 17. 24. John 12. 26. Acts 7. 59. Luke 23. 43. John 20. 17. Joh. 14. 1 2 3. Psal. 16. 11 12. should follow him that where he is there also may his servants be Amen Lord Iesus Good is thy Will and the Word which thou hast spoken Into thy hands I commend my Spirit which thou hast Redeemed Receive it and let me be with thee in Paradise O thou that hast called us thy Brethren when thou didst ascend to thy Father and our Father and to thy God and our God take up this poor unworthy soul to the mansions which thou hast prepared for us that I may be with thee where thou art And though this flesh must perish let it rest in hope and be but sowed as a grain of wheat till thy powerful Call shall raise it from the dust and this corruptible shall put on incorruption and this mortal shall put on immortality and this 1 Cor. 15. 53 54 55. natural body shall be raised a spiritual body and death shall be swallowed up in Victory For though I be dead my life is hid with Christ in God And when thou appearest who art my Life then let me appear with Col. 3. 3 4 5. 2 Thess. 1. 10 11. thee in glory O hasten that appearance and come with thy holy glorious Angels to be glorified in thy Saints and admired in and by Believers When thou wilt change our vile bodies and make them like to thy Glorious Body by the mighty working by which thou canst subdue even all things to thy self Hast Phil. 3. 21. Rev. 2● 20 17 Eph. 5. 26 27. 1 Cor. 15. 45. Acts 3. 5. John 14. 19. Rev. 14. 13. Matth. 10. 30. Luke 21. 18. Heb. 12. 22 23 Rev. 1. 6. Rom. 11. 36. Rev.
Si quisquam Dei cult●rum pepercit Apostatis sint vera quae dicis de nobis and so he heapeth up as many Texts for rough dealing with offending Kings I give this one instance to shew the fruits of violence as pretended for peace and unity Of the persecutions of the faithful in most ages even by professed Christians themselves and Gods disowning that Spirit of Cruelty by his special Providences all Church History maketh mention And how the names of such persecuting hypocrites have stunk in the nostrils of all sober men when their tragoedy was fully acted and understood Especially the poor Churches called Waldenses Piccards and Albigenses have felt the grievousest effects of this tyranny and yet have the Testimony of the best and wisest men to have been the purest and nearest to the Apostlick simplicity in all the world and the memory of their enemies and persecutors is an abhorrence to the Sons of Charity and Peace Read Lasitius and Commenius of their Discipline and Bishop Usher de Eccles. succes statu I will recite one notable passage mentioned by Thuanus and Commenius the one Hist. l. 36. the other de Bono Unit. Ord. Discipl p. 59. Maximilian that good and moderate Emperour being one day in the Coach with Ioh. Crato only his chief Physicion and a learned Protestant lamenting the divisions of Christians asked Crato which sort he thought came nearest to the Apostolick simplicity He answered He thought that honour belonged to the Brethren called Picards The Emperour said He thought so too which Crato acquainting them with encouraged them to dedicate to him a Book of part of their devotions For the year before God had thus marvellously saved him from having a hand in their blood Ioachimus a Nova Domo Chancellor of Bohemia went to Vienna and gave the Emperour no rest till he had procured him to subscribe a Mandate for the reviving of a former persecuting Mandate against them Having got his Commission and passing just out of the Gates of Vienna as he was upon the Bridge over the Danubius the Bridge brake under him and he and all his retinue fell into that great and terrible water and all were drowned except six horsemen and one young Nobleman who seeing his Lord in the Waves catcht hold of his Gold Chain and hold him till some Fishermen came in Boats but found him dead and his Box with the Commission sunk past recovery This Noble man who survived was sensible of Gods judgement and turned to the Brethren in Religion and the Mandate was no further prosecuted Such another story Bishop Usher was wont to tell how Ireland was saved from persecution in Queen Mary's dayes But it is the most heinous cruelty when as in Daniels case there are Laws of impiety or iniquity made of purpose to intrap the innocent by them that confess We shall find no fault against this Daniel except it be concerning the Law of his God And then men must be taken in these Spiders webs and accused as schismatical or what the contrivers please And especially when it is real Holiness which is hated and Order Unity Concord Peace or Obedience to our Pastors is made the pretence for the malitious oppression of it Gildas and Salvian have told Church Governours of this at large And many of the persecuted Protestants have more largely told the Roman Clergy of it It is a smart complaint of him that wrote the Epist. de malis Doctoribus ascribed to P. Sixtus 