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A68718 A key of heaven the Lords Prayer opened, and so applied, that a Christian may learne how to pray, and to procure all things which may make for the glorie of God, and the good of himselfe, and of his neighbour : containing likewise such doctrines of faith and godlines, as may be very usefull to all that desire to live godly in Christ Iesus. Scudder, Henry, d. 1659?; Sibbes, Richard, 1577-1635. 1633 (1633) STC 22122; ESTC S1717 241,855 822

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in his holy wisedome decree to permit it Moreover there could be no faultinesse in such a decree because that in it was set such an order that neither the coming of things to passe by Gods permission nor that which should come to passe by his working should either offer violence to the wills of the reasonable creatures or should take away the liberty or contingency of second causes but doth establish them rather For Gods decree doth determine the creature to worke according to its nature that as all naturall agents as that stones should descend if they be not upheld and that fire should burne combustible matter should worke necessarily so all voluntary agents should worke freely and contingently The liberty of the creature together with the sinfulnesse of the act of the creature may and doth well stand with the decree of God Indeed upon supposition of Gods decree to permit Adam to fall it followed by necessarie consequent that Adam would fall yet was it not necessarie that Adam should fall necessarily But rather upon supposition of Gods decree Adams fall by eating the forbidden fruit which God permitted him to do came to passe freely and contingently that is with a possibility of the contrary namely of forbearing to eate of the forbidden fruit This was because God had made man a rationall and voluntary agent to worke contingently and freely according to the freedome of his will and not to be forced thereto by any necessity The decree of permitting sinne doth not lay any necessity upon any man to commit sinne Sinne hath not relation to Gods decree as the effect hath to its cause but onely as a consequent of it and as an object whereabout the decree is conversant Gods fore-knowledge of what shall come to passe and his will to permit it to come to passe are sufficient to denominate a necessity or certaintie of event that the same thing must needs come to passe but neither his fore-knowledge or his will that a thing shall come to passe by his permission maketh God the author of that which is fore-knowne or permitted but to produce a thing that maketh God to be the author of it As for sinne there is no operation of God concerning it as it is sinne but rather negation or suspension of that grace which if God did bestow would keep man from committing of it Gods decree to permit sinne doth not destinate any man to sinne for destination is the ordaining of a person to a certaine end an evill action cannot be the end to which a man is ordained And this decree of permitting sinne and of leaving him in his sinne and then of damming him for sin all which presuppose that God decreed to create man yet from hence it doth not follow that God made any man to the end hee might damne him the end of his creation and of all the parts of Cods decree was the manifestation of his owne glory He made all things for himselfe Prov. 16 4. Now if man might fall by Gods permission and yet God is free from being author of sinne then who can have any colour of exception if after man is fallen God do leave him in his sinne and shall condemne him for his sin especially sith that though Gods decree to leave a man in state of sinne and to reprobate him from faith and other graces needfull to salvation be absolute and without any cause out of God but of his meere will and absolute pleasure yet he never decreed to reprobate or destinate any to damnation absolutely nor yet doth he execute or damne any but for his sinne God never doth save or damne any absolutely but as they are found to be in Christ or as they are found to be in their sinnes out of Christ For God did not absolutely elect any unto salvation nor absolutely reject any to damnation but he decreed to save only those which should actually by his Spirit beleeve in Christ repent and persevere in an holy life to the end if they be of yeares of discretion and such as by secret union of the Spirit should by a way unknowne to us partake of and belong to Christ if Infants within the covenant of grace And he decreed to damne onely such as should persevere in their sinne and infidelity For the promise of salvation and the threat of damnation is made respectively onely to such Yet know that God of his meere will and pleasure did absolutely elect some and did determine to give them the grace of faith in Christ repentance towards God and perseverance in holinesse of life and likewise absolutely to reject others therefrom and to leave them in their sinne and infidelity Thus God is cleared from being any author of sinne or yet to blame if he proceed in rigour in the eternall punishment of some for sinne I will last of all shew that God was no deficient cause in Adams sinne though he did decree to permit it and did work accordingly either by denying his grace or by concurring with him to the substance of the act which was sinfull In all this God did not carry himselfe