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A12473 Essex doue, presenting the vvorld vvith a fevv of her oliue branches: or, A taste of the workes of that reuerend, faithfull, iudicious, learned, and holy minister of the Word, Mr. Iohn Smith, late preacher of the Word at Clauering in Essex Deliuered in three seuerall treatises, viz. 1 His grounds of religion. 2 An exposition on the Lords Prayer. 3 A treatise of repentance. Smith, John, 1563-1616.; Hart, John, D.D. 1629 (1629) STC 22798; ESTC S117569 350,088 544

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cause of Repentance 1 The first furthering cause is the Mercies of God and the remembrance of them for when God puts vs in minde what hee hath done for vs or wee our selues consider what wee haue lost or hazarded by reason of our sinnes who cannot but relent and acknowledge the same considering of Gods goodnesse as it is Rom. 2. What dost thou not know O man that the bountifulnesse of God and his goodnesse leadeth thee to Repentance for looke how many mercies God doth bestow vpon vs so many strong motiues they are vnto Repentance So Ierem 2. God shewing his former kindnesses vnto them expostulateth the matter to bring them vnto Repentance and Confession Ezek. 20. 43. the Lord shewes for the other And there shall you remember your wayes and all your doings wherein you haue beene defiled and yet shall Ioathe your selues in your owne fight c. and Iob. 35. 10. hee complaineth that none remembred the mercies of God and therefore they were not heard in their prayers because they wanted faith to repent To vrge the point yet more that the mercies of God moue much to Repentance see Luke 5. when Peter saw the great draught of fishes Lord saith hee depart from me a sinfull man Thus Gods mercies did bring Peter to the acknowledgement of his sinnes Euen so the mercies of God should bring vs to make this vse of it to bring vs to the consideration of our sinnes and to repent for them and to loue the Lord for his goodnesse and for his mercy and fauour bestowed vpon vs. If a wicked wife should slip away from her husband and commit many faults against him If hee not withstanding send her loue tokens from time to time this kindnesse of her husband must needs bee a mighty meanes to drawe her backe againe in loue and obedience vnto him Euen such is the kindenesse and goodnesse of God towards vs that though wee slip and slide from him by our sinnes yet hee sends to vs loue tokens his mercies and his blessings euery day from time to time to bring vs home by Repentance Helping cause of Repentance 2 The second Helping or furthering Cause is The Iudgements of God this is a principall cause in furthering of our Repentance as wee may see Genesis 42. 12. of Iosephs brethren when they were in trouble then they confessed their sinnes being accused Nay but to see the Nakednesse of the land you are come So the Prodigall sonne when hee was in miserie then hee came home to his Father So Isa. 26. 16. Lord in trouble haue they visited thee they poured out a Prayer when thy Chastisement was vpon them so the Lord doth mightily conuince them of sinne and neglecting his Iudgements I hearkned and heard but they spake not ar●ght no man repented him of his wickednesse saying what haue I done euery man turned to his course as the horse rusheth to the battell and Zephan 3. 5. hee sayes The iust Lord is in the midst thereof hee will not doe iniquitie euery morning doth hee bring his Iudgements to light but the vniust knoweth no shame So Amos 4. the Lord there complaines of this that hee sent his Iudgements from time to time hee sent mildewes and blastings and many other iudgements and yet he complaines Yee returned not vnto mee If a sheepe goe astray from his sheepheard out of the flocke hee will set his dogge at him as if hee would kill him or worrie him and yet hee hath no purpose to hurt him but to driue him home to the fould againe for when the sheepe is come home hee rates and calls off his dogge So the Lord doth by vs if wee goe astray and turne from his sheepe-fold then hee sets his dogge at vs as if hee would kill vs the dogge of pouertie or the dogge of lamenesse or of blindenesse or of sicknesse or some crosse or some other iudgements and yet hee hath no purpose to hurt vs it is but onely to bring vs home vnto him for if wee bee once brought home hee calls off his dogge againe and rates him which is Gods end in all afflictions which hee from time to time sendeth The third helping or furthering Cause is our owne Considerations as Psal. 119. Dauid saith I considered my wayes and turned my feete to thy testimonie So vntill wee come to consider our owne wayes wee can neuer turne vnto God Now this consideration must bee in foure things First of the strict account wee must giue vnto God at the day of Iudgement for all those sinnes wee doe not repent of in this world If wee repent then the Lord will forgiue vs but if wee doe not repent bee assured wee must answer for our sinnes wheras vpon repentance Christ will answer for vs and wee may confidently put away the reaccount lying vpon Christ vnto which the Apostle alludes 2. Cor. 1. 5. For as the sufferings of Christ abound in vs so our Consolation also aboundeth through Christ. Secondly of the fearefull estate wherein wee liue vntill wee haue repented not being the friends of God but heires of hell not hauing interest in any promise but liable to the Curse of the Law vpon which ensues death and torments Which is the third thing those vnspeakable tortures the soule for euer shall endure with the deuill and his angels for euermore Fourthly the consideration of foure other things First The Necessitie of Repentance that is is such a necessarie grace that wee cannot bee saued without it for there is but two wayes either to Repent or else to perish For if a man weresicke and a Physitian should come to him and temper for him such a Potion which if hee did not take hee could not choose but dye one would thinke a man could not choose but take it though it were against his stomacke Euen so wee are all sicke of the disease of sinne and the Lord hath tempered a Potion for vs to drinke and hee telleth vs if wee doe not take it we shall not escape condemnation Now this Potion which the Lord hath tempered for vs is Repentance therefore wee must bee contented to take it though it bee against our stomacke The Second consideration is The vtilitie and profite wee haue by it for if wee repent God will forgiue vs but if wee repent not God will make vs answer for it at the great day of Iudgement here is our choice Repent and bee forgiuen Repent not and perish so the Lord promiseth Forgiuenesse vpon Repentance Isa. 1. 18. Though your sinnes wer●red as scarlet hee will make them white as snow if you repent and obey that is in Gods account it shall bee so The Third Consideration is The readinesse of God to receiue vs then hee will turne his frowning anger into louing fauour his cursings into blessings his iudgements into mercies so soone as the Prodigall sonne came home to his Father wee see
That we are not dead in some one sinne but are dead in many sinnes the soule being wounded in euery part and hauing bled as it were to death at euery ioynt Qu. What is the miserie of this estate A. Exceeding great partly in respect of sinne it selfe and partly in respect of the punishment of sinne Rom. 7. 24. Qu. What is the miserie of this estate in respect of sinne A. First that men grow worse and worse in this estate euen as a dead man the longer hee lies aboue ground the more he senteth So they that are dead in sinne the longer they liue the more sinfull they are as yeares increase so wickednesse and sinne is increased with them 2. Tim. 3. 13. Secondly That men liue in it without any feeling and trouble of minde euen as a dead man though he sents and sauours that no man can abide him yet hee smells it not himselfe and therefore is neuer grieued nor troubled for it So they that be dead in sinne though they be loathsome both to God and man yet they haue no feeling of their bad estate and therefore they are neuer vexed nor grieued for it Reu. 3. 17. Thirdly that men seeke not to come out of it euen as a dead man will neuer stirre his foote nor so much as becken with his finger for one to helpe him and giue him life So they that are dead in sinne are well content to lye still in that estate and will not vse the least meanes for the recouering of themselues Mat. 4. 16. Fourthly that they profite nothing by all the meanes that should doe them good let the Lord ring his iudgements in their eares yet they heare no more then a dead man heares let him set vp neuer so many shining lights in the Church yet they see no more then a dead man sees they taste no more sometimes in the word then a dead man doth in his meate Math. 13. 14. Q. What is our misery in regard of the punishment of sinne A. We are subiect to the curse of God both in this life and in the life to come Gal. 3. 10. Qu. What is the curse of God in this life A. It is of two sorts Partly on our selues And partly on the things that belong to vs. Qu. What is the curse of God on our selues A. It is the losse of our happy estate For whereas before we were the heires of God and all his blessings belonged vnto vs now wee haue no right nor interest in any of them As a dead man loseth all that his father by will had bequeathed him Secondly the calamities that are falne vpon vs on our bodyes riches sicknesse and death it selfe on our soules feare sorrow and despaire Qu. What is the curse of God on the things that belong vnto vs A. In our Goods hinderances and losses In our Name infamie and reproach In our children seruants parents and friends infinite miseries that may grieue vs. Qu. What is the Curse of God in the life to come A. Eternall damnation both of body and soule in hell fire Whereas the state of the wicked is much more miserable then the state of a dogge or a roade For when they die all their miseries end but when the wicked dye then their greatest miserie begins Math. 25. 41. Q What will the fight of our miserable estate worke in vs A In those that belong to God it will worke true humiliation and sorrow for their sinnes For when they shall see themselues so many wayes guiltie of the wrath of God This will melt them into teares and turne their ioyes into heauinesse and all their mirth into mourning Acts 2. 37. Q What gather wo● of th●● A. That they who haue not truely sorrowed for their sinnes nor wept as it were at the feet of Iesus in remembrance of them can finde no sound comfort nor peace in Christ Mat. 21 28. Q What are the meanes to further and helpe on this sorrow for sinne A. First to consider that we and all we so long as we liue in sinne are subiect to the Curse of God cursed in our selues and cursed in our friends cursed in our bodies and cursed in our soules Deut. 28. 16. 17. Secondly to consider that wee are subiect to all the curses of God And therefore if some one bee so heauie and intolerable that it makes vs euen weary of our liues How will it be with vs when the whole wrath of God shall be poured out vpon vs Deut. 28. 45. Thirdly to consider that we are subiect to the curse of God continually sleeping and waking riding and going working and playing liuing and dying in this life and in the life to come Deut. 28. 46. 47. Fourthly to consider that many thousands lie Damned in Hell for those sinnes where in we liue Sodom is in hell for pride and yet we are proud The Glutton for abusing his wealth and yet we abuse it Corazin because they profited not by the Gospell and yet we profit not by it Iude 7. verse Fiftly to consider our mortalitie and the vncertaintie of our life that we know not how soone we shall die and if wee die in this sore we goe oamned to hell Luk 12. 20. Sixtly to consider that there is no meanes to shift away from the iudgement of God but howsoeuer they seeme to sleepe for a while yet they will awake and ouertake vs at the last Num. 32. 13. 2. Pet. 2. 6. Seuenthly to consider the iudgements of God vpon other men and to weight that what God hath beene to them hee will be to vs if we liue in these sinnes Luk. 13. 3. Eighthly that we vse all our afflictions to this end to consider they be for sinne and that we haue as well deserued all the rest of Gods iudgements as these which presently lye vpon vs. And therefore that we sorrow not so much for the Euills as for our sinnes that are the causes of them Lament 5. 16. Q. What is the second thing required of him that would bee saued A. He must know and bee perswaded of his happie estate in Christ. Q What gather wee of this A. That though sorrow for sinne bee necessarie Yet if any rest in this sorrow and seeke not the remedie in Christ he shall neuer be happy Ierem. 50. 4. 5. Q. What is our estate in Christ A. By Christ we are free from all our miseries and fully and cleerely restored to true happinesse Rom. 8. 1 Q. How did Christ worke this A. By bearing the whole punishment that was due to our sinnes for thereby the iustice of God was fully answered and we discharged of all the fearefull curses that were written vp against vs Gal. 3. 13. Q How is this declared in the Scriptures A. By the similitude of a Debtor If a suretie discharge the debt the principall debtor in no good conscience can bee troubled or arrested for it So Christ hauing cancelled the Bonds and brought vs
vs any good For what shall it profite a man to haue a mountaine of gold and yet to carry a fire-marke in his soule the brand and marke of a condemned man and to know that whensoeuer he goes hence hee goes damned to the deuill Math. ●6 26. Q. What learne we by this A. That euery Christian man and woman must make it their chiefest study and their chiefest care to finde Mercy and fauour with God in the forgiuenesse of their sinnes rather then to inioy ten thousand worlds without it Q. What is the second reason A. Our sinnes are so many and so grieuous against the Lord that wee are not worthy of one morsell of meate to put into our mouthes yea wee deserue euen to bee starued and famished vpon the face of the earth And therefore because our sinnes are the barre and stop that let and hinder Gods blessings from vs therefore wee pray God to forgiue our sinnes that the true hindrance of our comforts being taken away all his blessings in most rich and plentifull sort may flowe vnto vs Ier. 5. 25. Qu Why are our sinnes called debts A. Because as a debt bindes a man either to satisfie the partie or to goe to prison So our sinnes binde vs either to satisfie Gods Iustice or to goe to hell Qu. What learne wee from hence A. First that wee are all in the Lords debt and it is not some dribling somme that wee owe him but a thousand Talents at the least more then wee and all the friends wee haue be able to discharge Secondly that vnlesse God be contented for them wee are sure to goe to hell where wee shall endure not a moneths or a yeares imprisonment But wee shall lye bound in the chaynes of horror and darknesse as long as there is a God in heauen to reuenge our sinnes and the Deuill in hell to torment vs for them Thirdly that there is no way to deale with God but onely by intreaty and by request Wee cannot choppe and change with him as the Pope thinkes Lord I haue so many sinnes and here are so many good deeds for them But wee must begge our pardon and become humble sutours to the Throne of grace that God for Christs sake would shew Mercy vpon vs. Fourthly that we shall finde the Lord ready for to yeeld vnto our sute especially seeing the Lord Iesus who sitteth at the right hand of God is an Intercessour for vs Q. Must wee pray thus euery day A. As wee pray euery day for our daily Bread so we must also pray daily for the pardon of our sinnes The pardon of our sinnes being as needfull euery day as the bread that wee liue by Qu. What may this teach vs A. That wee sinne euery day howsoeuer God shall blesse vs or punish vs or teach or touch vs with his Spirit yet wee know aforehand that wee shall sinne tomorrow and the next day and so euery day to our dying day Secondly that wee sinne often euery day and therefore wee speake in the plurall number Forgiue vs our sinnes as hauing many sinnes to be forgiuen And though wee bee able to discerne but a few of our sinnes yet our ignorance is the greater who sin many times when wee thinke we doe not sinne Thirdly that as wee sinne daily so it must be our care euery day to make euen with the Lord that wee come not with after reckonings with sinnes of 10. 20. or 30. yeares old not repented of but that euery day wee reconcile our selues to God for the sinnes of that day that whensoeuer wee shall die wee may haue but the sinnes of one day Q. What is meant by these words For euen wee forgiue them A. They containe 1. A Comfort 2. An Instruction Qu. What is the comfort A. That if wee who are full of hatred and reuenge can forgiue our brethren much more wil the Lord who is full of Mercy and compassion bee ready to forgiue vs. For wee are not to thinke that wee can goe beyond the Lord in any grace and therefore if wee can loue him that loues not vs and passe by many wrongs wee may well thinke wee shall finde the Lord much more fauourably inclyned to vs. Q. Is our forgiuenesse a cause why God forgiues vs A. No For if wee forgiue our brethren some little fault that is no reason why God should forgiue vs our huge and mightie sinnes But the Lord addes this as a sure testimonie of our soules that if we who haue but a drop of Mercy can forgiue our Brethren much more will the Lord who is euen full of goodnesse forgiue vs. Q. What is the Instruction A. That wee shall neuer finde fauour at Gods hands till such time as our brethren finde loue and mercy and good dealing at our hands For looke what wee bee to others when they offend vs the same wee shall finde God to vs when wee offend him Q. Whom doth this Doctrine condemne A. First it condemneth those who wil vse extremity to their brethren that will not by any meanes bate of their right but eagerly pursue euery aduantage they can get against them Secondly it condemneth those that will say they forgiue and forget and yet notwithstanding the memorie of it is most quicke in their hearts and vpon euery little occasion they breake out againe Alas doe wee looke for such forgiuenesse at Gods hands how is it then that our Brethren can finde no better at our hands Thirdly it condemneth those that can bee content to forgiue some small offences of their brethren but if it touch them somewhat neere in their goods or names oh then the matter is heynous and so preiudiciall it toucheth vs so deeply that it may not in any wise finde fauour at our hands Why alas our brethren cannot commit any so grieuous offence against vs but wee commit farre greater against the Lord and therefore as wee except against them so wee may well looke the Lord will except against vs. Q. What doe wee pray for in the sixt Petition A. Wee pray for strength and grace against sinne Q. Why are there two Petitions for the Soule and but one for the Body A. The Lord would teach vs thereby that our care for heauenly things should be twice so much as our care for earthly and therefore where wee are once vpon our knees for the blessings of the body wee should bee twice vpon our knees for the blessings of our Soules Qu. How doth this Petition depend vpon the former A. In the former Petition we prayed for the pardon of our sinnes that be past and now wee pray for grace and strength against those euills that be to come Q. What learne wee by this A. First that none are more subiect to Tentations then the godly For of all men they are most layd vnto sinne will bee euer nibling and the diuell will labour mightily to regaine his hold Secondly that it is not enough to haue our sinnes pardoned
