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B15559 A practicall catechisme: or, A view of those principall truths according to godlinesse, which are contayned in the catechisme diuided into three parts: and seruing for the vse, (as of all, so) especially of those that first heard them. By D.R. B. of Divin, minister of the Gospell. D. R. (Daniel Rogers), 1573-1652. 1632 (1632) STC 21166; ESTC S116040 309,840 430

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of sinne As concerning those notions which were left in them and were in stead of a law they were onely enough to condemne them not otherwise The most ignorant and vicious among them easily blew out that dimme sparke they had by the blast of their strong lusts and were giuen vp to a reprobate sence and horrible lusts Their most morall Philosophers although to the shame of Christians it may bee spoken hatcht vp their sparkles of dimme light to some measure yet as touching the true knowledge of sinne they had it not they thought some sins no sins some sins vertues and some vertues vices and the sinnes they saw they neuer saw them by a word or in the curse due to them they saw a dimme twilight of an vnknowne GOD vertue vice punishment or reward and therefore were farre from any true enlighting Q. But what doth the Law worke in particular A. Two distinct things Knowledge and conviction For the first reade Rom. 7. I had not knowne sinne if the Law had net said Thou shalt not lust In which respect sinne is said to raigne from Adam to Moses yea and vnder the old Law in respect of any conuincement But since the Ministery of the Word of reconciliation came the Lord hath enlarged the power of the Ministery of the Law as a preparatiue thereto in the hearts of men As Paul saith 1 Cor. 10. Those that heare the word plainly preached and by name the Law in the true spirit●all sence and sauor of it they fall downe and say that God is in you of a truth Not that the Ministery of Christ is properly Legall for we are Ministers of reconciliation but not excluding it Christ came not to destroy the Law in the doctrine of it for it leades to Christ saue in the rigour and dominion of it The Law then first searches the soule it s the candle of the Lord and pierces the bowels of the spirit those secret windings corners shifts and euasions of it bee they neuer so colourable and subtill It is as a great torch-light in the dead time of night in the hand of an Inquisitour which searches an house for Papists and Iesuites and finds them in their Masse and takes them with all their bookes and trinkets As the persecutors of the Saints searched all vaults and priuy doores barnes and mowes of hay and corne with speares sharp spits and swords so is the Law acted by that spirit of conuincement and search Ioh. 9. the discouerer of the thoughts and Heb. 4.12 pierceth between the ioynts and marrow The Lord hath giuen it authority ouer the conscience as his owne Bayliff to hunt out and discerne sinne in the colours in the kinds of it open secret thoughts affectiōs yea concupiscence not the bare letter of the Law but the spirit for Paul notwithstanding al Gamaliels teaching knew it not And the conscience of the vnregenerate being once thus stirred is as the light of the Law to bring God into ech priuy part Not a dimme twilight but a Sunne at noonetide which shines frō East to West all ouer the spheare of Heauen and makes euery soule come out as Adam from the bushes by the voyce of God so cleerly bewraying a man to himselfe that for the time hee thinkes all other men see him pointed at by the finger of GOD. Q. How is it that the Law of GOD is the reuealer of sinne A. That most Holy and wise God who first contriued and vttered it put the light of his owne pure Maiesty into it and enabled it to discouer sinne to the soule not as other Lawes to speake to the eare but to the conscience and although there is no commandement in the whole booke of God Psal 19 Psal 119. Heb. 4.12 Eph. 5.10 11. Ioh. 3.20 which comes not from the same Author and spirit of light and truth yet the Lord hath more peculiarly put this power of Enlightening into this his morall Law as conteyning a more full exact and cleer view of all sinne both in the Nature and penalties of the same and according to his ordinance so it worketh not by the bare ten words syllables but the effectuall Ministery thereof accompanyed with the Spirit And looke what I say of light the same I adde of co●uiction also and her worke both are put into the Law by the same GOD whose fingers wrote it Q. Is vnbeleefe of the Gospell discouered by it A. No The Law is a modell of the righteousnes of Creation in which there was no need of fayth therefore it onely reueales those sinnes which make vs guilty without a remedy that it might dryue vs to seeke a remedy Yet we must not thinke it an imperfect light for this cause For as no man calles the Rules of Grammar imperfect because the Rules of Rhetorique are not in it so none can call the discouery of the Law insufficient because it reueales not the sinnes against the Gospell Q What sinnes doth the Law discouer A. All sorts by name Actuall and originall Q. What need any more be sayd of thi● haue we not heard enough of the nature of Misery in the third A●ticle both in Sinne and death A. Euen that we spake there flowes from no other spring then the Law of God onely heere we adde this Article to that for this cause In that we onely bounded misery within her Compasse shewing wherein it lyes simply considered But when wee adde The Law reueales sinne wee meane as sinne and the curse lyes vpon vs as we are guilty of it and cursed by it the Law doth set the saddle vpon the right horse and so shewes sinne in her colours to the soule that it might apply the knowledge of it to thee and me in particular and this is a further worke Q. Well proceed to the enlightning worke of the Law about Actuall sinne what is it A. First the Law in the spirituall Ministery thereof do●h disperse those mysts and skales of the blindeye that suffer not light to enter Secondly It opens and giues light to the eyes to see sinne in her true colors For the first According to the sorts of sinners so doth the Law take away their lets of knowledge Take three or fore Instances Put case CHRIST had purpozed to enlighten a Pharise in the knowledge of sinne he would haue remmooued all the corruptions of the Law and darknes of the text They had establisht a Corban which might free a child from the fifth Commandement as their heires the Papists at this day dispence with any murthers or villanies if for their Catholique cause and ends They had curtolled the law in point of her extent confining her to some grosse crimes and taken away the key of light from the people about particulars They had set vp an exposition of their owne inuention they had made what they listed to bee sinne and what they pleased to be none they had soothed the people vp in this course and sowed pillows vnder
of present helpe himselfe stepped forth to helpe it out he of duty the Lord of meere goodnesse but thus he did found out a way to set man vpon dry land againe out of the gulfe and depth of misery so that the one was not so hidious as this is precious and gracious Q. More particularly what do they conteine A. A sweet view of the chiefe parts of this Redemption First the first hidden and secret eternall Workeman of this deliuerance and that is God the Father In whose bosome this depth lay before all worlds who fore-seeing this ruine and his endlesse Iustice against sinne yet purpozed not to abandon all grace out of his heart towards desolate man but to retaine some still in the bottom of his wisedome good pleasure And note that this appeared not at first yet it was there then and appeared after This is the cause why GOD the Father is heere called our Sauiour and why he is said to Saue vs in ver 5. viz. as in 2 Cor 5.17 he is said to Reconcile vs not by meriting it but by first and originall ordaining it as the first agent in the working of the Trinity the deuizer of this Saluation and of the Lord Iesus the meriter of it Now marke this act of God is described by a double argument The first is the impulsiue cause set down by three words Kindnesse Loue Mercy Whereof the latter interprets the former Kindnesse and Loue noting the remainder of that Goodnesse of Creation as if the Apostle should say The sin of man could not root out this goodnesse so as to take it from God but still he had a bottomlesse goodnesse and kindnesse left in himselfe But the third word Mercy add● to them both q. d. The Lord imparted himselfe to Adam in this goodnesse of his ere hee was fallen but hee shewd him no mercy for hee needed none But beeing become miserable Lo he addes mercy to goodnes and enlarges his first kindnes and loue by a second compassion pity respecting him now in his blood and misery in which he exceeds the former as much as the Sun at noonetyde doth the rizing mercy being the perfection of loue The second argument is from the