3. Hujus doctrinae causa pro sanctitate scilicet paucos amicos conquirunt plures inimicos Necesse est enim eos qui peccatorum vitia condemnant tantos habere contrarios quantos exercere vitia delectat In de est etiam quod iniquis impiis factionibus opprimuntur quod criminibus falsis appetuntur quod haeresis etiam perfunduntur infamia quod hic omnis inimicorum suorum sermo ab ipsorum sumit obtrectatione materiam Sed quid mirum ut flagitiosis haeresis videatur doctrina justitiae Quibus tamen haeresis Ipsorum secretum patet tantum inimicis cum si fides dictis inesset amici illud potius scire potuissent c. The cause is saith Prosper de vit contempl l. 1. cap. 20. ex eo Hilitgarius Camarac l. 5. c. 19. Sed nos praesentibus delectati dum in hac vita commoda nostra honores inquirimus non ut meliores sed ut ditiores non ut sanctiores sed ut honoratiores sunus caeteris festinamus Nec gregem domini qui nobis pascendus tuendusque commissus est sed nostras voluntates dominationem divitias caetera blandimenta carnaliter cogitamus Pastores dici volumus nec tamen esse contendimus Officii n●s vitamus laborem appetimus dignitatem Immundorum spirituum feras a grege dilacerand● non pellimus quod eis remanserat ipsi consumimus Quando peccantes divites vel potentes non solum n●● arguimus sed etiam veneramur ne nobis aut munera solita offensi non dirigant aut obsequia desiderata subducant ac sic muneribus eorum obsequiis capti immo per haec illis addicti loqui eis de peccato suo aut de futuro judicio formidamus Ad hoc tantum Potentes effecti ut nobis in subjectos dominationem tyrannicam vindicemus non ut afflictos contra violentiam potentum qui in eos serarum more saeviunt defendamus Inde est quod tam a Potentibus hujus mundi quam a nobis quod pejus est nonnulli graviter fatigati deper●u●t quos se de manu nostra Dominus requisiturum terribiliter comminatur Sulp. Severus also toucheth the sore when he saith Hist. l. 2. Certatim gloriosa in certamina ruebatur multoque avidius tum martyria gloriosis mortibus quaerebantur quam nunc Episcopatus pravis ambitionibus appetuntur But when he saith ibid. after Constantines delivery of the Church Neque ulterius persecutionem fore ●redimus nisi eam quam sub fine jam saeculi Antichristus exercebit either he was very grosly mistaken or else those are the instruments of Antichrist that are not thought so It is a most notable instance to our purpose which Severus ends his History with of the mischievous zeal of Orthodox Ithacius and Idacius against Priscillian and his Gnosticks and worthy of the study of the Prelates of the Church Idacius sine modo ultra quam oportuit Istantium sociosque ejus lacessens facem nascenti incendio subdidit ut exasperaverit malos potius quam compresserit In summ they got the Magistrate to interpose and banish the Gnosticks who quickly learned by bribing Court Officers to turn the Emperour against the Orthodox for themselves Till the zeal of Idacius and Ithacius grew so hot as to accuse even the best men yea St. Martin himself of favouring the Gnosticks And at last got another Tyrannical Emperour to put Priscillian and many other Gnosticks to death Though they
Father Mother c. for his service and swearing to prefer it and his safety before them all See Martinius reciting the Oath out of divers Authors This is our sense of the word Let no man now that taketh it in other sense pretend therefore that we differ in doctrine 2. Seeing it is no Scripture word it is not of necessity to the faith or peace of the Church but when disputers agree not of the sense of the word they are best lay it by and use such terms whose sense they can agree on 3. The name Sacrament is either taken from the Covenant sworn to or from the Sign or Ceremony of Consent by which we oblige our selves or from both together 4. The Covenant of Christianity is different from a particular Covenant of some Office And accordingly the Sacrament is to be distinguished 5. As Civil Oeconomical and Ecclesiastical Offices are distinct so are their several Sacraments 6. The solemn renewing of the sacred Vow or Covenant without any instituted obliging sign is to be distinguished from the renewing it by such a sign of Gods institution And now I conclude 1. As the word Sacrament is taken improperly secundum quid from the nobler part only that is the Covenant as a mans ●oul is called the Man so there are as many Sacraments as Covenants and there is in specie but one Covenant of Christianity and so but one Sacrament of Christianity variously expressed 2. As the word Sacrament is taken properly and fully according to the foresaid description so there are properly two Sacraments of Christianity or of the Covenant of Grace that is Baptism the Sacrament of initiation most ●ully so called and the Lords Supper or the Sacrament of Confirmation Exercise and Progress 3. As the word Sacrament is taken less properly defectively secundum quid