vs. Therefore after pardon of our sinnes we pray that wee may be kept from more sinnes as knowing the Diuell will be busie not onely not to let vs alone so but seeks by all meanes to supplant and surprize vs as the Apostle speakes 2 Cor. 11. 3. But I feare lest as the Serpent beguiled Eue through his subtilty so your mindes might be corrupted c. and 1 Pet. 5. 8. Be sober saith he and watch for your aduersary the Diuell as a roaring Lyon walketh about seeking whom he may deuour So that howeuer we may relye vpon the pardon of our former sinnes the Diuell is ready still to thrust new sinnes vpon vs. As we know if a prisoner get out of prison and make an escape the Iaylor will not let him goe so but make Hue and cry after him raise the Countrey lay all the Towns and wayes to take him till at last be seaze vpon him and bring him backe to the stinking Dungeon which he came from So doth the Diuell deale by vs when wee haue made an escape got out of the prison-house of our owne sinnes he will not let vs goe so but makes after vs layes all baytes and ginnes possible to see if possibly he can intrap vs that so he may carry vs backe to our former old courses to walke in the wayes of darknesse So we see the grieuousnesse of sins and daily tentations are inseparable companions in this life for wee shall neuer haue our sinnes forgiuen but the Diuell will bee ready to tempt vs vnto other sinnes so to lay a new load vpon vs. Secondly That to the grace of Iustification we must alwayes labour to joyne Sanctification that is we must not onely labour to haue our sinnes pardoned but also mortified and the power thereof weakened for by sinne there be two things alwayes remaining 1. The guilt of sinne 2. The corruption of it The guilt of sinne is a binding of vs to the punishment as I haue said by order of diuine Iustice which is taken away by the Lords mercifull forgiuenesse but when the guilt is taken away the corruption of sinne remaineth which is a way ward disposition of the soule wherby it is wholly inclined vnto euil and vnfit and vnable for heauenly things Now this is that we pray for that God would not onely take the guilt of sinne away with the punishment and penalty due vnto it but the corruption of it also this is our desire others indeed are well enough content to haue their sinnes pardoned but to haue them mortified restrained weakned and the power thereof abated and quite killed but a few desire heartily But we who know the danger and bitternesse of sinne must pray also to haue the soule Sanctified the faculties rectified and set in the same beauty that the LORD in the beginning gaue it When a man hath broken an Arme or a Legge some fooles care no more but to be eased againe so the Chirurgion can giue them somewhat to take away the ache they go no further but they who be wise doe not onely seeke to haue the paine slaked but also to haue the bone well set againe that by that meanes there be no blemish or disproportion to the rest of the body So it is with a true Christian he doth not onely desire to be rid of the paine of his sinne the aches of his soule but the very corruption of it also healed and mortified in him Dauid conioynes these two together Psal. 103. 2 3. Blesse the Lord O my soule and forget not all his benefits who forgiueth all thine iniquitie and healeth all thy diseases The like we haue Psal. 51. 9 10. where he prayes Hide thy face from my sinnes and blot out all my iniquities create in me a cleane heart O God and renew a right spirit in mee Thus after Iustification he prayes for sanctification which also must be our care through the course of our life So much of the connexion The Petition it selfe hath two Branches in it 1 We pray that we may not be tempted vnto sinnes 2 That though we be tempted yet we may not yeeld vnto it Now there be two kinds of Temptations obserueable which we are subiect to in the course of our liues 1 Of tryals and tentations to sinne 2 Of sicknesse and diseases Tentation is any present prouocation or inclination to sinne which is a bait laid by the Diuell or our owne flesh against vs. When we pray therefore not to be led into tentation we pray that we may not haue any prouocation or inticement to sinne that may ouercome or intrap vs in leading vs from that loue duty and obedience we owe vnto the Lord so that the words in this first part of the Petition containe two principall things 1 A Confession 2 A Request First in that we pray not to be led into tentation Here is a close confession that our sinnes deserue it that the Lord may iustly leaue vs vnto the will and power of temptatation As it is said of the Gentiles Rom. 1. 24. Wherefore also God gaue them vp to their hearts lusts to doe things vnseemely So 2 Thes. 2. 11. It is said because they went on in the loue of darknesse receiued not the loue of the truth that they might be saued for this cause GOD should send them strong delusion that they should beleeue a lie So that God in his iust iudgement giues vs vp to our sinnes making one sinne the punishment of another This the Lord shewes plainly in the parable of the Vineyard Esay 5. 6. For so also a man that hath a Vineyard as long as it beares well hee will fence it weed it and hedge it that no hurt come vnto it but if it grow barren and yeeld him no profit then he causes the hedge to be throwne downe pull away the wall and let in Hogges Swine and Vermine to deuoure it So doth God order and deale in the businesse of our soules so long as we bring forth branches flourishing and worthy the fruit of the Gospell so long we are fenced and tended well cared for of God But when wee grow barren bring forth bryers and weeds then all our labour is lost when although the Lord doth not let in hogges and swine yet doth the Diuell and all the power of darknesse come in vpon it and blindes and hardens vs more and more by reason that we haue abused the gifts and graces which the Lord first bestowed vpon vs. The second part of this confession is That we are exceeding prone to yeeld vnto temptation Wherefore wee acknowledge that the Lord in Iustice may giue vs vp to the temptations of the Diuell for which cause we pray that we might not be tempted because we find such infirmity in our selues that if we be tempted a thousand to one we shall yeeld to the tentation for the corruption of man is like vnto dry Tinder ready to kindle and
speakes pitifully and begges for his life He cannot misse to speed at Gods hand as Daniel did Dan. 9. 20. euen so if a sinner can pierce the heauens with his cryes and solicite God earnestly no question he shall at length heare the voice of Christ say vnto him by his Spirit Goe in peace thy sinnes are forgiuen thee The Fourth and last point in the Practise of Repentance is Resolution to walke with God in newnesse of life as Dauid did Psal. 119. I haue sworne and will performe to keepe thy righteous law and Psal. 39. 1. I said I will take heede to my wayes that I offend not with my tongue And againe Psal. 119. I considered my wayes and turned my feet vnto thy Testimonies I made haste and delayed not the time is now not deferring till hereafter now wee must resolue to leaue our sinnes to walke with God with newnesse of life and with all watchfulnesse ouer our owne hearts then vnto resolution wee must ioyne a holy constant indeauour vsing all good meanes and remoouing the lets and hinderances which stop and hinder our repentance which is now the next thing wee are to speake of LECT VII VII THE IMPEDIMENTS of Repentance Io● 15. 31. Let not him that is deceiued trust in vanitie for vanitie shall be his recompence THe Spirit of God by Salomon hath iustly taxed all things vnder the Sun to be vanitie and vexation of Spirit so may I iustly now being to speake of the impediments of Repentance censure all these lets and hinderances which detaine men from this so necessarie Grace vnder the Name of vanitie whatsoeuer they bee and vanitie shall be their recompence Wee spake the last day of the Practise of Repentance wherein must bee foure things First a man must search out his sinnes by the bright candle of the word of God Secondly when he hath found out his sinnes then he must bee sorry for them Thirdly Then hee must pray to God in Christ Iesus to forgiue them Fourthly Then he must resolue against them that is renounce and remoue them as farre as may be Which practise of repentance must be not only once in an age or a mans life but as our sinnes be dayly so our repentance must be euery day performed so long as wee liue in this life Now in the next place we are to speake of the Impediments of repentance and those deceits which hinder men and women from this dutie Generall or vniuersall motion as Schoolemen say is caused two wayes First Either Agendo by enforcing vp that which wee meane to mooue as when a man flings a stone with his hand Or Remouendo prohibens quod impedit or remoouing of that which hinders the motion as when a stone lieth vpon a shelfe when one pulles this away then by and by downe falls the stone of his owne accord and yet hee who pulled away the shelfe caused that motion of the stone But how Not Agendo by flinging of the stone downe but by Remouendo prohibens remoouing of that which hindered the motion of it Now as it is in vniuersall motions so also it is in speciall motions of the mind for they be caused first either directly by an immediat impression made vpon the mind as when a man is directly inuited to goodnesse or vertue Secondly or by remoouing the impediments which hinder vs from it O● the first I haue spoken in the practise of repentance formerly It shall not therefore be amisse now to speake of the impediments in the next place wherein two things are required of euery one 1. Christian wisedome to finde out the let 2. Christian care to remooue it First there must be Christian wisedome to finde our thelets for in euerie man there is son especiall barre or let which if he can finde out or light vpon there is the wisedome to be wise to finde out these pressing downe weights as the Apostle calls them They who haue water running home in pipes and conduits to their houses as soone as they want that which they see their neighbors haue at their doores close by them by and by they search into the causes and run to the conduit or the pipes to see wherethey be stop● or what is the defect Euen so must euerie man do when he findes that the grace of Repentance flowes into other mens hearts and hath no recourse or accesse into his soule by and by sit downe and search himselfe what the cause should be where the rub lies which detaines the grace of Repentance from him seeing they that liue it may be in the same house sit at the same table lie in the same bed they can be penitent for their sinnes sorrie that they haue offended God and so complaine in bitternesse of soule for their sinnes but hee that had the same meanes the same occasions more sinnes to be humbled for more time to repent and more motiues to draw him to the dutie is not yet moued with the same melted with griefe nor come neere this dutie of contrition Thus as I said euery man must looke to himselfe what that is which hinders his repentance We see when Christ cast out the diuel Mat. 17. 19. his disciples came vnto him saying Why could not wee cast him out So when we see others in the course of their life and midst of their sinnes brought vnto repentance mourning weeping for sinnes whereby they haue offended God let vs looke into our selues and enquire at our own hearts why we doe not repent why we cannot do as other good people doe We haue the same meanes the same preaching the same exhortations yea the same iudgements the same punishments the same afflictions But 〈◊〉 Where shall we find that man or that woman who are thus carefull to search into themselues There is not one of a hundred but they lie still in their sinnes without repentance and few or none desires to search into the cause what it is which hinders their repentance making them vnapt to so good a duty Wee see in experience let one come to light a candle if it will not presently take fire wee imagine and runne by and by to consider what should be the reason of it and wee iudge that the wicke is wet or something is am●●le O how wise men can bee for the things of this life and are carelesse for those things which concerne eternall happinesse W●… to know then that the Impediments of Repentance be of two sorts 1. Some bee in the Iudgement 2. Some bee in the Affections Euen as when a man is sicke and will not take the good physick which would cure him the defect is either in his Iudgement or in his Affections In his Iudgement because either hee doth not feele himselfe to bee sicke though hee be ill hee hath no apprehension thereof or if her 〈◊〉 yet hee doth not take it to be dangerous or deadly or though hee thinke it
Iudg. 2. 4. came and set their sins before them the text saith That they lift vp their voice and wept and in another case of sorrow 1. Sam 7. 6. wee reade They poured out water before the Lord and therefore seeing such who of all others were most vnlikely to weepe did shed teares for their sinnes being prickt in conscience what shall wee thinke of others a great deale more tender-hearted what haue they done in secret before God Thus the conclusion is made good Use. Oh then thinke of this yee merry people of the world you that passe your dayes in ioy and pleasure that if the best of Gods people and seruants at one time or other haue and must shed teares and weepe for their sinnes O how great cause haue you to lay aside your meriments to bid farwell to your sports and to come downe into dust and ashes and there in the bitternesse of your soules mournfully and heauily to lament your sinnes before the Lord It is time that you exclaime and say Peccatum est causa tristitiae doloris Sinne will cause sorrow feare and lamentation either in earth or in hell and so better weepe and mourne for our sinnes on earth where you may haue comfort and pardon ease and forgiuenesse then in hell where you shall haue a continuall death and yet a liuing torture Ibi erit fletus assiduus terror they be Christs owne words as you know Luk. 13. 28. When they shall see Abraham Isaac and Iacob and all the Prophets and Saints in heauen and themselues shut out of d●ores whilst they shall see other penitent sinners goe to heauen and themselues meanetime tormented in hell Others goe to pleasure whilst these goe to paine others to bee carried to eternall life whilst these goe downe to eternall death And so beloued of the Lord iudge your selues for your sins that God may not iudge you condemne your selues and let your present teares preuent those heauy endlesse teares to come vpon you hereafter And thus let vs all goe forth with Christ into the Garden and let vs not sleepe there as his Disciples did but seeing Christ fell flat vnder the burden of our sinnes let vs fall downe by him in consideration of our manifold offences where though wee cannot shed blood as hee did yet let vs indeauour and pray to God that wee may shed teares of repentance Yea as Christ in the daies of his flesh did offer vp strong cries and teares with supplications and prayers vnto him who was able to saue him from death so let vs doe and let vs be restlesse neuer to giue ouer our sute vntill we heare that comfortable voyce come vnto vs Sonne bee of good cheere thy sins are pardoned thy soule shall be saued thy prayers and teares are come vp in remembrance before God Thus much of the Case of Teares LECT XI V. THE CASE OF comfort in death in Repentance NVM 23 10. Let mee die the death of the righteous and let my last end bee like his AS wee haue a care to liue to the Lord so wee must haue a care to die to the Lord also For as it is Rom. 14. 