otherwise than an absolute Lord and a most holy God might rightfully do What though God made the forbidden fruit of an alluring nature pleasant to the eye and good for food as it seemed to Eve and was called by an alluring name a Tree of knowledge of Good and evill What though God exposed Eve unto the temptation of the Serpent and Adam to the temptation of his wife What if God restrained the good Angels that they did not as otherwise they might assist Adam against Satan and against his temptation by minding him of his duty to God and of the falshood and malice of the devill and how much he was but lately beholden to God And what though God left Adam and Eve to themselves without giving thē actuall assistance of his grace any more than what he gave them in their creation to preserve them from falling which he gave to the good Angels and denyed to others What hath God done in all this which he might not do For notwithstanding all this there was a naturall and true possibility in Adam and Eve to have forborne to eate of the forbidden fruit in spite of Satan though hee did his utmost that he could Adam and Eve did eate the forbidden fruit as freely without compulsion as ever before they had eaten of any other tree in the Garden No compulsion but bodily appetite leading them to eate of the common fruit and partly bodily appetite and partly affectation of being like God in knowing good and evill seducing them to eate the fruit which was forbidden There remained I say a true possibility in Adam to have stood For by vertue of the graee of God received in the creation he could not only have abstained from every outward action forbidden him of God but to abstaine from it in a gracious manner for that both outwardly and
by the discretive conjunctiō but which sheweth that in the latter clause the petitioner doth enlarge his desire and crave Gods helpe against sinne in a further degree then was asked in the first clause scil that God would not onely not leade th●● into temptation of evill Ne inducas sed educas but to deliver them from evill Sinne here is considered in the immediate cause thereof scil temptation prayed against in the first clause Leade ●s not into temptation It is considered likewise in respect of the very act of sinne scil evill prayed against in the second clause But deliver us from evill In the first clause an act of God concerning temptation unto sinne is deprecated namely that he would forbeare to leade into temptation and forbeare to shew himselfe an adversary but this is asked not absolutely but under correction if it might stand with his pleasure and with his glory In the second clause their sute is enlarged wherein they desire a further act of God that if it must needs be that they must be exercised with temptations that he would stand for them and deliver them from the evill of those temptations this latter is asked for absolutely In both clauses of this petition wee must consider the person to whom sute is made scil God the persons for whom us the things praied against namely sin but in different respects both of the cause thereof temptation act of sinne evill Temptation Temptations unto which men are subect Tentatio probationis tentatio se duct●●n are of two sorts proofes or trials of a mans graces these are not to be prai● against for in such hee must rejoyce Iam. 1.2 motions or enticements unto sinne by Satan by evill men or by a mans owne evill heart such as are spoken of Jam. 1.14 Temptation is good or evill A good and blamelesse temptation is when any one that hath right to make experiment of what a man is or of what he will do doth to a right and good end by lawfull meanes make triall whether a man will do or not do that to which he is moved or occasioned An evill and blame-worthy temptation is when the end of him that tempteth is that hee that is tryed or tempted should do that which is evill doing it with a mind to perswade thereunto Leade By this act of Gods leading into temptation we are to understand such an over-ruling act of Gods providence by which he disposeth of all things good and evill whereby partly by what he doth by his concurrence with him that tempteth touching the substance of his act and partly by what hee permitteth in not hindring what he could hinder concerning the evill and irregularitie thereof and partly by what he omitteth leaving a man to himselfe to strugle and wrastle with the temptation it commeth to passe that a man is not onely intised unto but overcome of the evill unto which he is tempted God must be acknowledged to have an holy hand in all temptations whether good or evill In good temptations God is properly an agent and worker Gen. 22.1.2 as when he proved and tempted Abraham by commanding him to offer his onely sonne Isaac likewise when he causeth men to prosper as when he rained Manna to tempt or proove the children of Israel Exod. 16.4 whether they would walke in his law In like manner when he sendeth afflictions as he did to the Israelites in the wildernes to humble them and to prove what was in their hearts Deut. 8.2 whether they would keepe his Commandements or no. In evill temptations God is not at all in proper speech an agent or worker of the evill of the temptation but yet he hath to do in and about all evill temptations and that not onely in determining them to a good end as to his owne glory and also in the concourse of his power to the substance of the act whether of Satan of a mans selfe or of other men when they tempt God hath further to do in evill temptations He hath to do in them both by way of permission in permitting and in not restraining Satan or a mans owne concupiscence or other men from tempting by which way of permission he is said to prove or tempt men as in Deuteronomy Deut 13● in his permission of false Prophets to seduce and also by way of omission insuspending his action and forbearing to give grace or to do that which he was wont to do and if he would could do to keepe a man from acting the sin to which he is tempted By this way of omission God is said to have proved or tempted Ezekiah when the Embassadours of the King of Babel came unto him 2 Chron. 