for the same Covenant of Grace or Christianity renewed by any arbitrary sign of our own without a solemn Ceremony of Divine institution so there are divers Sacraments of Christianity or the Covenant of Grace that is Divers solemn renewals of our Covenant with God As 1. At our solemn transition from the state of Infant-membership unto that of the Adult when we solemnly own our baptismal Covenant which Calvin and many Protestants and the English Rubrick call Confirmation 2. The solemn owning the Christian Faith and Covenant in our constant Church-assemblies when we stand up at the Creed or profession of our saith and all renew our Covenant with God and dedication to him 3. At solemn dayes of Fasting or humiliation and of Thanksgiving when this should be solemnly done Specially upon some publick defection 4. Upon the publick Repentance of a particular sinner before his absolution 5. When a man is going out of the world and recommending his soul to God by Christ All these are solemn renewings of our Covenant with God in which we may use any Lawful Natural or Arbitrary signs or expressions to signifie our own minds by as speaking subscribing standing up lifting up the hand laying it upon a book kissing the book c. These Sacraments are improperly so called And are Divine as to the Covenant renewed but Humane as to the expressing signs 4. Ordination is not improperly or unfitly called a Sacrament because it is the solemnizing of a mutual Covenant between God and man for our dedication to his special service and his reception of us and blessing on us though Imposition of hands be not so solemn a Ceremony by meer Institution as Baptism and the Lords Supper But then it must be noted that this is not Sacramentum Christianita●is a Sacrament of the Christian Covenant but Sacramentum Ordinis vel officii particularis a Sacrament of Orders or a particular Office but yet of Divine institution 5. The solemn Celebration of Marriage is an Oeconomical Sacrament that is a solemn obligation of man and woman by Vow to one another and of both to God in that relation which may be arbitrarily expressed by lawful signs or ceremonies 6. The solemn Covenant of a Master with his servant is on the same account an Oeconomical Sacrament 7. The inauguration of a King in which he is sworn to his subjects and dedicated to God in that Office and his subjects sworn or consent to him is a Civil Sacrament whether Unction be added or not And so is a Judges entrance on his Office when it is done so solemnly by an obliging V●w or Covenant 8. Confirmation in the Papists sense as conferred by Chrysm on Infants for giving them the Holy Ghost is but an unwarrantable imitation of the old miraculous operation by the Apostles and neither a Christian Sacrament nor a warrantable practice but a presumption 9. The same may be said of their Sacrament of Extream Unction 10. Their Sacrament of Marriage is no otherwise a Sacrament than the Inauguration of a King is which is approved by God as well as Marriage and signifieth also an honourable Collation of Power from the Universal King 11. Their Sacrament of Penance is no otherwise a Sacrament than many other fore-mentioned renewings of our Covenant are 12. Therefore the Papists seven Sacraments or septenary distribution is confused partly redundant partly defective and unworthy to be made a part of their faith or Religion or the matter of their pievish and ignorant contendings And they that peremptorily say without distinguishing that there are but two Sacraments in all do but harden them by the unwarrantable narrowing of the word Quest. 100. How far is it lawful needful or unlawful for a man to afflict himself by external Penances for sin Answ. Neg. 1. NOt to the destroying of his body life or health or the disabling or unfitting Isa. 58. ● 5 6 7 8 c. Matth. 9. 13. 12. 7. Matth. 6 1 3 5 6 17. Z●ch 8. 19. 2 Cor. 2. 7. Col. 2 22 23 24. Joel 1. 14. 2. 15. Dan. 9. 3. A●●●● 10. 13. 1 Cor 7. 5. ●uke 2 37. Ma●●h 4. 2. ● S●m 12. 22. ●uke 18. 12. body or mind for the service of God 2. Not to be the expression of any sinful inordinate dejection despondency sorrow or despair 3. Not so as may be an outward appearance of such inordinate passions or as may be a scandal to others and deter them from Religion as a melancholy hurtful thing 4. Not as if God would accept the meer external self-afflicting for it self or as if he loved our hurt or as if we merited of him by our unprofitable voluntary troubles But 1. It is a duty to express true godly sorrow by its proper exercise and signs so far as either the acting of it or the increase or continuance by the means of those expressions is profitable to our selves 2. And also so far as is needful to the profiting of others by shewing them the evil of sin and drawing them to repentance 3. And so far as is necessary to the satisfying of the Church of the truth of our Repentance in