7. 8. None of vs liueth to himselfe and no man dieth to himselfe for whether we liue wee liue vnto the Lord or whether wee die wee die vnto the Lord whether wee liue therefore or die wee are the Lords Accordingly is that rauish'd speech of Balaam here in my text Let mee die the death of the Righteous and let my last end bee like his Which words doe especially imply these three thing 1. That there is a death of the righteous that they must die as well as others 2. That the death of the righteous i● farre different from the death of the wicked 3. That euery man must desire to die as the righteous die That is in peace of a good conscience and feeling of the promises and comforts of God made in Iesus Christ so that these words shew vs that there is great cause for vs to inquire after The case of Repentance wee last spake of Whether euery one that hath truely repented can shew himselfe comfortable and heauenly minded at the houre of Death Now the answer I will lay downe in two points 1. That a man may truely repent and yet depart out of this world with little or no comfort at the houre of death 2. That there is neuerthelesse a very hopefull and likely way whereby true penitents may come boldly to die with comfort if they doe not neglect the meanes Concerning the first point I say a man may truely repent him of his sinnes and yet shew little or no comfort at the day of death Yea the truth is that the greatest part of Gods people as they liue well so they die well and comfortably as wee see Steuen did Acts 7. 16. Hee saw a heauenly vision heauen opened and Christ standing at his right hand readie to helpe him and euen so for the most in the day of death the people of God see heauenly visions So Iacob went downe to Aegypt and died there comfortably and in peace The like wee reade of Ioseph who commanded his bones to bee remooued at their departure from Aegypt So Dauid Moses and other of the Saints died and had honourable buriall in the peace of a good conscience This made Balaam say O that I might die the death of the righteous and that my last end might bee like his Hee would not liue the life of the Saints but hee would gladly haue so died it was too strict too precise a way for a naturall man like him too much against the currant and streame of the world though hee would haue dyed like the righteous because hee knew the difference was great betwixt their death and that of wicked men So it is written Heb. 11. 13. of the Fathers of the faithfull They all died in faith not all of lingring sicknesses nor they died not all in their beds nor amongst their friends in bodily honour and pompe which may bee taken away and debarred men to i●…ioy but in faith in peace of conscience in hope of heauen in the comfortable application of the promises of Gods loue in assurance of the pardon of sinne So as I say vsually and ordinarily the people of God liue in this world with comfort and depart out of this world as old Simeon did when hee had gotten Christ into his armes Luk. 2. Yet sometimes it falls out by the wise dispensation of God that through their owne default the most faithfull and beleeuing men haue very little comfort and poore fruits of their faith when they come to die but either die without feeling which is grieuous or which is more fearefull with feare and horror which not onely daily experience confirmeth but Scripture also as Eccles 8. 9. All things come alike to all there is one euent to the righteous and to
What say you then of p●turing God in glasse windowes to worship A. It is one of the abominations in Poperie electely condemned by the Lord Deut. 4. 14. 19. Rom. 1. 23. Q. Why is God said to haue his Being of himselfe A. Because all that wee haue we haue from God but whatsoeuer God hath hee hath of none but of himselfe alone Heb 1. 3. Q. How are wee to conceiue of God A. By his properties That God is a Diuine power First most Mightie Secondly most Wise. Thirdly most Iush Fourthly most Mercifull And fiftly Infinite Q Wherein appeareth the g●eas might and power of God A. First in making the world of nothing all the world being not able to make one●●lly flie Secondly in vpholding it now 5622. yeares Whereas Iron houses that men make will moulder away 〈◊〉 ●any lesse Thirdly in conuerting the soule of a sinner it being a harder matter then to make the world For in creating the world the Lord found no resistance nothing that stood vp against him to hinder his worke but in conuerting the soule of a sinner the Lord findes a resistance ●en labouring to hinder his worke in them and opposing themselues against it Ephes 1. 19. Q What vse may wee make of this Propertie A. First that seeing wee be glad to get the fauour of mightie men wee be more carefull to get the Lords fauour who is mightier then they all Psal. 20. 7. Secondly that wee faint not in any trouble seeing God is most mightie that takes our part For no man is so poore but God by his power can make him rich No man is so sicke but God by his power can make him whole No man is so weake but God by his power can make him strong Heb 13. 6. Thirdly that wee feare to displease him who is able to doe vs more ha●●e then all the men in all the world can doe Luk. 12. 5. Q What is the second Propertie of God A Hee is most Wise. Q Wherein appeareth the Wisedome of God A. In two things principally First In framing the world so wisely that men and Angels may wonder at it If the Sunne had been set lower it would haue burnt vs if higher the beames of it with such comfort would not haue reached vnto vs. If all had bin Summer hea●e would haue parched vs. If all had beene Winter cold would haue killed vs. If all had beene Day many a ●●ser would haue killed vp himselfe and his seruants and his cattell with too much working many an angry man would haue killed himselfe with Fretting Secondly In ordering the things of this world with such most excellent wisedome surpassing all admiration For somethings wee may buy as Meate Drinke and cloathes And somethings againe wee cannot buy when wee haue meate wee cannot buy a good stomacke to our meate When wee haue Corne wee cannot buy seasonable weather to soweour corne most wisely God hath layd vp some part of euery blessing with himselfe and retained it as it were in his owne hand that men might bee driuen thereby more often to resort vnto him For if men might haue all things here below They would neuer goe so farre as Heauen to fetch any thing thence Q. What vse may wee make of this Property A. To rest contented with that portion that God giues vs with that weather which God sends vs with those losses and troubles that God brings vpon vs. God is wiser then the wisest of vs and therefore knowes alwayes what is fittest for vs And therefore to thinke when God sends vs sicknesse that health were better when God takes away our children it were better to haue them still It is the folly of our hearts to make our selues wiser then God Q. What is the third Propertie of God A. Hee is most Iust. Q. Wherein appeareth the Iustice of God A. In blessing the godly and punishing the wicked Q. How stands it then with Iustice that the godly are commonly in worst state A. Very well for though they haue but little yet they haue more contentment and more ioy in that little then the wicked haue in all their plenty Psal. 37. 16. Secondly though they haue but little yet God giues them a true and an holy vse of it they spend and vse that little well Esay 23. 18. Thirdly that little they haue is a pledge and a pawne that God hath greater things reserued for them As a man is put in possession of the whole field by receiuing a little Tur●e in his hand Prou. 13. 9. Fourthly that they want outwardly they haue inwardly Psalme 45. 13. Though they be not rich in the purse yet they are rich in Faith Iames 2. 5. Though they haue not gold yet they haue that which is better then gold Iob 28. 15. 16. 1. Pet. 1. 7. Fiftly that which God is behinde with them in this world shal be paid them with vantage in the world to come Mat. 19. 28. Q. What vse may wee make of this Propertie A. That seeing all our sinnes were punished in Christ they cannot in iustice be punished in our selues againe eternally and therefore all they stand fully discharged before the Iudgement seate of God who by a true a liuely faith haue receiued Christ. For as when the Surety hath answered the debt it cannot in any right be demanded of the debtor againe So seeing Christ hath discharged for our sinnes we ought not in any equitie to be charged with them Esay 53. 5. Q. Why then are the godly punished when they sinne A. They are punished not in Iudgement but in Mercie to weaken the strength of sinne and to keepe vnder the rebellion of their nature which still dwelleth in them Psal. 119. 71. Q. What may wee further learne from this Propertie A. That God will right wrongs of his children 2. Thess. 1. 6. 7. And that the wicked haue good cause to hang downe their heads knowing that God in Iustice for euery sinne will be auenged of them they must pay full sweetly for euery oath they sweare for euery lie they tell for euery Sabboth they mispend and therefore with trembling hearts they may looke euery houre when the fire will fall from Heauen that shall burne them when the great Iudge shall appeare in the cloudes who will condemne them Prou. 11. 21. Q What is the fourth Propertie of God A. Hee is most Mercifull Q. Wherein appeareth the mercie of God A. First in making vs Men when hee might haue made vs Beasts In making vs wise when hee might haue made vs starke fooles In giuing vs limbes when he might haue made vs lame In giuing vs sight when he might haue made vs blinde Scondly in prouiding things needfull for vs. When wee are sicke herbes to heale vs when wee are cold fire to warme vs when wee are hungry meate to feede vs when wee are naked wooll to cloathe vs. And the more to commend his Mercies hee prouides vs of all thesethings when wee are his
vnlesse he had taken vpon him the weake nature of man he could not haue suffered for vs 1. Tim. 1. 17. Secondly because man had sinned and therefore it was needfull that man should suffer for sonne Heb. 2. 16. Thirdly that he might be the more pittiful and tender to vs hauing felt in himselfe the many weaknesses and infirmities that our nature is subiect to Heb. 2. 17. Q. How did Christ become man A. He was conceiued by the Holy Ghost borne of the Virgine Mary Q. How was he conceiued by the Holy Ghost A. The holy Ghost sanctified the flesh of the Virgin and therefore created the Body of Christ without mans helpe Luk. 1. 35. Qu Why was he so conceiued A. That he might be pure from originall sinne in his conception Heb. 7. 26. Q. Why was he borne of a Virgin A. That his strange birth might moue men to looke for some strange worke at his hands Isa. 7. 14. Q. What Heretiques are rebuked by this Article A. Simon Magus schollers who denied that Christ was come in the flesh and therefore are called Antichrists 1. Iohn 4. 3. Secondly the Ualentinian heretiques of old and the Anabaptists of late who affirme that Christ brought his body from heauen with him and so passed through the wombe of the Virgin as water through a Conduit Pipe contrarie to the Scripture Gal. 4. 4. Q. What doe the rest of the Articles concerne A. The execution of Christs office whereof there are 2. parts 1. His Humiliation 2. His Glorification Q. What is the first degree of his Humiliation A. Hee suffered vnder Pontius Pilate Q. Why is no mention made of his life but of his sufferings A. Because his whole life was nothing but a suffering his Passion began at his birth and from his cradle he was weeping towards his crosse Qu. Why is no mention made of his miracles A. Because we haue more benefit by his suffering than by all his miracles his miracles benefited onely to those that liued in that present age with him but the vertue of his suffering reacheth downe to vs 1. Pet. 2. 24. Q. Of whom did Christ suffer A. Of all sorts of men hee that came to saue all had all against him the Iewes against him and the Gentiles against him the Priests against him and the People against him the Souldiers against him and the Theefe against him yea and his owne Disciple too Q. What did Christ suffer A. All the punishments that were due to our sinnes Pouertie Hunger Contempt Shame Whipping and buffetting and the Wrath of God which was greater than them all Q. Why do the Martyrs suffer so cheerefully and Christ so heauily A. The Martyrs though they felt paines in their bodies yet they were infinitely comforted in their soules but Christs inward sorrowes were more than his outward paines Mat. 26. 38. Qu. For what cause did Christ suffer A. He suffered for our sinnes we are they that caused the death of the Sonne of God as we increased sinne so the torments were increased vpon him Isay 53. 5. Qu. What was this Pontius Pilat A. He was the gouernor of Iewrie Deputie to Tiberius Caesar Emperor of Rome Luke 3. 1. Qu. Why is he here mentioned A. To shew That the Sceptar was now taken from Iudah and therefore this was the time wherein Christ should come Gen. 47. 10. Q. Why was Christ condemned of Pilat A. That we might be acquitted at the iudgement seat of God Christ hauing borne the whole penaltie of our sinne Q. What was the second degree of Christs humiliation A. He was crucified Qu. What kind of death was that A. It was a most painful death and a most infamous death Q. How was it infamous A. It was infamous two wayes first By Gods Law Gal. 3. 13. Secondly By Mans Law because none but base and vile persons were adiudged to the Crosse. Q Why did Christ suffer such an infamous death A. That we might see what an hatefull thing sinne is in Gods sight which could no otherwise be expiated but by such a fearefull and infamous death of the Sonne of God There is not the least sinne that we commit but it cost our Sauior Christ the dearest bloud in his bodie Qu. What learne wee by this A. To account no sinne little seeing the least we haue cost our Sauior Christ not a little paine Qu. What other reason is there A. It meruailously commends our Sauiours loue That Christ performed not some sleight matter for vs but vnderwent a most vile death the death of the Crosse in our behalfe Phil. 2. 8. Q. When was Christ crucified A. At noone day that all men might see cleerely life saluation lifted vp vpon the Crosse Ioh. 3. 14. Q. Where was Christ crucified A. Without the Citie to shew that wee must goe out from this world if we will be partakers of the Crosse of Christ Heb. 13. 13. Q. Who did crucifie Christ A. The Iewes who longed for Christs comming yet killed him when they had him 1. Thess. 2. 14. Q. What miracles were done at it A. There was darkenesse from high noone till three of the clocke God put out the candle of heauen that man might leaue worke When Man would not blush the Sun was ashamed and hid his face When mens hearts would not quake the earth quaked for feare and when mens hearts would not rent the vaile of the Temple rent in twaine Mat. 27. Q. What was the third degree of Christs humiliation A. His death Q. Why did not Christ come downe from the Crosse as the Iewes would haue had him A. If Christ had come downe from the Crosse the Iewes would haue haled him to it againe and so the condemnation would haue been the greater If Christ had come downe he had left the worke of our redemption vnperfect and therefore howsoeuer it might haue beene much for Christs honour to haue come downe yet tendring our good more than his owne honour hee was content with shame and reproch to stay still vpon this Crosse. Christ shewed then a greater miracle than that if they would beleeue For it was more to rise from death after they had killed him than to come downe from the Crosse when hee was aliue Q. How did Christ die A. He died a voluntarie death and a holy death Q. How did Christ die a voluntarie death A. He died not with extremitie of paine as others doe but he willingly yeelded vp his life when he could haue liued longer if he would Ioh. 10. 18. Q. How did Christ die an holy death A. Though hee had many sharpe conflicts before his end yet he made a sweet close in so much that the Centurion was more mooued with his sweet death than with all the miracles which he had seene Mark 15. 39. Q. Why did Christ die A. To free vs from eternall death for vnlesse Christ had died on earth we had died euerlastingly in Hell Q. Yea but