deniall of contraries Not by workes of righteousnes c. The summe is this eternall mercy was free in the conception of it The LORD foresaw not who should in time embrace this mercy nor left it in a middle doubtfull vncerteinty who should and who not suspending his pleasure vpon mans will but he did out of the freedome of grace and mercy when as yet no good in vs was foreseene much lesse actuall when no naturall or supernaturall goodnes was to bee seene in vs euen then hee saued vs because he would so doe Q. What is the second branch of this description A. The inst●umentall meriting cause of this saluation set forth in those wordes when this loue appeared and againe vers 6 Which he shed abundantly through Iesus Christ our Sauior Note the sweet phrase which Paul delights in to stile both the Father and Christ our Sauiours the latter flowing from the former Now in this point note first he sayth It appeared As we see the like word Chapter second verse 11. The summe is whereas it had bin impossible for man or Angel euer to haue diued into the depth of this mercy Lo the Lord caused it to appeare in the fulnes of time and brake open this sealed fountaine of his bosome by the manifesting thereof in his Sonne for no man at any time hath seene the Father but the onely begotten Sonne of GOD comming out of his bosome hath reuealed him And which is this Appearer who made mercy appeare in himselfe Iesus Christ our Sauior It must bee so that howsoeuer mercy was hidde in the Father yet it could not appeare but by Iesus our Sauior he truly God and man in obeying suffering must bring iustice to kisse this mercy by appeasing that infinite anger of the Father for sinne and performing such a righteousnes for man as might afford a sufficient satisfaction to GOD in his vttermost iustice Christ and none else could thus do or suffer none else may satisfy he himselfe without all this both obedience and blood could not doe it none of his loue or prayers or pouerty but Iesus our Sauiour in this his full payment as a surety and a Sacrifice of blood could saue vs Q. All this is euident but what else addeth the Apostle to make vs this description of deliuerance A. The third point is the obiect vpon whom this blessing is bestowed intimated in these words Towards man and saue vs and shed on vs c. By which as he implieth that Man in his misery the selfe same man that fell frō God to hell was the obiect of mercy so the Number of all those to whom the Lord doth sauingly appeare in this mercy of his electiō in Christ are the ful obiect of mercy al that mercy can bestow The Church of Christ is she who is the sole and equall obiect of Christ all he did and suffred was not for the reprobate Ephe. 5. but the Elect these he redeemed gaue him selfe for that he might make them a peculiar spouse to himselfe without spot or wrinkle as he sayth to the Ephesians in plainer termes Q. And what are those excellent things which IESVS our Sauiour hath purchased doth this Text mention them A. Yea verie fully and that both in generall speciall For the first he sayth he saued vs. Which is as if hee had sayd he restored and set vs in as good an estate as we lost and quit vs as fully of all our misery as euer old Adam did plunge vs into it If hee lost vs Christ saued vs if hee betrayd vs to bondage He redeemed vs if he brought vs to vtter hatred He reconciled vs if he condemned vs Christ forgaue vs hee did deliuer vs in a word from all sinne and curse and layd a plaster on vs full as broad as the sore Rom. 5. Yet this must bee added that Not as the offence is so is the gift For in Adam wee were so made the Image of GOD that we lost it presently but the second Adam so saued vs pardoned and reconciled vs as neuer to be lost neuer to bee cursed neuer condemned the second time And more yet Adam was not created to any happinesse saue immortality vpon earth in a created righteousnesse We to an vncreated Vnion and Communion with God in Heauen in the presence of God This in generall More particularly the words heere are three Saued vs Regenerated vs Renewed vs. By the first of them vnderstand the negatiue part of this deliuerance viz. from what he freed vs Sinne Law Satan Wrath Death Iudgement By the latter two the positiue good things purchased vs. First by Regeneratiō and Renewing he meanes all those graces which concerne our estate in the grace of Iustification standing in
discerning and practice Read therefore and consider Pray for blessing also that this Treatise may returne into your bosomes with double fruit If you profit not how shall strangers In hope whereof I commend your Reading to the Lord and my selfe to your prayers Farewell A necessary Table of direction how to finde any poynt contained in the Treatise The Table of the first part ARtic 1. Touching the integrity of Adams estate p. 1. The Explication of it generally to p. 2. particularly in his body to p. 3. In his soule to p. 4. In his person ibi The vses to p. 7. Artic. 2. Adams fall from his integrity p. 7. The explication of it 1. By the description of it p. 8. 2. The parcels of it ibid. partly circumstances p. 9. partly the causes eyther remote p. 9. or neere p. 10. The vses p. 12. Artic. 3. The misery of Adam fallen both by sinne and punishment p. 15. The explication of it in generall p. 15 16. In particular eyther first sinne and that Originall both guilt p. 17. and staine p. 18. So Actuall p. 20. Or secondly Punishment p. 21. The vses p. 22. Artic. 4. This misery is vniuersally ouerspredde the race of Adam p. 26. The explication of it generall p. 27. particular p. 29. the vses p. 30. Artic. 5. No possibility to manward out of himselfe to escape p. 33. The explication of it ibid. p. 34 The vses ibid. Artic. 6. The Morall Law preached soundly reueales this misery p. 37. The generall explication ibid. The particular First by knowledge of sinne p. 38. and that Actuall p. 40. First by dispersing mists of error p. 41. Secondly by giuing light p. 43. and that in tw particulars First The●selues Secondly Penalties Themselues in fiue respects First Her authority p. 43. Secondly Her Coherence p. 44. Thirdly Her Royalty p. 45. Fourthly Her integrity p. 46. Fiftly Her extent p. 47. Then two Penalties p. 50. Secondly Originall sinne three waies First by termes of Scripture ibid Secondly by Comparison with Actuall p. 51. Thirdly by her properties First Eminency p. 52. Secondly Predominancy p. 53. Thirdly Perpetuity ibid. Fourthly Generality ibid. Fiftly Bondage p. 54. The vses ibid. Secondly by Conuiction of sin and that twofold eyther of iudgement p. 60. that eyther by remoouall of lets p. 61 Or effecting the worke and that many waies p. 63. The vses p. 66. Or else of the whole man p. 68 The explication of it in generall ibid. or specially in three things First the difference p. 70. Secondly the Nature of it the effects and end First Nature ibid. Secondly the effects three First stopping of bad course p. 75. Secondly vnsettling rotten peace p. 76. Thirdly Spirit of Bondage p. 78. The vses p. 79. Then the end p. 81. The vses p. 82. Or the extremities desperation and presumption p. 83. 84. and abuses p. 85. Heere of legall Rebellion The Nature of it vnfolded at large p. 87. The vses p. 92. Then the vse of the whole Doctrine of terror p. 96. Addition The Lord vpholds such as he will saue in this extremity and that by a secret hope p. 98. Explication of it p. 99. 100. The markes of it p. 101. The vses 102. to the end The Contents of the second part ARtic 1. That there is a deliuerance ordained for miserable man out of this thraldome p. 112. The explication of it ibid. the vses p. 113. A further opening p. 114. A further vse p. 116. Artic. 2. The onely meane and meritorious instrument to procure this is Iesus Emanuel p. 120. the Explication p. 120 121. Whereby this is done to wit by a satisfaction where two things First the Qualification of his person First by vnion and vnction Secondly satisfaction it selfe p. 122. the seuen welsprings of Saluation named p. 123. prosecuted after the first Incarnation with the vse p. 123. the second the Godhead with the vse of it 124. the third vnion of flesh with Word and the vse p. 126. the vnction and the vse 226. the fourth the merit and first of Actiue obedience p. 127 the explication of it fully to 130. The fift the Passiue obedience p. 130. the vses of both p. 134. the sixt the conquest with the vse p. 149. the seuenth the application of his merit and by what with the vse p. 153. Artic. 3. The act of God the father not imputing sin c. is the forme of our iustification in it selfe p. 157. the explication of it ibid. the vses p. 162. Artic. 4. The meane of externall dispensing this deliuerance is the offer of grace in the Gospell p. 176. the explication p. 177. the vses p 180. till 187. Artic. 