can any man with reason think Object 5. but that the first institution of Kings a sufficient consideration wherefore their power should alwayes depend on that from which it did alwayes flow by original influence of power from the Body into the King is the cause of Kings dependency in power upon the body By dependency we mean subordination and subjection ☜ Answ. 1. But it their institution in genere was of God and that give them their power and it never Answ. flowed from the Body at all then all your superstructure falleth with your ground-work 2. And here you seem plainly to confound all Kingdoms by turning the pars imperans into the pars subdita vice versa If the King be subject how are they his subjects I will not inferr what this will lead them to do when they are taught that Kings are in subordination and subjection to them Sad experience hath shewed us what this very principle would effect § 17. Object 6. Ibid. A manifest token of which dependency may be this as there is no more certain Object 6. argument that Lands are held under any as Lords than if we see that such lands in defect of heirs So Lib 8 ● 211 p 218 p. 220. fall unto them by Escheat In like manner it doth follow rightly that seeing Dominion when there is none to inherit it returneth unto the body therefore they which before were inheritors of it did hold it in dependance on the body So that by comparing the Body with the Head as touching power it seemeth alwayes to reside in both fundamentally and radically in one in the other derivatively in one the Habit in the other the Act of Power Answ. Power no more falleth to the multitude by Escheat than the Power of the Pastor falls to the Answ. Church or the Power of the Physicion to the Hospital or the Power of the Schoolmaster to the Scholars that is not at all When all the Heirs are dead they are an ungoverned Community that have power to choose a Governour but no Power to Govern neither as you distinguish it in Habit nor in act originally n●r derivatively As it is with a Corporation when the Mayor is dead the power falleth not to the people Therefore there is no good ground given for your following question May a body politick than at all times withdraw in whole or in part the influence of dominion which passeth from it if inconveniences do ●row thereby Though you answer this question soberly your self its easie to see how the multitude may be tempted to answer it on your grounds especially if they think your inconvenience turn into a necessity and what use they will make of your next words It must be presumed that Supream Governours will not in such cases oppose themselves and be stiff in detaining that the use whereof is with publick detriment A strange presumption § 18. Object 7. The Axioms of our Regal Government are these Lex facit Regem The Kings Object 7. grant of any favour made contrary to Law is void Rex nihil potest nisi quod jure potest Answ. If Lex be taken improperly for the constituting contract between Prince and people and Answ. if your facit have respect only to the species and person and not the substance of the Power it self Lib. 8. p. 195. Trita in Scholis Nem nem sibi imp●r●e poss● nominem sibi legem posse dicere à qua mutata voluntate nequeat recedere Summum ejus esse Imperium qui ordinario jure derogare valeat Equibus evin●itur jus summae potesta●●s non lim●tari per legem positivam Hinc Augustinus dixit Imperatorem non esse subjectum legibus suis G●●iu● de Imp. p. 149 150. then I contradict you not But if Lex be taken properly for Authoritativa constitutio debiti or the signification of the Soveraigns will to oblige the Subject then Lex non facit Regem sed Rex Legem § 19 Object 8. Lib. 8. p. 210. When all which the wisdom of all sorts can do is done for the devising Object 8. of Laws in the Church it is the general consent of all that giveth them the form and vigor of Laws without which they could be no more to us than the Councils of Physicions to the sick Well might they seem is wholesome admonitions and instructions but Laws could they never be without consent of the whole Church to be guided by them whereunto both nature and the practice of the Church of God set down in Scripture is found every way so fully consonant that God himself would not impose no not his own Laws upon his people by the hand of Moses without their free and open consent ☜ Answ. 1. Wisdom doth but prepare Laws and Governing power enacteth them and giveth them Answ. their form But the whole Body hath no such Governing power Therefore they give them not their form 2. The peoples consent to Gods Laws gave them not their form or authority This opinion I Hanc video sapien issimorum fuisse sent●ntiam Le●em nec hom●num ingeniis excogitatam nec s●itum aliquod esse populorum sed aeter●um quiddam quod universum mundum regeret ●mperandi prohibendique sapientia Cicero de Leg. have elsewhere confuted against a more erroneous Author