dwell in peace and friends and good seruants c. Qu. Why doth the Lord ●ame nothing but Bread A. To teach v●to bee content if wee haue no more but bread seeing wee aske no more if God giuemore wee are to take it thankfully and to vse it well But if God shall cut short our fare and bring it to bread onely yet wee are to rest with contentment in it Phil. 4. 11. 12. Qu. What gather wee of this A. That they who pray for heapes of gold and siluer for stately and gay houses for sumptuous fare for great liuings and the like sinne in praying because not Christ but Couetousnesse taught them to pray so Q. Why doe wee aske our Bread of God seeing many of vs haue meanes euer to get it A. Because all our paines is not able to procure vs one morsell of bread without the Lords blessing bee vpon it and therefore wee pray God euen to giue vs that Bread that wee labour for knowing that without his blessing wee may as soone perish when we haue the greatest meanes to feed vs as when wee haue no meanes at all Psal. 127. 1. 2. Qu. What learne wee by this A. That wee must as hardly begge bread of God that is good succession in our affaires when wee haue the greatest meanes in the world as when wee haue no meanes at all neither money nor friend nor counsell to compasse it Q. What need they aske bread who haue bread enough A. First though wee haue bread yet the bread that wee haue is none of ours For by sinne wee forfeit euery day all wee haue into the hands of God and wee dispossesse our selues of all right and title to it And therefore vnlesse the Lord restore vs and giue it vs againe wee doe but vsurpe vpon any thing that wee haue Secondly though wee haue the substance of bread yet wee haue not the staffe of bread that is the nourishing and feeding of it but from God alone Vnlesse God blesse it as good take a mouthfull of grauell as a mouth-full of meate And therefore euen then when wee haue our Tables full of bread yet we had need pray still for our daily Bread because our bread without his blessing shall no more nourish vs then a stone Q. Why doe wee say giue vs our bread and not giue mee my Bread A. To shew that wee must not regard our selues alone but in a fellow feeling pray for other mens wants as well as for our owne Q. Whom doth this condemne A. First it condemneth the couetous man who had rather say Giue mee my Bread then giue vs our bread wishing well indeed to no body but himselfe Secondly it condemneth those who bee spoylers of their brethren For it is as much as if hee should say to God Lord doe thou giue him bread and I will take it from him Doe thou make him rich and I will make him poore Doe thou make him merry and I will make him sad Q. Why doe wee pray but for the Bread of one day A. Christ teacheth vs thereby to restraine and cut short our cares for the time to come and not to bee tormented with the feare of any hard estate afore hand but to resort to the Lord for the necessitie of the day in the day thereof Math. 6. 34. Qu. What incouragement haue wee to doe so A. Gods care for the little Birds For when they haue dyned they know not where to suppe and when they haue supt they know not where to dyne and yet God feedeth them from day to day how much more safely may we rest vpon the prouidence of our God assuring our selues that he that feeds vs this day wil feed vs the next day the next so to our liues end Q. What other reason is there A. The Lord would bring vs euery day in prayer to him For seeing wee aske but the bread of one day when that day is past our patent and our grace is out And therefore wee must come to the Lord the next day to renue it againe Q. What else doe wee learne by this A. Wee aske our bread euery day of God as being not able to liue any one day without him and therefore it must bee our chiefest care to stand fast by God to keepe him our friend whosoeuer bee our foe and that hee may bee pleased whosoeuer is displeased with vs. Qu. Why doe wee say our Bread A. Wee are hereby taught to aske our owne Bread that which wee haue laboured for in some honest calling or other for that onely is ours which is gotten by lawfull and by honest meanes That which is vnlawfully gotten is none of ours it is not our bread which wee haue of God but the diuill and sin is the purueyer and prouider of it Qu. What gather wee of this A. First that a man cannot eate his Bread with a good conscience that hath not done something according to his abilitie strength and place to make himselfe in some sort fit and worthy of it Secondly that their sinne is great who desire other mens bread and are not contented with their owne And therfore breake in vpon their brethren seeking to defeate either their neighbours of their houses or their seruants of their wages or their labourers of their hyre or the poore of their reliefe which in right and conscience is due vnto them Q. What is meant by daily Bread A. That which is meete and conuenient for the day The Nobleman hath need of more then the meane man hee that hath a greater charge hath need of more then hee that hath a lesse charge And therefore in asking our daily bread wee aske so much as may bee fit and conuenient for our state Prou. 30. 8. 9. Q. And how much is conuenient for vs A. The Lord bids vs not aske any set and certaine stint but to leaue that to him and to his most wise disposition who knowes better then wee what will serue our turnes Q. What learne wee hence A. That it can bee no small comfort to vs that the Lord is most priuie to our estate and knowes what children what seruants what charge wee haue what earnings what commings in and what goings out and accordingly will fit vs with that which hee shall iudge to bee meetest for vs 1. Pet. 5. 7. Qu. Doe wee aske these things absolutely of God A. No wee aske them no further then they may stand with Gods glorie and therefore if they may bee any meanes whereby wee may glorifie God the better wee pray that wee may haue them if they may not wee pray that both bread and friends and strength and health and all may bee taken from vs. Q. What doe wee aske in the fift Petition A. Wee pray for the forgiuenesse of the sinnes that bee past Q. Why is this Petition knit to the former A. For two causes First because without the forgiuenesse of our sinnes all the bread in the world will not doe
in Christ vnlesse wee haue also grace to lead a better life and to abstaine from the same or like sinnes in time to co●…e Qu. Doe not the Papists say well Let vs not bee led A. No for they would seeme to bee wiser then Christ and therefore they haue delayed his words as being too harsh Q God tempts no man ●ames 1. 13. A. It is one thing to tempt a man to sinne another thing to lead a man to bee tempted of it It was the deuill that tempted Christ in the desart but it was the holy Ghost that lead him forth as the Lords Champion into the field Math. 4. 1. Q. How may God worke in tentation and yet bee free from sinne A. First by withdrawing his grace and leauing vs to our selues as if a man should send another his staffe to goe by when his legges be lame and thereupon hee begins to despise him and to set him light the other takes away his staffe and the lame man fall So God hauing lent vs his grace to walke by when wee begin to thinke wee stand not any way beholden to him for it but that wee could shift as well without it the Lord withdrawes his grace and wee ●unne into sinne and yet God is not the cause of our sinne but our owne weaknesse not able to beare vp and to sustaine it selfe Secondly by offering occasion to trie whether hee will sinne or no As a man leaues a little loose money about the house to try whether his seruants or his sonne will steale it So God sends feare to tempt vs to see if wee will yeeld to feare Pride to tempt vs c. if wee doe yeeld it is our fault not Gods who did but vent vs and set vs a broach and discouer the bad liquor that was in vs. Thirdly by causing the motion but not the euill of the motion as when the Sunne shineth vpon a dead carcasse there ariseth a stinking and a loathsome smell and yet the Sun is not the cause of it but the corruption of the carcasse So in euery action God is the cause of the motion which is good But if we sinne in moouing that comes of the Deuill or of our selues Fourthly by ordering the euill of the Action to some good end As a Father seeing his childe to bee busie about the fire catcheth his finger and thrusts it to a coale to make him the more affraid of it after So God sometimes lets vs taste of sinne that wee may the more detest it and hate it while wee liue Q. How many parts are there of this Petition A. Two First wee pray that wee may not bee tempted to sinne And secondly though that wee bee tempted yet that wee may not be ouercome of sinne Q. Why doe wee pray that wee may not bee tempted to sinne A. Wee know our owne weaknesse to bee so great and vnable to resist temptations that wee pray that wee may not bee tempted So readie wee are to yeeld to sinne that wee pray we may not bee prouoked to it Often wee sinne and oftner wee should sinne if wee were oftner tempted to it Many times we are angrie and yet if wee had ofter occasions wee would ofter be angrie Q. What gather wee of this A. That their sinne is great who fling themselues into tentation that will take vp their dwellings in those Townes and venture themselues into those companies where they know are many and strong entisements vnto sinne What doe they else but offer the deuill Blockes of aduantage against themselues and hold him the stirrop that his Tentations may the more easily mount vpon them Qu. What are the Euills that wee pray against A. They are of two sorts 1. Sinne without vs as the Deuill and the world 2. Sinne within vs as the corruptions and lusts of our owne hearts Q. What doe wee pray for against the Deuill A. That whereas the deuill is woont to pull a vizard vpon vpon his face and to translate himselfe into an Angell of light that wee may haue wisedome to discrie him and strength from heauen to stand against him Q. Doth not euery one hate the Deuill A. Indeed many will say fie vpon the Deuill and say they detest him with all their hearts and yet in leading a prophane and a wicked life they beare him about in their bodyes with them Q. What doe wee pray for against the World A. First that wee may not bee poysoned and corrupted with the bad examples that bee abroade That wee may not catch the infection but keepe our selues vnspotted to the world Secondly that neither our friends by flatterie nor our foes by feare may quench vs in good things and drawe our hearts from God Thirdly that our worldly cares may not ouergrow our godly cares so that wee haue more loue to the frothy things of this life then to those that concerne the life to come Q. What doe wee pray for against our owne lusts A. That God will weaken the strength and power of sinne in vs euery day that wee may feele it either cleane killed or so mightily weakened that as a man that hath receiued his deaths wound though hee liues and breathes yet languisheth and fainteth and droopeth euery day more and more vntill he dye So sinne may haue lesse and lesse strength till at length it haue no strength at all Q. Why doe wee aske all these things of God A. Because wee are not able of ourselues to stand the least enemy being stronger then wee and therefore wee pray to bee girded with the strength of God that through his might wee may doe that which of our selues wee should neuer doe Qu. What other thing doe wee pray for A. That if wee fall into sinne that wee may not lye in it but that the Lord will finde vs out in our falls and seeke vp our lost soules and bring vs vpon the shoulders of his mercy to his fold againe Q. Doe the godly sinne then as well as the wicked A. Yea but the godly are euer desirous to bee deliuered from sinne and therefore doe both pray and watch against it whereas the wicked hugge it and keepe it warme in their bosomes and are well content to continue in it vsing no meanes to get out of it Q. What meanes doth God vse in deliuering vs from sinne A. The chiefest meanes is the Ministry of the word it being the hand of God whereby hee pulleth vs out of sinne as a beast is lugg'd out of the mire And therefore wee pray that wee may bee obedient to it and profite by it that it may make vs wise vnto Saluation and mighty through God to withstand all assaults that rise against vs. Q. What is the last part of the Prayer A. The Conclusion or shutting vp of the Prayer Q. What is the vse of the Conclusion A. It containeth certaine Reasons to strengthen our faith that wee shall be heard For this is a great cause why our prayers come so
and not quickened vp wee shall goe from the Sacrament as emptie as wee came Q. How can wee receiue Christs Body that is absent in heauen A. By Faith wee may make it present setting Christ 〈◊〉 liuely before the inward eyes of our Soules as if wee saw him hanged nayled crowned bleeding vpon the Crosse So Abraham by faith had as liuely a sight of Christ as if with his bodily eyes hee had looked vpon him Iohn 8. 56. So the Israelites did eate and drinke Christ in the Desart 1. Cor. 10. 3. 4. and yet Christ was not borne till 1500. yeares after Q. How are the godly said to eate Christ A. As a man is said to eate the meate that hee liues by which hee doth apply and appropriate to his body to the nourishing and feeding of the same euen so when by speciall faith wee doe apply Christ vnto our selues and make him ours so that wee liue by Christ as a man liues by meate then wee are said to eate Christ. Qu. How is the Bread the body of Christ A. It is not verily and indeed his body For Christs body is in Heauen onely Act. 3. 21. but it is his body Sacramentally that is a certaine pledge and token of his body For as the Rocke is called Christ because it signifies Christ 1. Cor. 10. 4. So here the bread is called Christs Body because it signifies his body Q. Doe wee then receiue nothing but a Signe of his Body A. Yes wee receiue the very body of Christ by Faith for the bread which wee receiue with our mouthes is a true token that Christs body is receiued by faith For as a man that takes a key in signe of possession takes not the bare signe but the very possession together with the signe So they that worthily Communicate receiue not a bare signe of the Body but the very body it selfe spiritually and by faith Q. What difference is there then betweene the Papist opinion and ours A. They thinke that they eate Christ corporally and carnally with their teeth and therefore they cage him vp in the consecrated Host and hold that a cat or a mouse may deuour him But we knowing that Christ is now food for the belly but food for the soule affirme that Christ is not 〈◊〉 ca●al●● with the teeth but spiritually by faith Iohn 6. 63. 1. Cor. 10. Q. Why doth Christ adde My body which is giuen for you A. To shew that it is not Christs body glorious in Heauen 〈◊〉 downe in great Maiestie vpon the Throne of God but it is his wounded body his bleeding body his dead body that our faith must feed vpon So that here we are led backe to the crosse of Christ that wee may lay to our mouthes and euer sucke life and Saluation out of his bleeding sides Q. How may wee feed vpon the dead body of Christ A. By faith wee must set our selues vpon Mount Caluery and there behold our Lord vpon the Crosse with his shoulders trickling with his head spinning with his hands streaming with his sides gushing all his body running downe with blood and then say Behold this is the Body that is giuen for mee These sides were whipped that mine might bee spared These hands were nayled that mine might bee freed These cheekes were buffeted that mine might be kissed This head was crowned with Thornes that mine might be crowned with glorie These torments Christ suffered on Earth that I might not suffer greater things in Hell Zach. 12. 10. Q. What is the second Reason A. To shew that wee were the Authours and causes of the death of Christ. It was our sinne that brought all these punishments and these paines vpon him As an vnthrift that comes behinde hand and his suretie is made to pay for all So all our sinnes were charged vpon Christs head and hee was faine to suffer whatsoeuer wee should haue suffered for them Psalme 53. 5. Q. What learne wee by this A. That if wee detest Iudas that betrayed Christ and Pilate that condemned him and the Iewes that killed him Much more should wee hate our sinnes that were the chiefe causes of his death Q. To what end must wee celebrate the Lords Supper A. To stirre vp our faith to a more liuely consideration of the death of Christ. Q. Is there any that forget the Death of Christ A. Too many forget it or very coldly consider it First they that will doe nothing for their brethren little considering how much Christ hath done for them Secondly they that liue in sinne little consider what Christ suffered for it Thirdly they that will beare no disgrace for Christ little remember how hee was disgraced for them Lastly they that will sell themselues for a ●●rifle to the Deuill little consider how dearely they were bought Q. Why are there two signes in the Lords Supper and but one in Baptisme A. Christ is set forth in Baptisme as washing the soule from sinne And therefore because water of it selfe is enough to wash the body therefore there needed nothing else to signifie the washing of the soule But in the Sacrament of the Supper Christ is proposed as a nourishment feeding vs and vpholding vs in the life of Grace And therefore because bread is not sufficient to sustaine the bodily life without wine nor wine without bread Therefore two Signes were appointed to shew that wee haue our whole nourishment by Christ. Qu. What resemblance is there betweene the Wine and Christs blood A. As Wine maketh glad the heart of men and a man hauing tasted of it forgetteth the trouble and the miferie that lies vpon him So the blood of Christ which speaketh better things then the blood of Abel euen peace and saluation to those that killed him bringeth vnspeakable ioy and comfort to the heart Eph. 2. 13. Secondly as wine breeds good blood good spirits in a man and a man hauing tasted of it the very colour and the strength of it will appeare in his face yea it will make his very breath smell the sweeter for it So the blood of Christ breedes good thoughts and good desires and good affections in the heart and a man hauing tasted of it by faith all his actions and all his thoughts will be full of the good taste and good relish of the same Q. When did Christ ordaine this Sacrament A. After Supper that is after the eating of the Paschall lambe When they had now sufficiently filled themselues with meate and so needed not any further nourishment for this life to shew that it is not the bodily life but the spirituall that hee seekes to feed and to nourish in them Luke 22. 20. Q. What learne wee by this A. That men must come to the Lords Table not to fill their bellies but to seed their soules to haue their faith strengthened their zeale kindled their loue increased all their graces to bee quickened in them Qu. What else may bee obserued in the time A. That the Disciples hauing