5. That the Lord offring Christ to the soule doth not offer him barely but furnisht with al the benefits of his satisfaction p. 207. the explication and sorts of these benefits p 208. the things to bee considered herein are three First the difference p. 209. Secondly their order p. 211 Thirdly their nature in speciall where of vocation ibid. vnion p. 213. Iustification p. 214. Reconciliation ibid. Adoption p. 215. Redemption ibid. Regeneration p. 216. Sanctification p. 217. Glorification p. 218. The vses p. 219. Article 6. That the Subiect vpon which the Lord bestowes all these good things is his Church p. 223. Explication of sundry Names of the Church p. 224. The vse p. 228. The Adiunct of the Church Communion p. 234. though fouly mis-placed in p. 187. the Explication of it in the qualification and markes of it ibid. and p. 188. the exercise of it First In graces p. 561. Secondly In Ordinances p. 200. Thirdly In Seruices both to bodies p. 203. And soules p. 205 the vse p. 206. Artic. 7. The vse of this whole part viz. that wee beleeue this deliuerance to be our owne p. 234. The Explication of it ibid. whereof two things First the condition of fayth wherein it stands p. 235. Explication of it p. 237. the vses p. 246. Concerning sayth it selfe p. 250. What particulars fayth includes p. 251. the vse of the whole part p. 262. The Contents of the third part ARtic 1. That whoso is in Christ is a new Creature p. 6. the Explication ibid. Foure things considered First the Author p. 8. How he worketh p. 9. Secondly the Instrument p. 10. A question decyded about it viz. How fayth both reconciles and renues p. 11. what acts it performes p. 12. Thirdly the Subiect of it both in particular and generall p. 15. Fourthly the parts p. 16. the vses of the Article at large p. 17. Artic. 2. That the Lord requires that this new Creature thus framed in the soule breake forth into the whole course and conuersation p. 25 The explication ibid. things heerein considerable First the circumstances concerning the persons p. 26. or the conuersation it selfe p. 26. 27. Secondly the substance of conuersation and that in three things First the Graces qualifying it p. 28. Secondly the subiect of it and that in three
death by eating but they feeling all well within for the present rested too much in it felt not their owne changeable will proue to hazzard all their pearles at one cast feared no hurt from without● and here they were caught The Third was the aptnes of the temptation the Diuell feared not their perfection hee makes it strong and alluring both in the blinding of their mind and bewitching of their heart Let it not bee imagined by you sayth he that it is sinfull or deadly to attempt God knoweth the contrary What shall it boot you to obey him that enuies your good A 〈◊〉 the hurt yee feare Lo by eating yee are sure of a better estate then yee are in Thus by the strong bayte of sweetnes hee attempts the affection and so corrupts the iudgement Q. Proceed to the more neere cause of their sinne A. It is threefold First Inward tickling of their affection Secondly Snaring Thirdly Secret consent For the First So excellent a creature could not haue bin suddenly surprized but by steps For why Sinne as yet was not it could not therefore be with them as with vs Iam. 1.5 Wee are first led away by concupiscence but they had none Therefore there must bee a strong moouing and drawing of their mindes a trauaile with this indetermined freedome of theirs to sway it and this supplyeth the roome of concupiscence Satan suspends the act of goodnesse in them brings them to a slacke remissenesse and corrupts their bent of spirit as if a man would suffer an enemy to come within gunshot of him when he ●ight haue kept him out and so liberty is questioned as i● a man would call in question whether his owne be his owne or not This was the first spawne of the sinne And this stood in foolish credulity curiosity and dallyance Credu●ity to secure her selfe of her owne welfare as if nothing could or would ●utcher whereas shee should haue bin suspicious of the least accident threatning her Curiosity to interchange talke and speach with a creature she beeing the Lady of all creatures and therefore should not haue admitted such a parlee but wisely haue thought This is no place for a seruant to intrude himselfe and to iangle with mee being vncalled Speech is not for a Serpent● it becomes not me to seek better content then I haue by an idle curious and vaine discourse which I know not what whence nor to what purpose But this her vaine iangling was her ruine Then Dalliance in bandying so many replies one after another who knowes how many and venturing to prate of so weighty athing as her happines not doubting that so mayne a point threatned her Ruine but hazz●●ding all vpon her owne wit tongue conceits and answers as if shee could haue pluckt backe her score at her pleasure and preuented sinne in the very kindling I say what is this but bold venterousnes vpon the danger because she felt her selfe as yet vntouched These three brought foorth the second which was Snaring for by this tickling of her shee takes the Deuils snare into her will and thoughts so far that as a bird in a grin she could neyther go backeward nor forward but is limed and hampered with that which at the first she was free from her wings begin to be clip● and now shee is ready to tell where her great strength lyeth and now an vnc●eane delight begins to defile her her freedome staggers shee admits a thought What if I venture and try what hurt can come of it Now he● directiue light begins to dazle her purenesse to bee defiled 〈◊〉 and false sweet to expell true And so ceases to bee in her owne power as the bowle rolling downe the hill And so thirdly succeeds Secret assent to the temptation and yeelds vp the inward weapon of her Innocencie to the Diuell rests in the thing offred as very good meet sweet delightfull standing vpon thornes till she do as shee is tempted What wonder when she refus●● to be led by that inward light and grace she had receyued Therefore God leaues her to call good euill and euill good And so shee tooke it ate it gaue it her husband wh● though hee were not first yet hee was last in the transgression and yeelded to doe as the Deuill had drawne her to doe and so both of them disobeyed Q. What consider you in the fall it selfe A. Not onely the act of the transgression but with it a fardell of abundance of foule corruptions of heart And those are of these two sorts eyther more speciall or more generall The speciall were Pride Security and Sloth Vanity Sensuality Discontent Sacriledge Cruelty and vnrighteousnes with the like More generall and fearefull Distrust of GOD. Rebellion against God vnthankfulnesse and Apostasy totally from God For the First Pride how fearfull was it for a creature made in Gods Image to aspire like Satan to be checkmate with his Maker Secondly Sloth and Security in a flacke neglect of so great a trust reposed in his custody Thirdly Vanity in so inconstant and vnsettled curiosity to pry into matters forbidden Fourthly Sensuality to affect a present contentment to the sence and appetite vpon so infinite hazard Fiftly Discontent with the present estate so excellent and so instantly vpon their enioying it Sixtly Sacriledge in profaning the ordinance if it be true that the fruit was Sacramentall and tye of God Seuenthly Cruell vniustice in casting away not themselues onely but all their posterity But especially the generall First Wofull distrust in ascribing no credit to God eyther in charge or threat but rather to Satans malicious slanders suffring themselues to bee pulled from the Simplicity of Gods Word 2 Cor. 11.3 enterteyning base thoughts of him to bee false enuious yea admitting a roote of bitternes and indignation against his loue Secondly Rebellion to dare so ●●enly and with full butt to rush against the command of God and to prouoke him to try whether hee would do as hee had threatned fearing nothing And Thirdly Vnthankefulnes and a wearisom restlesnes in that state of happines e●en departing from God the Fountaine of liuing waters when they enioyed all in him that heart could wish euen needlesly in coole blood Lastly Apostasy vtter reuolting like tray●●rs from that happines of theirs and the Lord the Author thereof to Satan sinn● and curse to t●ll● and finally for ought was in themselues Q. What vse is there hereof doth it afford any instruction Vse 1 A. Ye● seuerall● first from the Serpent who by abusing his parts teacheth vs to boast our selues or rest in no outward gift of God for it selfe seeing if ●●sanc●ified it may be instrumentall to such villany and dishonour to God either in our publique or priuate places and so preiudiciall to our owne saluation as we should wish rather we had beene Idiots then so egregious Secondly from Satan We learne that he feares not to attempt the best and most godly hoping to prevaile for if he could bring