Their consent to Gods Laws was required indeed as naturally necessary to their obedience but not as necessary to the Being or Obligation of the Law Can you think that it had been no sin in them to have disobeyed Gods Laws unless they had first consented to them Then all the world might escape sin and damnation by denying consent to the Laws of God 3. This doctrine will teach men that * How considerable a part of England is London Yet in this Convocation which hath made the Ne● Changes in the Liturgy and Book of Ordination London had not one Clerk of their choosing For being to choose but two they chose only Mr. Cala●y and my self who were neither of us accepted or ever th●re Now if your opinion be true Quar. 1. Whether you make not this Convocations Decrees to be but Counsels to us a. Or at least whether the City of London or the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Ministers be not made free from detriment as not consenters You will free them and me especially from Detriment for our Not Conforming to this Convocations Acts as such upon reasons which I do not own my self as generally by you laid down we have no Church-Laws For the whole Church never signified their consent Millions of the poorer sort have no voices in choosing Parliament men or Convocations And this will teach the minor dissenting part to think themselves disobliged for want of consenting and will give every dissenting part or person a Negative voice to all Church Laws 4. A single Bishop hath a Governing power over his particular Church and they are bound to obey
nature of Carnal-selfishness and it is no better § 4. 3. SELFISHNESSE is the corruption of all the faculties of the soul. It is the sin of the mind by self-conceitedness and pride It is the sin of the will and affections by self-love and all the selfish passions which attend it Selfish desires angers sorrows discontents jealousies fears audacities c. It is the corruption of all the inferiour faculties and the whole conversation by self-seeking and all the forementioned evils § 5. 4. Selfishness is the commonest sin in the world Every man is now born with it and hath it more or less And therefore every man should fear it § 6. 5. Selfishness is the hardest sin in the world to overcome In all the unregenerate it is predominant For nothing but the sanctifying Spirit of God can overcome it And in many thousands that seem very zealous in Religion and very mortified in all other respects yet in some way or other selfishness doth so lamentably appear yea and is so strong in many that are sincere that it is the greatest dishonour to the Church of Christ and hath tempted many to infidelity or to doubt whether there be any such thing as true sanctification in the world The persons that seemed the most mortified Saints if you do but cross them in their self-interest or opinion or will or seem to slight them and have a low esteem of them what swellings what heart-burnings what bitter censurings what proud impatience if not Schisms and separations will it cause God hath better servants but too many which seem to themselves and others to be the best are no better How then should every Christian abhor and watch against this Universal Evil § 7. Direct 2. Consider oft how amiable a creature man would be and what a blessed condition the Direct 2. world and all societies would be in if selfishness were but overcome There would then ●e no pride no covetousness no sensuality no tyranny or oppressing of the poor no malice cruelty or persecution no Church-divisions no scandals nothing to dishonour Religion or to hinder the saving progress of the Gospel no fraud or treacheries no over-reaching or abusing others no lying no● deceit no neglect of our duty to others In a word no injustice or uncharitableness in the world § 8. Direct 3. Iudge of good and evil by sober Reason and not by bruitish sense And then oft Direct 3. consider whether really there be not a more excellent end than your self ish interest Even the publick good of many and the pleasing and glorifying of God And whether all mediate good or evil should not be judged of principally by those highest ends Sense leadeth men to selfishness and privateness of design But true Reason leadeth men to prefer the publick or any thing that is better than our self-interest § 9. Direct 4. Nothing but returning by converting Grace to the true Love of God and of Man for Direct 4. his sake will conquer selfishness Make out therefore by earnest prayer for the Spirit of Sanctification And be sure that you have a true apprehension of the state of Grace that is that it is indeed The Love of God and Man Love is the fulfilling of the Law Therefore Love is the Holiness of the soul Set your whole study upon the exercise and increase of Love and selfishness will dye as Love reviveth § 10. Direct 5. Study much the self-denying example and precepts of your Saviour His