supped before had so moderately vsed the matter that they were fit to receiue the Sacrament afterwards which may teach vs to vse such sobriety and moderation in our meates that wee bee not thereby made any way vnfit for holy duties Q. Whom doth this meet withall A. It meetes with those who stuffe themselues with meate especially vpon the Sabboth day That thereby they become vtterly vnfit for any holy Dutie being readier to sleepe then to heare and to seeke ease for the body then any comfort for the soule Qu. Is the Cuppe indifferently to bee administred vnto all A. If the Bread must bee administred vnto all much more the Cuppe Christs commandement being more expresse for the Cuppe Math. 26. 17. Qu. Why did Christ make such expresse mention of the Cuppe A. Christ being a Prophet foresaw in his Spirit that the Pope would denie the people the Cuppe but not the Bread and therefore hee hath giuen a more expresse charge for the Cuppe to breake the necke of this heresie before it rose Q. What gather wee of this A. That the Papists bearing hatred to the truth through the iust iudgement of God vpon them are commonly cast vpon these errours which may most easily and most plainely be conuinced by the Scriptures Qu. How is W●…e the Blood of Christ A. It is not properly indeed his blood For Christs blood was not then in the Cuppe but in the ●…nes and arteries of his Body else how could the souldiers haue shed it the next day but it is called his blood because it is a signe and a figure of his blood Q. How is this prooued A. First the drinking of blood was condemned by the Law as an horrible thing Leu. 7. 27. 〈◊〉 Christ neuer brake the Law Math. 5. 17. And therefore ●ee dranke not his owne blood nor commanded others to drinke it carnally Secondly Christ expounds himselfe For le●t some should mistake his meaning he shewes in the very next verse that it was not Blood but very Wine that hee drunke Math. 26. ●9 Q. Why is Christs Blood called the Blood of the new Testament A. Because the new Testament was ratified and confirmed by it Heb. 9. 16. Q. What is a Testament A. It is that which wee commonly call a dead mans Will whereby hee giues away his goods and disposeth of his lands and liuings that belong vnto him Such a will Christ made at his death that hee gaue away all he had The Souldiers had his Garments the graue had his Body heauen had his Soule But his righteousnesse his holinesse his merits his kingdome and glory he bestowed vpon his people Q. How many Wills did the Lord make A. The Lord made two Wills or Testaments An Old Will And a New Will Gal. 4. 24. Q. What was the tenour of the Old Will or Testament A. Therein the Lord bequeathed life and Saluation to those onely that fulfill the Law Rom. 10. 5. Q. What is the tenour of the New Testament A. Therein the Lord bequeathes heauen and the happinesse thereof to those that beleeue in Christ Rom. 10. 9. Q. Why did the Lord make this later Testament A. Because wee were all cut off of all by the former for that gaue vs nothing but vpon condition that wee should fulfill the Law and therefore seeing wee could not performe the condition wee could not recouer one penny by the Will Therefore the Lord to relieue vs made a new will and a●●exed 〈◊〉 easier condition That all should be saued who beleue in Christ Heb. 8 6. 7. Q. What gather wee of this A. That the Papists folly is exceeding great who make our state farre worse by the second Testament then it war by the first For by the first Testament Merits onely were required to Saluation But by the later as they say both our whole taske of workes is required and besides that Faith in the Mediatour So that our condition is now harder then in the Old Testament God requiring then but workes onely but now as they say both faith and workes as needfull to Saluation Q. Why doth Christ say his Blood is shed for many A. To shew that all haue not benefite by the blood of Christ. For though Christs blood bee a fountaine to wash away vncleanenesse Yet wee see a number had rather runne further into the mire then come to the lauour of Christs blood to wash away any one corruption that is in them Q. Why did Christ shed his Blood A. To purchase pardon and forgiuenesse for our sinnes Christ suffering that in his body and soule which wee should haue suffered for our sinnes Q. Haue wee no other benefite by the Blood of Christ A. Yes Through the blood of Christ wee bee not onely discharged of the sinnes that be past but wee haue strength and power against those Tentations and euill motions that bee to come Heb. 9. 14. Qu. How haue wee this A. Euen as a Corrasiue being applied vnto the diseased part eates out the corrupt flesh and drawes out the poyson and the venome that is in it euen so the blood of Christ being applied by faith eates out the dead affections and suckes out the Cankered corruptions that are in it Q. Why then doth Christ mention no benefite but Remission of sinnes A. Because this is the chiefest For euery day wee deserue to bee cast into Hell and wee giue the Lord iust cause to strip vs and to take away all his blessings from vs And therefore if Christs blood did not obtaine pardon for our sinnes we might not looke to liue one day in any tolerable estate Q. May all come to receiue the Sacrament A. No none but they who vpon due tryall finde themselues meet and fit to receiue it 1. Cor. 11. 28. Q How must a man make tryall of his fitnesse A. First whether hee bee Gods seruant or no. For God hath furnished his Table for none but for his owne people and therefore vnlesse a man can approoue himselfe to bee one of Gods Family and of Gods houshold hee may not presse and presume to come vnto it 1. Cor. 10. 21. Qu Wherefore may not others come A. If a man had prouided a good meale for his seruants that haue done his worke and a sort of R●…ans and roysters that haue done nothing for him should come in and eate it vp would not hee frowne and take on when hee should spie them at his Board So God hauing prouided this Sacrament for his Seruants will not take it well if heespie any other there that haue not serued him Math. 22. 12. Qu. How shall a man know whether hee bee Gods seruant or not A. By considering whose businesse it is that hee hath laboured in whether it be Gods worke or the deuills worke which he hath done Loue and Patience and Temperance and holinesse be Gods workes But malice and enuie and slandring and lying and swearing bee the deuills workes So that a man may soone see what Master hee hath
these are in a man nor in a mans will vntill God worke and fulfill them by his mightie power For first a man hath not eyes to see the good things of God Deut. 29. 3. saith hee Yet the Lord hath not giuen you a heare to perceiue and eyes to see and eares to heare vnto this day Secondly man hath neither desire nor appetite till God worke it in him as it is Phil. 2. 13. For it is God which worketh in you both the will and the deed or to will and to doe of his good pleasure Thirdly though wee had eyes to see good things and will to delight in them yet haue wee no strength and power to performe them vntill God will as Iohn 15. 5. For without mee you can doe nothing So then this is the doctrine of Repentance that if God worke not in a man these motions by his power there is no repentance Nay we see God onely workes man vnto repentance by the power of his Spirit and Grace so that hee is the first Cause of Repentance Of which let this be The Vse Vse 1 That because the Efficient cause of Repentance is God onely wee must say as St. Iames saith If any man lacke wisdome let him aske of God that giueth vnto all men liberally c. So let vs say of Repentance if any man lacke repentance let him aske it of God and hee will giue it him It is said of the Rocke Psal. 78. 20. Behold hee smote the Rocke that the waters gushed out and the streames ouerflowed c. Euen so let vs pray God by the power of his Spirit and grace to smite so hard vpon our rockie hearts that by and by may gush out from vs floods of repentant teares Vse 2 Secondly let vs learne to take God at his offer or else at another time wee may goe without it and hauing it let vs stirre vp our selues to be thankfull to God for it Cause of Repentance 2 The Second Cause of Repentance is called The Instrumentall Cause and that is the preaching of the Word as it is Luk. 24. 27. saith hee And that Repentance and remission of sinnes should bee preached in his Name amongst all Nations so that preaching is the Instrumentall cause thereof for though God giue Repentance it being wrought by him in vs yet hee doth it by meanes wee must not thinke that God will open the Cloudes and come downe from heauen and poure Repentance into our hearts or drop it in vs but hee hath ordained that wee shall get it by the preaching of the Word for thereby wee are made partakers of the graces of his holy Spirit Now consider there are two things to effect this The Preaching of the Law and the preaching of the Gospell the first that a man may see his sinne and the fearefull estate hee is in by the same The second that he may finde there is a remedie and that it is not in himselfe The Law prepares a man for Repentance shewes him all his sinnes and his damnable estate before yea it terrifies the conscience euen to the very flinging of him downe to hell and though this be not an infallible signe of grace to be thus terrified and restrained yet it is the occasion of it because it helpes to prepare vs and make vs willing to lay hold of Repentance as God workes in vs. As a man that makes choice of a tree to build with first he cuts it downe with his axe ere hee lay it flat vpon the ground and when he hath done so then hee applyes his line and tooles vnto lopping the boughes and so hewes it and squares it to make it the fitter for his worke Euen so doth the Lord first hee beates a man flat downe with the sentence of the Law and horrour of his sinne and then hee lifts him vp and restores him with the promises of the Gospell And whereas many thinke that it is a strange worke of God to deale thus with a man and that when God doth deale thus that man is in a wofull and lamentable estate the truth is that then the Law from God is a fitting and working a man to bee fit for eternall life and thus though the Law cannot bring a man to Repentance yet it is a meanes of preparation And then after this commeth the Gospell as a powerfull instrument and workes Faith and other Graces in vs by a diuine assistance The vse is Vse Because then the preaching of the Word is thus a powerfull cause of Repentance that wee make much of it and imbrace it esteeming it a pretious Iewell of Gods Treasurie yea and to seeke and hunger for it by all meanes If a man were grieuously sicke vpon his bed and that it were told him that in such a ground such a herbe did grow which applyed would quickly ridde him of all his paine and griefe if hee had any meanes to come by it sure hee would creepe thither vpon his hands and his feet to haue it no paines would bee irkesome vnto him so hee might recouer his health againe euen so when a man is deadly sicke of sinne as wee should all bee and it shall bee told him that in the preaching of the Gospell there is such a herbe of Grace the Flower of Repentance that will cure him of his sinne and restore him to the life of glorie I hope no man is so desperate and carelesse that will neglect the hearing of it Now what shall wee doe in this case but as it were to creepe on our hands and knees that is to vse all meanes to attaine the same and bee partakers of the benefites of the Gospell that wee may bee saued O! shall wee bee more carefull in such a case of our bodyes then of our soules Now besides these two Causes that may bring vs vnto Repentance there bee other three causes which are called Cause adiuvantes Helping or furthering causes because though they doe not worke Repentance in themselues yet they doe exercise a man to the helping and furthering of this worke in him I declare it by a similitude when one would saw a Tree three things are requisite vnto this worke First there must bee a saw which is the Instrument Secondly there must bee one to pull and mooue the saw to apply it to the Tree which is the Efficient cause Thirdly there must bee a certaine oylie and liquide matter to make the Saw runne which is Causa adiuvans the Helping cause which smoothes the Saw and makes it runne with case So it is in this great worke of Repentance the Saw or Instrument to worke is the preaching of the Gospell which doth sawe and worke vpon the conscience as the Instrument of God and God himselfe is the effectuall puller or workeman to worke Repentance in vs. So that Now the Helping Causes are especially three 1. The Mercie of God 2. The Iudgements of God 3. Our owne Considerations Helping
this is but a false Rule to examine by wee should rather doe as the Apostle commands Gal. 6. 4. Let euery man prooue his owne worke c. and then he shall haue reioycing in himselfe not in another A third false Rule is When a man will examine himselfe by the speech of people and the account that the world makes of him But wee may bee in much account with others accounted a good Christian and a good liuer and yet all this be but as a shadow before God and therefore the Apostle saith Rom. 14. 4. Euery man must stand or fall vnto his owne Master for God is able to make him stand And 2. Cor. 10. 18. hee shewes no commendation ought to be built vpon vnlesse it be of God For not hee who commendeth himselfe is approoued but whom the Lord commendeth Wheresore euen as it was said of Belteshazzar Dan. 3. Thou art weighed in the ballance and found light so if wee measure our selues by this Rule wee shall be found too light in Gods ballance The true rule is a righteous Rule therefore wee must examine our selues by the Law of God euery one who wold haue a true triall of himselfe and then as the Carpenter when he hath applyed his threed and line vnto the timber by and by hee sees where it was crooked So when a man hath thus applyed himselfe vnto the Law of God hee soone shall see wherein he hath beene sinfull and faultie So this Rule God giues vnto his people Deut. 30. 2. Obey his voice according vnto all that is commanded thee Now for the heads which wee must examine all our sinnes by they be 1. Inward 2. Outward And God is the Iudge of all that is wee must examine our selues of all our sinnes committed against God and against our Brethren There is a corruption in nature in the examining of our sinnes wee deale by our selues as a false Iudge doth by an offendor examine him so slightly that one may see he would willingly saue him or that he is affraid to finde him faulty euen so in the examining of our selues at the best wee looke but at our outward sinnes being loath to search into the inward secrets of our soules to finde out the poyson and corruption of our hearts for from the heart commeth all manner of wickednesses so that the true examination must be of all our sinnes so farre foorth as by any meanes wee can come to the knowledge of them both of sinnes against the first and second Table secret or open what kinde soeuer they be Trads-men you know especially in great Cities vse to keepe a booke of all their expences of their layings out and commings in and so are often casting vp their accounts to see whether they gaine or lose in matters of the world so we should take an account of all our actions and keepe a register of them euery night we should cast ouer our accounts to see how wee haue sinned and offended God and how often how wee haue repented if we finde things to be well wee should blesse God for it and if wee finde things to be amisse we should be humbled in our soules for it thus we must labour to view all our actions as wee see God did Gen. 1. when God had made an end of his first dayes worke and so of the rest it is said Hee beheld the same and loe all that he had made was very good So should we from day to day take a view of our workes speeches and the like to see whether they haue beene good or bad The second thing in the Practise of Repentance is Humiliation for when a man hath seene that he is a sinner and lyes in sinne this is not enough but then great care must be had also to be humbled for them that is bitterly to weepe and mourne for them euen to the shedding of many teares if it bee possible So Peter did Math. 26. 75. it is said And he went out and wept bitterly c. So Mary Magdalen Luk. 7. 38. it is said And shee stood behinde him weeping and began towash his feet with teares and then to wipe them with the haires of her head So Dauid Psal. 6. 6. confesses of himselfe All the night I make my bed swimme I water my couch with my teares So we see it is a plaine case when once we haue seene our sinnes the next thing to be done is to bee humbled for them as I haue said euen to the shedding of teares which in Gods sight are so pretious and acceptable that hee gathers and puts them vp in his bottle as Psal. 56. 8. Thou tellest my wandrings put thou my teares into thy bottle all other teares fall to the ground and are to little purpose but euery teare that a man sheds for sinne that hee hath offended God he gathers these vp But alas what shall I say I doubt me not one of a 1000. of vs let tears fall in this kinde and for this cause you goe mourning and want comfort because you seeke it not the right way in godly sorrow first to be humbled and then to reioyce It is a lamentable thing that many of you be twentie thirtie and forty yeares old and yet you haue neuer shed one teare for sinne O what a lamentable case is this that Christ may now come and say to you as hee did vnto those women Luk. 23. 28. O daughters of Hierusalem weepe not for mee but weepe for your selues c. It is a good thing to weepe for Christ in regard of the paines and troubles which hee suffered and did befall vnto him as our suretie but it is a greater grace to weepe for sinne and that thereby wee haue displeased so good a God Which I take it made St. Augustine say that Mary Magdalen brought two things to Christ her oyntment and her teares and yet her teares exceeded her oyntment in sweetnesse c. Now this sorrow for sinne doth require fiue qualifications First there must be Dolor Cordis or Contritionis the sorrow of the heart or Contrition as Act. 2. 37. it is said those three thousand who heard Peter were pricked in their hearts and Psal. 51. A contrite and a broken heart O God thou wilt not despise So that this sorrow must not be outward onely with the sadnesse of the face but it must be a sorrow of the heart as Psal. 63. the Prophet complaines my soule is vexed within mee c. It is called other-where the pouring out of the heart for this is most certaine when the soule in good earnest sets to wrastle for heauen then there is no time for vs to dissemble with God Secondly it must be Dolor secundum Deum Godly sorrow which is a sorrow for sinne because it displeaseth and hath offended God as wee may reade 2. Cor. 7. 11. For behold this selfe-same thing that you