a weight as I haue heere described could be carryed with ease especially through so many Sermons of conuiction as many heare Oh! that any should sleepe in such deepe debt so banquerupt as they bee short with such an intolerable weight crushing them Surely except there were a plague of insensinblenesse added to all other misery it could not but affect men otherwise But till sin begin to be out of her element and feele her misery Christ and the soule can neuer be reconciled in one Vse 4 Fourthly this should cause vs to wonder at the goodnesse of Gods dispensation of this misery That both in the sin and in the penalty it should be so mitigated by the prouidence of that God who for vniuersall ends restrayneth the force and violence of this misery why should God so order it that he in whom the fountaine of all sin abideth should yet bee in his particular nature stinted and shortened within the compasse of some ●ew foule sins what hinders in vs why not all as wel● any sin shou●d bee our beloued who much ●o appointed that in this plenty of Plagues the cause wherof of wee car●y about vs so few of these sho●ld light vpon vs H●th not sinne made vs a dunghill of sinne and a sea of sorrow why then see wee so few blinde deafe lame dumbe maymed out of their wits poore a●d miserable crea u●es as wee doe Sh●ll wee by this indulgence bee h●rd●ed to thinke our selues lesse wre●ched and miserable then wee are or rather admire that goodnesse that s●ffers vs not to bee so cursed as wee deserue Q What vse is to be made hereof A. First ●t may teach vs to acknowledge singu●ar patience in God to dispence so merci●ul●y and manifoldly with man huaing incurred this Promunire with the Lord that he did not quite destroy him but al●oweth him so many comforts enco●rag●ments and helpes of nature and life all which hee might b ue stript him of All saue hell being meere indulgence of m●rcy as the support of nature in heal h in strength with wits sences breath of ayre vse of Earth influ nce of Heauen marriage posterity weal●h credit gouernement c. more then hee ●ught to damned Rebels who might haue beene destroyed when borne Secondly to iudge aright of this sin not to sl●ght it as P●pists and prophane men doe To count our selues miserable by it to esteeme it aboue any actuall si●s to iudge of it not by the matter or act of it but by the villany of it against the Vnity of God his Crowre and dignity The little weigh ng of this hath caused men to make such small account of actuall sin to make it a merryment as Forn●cation they will say it is a tricke of youth c. And the truth is from the slender esteeme of sin comes that base esteeme of Christ with many Whereas except Christ had beene made sinne in the roote it selfe by imputation and satisfied for it all the imputation of actuall could not haue profited vs. I● to raze the picture of a Prince bee such a crime what is it to deface the Lords Oh woefull wretches who dare say baptisme doth abolish that which all the grace of Christ cannot wash off till death All other sinnes are committed in a corrupt estate this in a pure one and therefore CHRIST that immaculate Sonne of GOD was faine to lay aside all his holinesse that hee m ght clense the slaine and the guilt thereof as a double dye out of our nature One of the miseries of orignall sinne is that its vncapable of the due conceiuing its owne woe but thinkes it selfe in good case as a drunkard forgets the sentence of death and dreames of great wealth And therefore wee had not need adde thirst to this our drunkennesse by esteeming it slight but desire the LORD rather that hee would awaken vs out of this delusion But more shall bee sayde of the vse of this in the sixt Article Q What is all this misery to vs who neuer sinned his sinne Art 4 A. It is ouerspred as a leprozie of the whole body ouer the whole nature of mankind all sorts sexes states degrees Not one free as all misery is in euery one so ouer all without exception Psal 14.1 2.3 Pro. 20.9 1 King 8.46 Eccl 7 22. Rom. 3.9 Iam. 3.2 1 Ioh. 1.8 Iob 14.4 and 15.14 Psal 51.5 Examine the texts All both Iew and Gentile Barbarian Scythian bond and free noble simple learned and idiots yea all who are to be For as they are in our loines so we were in Adams Adam not beeing a single person but in the whole stead of mankind before hee had issue Q. How doth this trueth appeare more clearly A. Both by the Scriptu●e and reason Paul sayth Rom. 5. that by the disobedience of one sinne entred into the world and by sinne death What is that Sin and curse ceazed vpon all he whole world as well as Adam and Eue. And the like proofes f●llow in all the verses as verse 14. Death reigned from Adam to Moses ver 17. By one mans offence death reigned by one ver 18. By the off●nce of one iudgement came vpon all to condemnation and ver 19 As by one mans disobedience many were made sinners So that this Article remoues all conceite of any man whatsoeuer I say meere man to be exempted from this masse of corruption No Rom. 3.12 All are gone out of the way not one doth good no not one All the sinne all the penalties of sinne belonging to Adam himselfe belong to vs wee may vse Peters choise word 1 Pet. 1.18 By the tradition of the fathers All these are conueyd to vs by the tradition of Adam not example but propagation no one of all these tokens miscarryed but as hee sent them to vs for a cursed memoriall what he had done for vs so were they all and each of them deliuered to vs wee faile not in the receiuing of the whole summe to the vttermost farthing Q. But in what order is this masse of euill deryued to vs A. In this That first the actuall sinne of Adam and Eue eating the forbidden fruit is conueyed and made ouer to vs then originall then actuall then penalties all hanging each vpon other as the lesser boates tyed to the great ship But yee will obiect that Paul himselfe Rom. 5. sayth That others sinned not after the similitude of Adams transgression I answer True not against a set law as Adam did but yet they were held guilty before GOD of Adams sinne as if they had knowne it So then marke although wee did not indiuidually and personally see talke with the Serpent put forth our owne hands and put the fr●ite into our mouth yet wee did eate it as well as hee And why Because the sinne which Adam committed ere hee had be gotten a sonne or childe was the sinne of nature not of a Person As it is sayde Leui himselfe payde tithes in Abraham Heb. 7.9
their elbowes thinking the law was giuen them to obey and not to enlighten or conuince o● sinne They had taken away foure or fiue sinnes from the Law as the Papists now doe the second Commandement as yee see in point of adultery and diuorce of oaths and periury of iustice and reuenge of loue and charity Mat. 5. ver 27 33 38 and 43. What was this but to call light darkenesse and darkenesse light If then Christ had meant to giue them true light hee would haue scattered those false and base conceits and corruptions as indeed his Sermon on the mount was chiefly to that purpose Secondly come lower to those that liue in the Church of GOD many are ignorant by meere want of meanes as thousands of Congregations at this day are though baptized I remember the speech of a Reuerend man that once on the Sabbath lighting vpon a Company as hee was going to preach neere-by who were some at foot-ball some dancing the Morris others quaffing in the Ale house asked them Sirs why doe yee thus prophane the Sabbath They answered him Alas good Sir wee know not that wee doe ill in our dancing or drinking which drew teares from his eyes If then GOD meane to enlighten such hee will giue them a Ministery of light to teach them what is good and what is euill So to come further put case a third soft hath some kind of light yet still mainteining a ciuill prophane or hypocriticall course what will the Lord doe to enlarge them with cleere knowledge Hee will take away their barres also Q. What are they A. These or the like First Their preiudice against the light and the meanes of light and instruments of light which hinders them from knowledge They haue perhaps a conceit that its a needlesse thing curious and vnprofitable a new fangled toy of some men or very difficult to get if not impossible These Ministers and their preachings are but noveltyes and might bee spared keepe people from their callings trouble the peoples braines and fill them with fancies These and the like false principles of preiudice Act. vlt. 22. The LORD will remoue Secondly Their custome in darknesse they haue liued as their forefathers and done wel enough new matters are yrksom also custome in profanenesse which holds them from comming where any light is for men are loth to know that which should vnsettle them in their loue See Ioh. 3.19 20. Men that loue darkenesse hate light lest their euils bee discouered Thirdly Their hardnesse of heart and purpose to liue in their lusts still For although order of law may compell them to Church yet when they see that knowledge robs them of their lusts they fare as a beare robbed of her whelpes and fight against the light of the Law as Pharaoh against the returning waters because their free-hold is toucht lose their lusts cosenage in buying and selling deceit lying pride reuenge they lose their life Fourthly That wofull dulnesse of edge and bluntnesse of