life and Direct 5. doctrine are the liveliest representation of self-denyal that ever was given to the World Learn Christ and you will learn self-denyal He had no sinful selfishness to mortifie yet natural-self was so wonderfully denyed by him for his Fathers Will and our Salvation that no other Book or Teacher in the world will teach us this lesson so perfectly as he Follow him from the Manger or rather from the Womb to the Cross and Grave Behold him in his poverty and contempt enduring the contradiction and ingratitude of sinners and making himself of no reputation Behold him apprehended accused condemned crowned with thorns clothed in purple with a reed in his hand scourged and led away to execution bearing his Cross and hanged up among Thieves forsaken by his own Disciples and all the world and in part by him who is more than all the world And consider why all this was done For whom he did it and what lesson he purposed hereby to teach us Consider why he made it one half the condition of our salvation and so great a part of the Christian Religion to Deny our selves and take up our Cross and follow him and will have no other to be his Disciples Luke 14. 26 31 33. Were a Crucified Christ more of our daily study and did we make it our Religion to learn and follow his holy example self-denyal would be better known and practised and Christianity would appear as it is and not as it is misunderstood adulterated and abused in the world But because I have long ago written a Treatise of Self-denyal I shall add no more CHAP. XXVII Cases and Directions for Loving our Neighbour as our selves Tit. 1. Cases of Conscience about Loving our Neighbour Quest. 1. IN what sense is it that I must love my neighbour as my self Whether in the kind of Quest. 1. love or in the degree or only in the reality Answ. The true meaning of the Text is You must love him according to his true worth without the diversion and hinderance of selfishness and partiality As you must love your self according to that degree of Goodness which is in you and no more so must you as impartially love your neighbour according to that degree of Goodness which is in him So that it truly extendeth to the reality the kind and the degree of love supposing it in both proportioned to the goodness of the object But before this can be understood the true nature of Love must be well understood Quest. 2. What is the true Nature of Love both as to my self and neighbour Quest. 2. Answ. Love is nothing but the prime motion of the Will to its proper object which is called Complacence The object of it is simple Goodness or Good as such It ariseth from suitableness between the Object and the Will as appetite doth from the suitableness of the appetent faculty and the food This GOOD as it is variously modified or any way differeth doth accordingly cause or require a difference in our Love Therefore that Love which in its prime act and nature is but one is diversly denominated as its objects are diversified To an object as simply Good in it self it followeth the Understandings Estimation and is called as I said meer Complacence or Adhesion To an Object as not yet attained but absent or distant and attainable it is called Desire or Desiring Love And as expected Hope or Hoping Love which is a conjunction of Desire
Arabick and sending it to Indostan and Persia. And what excellent labour hath good Mr. Iohn Eliots with some few assistants bestowed these twenty years and more in New England where now he hath translated and Printed the whole Scriptures in their Americane tongue with a Catechism and Call to the Unconverted by the help of a press maintained from hence 2. The attempt of Restoring the Christian Churches to their primitive purity and Unity according to mens several opportunities is a most excellent and desirable work which though the ignorance and wickedness of many and the implacableness and bloodiness of the carnal proud domineering part and the too great alienation of some others from them do make it so difficult as to be next to desperate at the present yet is not to be cast off as desperate indeed For great things have been done by wise and valiant attempts Princes might do very much to this if they were both wise and willing And who knoweth but an age may come that may be so happy The means and method I would willingly describe but that this is no fit place or time 3. The planting of a learned able holy concordant Ministry in a particular Kingdom and setling the primitive Discipline thereby is a work also which those Princes may very much promote whose hearts are set upon it and who set up no contrary interest against it But because these lines are never like to be known to Princes unless by way of accusation it is private mens works which we must speak to 4. It is a very good work to procure and maintain a worthy Minister in any of the most ignorant Parishes in these Kingdoms