32.31 The Scripture saith God left him to try him that he might know what was in his heart These acts of Gods permission and omission for which in Scripture phrase God is said to tempt or to leade into temptation are expressed sometimes by words of negation and sometime by words of action By words of negation where it is said speaking of the great temptations which the Israelites saw Deut. 29.4 The Lord had not given them an heart to perceive c. By words of action where it is said by the Church Isa 63.17 O Lord why hast thou made us to erre from thy wayes and hardened our heart from thy feare Likewise God saith of false Prophets if the Prophet be deceived Ezek. 14.9 I the Lord have deceived him And in the Revelation it is said touching the ten Kings which became Antichristian God hath put into their hearts to fulfill his will namely Revel 17.17 his purpose and decree concerning the permission of the tyranny of Antichrist and to agree and give their kingdome to the beast c. Now because where God permitteth tempters to tempt and also forbeareth to give grace to resist the temptation he doth not remove that which if it were removed would hinder the temptation nor give that which should hinder the yeelding to it and for that hereupon such is mans sinful disposition temptation and sinning followeth infallibly therefore this permission and omission of Gods is expressed by words of action and by words as it were of eausality as here by leading though God be farre and farre from being any cause of the sinne or of being any blame-worthy cause of the temptation as shall further appeare hereafter To tempt unto sinne properly which God doth not and to leade onely into temptation which God doth and may do doe much differ For to tempt taken in the evill sense is to intice to indeavour to move the will of man to wickednesse and that with a minde to have him to act it according to that of the Apostle Iames Iam. 1.14 A man is tempted when he is drawne away by his lust and is inticed Of this tempting it is which the Apostle Paul speaketh when hee saith to the Thessalonians 1
except against any thing herein whether we respect Gods negative acts in not willing to hinder sinne but to permit it as also in his not giving grace to some men to rise out of it or whether wee respect his affirmative acts thereabouts as his concurrence to the substance of the act or his determination of the meanes whcreby sin should be committed and of the ends to which sinne should serue after it should bee committed Which I will make to appeare thus as followeth God intending to glorifie himselfe in the manifestation of his manifold excellencies in the attributes of his goodnes wisedome power mercie and justice he decreed and determined with himself to create man and to make him good even after his owne image and withall to give him power to persevere in that goodnesse if hee would Moreover hee decreed to leave him to himselfe even to the liberty of his will and to permit him to fall into sinne decreeing withall to raise some of mankinde out of their fall and sinfull condition through Christ by giving them faith repentance and grace to persevere in the way of holinesse and in the end to give them everlasting life notwithstanding that by sinne they had deserved everlasting death and that for the manifestation of his glory in the way of mercie mixed with remunerative justice likewise hee together decreed to leave the other some of mankinde fallen into sinne and not to vouchsafe them the grace of faith and repentance and withall hee decreed that for their sinne hee would punish them with eternall death and this for the manifestation of his glory in the way of justice vindicative This I conceive to be but one formall decree of meanes not subordinate one to another but ordained together tending to one maine end namely to the end of all ends even to the glory of God though in different wayes to wit in the way of mercy in the way of justice namely Rom. 9.22.23 to the making knowne of the riches of his glory on the vessels of mercy which he had afore prepared to glory and also to the shewing of his wrath and making of his power knowne on the vessels of wrath fitted or made up to destruction For God made therefore it must needs be that he decreed to make all things for himselfe Pro. 16.4 not onely the godly who are the vessels of his mercy for the day of salvation but also the wicked who are the vessels of his wrath for the day of evill even for the day of destruction God decreed that sin should be by his permission through Adams fall God did not leave it to be as a fortuitous or casuall thing which perhaps might come to passe perhaps might not come to passe