spi●it by which they make themselues incapable of knowledge Heb. 5. Especially of any maine and material points Fifthly Generalnesse or slightnesse by which they please themselues to know the meer common sins which euery one may read in great letters running● and through e●s● seeke no further because indeed knowledge is not their ayme but their policy to auoyd the shame of grosse ignorance A man that hath no more vse of a Map then to see the breadth or situation of Essex will content himselfe with the generall Map of that Shire but if a man would haue a due suruey of some Towne what breadth it hath what such a Lordship therein situate is what lands woods pastures hopgrounds hee will get a Draught of that Towne or a Suruey of those particulars So heere If God meane to en●ighten a carnall generall and formall professor or hee will take from him his generall Map and subtill generalities whereby hee detaines the truth in vnrighteousness● and reach him a more speciall Map of sin to study vpon Sixtly He will remooue his sefeloue by which hee is loth to bee informed in truths his partiality and subtilty which suffers him not to heare such Truths as are like to oppose his personall precious and beloued euils whereby hee is loth to heare of any sins saue other mens not his owne and so he shunnes particular light of things which might prooue either against his lu●ts ease credit or course in euil to vnderstand If a man bee a good Iustice hee is willing to know the Statutes and bee informed in them well that hee may be able to punish sinne to purpose If not hee is willing not to bee informed of them So is it heere but if the Lord will enlighten him hee will enlarge his Law to him and him to his Law that hee shall bee gladdest when hee meet vs with the most distinct and cleere light And so I might be infinite let this view be sufficient for this sormer Q How doth the Law giue light to the eies in knowing Actuall sins A. Both in themselues and in their penalties Q. In themselues how A. Sundry waies some of which and the cheefe I will note by them desiring the wise Reader to iudge of the rest First The Law doth present the soule with the authority of GOD in commanding and sets vp her selfe not in the sences or back parts of man but in his conscience the most priuy chamber of the soule This no law of man can doe No nor can any destitute of the law be truely seazed in conscience by any sinne But the Law sets vp the Lawgiuer in the conscience presenting him to her in all his Souereigne Iustice wisedome and Power that so she may esteeme of sin not as touching man but trenching vpon God in all his attributes This is a great discouery and causes sin to bee conceaued as it is not as the passing act seemes which begins and ceases with time but this is infinite in time merit extent and scope because against an infinite God For example An ignorant man hauing hurt his neighbour lookes at the sad consequent of the fact onely how hee hath hurt him in his name cattell wife goods and so the damage is the sin to him But the enlightned conscience lookes at the Lawgiuer knowing that not man but God hath made the Law against hurting man man is the next but God is the chief and last obiect of his sinne And therefore God must bee agreed with or else conscience will keep it vpon Gods record to appeare in due time And put case man would be appeased yea is satisfied yea perhaps mans Law is satisfied by the death of the offendor yet GOD still must be compounded with as chiefly offended Q. How secondly A. It presents it selfe to the soule in the coherence and consent of the law This no man can see except enlightned S. Iames cleeres this Iam. 2.10 Hee that breakes one is culpable of all Meaning that such
hold and keepe the soule whō he will saue from all reuolt to former lust liberties The spirit of bondage is the frame of a fearfull heart held vnder slauery and chaynes of the Law from all escaping As we say such a man hath the spirit of mirth or Couetousnes in which he is rooted So in one place a woman is sayd to haue a spirit of infirmity viz. Sealth when her disease had so preuayled ●uer that she was crazed by habit So the spirit of bondage Gal 4.7 is to be as one sold to i● ●hat cannot get out It might bee wondred at that the Lord should vse such a course to do the soule good but considering our cursed base heart which is like the slaue no longer to bee in worke then the whip is vpon the backe it is no marueile Take a similitude Wee know it is one thing to bee rankt in the forlorne band which goes against the Cannon mouth another to bee beleaguered in a City by a long siege The one looke at present danger which when it s ouer they are past it but in the City men are held vnder continuall feare they see the Image of Death before their face ten wayes by famine pestilence Sword heere one wall beaten downe there another heere one slayne there another some dye of famine and threaten the rest to follow so heere to be vnder bondage is to lye vnder chaines as Peter vnder many keepers by which meanes frequent terrors assault dayly more or less● and the soule is held to it as poore Israel vnder bricke and clay Neuer was this Taskemaster of more vse then in these dayes wherein men shunne legall feares as Todes or Serpents or if any come nigh them they shake it off with violence It s yrkesom to the flesh to bee vnder the whip long some way of breaking out of this house of Correction they deuise thinking themselues neuer well till they be at their old liberty out of the hands of so hard a Master But as it is with the breaker of the house of Correction or prison his end is commonly to be hanged so is it with such as despize this remedy of a licentious heart Now for vse of it beware that wee rest not in this feruill state Whatsoeuer the LORD meanes to do by it in time when hee offers the Gospell to the soule sure it is this is no state to rest in For why It differs from true feare as much as from true liberty True feare is the Lodestone to attract the soule to GOD and to acquaint it with GOD thus rather of it selfe dryues it away from God especially if it bee in any excesse Secondly This feare hath a respect to sinne onely as an occasion to punishment as a cause As wee see in the Slaue who lookes not at his Sloth but the whip But the true filiall feare looks at sinne as the proper cause of feare but at punishment as the occasion Thirdly True feare softens this rather hardens and imbitters the heart As wee see both in the examples of Iosiah who melted and Ahab who hardend his heart by his feare and returned to his pranks The feare of a condemned man is an hardner of him but he that heares of a pardon relents at it presently Fourthly It hath excesse in it both for the constant assault of it without intermission in all places dutyes and occasions and also for the dangerous inconuenience it brings after it oft times Hinders all fitnes of spirit both to duty and in duty to calling worship liberty solitarines defiles all and is a speciall sparke to light vpon the sad and melancholique temper of the body which the Deuill seldome fayles in to make it flash vp and blow vp the whole frame of nature yea euen in the godly themselues its a mayne enemy to fayth hope or other graces or duties Fifthly And the truth is looke how the feare of her that played the harlot differs from the loyall wifes so doth this from the feare of the regenerate the one feares danger and hurt from her husband the other reuerences him from loue Saul feared Dauid because he lookt for danger from him no otherwise Let the vse then I say be to take heed lest we rest in it Vse 2 And secondly let none heere stumble at my description of it for although it bee no better in it selfe yet the LORD can moderate qualify and correct it so that it sh●lbe a speciall medicine to prepare the heart for that which lightnes and giddines would disable it from attayning Pray therefore for a moderation of it and a directing it to the end which God int●nds it for and the lesse good is in it of it selfe the more adore his wisdome who vses it to good both in ●he restreint of euill and the preparing of the heart to more stayednes sobriety Q What is the end of GOD in this worke of the Law A. To make way for a sinners reconciliation which otherwise were not possible to worke As soone catch an Hare with a Tabre as a wi●d wi●full sinner by the Charme of the Gospell That woman of Samaria scoffed at Christ telling him the well was deepe and there was no bucket But when he had well tozed her she changed her humour See Ioh. 33.33 If then after long terrors there bee an interpreter one of a 1000 to decla●● to man his R●conciliation he will be good to him and be entreated saying Deliuer him I haue accepted a ransome But how appeares this ● Doubtlesse hitherto appeares no such things in all this tedious Law-course no as the Law is for her vs● so is the Gospell for hers neyther intimating other but oppozite saue in the intent of the ordeyner But if we looke thereat we shall in sundry respects confesse this a most wise and fit way to bring on the remedy First By this meanes GOD ioynes all wholesome Doctrine together For it is not his purpoze to leaue the soule in this case to seeke out of her selfe after ease seeing it s not in her power But hee himselfe will haue his Minister to ioyne all Doctrines together in the order of Catechizme both of remedy and misery in their due order Not because all that heare them can for the present apply them but that heereafter they might and the whiles want nothing which might set them on worke Secondly by this consternation he doth tyre and weary the spirits as in a Labyrinth working thē to an vtter hopelesnes in th●mselues to be better that in such a case the least inkling of mercy might be as newes out of a farre country Thirdly That by the hearesay of it their hearts might be ●●ysed vp to make serious inquisition after it and not to Perish in their misery When the prodigall was brought to huskes at the trough then and neuer till then the notion of a father pierced him rea●ly When those lepers saw their liues past hope they resolued thus If wee