of which alas how many are there where the skilful preaching of the Gospel is now wanting or to maintain an assistant in populous Parishes where one is not able to do the work or by other just means to promote this service 5. It is a very good work to set up Free-Schools in populous and in ignorant places especially in Wales that all may be taught to read and some may be prepared for the Universities 6. It is an excellent work to ●ull out some of the choicest wits among the poorer sort in the Countrey Schools who otherwise would wither for want of culture and to maintain them for Learning in order to the Ministry with some able godly Tutor in the University or some Countrey Minister who is fit and vacant enough thereunto 7. It is an excellent work to give among poor ignorant people Bibles and Catechisms and some plain and godly Books which are most fitted to their use But it were more excellent to leave a setled revenew for this use naming the Books and choosing meet Trustees that so the Rent might every year furnish a several Parish which would in short time be a very extensive benefit and go through many Countries 8. It is a very good work to set poor mens children Apprentices to honest religious Masters where they may at once get the blessing to their souls of a godly education and to their bodies of an honest way of maintenance 9. It will not be unacceptable to God to relieve some of the persons or poor children of those very many hundred faithful Ministers of Christ who are now silenced and destitute of maintenance many having nothing at all but what charity sendeth them to maintain themselves and desolate families who were wont to exercise charity to the bodies and souls of others Read Matth. 25. Gal. 6. 5 6 7 8. 10. It is a good work of them who give stocks of money or yearly rents to be lent for five or six or seven years to young Tradesmen at their setting up upon good security choosing good Trustees who may choose the fittest persons And if it be a rent it will still increase the stock and if any should break the loss of it may be born 11. It would be a very good work for Landlords to improve their interest with their Tenants to further at once their bodily comfort and salvation To hire them by some abatement at their Rent dayes to learn Catechisms and read the Scripture and good Books in their families and give the Pastor an account of their proficience Whether the Law will enable them to bind them to any such thing in their Leases I cannot tell 12. And the present work of Charity for every one is to relieve the most needy which are next at hand To know what poor families are in greatest want and to help them as we are able and to provoke the rich to do that which we cannot do our selves and to beg for others And still to make use of bodily relief to further the good of their souls by seconding all with spiritual advice and help Quest. 4. In what order are works of Charity to be done And whom must we prefer when we are Quest. 4. unable to accommodate all Answ. 1. The most publick works must be preferred before private 2. Works for the soul caeteris paribus before works for the body And yet bodily benefits in order of time must oft go first as preparations to the other 3. Greatest necessities caeteris paribus must be supplyed before lesser The saving of anothers life must be preferred before your own less necessary comforts 4. Your own and families wants must caeteris paribus be supplyed before strangers even before some that you must love better Because God hath in point of provision and maintenance given you a nearer charge of your selves and families than of others 5. Nature also obligeth you to prefer your kindred before strangers if there be a parity as to other reasons 6. And caeteris paribus a good man must be preferred before a bad 7. And yet that charity which is like to tend to the good of the soul as well as of the body is to be preferred And in that case oft-times a bad man is to be preferred when a greater good is like to be the effect 8. A friend caeteris paribus is to be preferred before an enemy But not when the Good is like to be greater which will follow the relieving of an enemy Many other rules might be given but they are laid down already Tom. 1. Cap. where I treat of Good Works whither I refer you Quest. 5. Should I give in my life time or at my death Quest. 5. Answ. According as it is like to do most good But none should needlesly delay Both is best Quest. 6. Should one devote or set by a certain part of daily incomes Quest. 6. Quest. 7. What proportion is a man bound to give to the poor Quest. 7. Answ. These two Questions having answered in a Letter to Mr. Thomas Gouge now printed and the Book being not in many hands I will here recite that Letter as it is published Most Dear and very much Honoured Brother EVen the Philosopher hath taught me so to esteem you who said that He is likest