but fore-saw it as a thing certaine that sinne would bee through Adams transgression of his Law in as much as he determined to permit him so to do Vpon this permission it did infallibly follow that Adam would sinne For this permission being granted the thing permitted must needs follow because Gods will can neither be changed nor resisted And without Gods will nothing can be The event also and mans woful experience doth too wel prove that sin is in the world God likewise decreed to leave some men in state of sin not giving them of his saving grace and also determined for sinne to condemne them as appeareth clearely by the Scriptures For Saint Peter saith that some stumbled at Christ the corner-stone and at the Word 1. Pet. 2.8 being disobedient whereunto also they were appointed 2. Pet. 2.9 And hee saith also that God knoweth how to reserve the unjust unto the day of judgement to be punished The Apostle Paul saith We are not ordained to wrath 1. Thes 5.9 implying that God hath ordained some namely the wicked unto wrath Saint Jude saith of certaine men that were ordained to this condemnation Iude 4 13. to wit to bee left to their owne hearts lusts turning the grace of God into wantonnesse and also for that their wickednesse to have the blacknesse of darknesse reserved for them Thus we see what it is which God hath decreed touching sinne Now lest God should have any the least imputation of unjustice or cruelty cast upon him or of being the author of sinne which were blasphemous to conceive I will therefore in the second place shew how and in what manner hee hath decreed sinne to be and to be punished whereby it shall appeare that God is holy and blamelesse even in this as well as in all other his wayes and will bee every way justified when he is judged It is most true that God decreed that sixe should bee but how He did not decree that sinne should be as he decreed that all good things should be namely by his operation hee producing them but he decreed that sinne should be onely by his permission It must also be considered how sinne came to have a being by Gods permission Permission either is a midle thing betweene command and prohibition and in that sense it imports a kinde of allowance in this sense God never did nor will permit sinne for he hath most straightly forbid i● or else permission is taken for a middle thing betweene furthering the being of a thing and impedition or hindering of the being of the said thing in this sense it is taken in Gods decree of sinne he willed it to be but so as he did not further the being of it as it is sinne nor yet did he hinder the being of it onely hee did permit it Great difference must be put berweene Gods decreeing the things that be good and the things that be morally evill For the decree that good things shall be is accompanied alwaies with an effectuall operation of God which causeth them to be but the decree that evill shall be by Gods permission is not accompanied with any effectuall furtherance or operation of God in the way of a cause to effect it God is truly the cause of every thing that is good but he is not at all truly the efficient cause of the evill of sinne yet there was good cause why God might decree to permit man for to sinne For he knew it could be no wrong done to the reasonable creature if he should leave him to his owne nature to do according to the nature and freedome of his will especially he having made it onely disposed to good and able to hold it selfe onely to that which was good if he would Besides he knew that to leave the creature made in such perfection to its owne nature was in it selfe not against but according to the common good of the creature Wherfore sith God knew how sinne might be without his causing of it to be and knew also that for the manifestation of his further glory it did belong to his omnipotent wisedome and goodnesse rather to draw good out of evill then not to permit it why might not he
fourth thing to bee considered is the end which God proposeth and attaineth by permitting and ordering of the sinnes of men far different from those which men propose in committing of them which ends are holy good namely to set forth his owne glory and that many wayes as by discovering the impotency of the creature what need it hath to depend upon the creator for that man though perfect yet could not stand for want of a speciall grace to support him also to manifest his owne freedome and absolutenesse over his creature besides that his wisdome saw that permitting sinne in such a way as could no way impeach his holinesse it would make way for the manifestation of his power in his infinite grace and mercy mixed with justice towards some and in his infinite justice towards others This hee did not that he could not glorify himselfe otherwise but for that in his holy wisdome he held it fitte●●●o glorify himselfe thus But the end of the proper causes of sin is alwayes naught namely envy against man and malice against God was the cause why Satan tempted man to sinne the satisfying of some vile lust is the cause why man enticeth and is enticed unto sinne Why might not God first permit sinne to be in the world that so a cleere way might bee made to the manifestation of his holinesse in hatred of sinne and in his just revenge upon sinners in which respect though sinne was no way good in acting yet it was good that it should be acted And since the fall his end