for if the sur●ty faile in any point his vndertaking is vneffectuall Greatmen must haue their Peeres to acquit them no common persons S●e Rom. 1.3 Eph. 1. vlt. Q What is the vse of it A. Briefly this to stay and comfort an heauy heart in the view o● the hainous circumstances of her sinne making it out of measure sinfull as depth of continuance odious greatnesse against knowledge meanes of grace with an high hand Bee not dismaid Hee that is thy surety made not thy peace for small and some but all and the greatest so that thy thought must be how to receaue this fulnesse Heb 9 14. not for the greatnesse of the sinne The Lord Iesus offred himselfe vp by his eternall Spirit that an eternall Maiesty might bee appeased for sin of an eternall guilt and curse and such is all sin but especially crying sin his merit is more out of measure deseruing then sinne is sinnefull and hath merited far more happinesse then Adams sinne forfeited Get humblenesse and faith and then thy great sins shall be as deaw to the sunne and as a spoonefull of water cast into the Ocean Q What is the third thing considerable A. Vnion of both natures into one person by the vnconceauable work of this Spirit of God It s much that a soule and a body but much more that flesh and the Word should be really one person I doe not say that the Diuinity of Christ was a nature as the humanity for Christ was so a nature that yet a distinct subsisting person of himselfe But the meaning is that this person of the Word tooke the nature of his flesh into his person therein to subsist The flesh of Christ was no person as Abraham or Dauid but a nature onely hauing no subsisting of it selfe at all but as it dwelt in the Godhead As Misleto is no plant of it selfe otherwise then it fastens and subsists in the appletree So that Iesus Emanuel God and man vnited was the third qualification of the surety Assistance could not haue caused identity or samenesse onely hypostaticall vnion could do that By vertue whereby not onely properties are communicated to ech other in forme o● speech as The Lord of life was slayne GOD dyed c. but in reall manner the efficacy of the one nature was imparted to the other Yet this vnion doth no more admit confuzion then separation no not in the lowest degree of eclipsing in death or the graue See text Ioh. 1.1 ●say 1.4 Call him Emanuel Mat. 1.23 Q. What is the vse heereof A. Most sweet lo all broken soules in their approch to the throne of grace What is so bottomles and vnsubsisting a thing in it selfe as a soule in the anguish of conscience Yet euen then looke vp to Emanuel and he will vnite thy poore empty bottomlesse spirit to his owne person that in him thou mayst haue a reall beeing and subsistence Oh poore soule who thinkest thy selfe meerely lost in this thy estate In time thou shalt see it was mercy brought thee to be out of hope in thy selfe that the hope of thy wel beeing might be in him for euen the flesh of Iesus himselfe had the like vnablenesse of subsisting except the second person had taken it to himselfe Q. What is the vnction of Christ A. It is a consequent vpon his personall vnion whereby the Godhead made the man-hood full of himselfe and of all gifts and graces of the Spirit meet to enable him to his worke of mediation and by name separated him from men to be excellent as to be the Prophet Priest and King of his Church That this was from the wombe appeares by sundrie glorious effects exceeding man as that in Luk. 2. at twelue yeeres old Yet especially his Baptisme was the anoynting of him to the entire and immediate execution of these Offices for therein hee did more fully receiue the anoynting with the Oyle of gladnes aboue his fellowes as was prophecied Psal 2. Esay 42.1 and Esay 61.1.2 He was Priest to satisfie and pray for Prophet to teach and King to rule and deliuer his people And these offices do mutually serue each other The vse is that wee his members might acknowledge him an eminent Mediator as hauing a calling from GOD as those three sorts of Men had vnder the old Testament And that we might be out of doubt that the acts and suffrings he performed were allowed according to that voice This is my well beloued Sonne in whome I am well pleased heare him And that wee knowing into what treasure the Lord hath put all his graces euen the flesh of Christ might there seeke and finde them all Therefore 1. Cor. 1.30 Paul sayth Of him are we who is made vnto vs of the Father wisedome as a Prophet righteousnes as a Priest sanctification and Redemption as a King Ioh. 1.17 Reuel 1.6 The Lord hath made him whatsoeuer his Church needes that of his fulnes we might receyue grace for feare And that we also in our measure together with vnion to him might receyue his vnction and become Prophets Kings and Priests to God and be conformed to our head in all his excellencies not in the poynt of his meritig but of his Graces Q. Proceed to the fourth the former part to wit the merit A. This is yet more essentiall then the former three The fourth then I say is Actiue obedience of Christ I do not separate the actiue from the passiue as if eyther alone could satisfie or as if I ascribed the effects of eyther to the one without the other but yet distinctly I speake of both for the vse of each of them to the soule Marke then what I haue noted The Lord Iesus became piacular for vs not onely by bearing our punishment but by translating vpon himselfe the reall imputation of our guilt with out the least measure of inherent guilt This latter would haue disabled his person for he must be separated from sinners Heb. 7.26 yet the want of the former would haue made his merit none of ours and his death vniustly inflicted Therefore he was made Sinne originall and actuall all the sins of the elect were charged vpon him that he by his perfect obedience might disanull them and bring in and settle vpon vs perfect righteousnes And as the mi●ery of a man stands in both sinne and guilt and staine aswell as in curse so must our Surety performe righteousnes aswell as beare the curse Now this righteousnes of Christ is both his Naturall and his actuall opposite to this naturall and actual vnrighteousnes of Adam I say both the purity of his humane nature infused by Vnion a●d also the obedience to the whole Morall Law to the vttermost extent thereof And this is as true a part of the material cause of our iustification as the other of the Passiue though not to be disioyned Q Whereof doth this Article obedience consists A. Of the whole conuersation of our Lord Iesus his
the euidence saying If these men will sweare thus I beleeue it So when the soule sees the bottomes of the promise of GOD to bee sound it waxes conuinced of the truth and answers Lord I cannot see why thou shouldst trauaile with mee thus to bring me vnder the condition and reueale thy promise with such euidence but I must needes be conuinced Surely thou hast done thus because thou meanest to pardon and saue me I am Lord vnable to gainsay thou hast perswaded me to beleeue Q. What is the third worke A. It is the cleauing of the soule to the Promise against all her feares doubts cauils For marke when it is conuinced of cleere truth the scales of darknes fall from her eyes When Naaman had weighed the Prophets promise of clensing his cauils vanished no more speech of Abana and Pharfar So Thomas being conuinced by Christs hands and sides The soule is set betweene vanity and mercy Iona 2.8 if mercy preuaile then lying vanityes cease Then the soule lookes off from her former doubts and beholdes the Temple out of the belly of the Whale It then begins to set close to the promise As if a man that grafts a sien in a stocke should fynd some clay stone to get betweene the one and the other to keepe the sap away and make it warp from the stock and pulling it out le ts the sien come close home to it Hence it is that a conuinced heart comes forth and sayth I