dangerous yet he thinkes hee may renoue it without Physicke or if he must haue physicke yet he needs not such physicke or in such qualitie as is there prescribed Yet there may be for all this a storme in his Affections though the Iudgement doe come on to yeeld for either a man may be so busie in the world that hee cannot attend it or spare time for it or hee is so tender that he cannot abide the least thing which may offend him or thinke physicke to bee bitter as many doe Yea a number will choose to die rather then meddle with it Now these be the reasons partly in iudgement and partly in the Affections why such sicke patients will not admit of that physicke which might doe them good As the case is in bodily sicknesse so is it with those who are spiritually sicke with sinne Repentance is that physicke which God hath appointed for the healing of them and curing of their soules which potion sinfull men refuse to take the causes being as I haue shewed partly in the Iudgement and partly in the affections Impediment 1 In the Iudgement there be foure impediments of Repentance First because men doe not know or finde themselues to bee sicke of sinne nor would haue others to thinke them sicke they presume therefore that all is well with them for they know neither disease nor infirmitie and so because they liue as others liue and doe as others doe they thinke Repentance needlesse and feeling no sick esse they neuer thinke of Physicke This kinde of deceite is reprooued Iob 15. 31. Let not him that is deceiued trust in vanitie for vanitie shall be his recompence So wee see Mal. 3. 7. when God bade the people returne from their sinnes vnto him they answered stubbornly Wherein shall wee returne So doe the wicked men of this world answer God wherein haue wee offended wherefore should I repent This is the first Impediment in iudgement when men doe not finde themselues sicke in sinne Impediment 2 The second is When men know themselues to bee sicke of sinne but doe not thinke their sinnes to bee deadly They thinke indeed they haue some frailties some imperfections some pettie sins some small sins but in accusing themselues they can say as the Pharisee Luke 18. I thanke God I am no Adulterer Extortioner c. And so they thinke themselues in no danger As a man that in the eagernesse of fighting receueth a small wound with a sword and neuer lookes after it or thinkes it worth the curing so men in the affaires of the world adding sin to sin neuer looke after them as needing Repentance because they suppose them slight and small c. Impediment 3 The third Impediment is That though they take themselues to bee sinners and their sinnes to be deadly yet they thinke that God is mercifull a grateous God and they may bee saued without Repentance But Deut. 29. The Lord thunders against such and plainely assures such presumptuous persons that his wrath shall smoake against such and he would not be mercifull vnto them but all the curses written in that Book should come vpon them yea this is that which Iohn Baptist exprobrateth the Iews for Math. 3. 9. And thinke not to say with your selues wee haue Abraham for our Father for verily I say vnto you that God is able euen of these stones to raise vp children vnto Abraham Impediment 4 The Fourth is That though wee thinke Repentance is needfull yet wee need not say some so strict a kinde of Repentance as the Scripture speakes of If a man can say Lord forgiue mee wee are all sinners and such like it is sufficient it will serue the turne well enough Pharoah thought Repentance was needfull but it was a slight one hee did not thinke so strict a one needfull as was prescribed So Saul thought Repentance needfull when Samuel came and told him what hee had done Yet saith hee Honour mee before the People hee cared not whether he had any honour before God or not so the people might honour him These be the foure Impediments in the Iudgement which hinder and keepe backe Repentance either that wee doe not finde our selues to bee sinners or though wee be sinners yet not so great sinners to require Repentance or though wee be sinners yet God is mercifull and can saue vs without our Repentance Or though wee must repent yet that there is no need of so strict a Repentance Now as there be these impediments in the Iudgement so there be also in the Affections diuers letts for although a man findes himselfe to be a sinner against God and his owne conscience and that there is no way of Reconciliation to come out of his sinne but by Repentance Yet he still findes impediments in his Affections to detaine and hold him from this so necessarie dutie The Impediments in the Affections Impediment in the Affections 1 Are first The loue of the world when men are so carried away with the loue thereof that they cannot attend vnto Repentance so taken vp with the cares of life and the hopes of pleasures prosite preferment and such like that they can neither come to this account reckoning of the soule with Repentance nor dare aduenture vpon it for feare of losing the benefites of a present life Such was the case of those who were inuited to Christs Banquet Math. 22. 5. Such also is our case wee are all so intentiue to these worldly affaires our Farmes our wiues our oxe● c. that we cannot come vnto Repentance which is the Banquet of our soules to attaine saluation Impediment 2 The next is The loue of our Pleasure that is men cannot abide the sober and sad things that belong to Repentance they must be merry they must haue their delights pastimes and deuices as Esay 22. 13. The Lord complaines that when he called to sorrow and mourning behold ioy and gladnesse killing of oxen eating of flesh and drinking of wine Thus pleasure is great a let Impediment 3 The third is The loue of our own Ease for men cannot endure to take any paines in prayer holy duties thing appertaining to the sauing of their soules they had rather lye warme in their soft beds then rise to religious exercises then goe to heauen in Elias fiery chariot It is said Math. 2. That when Christ was borne all Israell was troubled and why they thought Christ could not come into his kingdome without a great deale of trouble and it might be cost many of their liues so doe many now adayes shunne religion for their owne ease It is said Psal They despised the pleasant land and why did they despise it for it was a pleasant land indeed and a good land yea such a place as they could haue beene contented to haue inioyed it but because it asked of them so much paine trouble and in their sight hazard to goe to it
it long after So though wee haue repented of a sinne wee must not thinke to buy our peace at so easie a rate but humble our soules with sorrow and teares renewing our repentance againe and againe neuer leauing till we haue pacified the wrath of God for how often doth this holy man plye this sute So Psal 25 hee prayes God not to remember the sinnes of his youth So you see Dauid did repent him of those sinnes hee had repented of before Chrysostome sayes well that Dauid still repented of sins done long before as though they had beene done but yesterday Saint Paul did not onely repent of his sinne of persecuting the Church of God at his first conuersion Act. 9. 9. but as oft as hee remembred it as oft doth he speake of it with griefe and sorrow 1. Tim. 1. 13. I was before a blasphemer a persecutor iniurious c. So 1. Cor. 15. 9. I am not worthie sayes hee to bee called an Apostle because I persecuted the Church of God So that St. Paul you see doth often remember his sinnes past and confesses them This much wee may well obserue when God cast Adam out of Paradise hee sent him eregione horti and set and placed him ouer against the garden in the very sight and view of the place which hee had lost through his sinne and offending God and why was this that so often as hee lookt into the garden hee might remember his sinne and lament for it Now that which Adam did in the beholding of the Garden is that which wee must doe in the beholding of Heauen hee saw from whence he was cast throwne out of Paradise by reason of his sinne and wee see what wee are sure to lose euen heauen it selfe by reason of our sinne if wee doe not repent and humble our soules and that timely and daily Thus you see it is cleere that a Christian is bound to repent one and the same sinne diuers times and as oft as he lookes vp to heauen to sigh and groane for the losse of it and not to bee satisfied though he haue repented to day and so is assured of pardon but in the Name of God to goe to it againe to morrow and to morrow and neuer giue ouer Obiect Against this doctrine two things may bee obiected First If a mans sinnes vpon his Repentance be pardoned then what need is there vpon this to repent any more this appeares to bee labour lost Answ. 1 I answer that though a mans sinnes bee pardoned vpon Repentance yet there are three causes why a mans repentance must bee renewed First because Eadem manet obligatio the same Bond remaineth still for though God out of his owne goodnesse and mercie forgiue our sinnes yet neuerthelesse haue wee the same Cause to condemne our selues to dislike and bee sorry for it because the same bond or tye remaines still though God haue gratiously pardoned it yet it is our duty to repent still Nay to speake as the truth is Crescit obligatio our bond is the greater for the more mercy and goodnesse God shewes vs in the pardoning of our sinnes wee haue alwayes the more cause to be abased and ashamed that wee haue sinned against him This as wee see made an exaggeration in Dauids griefe In to solum peccaui I haue sinned against thee alone what had Dauid sinned against none but God no question against Uriah Barsheba and the people but that went to the heart of him most of all and did more deeply touch him that he had giuen God cause to bee angry with him who was so readie to forgiue him that had shewed him so great kindenesse and mercy in the pardoning and forgiuing of all his sinnes So Gods mercie to vs in pardoning our sinnes should not bee a meanes to abate our repentance but rather to augment and increase it because there remaines in vs still the same seeds of ouglinesse vilenesse deformitie and corruption as formerly the pardon whereof being great should continually augment and reiterate our Repentance with holy Dauid Psal. 103. Praise the Lord O my soule praise the Lord and forget not all his benefites who forgiues thee all thy sinnes c. Thus Gods mercie in forgiuenesse of sinnes should not abate but increase our repentance as wee see in the storie of the Prodigall sonne Luke 15. 20. hee had a purpose to confesse his sinne when hee returned to his Father his Father could not containe himselfe for ioy but runne out to meet and imbrace him yet this makes him not slacke in his former determination to humble himselfe but rather spurres him to fall downe and humble himselfe vnto his Father confessing his faults So Gods readinesse to forgiue vs should bee so farre from abating our repentance that it should rather prouoke vs vnto the same so much the more to increase it If a woman should commit wickednesse and folly against her husband who puts her away for it and afterwards should be bent not onely to receiue her and forgiue her freely this lewd offence but also welcome her and bestow vpon her rich ornaments and iewels this kindnesse of her husbands if any naturall affection be in her would make her the more to lament and grieue for hauing offended so kinde and mercifull a husband and remember it to her dying day so it is with Gods readinesse in pardoning our sinnes it cannot choose but make vs the more ready vpon all occasions from time to time to repent and bee sorry that wee had offended so good and gratious a God Secondly though a mans sinnes bee pardoned vpon his repentance Yet the more a man repents the more hee shall haue the sense and feeling of the pardon of them for a man may haue his sinne pardoned before God and yet haue no sense and feeling in his owne conscience of the pardon of it for there is still retained a feare of guilt as wee see in Dauid 1. Sam. 12. his sinne was pardoned before God and yet there remained as commonly in such cases such an impression of guilt as hee had no comfort for all this or as if there had beene no such matter And so though God forgiue our sinnes vpon our first repentance yet the more wee repent the more sensible wee shall bee of the forgiuenesse and pardon of them In other cases wee can say Abundantia cautela non nocebit too much caution hurts not as when a man comes to locke a chest or a doore wherein lyes his gold and treasure he will turne the key againe and againe sir sayes his friend the doore was fast before yea but sayes the other in cases of this nature it is good to bee sure to make fast worke as then couetous men say thus by their money and iewells so let vs say of our saluation in businesses of this nature it is good to bee sure a man cannot bee too cautelous in
wisheth well vnto himselfe desires his owne peace and hearts ease as much as may bee Therefore when hee apprehends the fearfull iudgements of God due vnto him for his sinne euen the hatefulnesse of vile actions which hee hath committed the very conscience and horror of these things will make him many times weepe so that a naturall man may shed teares for sinne and yet not repent him of it as wee see in Esau Gen. 27. 34. He wept for the losse of his Fathers blessing and his birth-right and yet so farre from repenting of his sinne that at that same instant after his Fathers death hee resolued to kill his brother So the Holy storie affirmes of Saul 1. Sam. 24. 17. that when Dauid had cut off the lap of his garment when hee might haue killed him and when he had made his innocencie knowne to him Saul hee lift vp his voyce and wept and made confession of his sinnes before God and yet for all this chap. 26. wee see hee persecuted him againe euen against his owne conscience so we see hee wept for his sinne and yet neuer repented Hee confessed hee had done ill and that Dauid was more righteous then hee So Mal. 2. 13. The people of Israel is said to haue couered the Altar of God with their teares with weeping and mourning and yet for all that liued in their sinnes without Repentance and said wherein shall wee returne So it is cleere that teares are not alwayes a true signe of true Repentance For the most part all the Religion of the world is this that if a man can bring himselfe so farre not onely to be touched for sinne but also to weepe for it to shed a few teares by and by they thinke themselues to bee safe yea though they liue loosely and prophanely after but this is to build vp their comfort vpon a safe ground because as wee haue heard a man may shed teares for sinne and yet not repent it so that teares bee not alwayes the true companions of true Repentance Obiect But here it may bee that some who are willing to repent and ready to indeauour this way may obiect and say How can a poore Christian take any comfort in his Teares If teares bee not alwayes a true signe of Repentance Answ. I answer for all this that there bee two wayes whereby a Christian may finde comfort in his teares 1. Hee must looke into the causes of them 2. Hee must looke into the Effect and fruit of them Hee must looke into the cause and fountaine from whence they flowe whether it bee for feare of damnation and of hell torments hee weepes or not for these may make a wicked man much to be astonished for the time and repent of his sinne as Act. 24. 26. so the children of Israel when the Lord told them that they should not enter into the land of Canaan repented of their sinnes and did weepe before the Lord but the cause was the iudgements and scourge of God vpon them being chafed by the Amorites Deut. 1 45. so that a man may weepe to no purpose for the iudgements and punishments that follow sinne but when a man can weepe for sinne because it is sinne which indeed would bring him vnto Repentance because hee hath offended so good a God displeased so gratious and so mercifull a Father done that which is prophane and vnseemly in his sight then wee may haue ioy and comfort in our teares So wee see in the example of the Prodigall sonne Luke 15 21. he more lamented that he had offended so good and louing a Father then for the losse of his money then for all the miserie which was vpon him and hardnesse hee had sustained yea I say all this did not so much grieue him as that hee had offended his good Father The like wee see by Dauid Psal. 51. 