of giving up the wicked unto abhominable sins is to shew his displeasure in his righteous punishing of one sinne with another for this hee holdeth to bee a meet and equall punishment as he saith of the Romans Rom. 1.17 They received in themselves that recompence of their errour a● wa● meete He doth thus dispose of their sinnes that it may also appeare that he hath just cause to damne them at the day of judgement Wherfore though sinne be evill ye● the punishment of sinne is 〈◊〉 evill but exceeding good The ends of the Lords permitting and disposing of the temptations and sinnes of the elect are manifold First at the first his permission of sinne to bee through mans fault made way for an object of his mercy since the fall he permitteth hi● owne people to be tempted unto sinne to shew his wisedome and power in sustaining the● that they do not fall into evill notwithstanding the subtilty of Satan and the d●ceitfulnesse of their owne heart or if they 〈◊〉 into sinne he suffereth it that he might shew his grace and mercie in forgiving and his almightie power in rescuing and delivering them out of the power of sinne Also God oftentimes suffereth his owne children to commit some great sinne that hee might discover unto them which do commit it that wickednes of heart which they would never else have acknowledged to be in them And this God doth that he might cure them of their diseases of sinne doing like a skilfull Physitian let them fall into one disease to cure them of a greater as they say they will cast a man into a burning ague to cure him of his Lethargie or like as a cunning Surgeon can gather dispersed humors unto an head and there make an issue whereas he may let out that corruption which otherwise could not be drawne forth even so God by suffering his children to fall into some great sinne letteth out that securitie and pride which else would not be cured and worketh that humiliation repentance and care to shunne sinne afterwards which would not else have beene wrought in them Seeing therefore God hath such good ends moving him to permit sinne and to dispose of it in manner as hath been said he is to be cleared from all imputation of faultinesse in all that he hath to do in the sinnes of men The last thing to be considered is how God standeth affected unto sinne Touching which be it knowne that he hateth it perfectly as it is sinne for he forbiddeth it before it be done he never approveth of it by his approving will when it is done yea he is so displeased with it that he never letteth it go unpunished after it is committed for he hath punished it in Christ for the elect and is daily in punishing of it and reserveth it to bee eternally punished by hell-fire upon the reprobate Thus Gods holinesse is every way cleared though he permitteth sinne and hath an over-ruling hand in mens sinnes God is the cause of the action which is the matter of sinne Ob. therefore of the sinne Here is no sound consequence Sol. for as sinne is an action and is an effect of God it is good and is no sinne Peccatum est defectus nou effectus but sinne is sinne as it is a defect and failing in the action swarving from the rule of righteousnesse which is not caused by God nor by any cause which hath any direct subordination from God the chiefe cause of all things God disposeth of sinne Ob. and worketh in sinne therefore in some respect an author of it Sinne hath reference unto God as it is an object Sol. or subject wherein or whereupon hee worketh disposing it to his own holy ends but it never hath reference unto God as the effect hath to the efficient cause Peccatum quà peccatum est objectum operis nb● opus Dei to be wrought by him therefore it doth not follow because he hath a worke concerning it or in it therefore he is a cause of it so long as it cannot be said he doth worke it Ob. God is a cause without which sinne could not be therefore a cause of sinne after a sort Sol. Grant that wirhout God sin could not be yet he is in no sort a cause for this kinde of cause which is called sine qua non is 〈◊〉 truth no cause And all that ca● be yeelded is that God is onely a cause by accident now caus●● by accident are properly no causes No wise man will say the warmth of the Sunne is a true cause of the stinke of carrion which doth not stinke untill the Sunne did shine upon it the cause of the stinke is in the 〈◊〉 thy corrupt matter of the carrion not in the warmth of the Sunne for the same Sunne shining at the same time upon violets occasioneth a sweet smell The Scripture doth seeme to say plainly Ob. that the cause of some mens sinnes have beene of God 1. King 12.15 The King hearkened not to the people for the cause was of God Now in not hearkening to them the King sinned Cause Sol. in that place doth not signifie the proper effecting of a thing causally but a disposing of the proper causes so as they did produce this effect God left Rehoboam to his evill heart and suffered the young counsellours to give counsell according to the pride of their owne hearts by which meanes it