cut off my carnall reason I see no sauor in it I cut of my bold presumption I renounce my slauish feare I abhorre my base mixtures of selfe and duties vertues and preparatiues of my owne I abandon all my former proppes of nature art experience Religion which kept me from mercy I cut al knots in sunder which I cannot vnloose and let all my tackling fall into the Sea and commit my soule to thy promise through rocks waues and shelues that if I perish I may perish onely I will for euer cling to thy promise do with me as thou wilt if I be deceaued thou hast deceaued me Thus the soule beeing conuinced claspes to GOD and affiances it selfe to him as the Iuy to the Oke so that breake the one and breake the other As the wife forsakes all and cleaues to her husband And this affiance causeth that sweet consent and naked obedience to the Word according to the Word and the extent thereof whereof read Esay 1.19 If ye consent and obey ye shall eate of the good things c. Consent looking at a promise and clozing with it as the seale with the waxe and it with the seale concurring therewith and beeing carryed in the streame of it against the motion of her owne rebelling heart as beeing ouercome and yeelding vp her weapons As Rebecca conuinced that the marriage was from God being called to speake answered I will go to Ishac And so followes obedience which hath a respect to a command of God nakedly considered in the promise of God As Abraham simply looked at the charge of killing Isac in the meere power of God Heb. 11.17 18 19. and so to the promise also of Isac not beholding Saras wombe See these two examples Luk. 5. of Peter and Luk. 6. of the Centurion I haue fished all night yet at thy Word Lord I will let downe And Say the word Lord and I beleeue Luc. 7.7 So the poore soule sayth LORD in my selfe I see little why I should thinke thy Word to concerne mee but seeing thou wilt haue it so I come in and kisse the Sonne submit to beleeue and put my selfe vnder the authority of thy promise Q. What is the last act of the soule about a promise A. The last differs not from the former saue in degree and it is the cleauing to a promise when there is strong vnlikelyhood presented to the soule eyther from the Lords leauing it to her selfe or in temptation or in deepe sence of vnworthinesse feare c. Then shee labours to cling to the promise by pleading it secretly as wee see in that rare example of the Woman of Canaan who was content to be put off by silence denyall yea taunts and although shee was called a Dogge yet she held close to the Word that Christ was the Son of Dauid A true Dog and happy in this that shee would not bee beaten off Therefore our Sauiour sayd She was of great faith Like to which was that of Iehoshaphat 2 Chron. 20.9 when those enemies beset him and the City he gat vnto God in the promise made to Salomon in 1. King 8.17 Oh Lord Thou saydst If when our enemies besiege vs round about wee come and pray in this place thou wilt looke downe and haue mercy Oh Lord looke now heere they are our eyes are vpon thee By which plea of an old promise yet as fresh as at first he preuailed Let vs do so in our streights with the promise of free reconciliation Q. Well what vse make yee of _____ Doctrine A. Manifold First confutation of those desperate enemies of a promise the Papists They say to cleaue to a promise by fayth with cleauing to it for saluation is a Doctrine of presumption But we answer that as their Doctrine of iustification is the true Doctrine of presumption of their owne works so their Doctrine of fayth is a meere Idoll and fancy They adde we must haue reuelations before we come to Assurance Wee answere it is true for although wee abhorre their fantasticall ones yet wee grant Reuelation of a promise is the true obiect of faith And because as in all other so in this point they crosse themselues I will conuince them by their owne words In the point of Transubstantiation they being put hard to it answere thus I will translate their words In their adored Sacrament of the Altar it is meet that the edge of all carnall reason bee blunted and that the wisdome of the flesh beeing banished wee hold our selues close to the Word Their meaning is Hoc est corpus meum But oh yee hypocrites Is the word so precious vnto ye yea a word which no body grants ye to be Gods but by imposture it becomes your owne that yee bid vs looke all reason in the Word and when we teach the Word must be of like vse in all doubts of conscience and Religion doe yee then eate your owne speeches What knot can hold a Pro●eus Secondly instruction to all that haue beleeued the promise Vse 2 of Grace once and seen cause to cleaue to it nakedly to vse the same method in recouery out of their particular falles Men seeme heere to forget themselues They confesse in their conuersion they must come empty-handed to God But in their recouery out of their sins they thinke they must first repent and then beleeue But if ye will be wise as yee vse the Lord at first so vse him after and hauing sinned let mercy first breake your hearts and
in his Spirit This of all other things searches a false heart whatsoever part of him seemes to have some image of God sure it is it is not in his spirit In spite of him his thoughts purposes and affections are voide of him The streame the frame the bent of his soule warps from him and goes another way The most subtile hypocrite can but come to this to delude himselfe by the strength of knowledge and some dammings of the streame of his corruption but as for the turning of it by a strong●r to a contrary motion that can hee not attaine to there is no dissembling of a new Creature Once a Phylosopher in 30. yeeres made an iron frame of a man to speake but as one said of him Oh fine scull without braines so here may be said Oh faire out-side without a principle of life and spirit Let us consider this although an hypocrite may grow to this to delude himselfe and make himselfe not to see his defiled principle yet he can never purge it out while he is so For the Image of God is set up onely in some out-roome and when his lust comes in place there is no routing for this this must yeeld to his base ease pride lust which are set up in his inner man and beare sway And secondly the hypocrites image of God is onely a counterfeit of it it s no free principle acting him from within so long as some torrents and violent pangs are up in his passions so long as he is under some streame of powerfull preaching or deepe feares or sudden humours of affection he seemes some-body but when these are past he is like himselfe as dead as ever I may compare him to Davids old body in which there was no heate left they sought out Abishag to keep heate on him but more then he had from her he had not and therefore he dyed instantly notwithstanding her So is it here So long as the five is within the water it hold it but no sooner out but all is empty when the Word is gone and violent causes he wanzeth and discovers those corrupt evils of uncleannesse and prophanenesse which the word suppressed But with the new Creature it s otherwise he is borne of God and sinnes not with consent when outward props faile loe all failes not he mournes for the want of old helpes but in this want he abounds with the comfort of the inner man the principle of grace which is immortall and whose being is of God Secondly its use of consolation to a beleever the Lord esteemes Vse 7 him by his best part his bent and streame and not by his defects The Apostle Rom. 7. Not I but sinne in me I serve God in my spirit ver ult As a man cals a dunghill precious for a pearle in it and as a man would cal wine mixt with water wine and corne full of weedes corne because of the better part So here the spirit and bent of the heart denominates a Christian with God Thirdly Its use of examination for all that would be sure Vse 8 to know the new Creature to be formed in them Try it by the roome wherein ye place it the best things require the best place The image of God in Christ drawne by the spirit will endure no roome but the most inward spirit of the soule If the enemy besiege a King hee must breake thorough many doores and locks ere he come at him because hee is in his privy chamber Try thy selfe then by two or three marks If the new Creature be set up in thy spirit then wil the stream of thy soule goe with him and to him as the riuers to the sea Thy plotting thy diuising fore-casting and whole wisedome shall serue for him how his honour seruice Sabbaths and himselfe may be set vp where thou hast to doe The Spirit of a Drunkard or Mizer will not so plod about the pots or mony as thine for God Thy tongue eares and all will bee for him Thou maist step out of the way but still thy bent will be to serue him and speake for him in thy spirit If memory or great words faile thy spirit will bee for him as that poore man was for Christ Ioh. 9. read the allusion Againe the sauour of thy heart will be in and for him The bent of the soule commonly goes where it delights and