4. saith hee Against thee onely haue I sinned did hee sinne onely against God hee had also sinned against Vriah Barsheba against the people and against the peace of his owne soule Yet aboue all his greatest griefe was for offending his God a God that had dealt so bountifully with him in his aduancement and mercifully in his preseruation and so by the consideration of the cause wee may receiue comfort in our teares when wee consider from what motiues they proceed and principally moouing Causes Secondly a man that would haue comfort in his tears must looke vnto the Effect and fruit of them for if a man doe so weepe for his sinnes as that by and by hee be ready to fall into and commit the same sinnes againe and that as greedily and carelesly as hee did before then it is to bee feared that the watrie teares shed here is but a beginning of that euerlasting weeping and mourning in hell But if a man doe so weepe for sinne as that thereby hee is made more watchfull ouer sinne more to hate it carefull to resist it more willing to weaken the sudden power thereof in himselfe then a man may haue comfort in his teares as it is 2. Cor. 7. 10. 11. For godly sorrow worketh Repentance to saluation not to bee repented of c. For behold this that yee haue beene godly sorrowfull what care it hath wrought in you what cleering of your selues c. So then you see there are two sorts of teares First Teares of prophane men for they haue their Teares too but there is small comfort in them a man is neuer the better for such teares they are seldome put home to the conscience nor is the life reformed by them they leaue no steps of goodnesse nor prints of Grace behinde them Secondly the teares of the godly bee indeed sorrowfull teares but they are mightie and quickning like Aqua fortis which make strong and lasting impressions of vertue and of grace which leaue a seed and ●…it behinde to worke vpon their soules and conscience Thus much of the first Conclusion the second is this Conclusion 2. Euery one that commits sinne hath iust cause aboue all Conclusion 2 things to shed teares for the same This is proued first By Reason Secondly By Example for there are three things which will make a man to shed teares 1. For the losse of some great good 2. The feare of some great euill 3. The sence and feeling of some grieuous paine Now in all these cases a man hath cause to shed teares for sinne First In regard of the great losse that comes by sinne worldly men as wee know will weepe for the losse of children goods lands and such like but all the losses of the world are not comparable vnto the losse which comes by sin for it is neither of children goods or lands but by sinne we lose the fauour of God all our parts of that wee haue in Christ heauen and happinesse yea wee faile of Gods blessed presence for euer and so of all losses the greatest comes by sinne So that
wee haue more cause to mourne for it then for any worldly calamitie or miserie whatsoeuer looke in the storie of Micah Iudg. 18. 24. Yee haue taken away my Gods which I made and the Priest and yee are gone away and what haue I more and what is this that yee say vnto mee what ailest thou Here you see that when the souldiers had taken away Micahs Gods hee ranne after them crying and weeping and was angry that they should aske what ailest thou Euen so must wee if such as hee can so weepe for a false God much more haue wee cause to weepe and mourne when wee shall consider that our owne sins haue taken away our true God from vs yea all the ioy comfort and peace that we had in God and therefore aboue all things wee haue cause to shed teares and weepe for our sinnes Secondly a man hath cause to weepe and mourne and shed teares aboue all things for sinne In regard of the great and intolerable euill which comes by sinne Whereof the finall euill is Hell and damnation which is the greatest most insupportable and mischieuous euill of all other because all other euills are temporarie this eternall Wee see a man is sorry when he hath brought himselfe to lamenesse blindenesse and mutilation of any member and how much more then when hee hath brought this vpon himselfe and therewith the curse of God and euerlasting damnation paines endlesse and restlesse for euer O how much cause therefore hath a man to mourne and lament for his sinnes which bring not temporarie but as I said euerlasting punishments The fire that came vpon Sodom lasted but for a day The floud that came vpon the old world lasted but for a short time the great famine of Aegypt Gen. 41. 49. lasted but for seuen yeares and the captiuitie of Babylon lasted but 70. yeares but damnation in Hell shall be for euer and euer no time shall end it no meanes shall finish it no policie shall escape it Againe all the euills that doe befall vs here are particular euills either paine in the head teeth back or belly or stomache arme legge c. but the paines of Hell are vniuersall in euery part in all parts at once which must much multiply paine sorrow and destruction in vs. Againe all other paines and euills haue their mitigations and limitations If a man hath the goute hee hath also a soft bed to lye in if hee be feeble hee hath one to leade him if hee be lame hee hath somebody to moue him from place to place but if a man bee in Hell there is no mitigation no ease no helpe left not so much as a drop of cold water to coole the heate of the mouth but all horror griefe torment sorrow and vexation so that if euer a man may haue cause to shed teares and feare mischiefe that may happen he hath reason to doe so for feare of hell and those gastly terrors of damnation to come to last for euer Thirdly a man hath reason and cause to shed teares for sinne in regard of the paines accompanying the same which are deadly dangerous For if one should wound a man in the legge hee might recouer but pricke him if it were but with a pinne at the heart and the wound proues deadly So it is in wounding of the soule euery sinne proues deadly and as a stabbe to the heart for though woe doe not presently feele it though our deadnesse and numnesse make vs insensible and carelesse Yet in the day of Gods visitation when Gods wrath shall fall vpon vs and open our wounds which sinne hath made then shall wee roare and crie and indure torment enough thus if wee haue cause to weepe for any thing wee haue cause to weepe for our sinnes that strike so deepe to our consciences and soules Thus we haue againe to bewaile the hardnesse of our hearts that in bodily cures can away with the cutting of a limbe breaking of an arme or legge and yet cannot away with the searching and lancing of our consciences Thus as it is by Reason so the necessitie of mourning for sinne is proued by Example for there was none of the holy men of God but they haue wept for sinne and wee haue certainely as much and more cause to weepe then they had and yet how farre short doe wee come of this dutie shall I name Dauid Daniel Peter and other holy men of God how feruent was holy Luther in mourning and weeping for his sinnes had Dauid cause to weepe abundantly and water his couch with teares and haue not wee cause much more Had Peter cause to lament his fall bitterly and haue not wee more falls then hee had Had Daniel cause to bewaile his many trespasses and are not we guiltie of many more iniquities shall Mary Magdalen weepe and weepe for sinne in a manner a riuer of teares and haue wee no cause or necessitie to weepe for our many transgressions O if wee could search our sinfull and corrupt liues and see how we haue offended our God wee could not choose but weepe for our sinnes what not shed teares for sinne when wee see our Sauiour shed blood in the Garden for our sins and not for any of his hee being without sinne but we are hard-hearted and neuer thinke vpon our Redemption Nor shed a teare for that which wrought blood out of Christs body O wonderfull and lamentable what a pitious thing is this that wee cannot let fall a drop of water for sinne when hee poured out abundance of his blood for the same yea he did sweate it out for griefe and anguish a signe of small or no sorrow in vs when wee cannot wring out a few teares much lesse poure out water before the Lord as his people sometime did for their sinnes 1. Sam. 7. 6. Thus much of the second Conclusion The third is this Conclusion 3. There is neuer a man liuing that is able to shed teares for euery sinne hee doth commit Euery sinne it is certaine deserues teares yea and bitter teares too for euery sinne is committed against God a holy Father yea Holinesse it selfe and an infinite Maiestie now we know it is no small matter to offend God nor no great enforcement to shed teares for our sinnes and yet wee are hardly brought to weepe for one sinne of ten thousand It is so in the generall though it bee true that there be some of more feeling and tender consciences then others as it is said of St. Hierome that hee wept for sinne and was so tenderly affected as if hee had killed a man but ô that it were so with vs that wee could attaine to this tendernesse of heart The hinderances and impediments I take to bee two 1. Blindnesse in Iudgement 2. Hardnesse of heart For many are so blinde that they know not sinne to bee sinne in their iudgements As Mal. 1 when they were reproued of their sinnes yet they
say wherein haue wee sinned or if men know sinne to bee sinne yet they mistake they thinke great sinnes are but pettie ones and small ones they esteeme to bee nothing at all not worth the grieuing at because for the present they paine not as a man hauing a bleeding wound hee sees not passes it ouer vntill hee faints it proouing deadly if not stopt and cured Againe another cause is Hardnesse of heart which for all the Regenerate are in part sanctified we are subiect vnto therefore though some in Repentance bring forth teares yet a number for their liues cannot shed any one teare for sinne vntill God by an especiall worke conuert and turne the Heart vnto him by an especiall operation of his blessed Spirit and power of Grace The want of this tendernesse wee see made the Prophet in the name of the Church crie out Isa. 63. 17. O Lord why hast thou made vs to erre● from thy wayes and hardened our hearts from thy feare Yet I must needs say there is great difference betwixt that hardnes of heart in the godly and in the wicked for that of the former is sensible full of paine griefe sorrow mourning yea there is a particular sorrow for that hardnesse felt besides that of other sinnes but that which is in the wicked is insensible they are neuer thorowly touched or affected with a feeling of their sinnes and so neuer weepe or sorrow for them The fourth Conclusion is Conclus 4. That a man may truly repent him of his sinnes though he cannot weepe or shed a teare for them Which I prooue thus They that can mourne for their sinnes and in compunction of soule make vse of the death and passion of Christ may truly repent but a man may mourne for his sinne and do thus and yet neuer shed a teare therefore a man may truly repent without shedding of teares for teares are not alwayes a signe of true repentance As we see Acts 2. 37. where it is sayd those Converts were pricked in their hearts not pricked in their eyes for a mans heart may be pricked and ouerwhelmed with griefe and yet not weepe or shed any teares So wee see the Publican Luke 18. Hee could not weepe but hee was humbled and cast downe in the sense and feeling of his sinnes Lord saith he be mercifull to me a sinner So in like manner we doe not read that the Theefe vpon the Crosse did weepe or shed any teares yet hee confessed his sinnes and was inwardly grieued for them So we see a man may truly repent who sheddeth no teares For as a Wine vessell without vent is readie to burst so the lesse weeping many times the greater is the sorrow and the heart so much the more ouerburthened Teares are as a vent which when they are not and the heart this way allayed and eased the inward griefe is so much the more excessiue and great The fifth Conclusion is Conclus 5. That there is hardly any man liuing that hath truly felt the worke of Grace in himselfe but at one time or other if God let him liue any time hath or shall in some measure shed teares for his sinnes Euer excepting those men whom their naturall hard and drie temper of their eyes disableth perpetually from all teares 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 This Conclusion I will first open and then in time confirme it yet assure your selues of this That euery one cannot weepe in their repentance and first Calling vntil it please God to infuse more grace and smite the heart Yet though at first they doe not wait a while and in continuance of time or when God sends some great affliction or judgement vpon them you shall see them come to teares and weepe for their sinnes As a man that is stricken with a sword the bloud doth not alwayes by and by follow So it is with the smitten conscience of a wounded sinner there is feare astonishment and amazement many times before weeping and yet afterwards teares may come abundantly as bloud after a wound But to my promise now which was first To open the Conclusion secondly To explaine it First then I say That hardly is there any man liuing but he hath or shall shed teares for sinne if God haue a purpose to saue him Therefore howsoeuer one may goe away at the first rejoycing like Lydia at her first conuersion and like the Eunuch in the Acts yet at one time or other they shall weepe and mourne for their sins though I would haue you remember that I do not exclude any from the hope of Heauen and state of true penitencie that shed no tears for sinne for so I haue shewed the case may be though seldome heard of Dauid sayes Psalme 37. 25. I haue beene young and now am old yet haue I not seene the righteous for saken nor their seed begging bread And yet poore Lazarus died a begger and was carried by the hands of the Angels into Abrahams bosome Now Dauids meaning is not that there was none of the righteous or of their seed that did begge their bread but that it was a rare thing that hee had not seene it in his dayes or in an Age So wee may say of this point It may bee a man may bee truely conuerted and yet neuer shedde a teare in his life but it is a rare case no ordinarie thing it is that which seldome falls out one of a thousand but that at one time or other they are so pressed with their sinnes Againe secondly I say that true teares are not to bee commanded by vs but are an effect of Gods grace wrought in man as Zach. 12. 10. And I will poure vpon the house of Dauid and vpon the Inhabitants of Ierusalem the Spirit of Grace and supplication and they shall weepe c. That is they shall mourne and lament as a man that mourneth for his owne sinnes nature may make a man mourne for the losse of his children friends goods wife and such like but it is onely the Spirit of God of Grace that can make a man shed teares for his sinnes so that a man may bee a naturall man an vnregenerate man an vnconuerted man and neuer shed a teare for his sinnes all his life long though hee bee a most wicked liuer But if the Spirit of Grace once worke vpon his heart hardly but at one time or other his heart will melt and lament that hee hath offended God Thirdly I say if God let him liue any time in this world for a man may bee taken away immediatly vpon his conuersion as the cheefe vpon the crosse and then as hee wants time for other Christian duties so for this also but if God let a man continue any time then one occasion or other will bring him backe to the beholding of his sinnes cause him to afflict his thoughts repent throughly and so worke teares out of him yea bitterly to bewaile his sinnes