to that which is precious to it try thy selfe by this What hath got thy heart Where is thy treasure If Christ in a new creature bee it lo the very instinct and ioy of thy heart will bee to him other things shall be vnsauory thou shalt stinke in the nostrils of an old man and he in thine And secondly try thy selfe by this The spirit of the soule is the chiefe part of it there is the whole streame If the new creature be set vp there God is serued withall the might the male not the female all the courage and strength Pro 23.26 no cost is too great The whole cost of all thy powers members gifts authority credit wealth experience shall runne in the streame of holinesse No vnbeteeming one can be a new Creature for hee is free borne The minde we say is the man If that be for God all the inferiour faculties will side with him as Iezabels Eunuches with Iehu as the lesser wheeles of the perpetuall motion did the first moouing Master wheele That engin when it was seene in the Court was not so admirable as this Q. Conclude the Article with the vse of the fourth branch Vse 8 A. It affords vs among many this onely one That wee learne to esteeme the Sacrament of Baptisme otherwise than most of vs doe Did wee know and beleeue it to be that Lauer of Regeneration and Channell of Christs divine nature and properties which are conveyed to the soule by it as Peter cals it The washing not of water but the Answer of the soule by the resurrection of Christ telling vs wee are washed by the Spirit of our God and ingrafted into the likenesse of his death and Resurrection by it surely we should make other vse of it then we doe And the doctrine of the Couneant would sinke the deeplier into vs by it if wee could vse it as the instrument to put on the Lord the holy Ghost and fire But touching the wofull contempt of Sacraments I shall elsewhere treat if God will Let this be sufficient for this Article The second Article Q. PRoceed now to the second Article A. The second is That the Lord requires that this new creature thus framed in the soule breake forth into the whole course and conuersation That is that holines be exercised and set on worke in the course of our life which sometimes in the Scripture is called the ordering of our conuersation aright See Psal 50. vlt. Gen. 5.24 sometimes our walking with God Gen. 17.1 Luk. 1.6 sometimes our giuing vp of our bodies as sacrifices to
the way the seruants and Ordinances of Christ which being once giuen out proue irreuocable See Matth. cap. 28.12 The Priests gaue large mony to the Souldiers to giue it out that Christ was stollen away and this preuailed long after against the Resurrection So men speake of the godly Tush doe yee beleeue them I warrant yee they can breake their promises bee as hard and couetous as others This new learning neuer did good wee liued better ere it came there was better house-keeping love among neighbours your greatest Professors shutting their doores and liuing in some corner of London to spend all vpon new fashions or else to hoard vp for their Children And so they speake of the good Ministry they doe but driue men out of their wits they are factious and turbulent And in old times the world reported of the faithfull that they met in the night and after their deuotions put out their lights and fell to vncleannesse Q. What is Cosenage A. That Trade of which mainly that Text treats Eph. 4 18. whereby false Teachers schismatiks and Hereticks blanched their conceits wresting their wits to abuse the Scriptures to set false Colors vpon their opinions And so the subtill and cunning devices which drunkards and the like set vpon their sinne calling them good fellowship or the like So the che●ting chapman hath his glosing protestations colors and tricks that harlot Iezabel abused fasting to couer her murther the Strumpet in the Prouerbs saith shee hath payd her vowes when that woman came with her circumstances to Dauid he asked Is not the hand of Ioab here so may we say If the father of lyes and trickes were not in this world of cogging and cosenage how could it deceiue so as it doth Q. Proceed to the next branch of the liuing worlds defilements wherein doe they consist A. Partly in words partly in deedes The former are the open corrupt Counsels of sinners or their secret insinuations Of the former see Pro. 7.18 the harlot tempts her paramour Come let vs take our fill my husband is far off And the t●eefe Prou. 1.13 Cast thy lot in with vs we will haue one purse But more close ones are such whisperers as the Apostle calls priuie corrupters of mindes whose words fret like a cankar 2 Tim. 2.17 Thus some do whisper in secret against Magistracy and good Ministers and others against gouernment of parents entising their children seruants yea wiues from their loyalty So doe wicked preachers scatter their false tenents or principles of prophannesse to taint mens iudgments or manners Thus young nouices are beaten off from their zeale and hearing I would scorne saith one to be tyed to their girdles Q. What are the deeds of the liuing world Vse 1 A. All their wicked malitious cruell intents threats and pursuits of the godly to quash them and to vphold their own Kingdome As those Scribes and Pharisees had a Law to crucifie Christ though they made it for the nonce And Daniel 6. those enemies of his This trade were infinite to rip vp Popish machauillian plots and deuises to dismay to suppresse and destroy all puritie of Doctrine and power of religion Witnesse their inquisition prisons censures and torments both lying in waite for the precious soules and bodies of men and sacrificing them to their God Maazzim wherein they doe whatsoeuer the Deuill their father hath taught them with absurd unreasonable and implicable hearts to the Truth And thus I haue gone ouer this whole Doctrine of the Lets in the three parts thereof Q. What now is the use hereof A. Large and plentifull I will but touch the heads and Vse 1 first it should bee vse of Instruction to vs to be humbled Branch 2 to bee comforted and to long after a full redemption For the first It 's humiliation to the best of Gods children for their selfe-love and for this misery that lyes upon them For marke it what outcryes doe we make if any man wrong vs in our bodies goods or names liues or liberties and indeed it is true we have bitter enemies but oh poore soules who is such an enemy such a Traytor such a deuill to vs as our selues At home begins our sorrow and our woe in our bosomes are those euils of pride prophannesse hypocrisie and selfe-loue which bane vs and what they cannot doe of themselues they doe by others setting dore open and letting in Divell and world to rifle and rob vs of all without which no enemy could hurt vs. Learne wee truly and cordially to cry out upon our selues So also for all this misery which in this vale thereof lyes vpon vs. Paul Rom. 7. O miserable man Why this body of death and world of sinne creates a world of sorrow in us of annoiances feares doubts strength of lusts little groth errors of wicked deadly feud of Satan melancholly crosses bad times poverty bootlesse wrongs hardnesse of heart harshnesse to the yoke of Christ an vnbroken carnall pusillanimous froward impure heart Are not these sorrow our belly full to vs at the best If God alayed them not with inward supports who should endure them Oh! so it must bee yet let vs mourne vnder our bondage Such as are led into captiuity are no merry folke witnesse they who hung their harpes on the Willowes and were so full of anguish that they could not sing How shouldst thou Psal 137.2 poore soule in a strange land Secondly let yet this comfort them for the present that it is Branch 2 no otherwise with them in this their sorrow than that wise God their good Father hath allotted them so that if they feele their burden they may cheere themselues with this They are as God will haue them it 's their Pilgrimage their Baca their warfare the Lord will worke them triumph out of these battels and combats hee will purge them and conforme them to his deare sonne by them and euen the sin and penalties they here endure yet are conforming and moulding things to make their victories sweeter It is not well with them they may say but it shall be they see it a farre off if this were a life of perfection if any of the faithfull were exempt from the like 1 Ioh. 1.8 Pro 24.16 Esay 64.6 2 Cor. 12.9 then this were cause of all and only mourning But here the best of our perfection is the sight of our imperfection we are as well on it as our head while he was here in this strange land he could neither be rid of our sinnes nor of infirmities or enemies but afterward hee knew no more Very gladly therefore will I be glad euen of my desertions and tentations to me its a sure signe of consolation to them of confusion and that of God I only wait my time to be perfectly redeemed Branch 3 Thirdly wait for that with longing as Paul did Rom. 7. Who shall deliuer me Be not so well apaid in this smalnesse of thy grace measure because it must