dead Palsie in which case a man shall haue all his senses benummed so as hee may die like a blocke without shew of iudgement or reason and yet for all this bee in a blessed state because though the state of his body bee changed yet the state of his minde and soule remaines vntouched Yet I doe not maintaine so saying as if all who died of these diseases died without comfort or that one may not die comfortably being thus visited yes it is most cleere that if a man be not wanting to himselfe and cast away the helpes which God giues him hee may die with comfort of whatsoeuer sicknesse hee dies of For of all deaths the most extreamely afflictiue is by fire this is accounted the sharpest and sorest of all bodily deaths and yet we see many of the Martyres haue shewed themselues very ioyfull and comfortable euen in the very flames The reason whereof is this The power of grace is infinitely greater then the power of nature as 1. Iohn 4. 4. Greater is hee that is in you then hee that is in the world as if hee should say the power of nature is the spirit of the creature but the power of Grace is by the Spirit of God now the spirit of God being greater then any created spirit whatsoeuer it comes to passe that the power of Grace brings the power of Nature vnto subiection and ouertopping those spirits and senses workes exceeding comfort euen in the houre of death as wee see when contrarie windes blow vpon a Ship that which is the strongest carries the ship away So because there is both nature and grace in vs and both blowe vpon the ship that is worke vpon our soules in this conflict that which is the strongest working most effectually preuaileth at the houre of death carrying the soule with it The second Generall Cause of want of comfort in the day of death is The decay of Grace for many times the people of God are negligent growe secure omit the meanes of growing in grace grow loose are not carefull to answer that expectation which is had of them leaue off diligence in hearing the Word and practise of holy duties quench the good spirit with following vaine delights giue way vnto temptations suffering them to take hold vpon them thus they breake out some one way and some another whereby it comes to passe that it is the good pleasure of God to correct this loosenesse though they thinke to shelter themselues vnder the Almightie as formerly but they cannot doe it wee see when Sampson had growne loose in his life hauing played the wanton and gone a whooring from God when after this the Philistims came vpon him hee thought to haue done as at other times but for his life hee could not for his strength was departed from him thus when some of Gods people runne out in their liues and venture on sin many times they smart for it at their deaths ere the conflict with conscience be ouercome and peace in the assurance of the forgiuenesse of sinnes be settled So 1. Cor. 11. 30. the Apostle shewes them For this cause many are weake and sicke amongst you and many sleepe so that oft times the cause of little comfort in death is by reason that men liue loosely and carelesly when they bee well So S. Paul saith 1. Cor. 15. 56. The sting of death is sin and the strength of sinne is the Law It is sinne that makes the sting of death to bee so grieuous painfull and bitter vnto vs so that is plaine the more loosely a man liues the more licentiously hee giues himselfe ouer to the world the more will death grate and sting him when hee comes to die Therefore if a man would lessen his owne paines in the day of death hee must looke to lessen his owne sin in his life because Death in death hath no sting but by the worke of sinne If a man haue an apparant hot burning Feuer the more hee drinkes hot Wines and feedes on fierie spices the stronger and more violent must his fitts bee where by the contrary the more sober and temperate hee is in diet the weaker still will his fittes bee euen so it is in death Death is like a powerfull fitt of an Ague if a man distemper himselfe before death and liue loosely and licentiously death will shake euery ioynt of him with mighty terrors and threaten to bring him to the King of terrors but if a man bee wise to weaken death by Repentance Humiliation holy prayer to God then though death may come yet the furie and strength of it shall bee much abated and so wee may haue comfort in the houre of death if we be carefull to watch ouer our liues The Third generall Reason is because of our indisposition at the houre of Death or in Death because men doe not then striue with themselues to stirre vp their Faith Zeale and the graces of God in them and prepare themselues with a good conscience to die for a man may haue Faith and Repentance and other graces of God in him and yet because hee doth not stirre vp those graces in him hee may die with little comfort A man in this case is like wasting coales couered ouer with ashes which must bee stirred or else they will die suddenly therefore when a man comes to die hee must stirre vp his faith hope repentance patience care loue and all the graces of the spirit euen as old Iacob Gen. 49. vlt. when hee came to die did reare vp himselfe leaned on his staffe and worshipped God though an old decrepid man and bedrid yet hee gat him vp vpon his knees turned himselfe and renewed his repentance so must a Christian man doe at the time of death stirre vp himselfe and prepare to Humiliation and to die in the Lord lest they want comfort in death which otherwise they might attaine to So wee see good Stephen amongst a shoure of stones that brayned him yet lift vp his eyes to heauen so as hee made all his persecutors amazed at his comfortable vision and was not here a man prepared to die Therefore let vs studie and pray in this case that God would helpe vs to rouze vp our selues against that time Hithert● haue wee so proceeded in this Case of comfort in Death that wee haue brought it thus farre that a man may truely repent and yet by occasions die with small comfort Now come wee to the next point the most obseruable of all the rest namely that There is a hopefull and likely way whereby a man may come to die with comfort if hee will not bee wanting to himselfe and neglect th●se meanes and helpes which God affoords him Now in this case there are two things to bee declared vnto you 1. That there is such a way 2. What that way is For the ground of the first I assume this That a Christian
wickednesse saying what haue I done And Isa. 9. 13 For the people turne not to them that smite them neither doe they seeke the Lord of Hosts So Ezek. 33. 31. And they come to thee as thy people commeth and they sit before thee as thy people they heare thy words but they will not doe them for with the mouth they shew much loue but their hearts goe after their couetousnesse Now there bee Three causes why the state of impenitencie is such a fearefull state to liue in Cause 1 First Because it bindes vs fast vnder damnation and brings vs vnto hell and in a manner shuts the doore of hell and death vpon vs being once there As we reade Reu. 20. 3. That the Angell layd hold on the Dragon that old serpent which is the diuel and Satan bound him a thousand years and cast him into the bottomlesse pit and shut him vp and set a seale vpon him euen so doth impenitencie deale with vs our sinnes fling vs into hell and when wee are there then comes Impenitencie and shuts downe the doore vpon vs ties vs in chaines makes all so fast that we haue no power or way to get out of the fearefull estate wee be in Therefore 2. Tim. 2. 26. indeauour and exhortation in this case is appointed Proouing if at any time God will giue them repentance that they may recouer themselues out of the s●are of the diuell who are taken captiue by him at his will So there is a promise that if at any time a man doe come out of the snares of the deuill and repent he shall haue mercie but it is very hard to be done Impenitencie being such a sinne as the Lord euery where cries out on as Amos 3. and Ier. 3. 3. And thou hast a whoores forehead thou refusest to bee ashamed So chap. 8. 6. No man repented him of his wickednesse saying what haue I done euery one returned to his course as the horse rusheth into the battell And Isa. 9. 13. For the people turneth not vnto him that smiteth them neither doe they seeke the Lord of Hosts So Ezek. 33. 11. As I liue saith the Lord God I haue no pleasure in the death of the wicked but that the wicked turne from his wicked wayes and liue Turne yee turne yee from your euill wayes for why will you die ô house of Israel Cause 2 Secondly Because it makes voide and frustrates all the meanes of grace and Life As a man dwelling in some poore house comfortably with his wife and his children the Sun with his bright beames shining and breaking in vpon them if one stop vp the window and shut out all the comfortable beams there comfort is gone euen so it is when God brings the sweet beames of grace to shine in vpon the conscience of a sinner impenitencie puts a barre against them and shuts out all the light of the Lord and of grace that shines into our hearts so making all the meanes of Grace and of Eternall Life vnprofitable and fruitlesse vnto vs wherfore with the holy Prophet Dauid wee must beware of this feacefull estate that we may haue boldnesse to say with him Psal. 66. 18. If I regard iniquitie in my heart the Lord will not heare me This makes one shamelesse and obstinate as Math. 23. 37. How often would I saith Christ haue gathered thy children together euen as a Henne gathereth her chickens vnder her wings and yee would not Thus Impenitencie shuts out all-thriuing in Grace Cause 3 Thirdly Because Impenitencie brings the guilt of all our sinnes vpon vs It is true if we repent as it is Micah 7. 19. God will pardon all our sinnes and cast them in the bottome of the Sea But if wee liue in sinne without repentance this impenitencie will turne all our sins vpon vs at the day of Iudgement Thus doth it heape vp wrath vpon wrath against the day of Gods fierce indignation euen as a man heapes vp gold and siluer that is euery day adding and increasing it ●●ll it be a great heape so an impenitent hard heart doth euery day heape vp and gather together by heaping of sinnes wrath vpon wrath against the day of wrath So that I may truely say with a learned man Better be the greatest sinner in the world and to repent it then to bee the least sinner and die in Impenitencie Which is the worst and most fearfull estate that may bee The vses of all which may be these Vse 1 First seeing the state of impenitencie is so dangerous Let vs pray to God often to deliuer vs from it that though through the corruption of our nature wee cannot choose but sinne yet we may see our sinnes bewaile and mourne for them and that wee may neuer come to that insensibilitie and deadnesse of spirit neuer to lament or bee sorry for them but to haue strength to remoue from this estate and rise vp as soone as may bee praying with the Prophet Psal. 119. I haue gone astray like a lost sheepe seeke thy seruant for I doe not forget thy Commandements Here you see was a going astray like a lost sheepe but this was such a straying as might be found out againe Vse 2 Secondly Seeing this estate is so dangerous Let vs labour to get out of it as soone as may be for howsoeuer our sinnes are multiplied by our corruption yet this sinne of impenitencie is more dangerous than all the rest and brings at last a fearefull despaire of mercie vpon vs. Therfore as the women going to the Sepulchre of our Sauior were careful who should roule away the great stone which lay at the mouth thereof So let euerie one of vs now say and bethinke our selues who shall roule away this great stone this hardnesse of heart this impenitencie this deadnesse and dulnesse of Spirit Therefore as Ierem. 31. 18. The Church prayes and confesses her failings so let vs pray Conuert vs ô Lord and we shall be conuerted and let vs vse the meanes diligently whereby our hearts may be touched and subdued to a true remorse and sense of sinne and the Majestie offended The second thing contrary to true repentance is Vnsound repentance This kind of repentance is When a man shewes a kinde of repentance but he does it not in such sort and manner as God requires it as Isa. 58. 5. Is it such a fast as I haue chosen a day for a man to afflict his soule Is it to bow down his head like a bulrush and to spread sackecloath ashes vnder him Wilt thou call this a fast and an acceptable day to the Lord It is Gods expostulation with his people as if he should say Is this such a Fast as I haue chosen I haue chosen fasting indeed and commanded it but you failed in the true meaning and manner of it I care for no outward shewes so much as the inward humiliation So the Lord hath chosen repentance
offer vp spirituall sacrifice acceptable to God by Iesus Christ. So that doe what wee can all sacrifices and seruices be onely acceptable to God through him Vse 3 Thirdly seeing all our Repentance is vnperfect so long as we liue in this world Therefore no man is to dismay himselfe and bee too much cast downe if hee doe not finde repentance to be perfect in him If hee doe not finde a perfect hatred of sinne loue of God indeuour to please God in that he requireth In this case one must not too much afflict himselfe because he cannot attaine to things impossible in this life considering that it is not perfection but truth of Repentance that God looks for in this life in which case S. Paul comforts the abiect saying 2. Cor. 8. 12. For if there be first a willing minde it is accepted according to that a man hath and not according to that a man hath not The second maine thing is That because euery mans Repentance is imperfect in this life Therefore there must bee an increase thereof in the life of a Christian As wee increase in other graces so increasing in the grace of Repentance Therefore Christians haue no cause to bee dismayed at this when God brings them off againe and againe to renew their Repentance A number of poore Christians cannot tell what to make of this when they haue repented their sinnes and beene comforted with the Promises of the Gospell and gone on a long-while in a cheerefull estate vpon a sudden all their old sinnes are cast vpon them againe to terrifie them worse then before and so by a heauy recourse of sorrow they become much perplexed and amazed But let such thinke that this is nothing else but Repentance As in a little childe when hee begins first to write hee frames his businesse somewhat vnhandsomely when he hath perfected a letter his Master sets him to make the same letter againe vntill he doe it better and better vntill at last it bee excellently well Euen so because there are not those firme and true intensions of our affections in our first Repentance the Lord is faine to goe ouer againe with vs and to set vs anew to repent of our old sinnes thus is the growth and frame of a Christians progresse in grace to goe it ouer againe still vntill it come to perfection I haue heretofore obserued that a tree alwayes growes vntill it come to his full pitch of state yet it growes not alwayes in one sort but sometimes it growes in the boughes sometimes in the branches sometimes in the root Euen so it is with a Christian hee hath his times of growth hee doth not alwayes grow in one and the same sort but sometimes in one Grace and sometimes in another sometimes in knowledge faith loue obedience c. and yet bee in a good estate though he be put still to renew his Repentance from time to time which if I may so speake becomes so much the purer like gold when it is often refined by ardent and often praying againe and again therfore distressed Christians in this case haue no iust cause to be so perplexed and cast downe as many times they are Wherefore seeing it is necessarie still to grow in Repentance and that it can neuer bee too pure nor perfect not too often gone ouer in this life wee must therefore labour and euery day indeuour to be more and more penitent for our sinnes bitterly to lament them and increase in the detestation and hatred of them so making vse both of the mercies and iudgements of God this way as to further vs in the growth of our repentance So we see Peter did by occasion of Christs mercie vnto him in the draught of fishes Luk. 5. 8. Hee fell downe on his knees and said depart from me I am but a sinfull man ô Lord So did the Lords people by occasion of the iudgement in the Thunder and lightning 1. Sam. 12. 19. say vnto Samuel Pray for thy seruants vnto the Lord that wee dye not for wee haue added vnto all our sinnes this euill to take a King thus must we grow in this as in other graces It is therefore a great corruption for any to desire to grow in other graces if this be neglected and to doe some things conscionably and to neglect those other maine duties in Religion For if one had a childe and the childe should grow in one part and not in another one hand and one leg should thriue but not the other but keepe still at a stand how bitterly would he complaine of this and yet so is it in the state of many a Christian one part of the graces of God growes well but the other doth not grow at all many increase in knowledge shew a great deale of zeale of deuotion haue sufficiencie of faith and are cheerefull in their obedience but they grow not a whit in Repentance they are not a whit more humbled for their sinnes more penitent and cast downe before the LORD and therefore can say what cause haue wee to bee deiected and afflicted so for it but let vs of better knowledge learne to bee better affected our care being to bee more and more humbled for our sinnes Wee see in Nature when a man is buried and layed in the ground the more earth and mould you cast vpon him the more hee consumes from day to day being so much the more vnfit to rise vp againe suppose aliue from vnder the weight and burden of the earth which presses him downe Euen so it is with the sinne of a Christian when a man hath buried sinne in himselfe the more hee increaseth his repentance and holy humiliation the more earth and mold hee casts vpon it in this kinde the lesse able will it be to rise and reuiue againe nay our sad and serious Repentance will make it that it shall not rise againe Now there be three wayes wherein a Christian must increase in the Grace of Repentance as well as in other Graces 1. In the Number of his Graces 2. In the Measure of his Graces 3. In the good vse of them First for the Number of Graces see what Peter saith 2. Pet. 1. 5. Adde to your faith vertue and to vertue knowledge and to knowledge temperance and to temperance Patience and to patience godlinesse c. And so 2. Cor. 8. 7. Therefore as yee abound in euery thing in faith and vtterance and knowledge and in all diligence and in your loue to vs see that yee abound in this Grace also Therefore it should grieue a Christian to heare a man speake of any grace which hee hath not in himselfe Fine and daintie women we know who haue a delight in curious gardens if they heare of any goodly Plant or delicate Flower in another bodies garden they neuer rest till they haue got a slip of it into their owne yea here they beg a root and