came to passe that Rehoboam sinned the infatuating of Rehoboam who was of himselfe partially and corruptly affected towards his young Councellours and the not putting of wisedome into Rehoboams greene head was of God but that Rehoboam made choice of the worst counsel that was a most free act of his owne Now Gods hand was in the disposing of these things that the thing before prophesied might come to passe Thus much the word translated cause doth signifie scil the thing brought about or brought to passe was from God This act of not hearkening must be considered in divers respects First as an evill act of Rehoboam and his evill Councellours in this respect God did not cause it Secondly it must be considered as a meet punishment of that kingdome and as a means to bring to passe the prophesie of Ahijah in which respect that God in justice should leave Rehoboam and his young Councellours to their folly and to the pride of their owne hearts it was good and was caused of God Thus it may appeare as I hope that God hath an over-ruling and disposing hand in mens sinnes without being author of sinne and without any impeachment of his-holinesse The uses follow They are therefore to blame Vse 1 that alter the forme of this petition saying Suffer us not to be led in stead of Leade us not Their end may bee good but their alteration is naught and to no purpose for in truth this change of words doth not cleare Gods justice any more then Christs owne words Let the petition therefore remaine and stand holy as it is set down by Christ for it is presumption to teach Christ how to speake This our tenent is an apology Vse 2 against Papists or any other that shall slanderously affirme that we hold either directly or by consequent that God is the author of sinne although wee say as this petition teacheth us that God leadeth into temptation and hath more to do in the sinnes of men then a bare permission Vse 3 This should cause all men to admire and magnifie the infinit wisedome and perfection of Gods holinesse that can have so much to do with sinners and with their sinnes and yet there doth not so much as one dust or spot of defilement cleave unto him Vse 4 Hereby are condemned the blasphemies of very many who to excuse or lessen their sin will lay the fault on God because Gods determinate counsell hi● providence power permission and his giving men over is in their sin and because he might have hindered it if he would therefore they thinke they cannot chuse but sinne and why should fault bee found with them if God would it shou●● be otherwise Such are brought in objecting Rom. 9. Who hath resisted his will Why doth he yet finde fault This they take from Adam who before his conversion would have laid the fault on God rather then take it on himselfe for he saith Gen. 3.12 The woman whom thou gavest to be wiih me she gave me of the tree and I did eate But take notice that although he thus extenuated his sinne by laying it on God yet God could Gen. 3.17 and did curse Adam and the earth the bitter fruits whereof we feele unto this day Know therefore thou that any way darest put off thy sin upon God if thou do not beleeve in Christ and forsake thy sinne the Lord will one day shew to thy cost that he can bring it about that thou through thine owne evill heart shalt sinne he giving thee over unto it and yet can in holy justice cast thee into hell for thy sinne For he can say he deceived the false Prophet and yet justly punish the said Prophet and all that are deceived by him Ezek. 14.9 10. Vse 5 May God if he please leade into temptation and can we not be overcome by temptation except the Lord permit This should teach all men to live so that God may be their friend and may not be provoked in his justice to give them over to the power of the devill and unto their owne lusts For which cause observe and keepe these directions following 1 First make your peace with God by faith in Christ repent of all sinnes past and having hereby obtained friendship with God then keepe it by being good before him which is then approved when you shall endevour to please him by doing his will in time to come which if ye do for this is to be good before God or to please God then you shall escape the snares and nets the hands and bands of the most enticing harlot in the world the like may be said of all other temptations but the sinner saith Solomon shall be taken by her Eccles 7. 2 As much as in you is abstaine from all sinne for since mans fall Gods giving over unto sinne is a punishment for some former sinne but especially shunne those particular sins for which God doth in speciall sort give men over the chiefe whereof are these following 1 First all refusing 2 Thess 2.10.11 or a slight and formall receiving of the truth For this causeth God to send men strong delusion to beleeve a lye 2 Abusing or not making right use of that knowledge a man hath Rom. 1 21.22 23 24 26 28. doth cause God to infatuate and give him over to vile affections 3 A willingnesse of heart to be ignorant of the truth and a wilfulnesse to practise evill for of such saith the Lord Ezek. 14.4 He that setteth up his idols in his hea●● and cometh to the Prophet I the Lord will answer him that commeth according to the multitude of his idols 4 Presumption of a mans owne power of himselfe to resist temptations Matth. 26.33 34. for this cause the Apostle Peter was given over to fall so fearfully 5 All willing casting of ones selfe into the occasions of sinne for this cause Jehoshaphat's familiaritie with Ahab 1. Kin. 22. caused him to be given over to beleeve Ahabs false Prophets rather then good Micaiah 6 Idlenesse to live without a calling or negligently in a calling Ezek. 16.49 doth expose a man unto the Lords giving him over unto many abhominations for this he gave over Sodom to uncleannes 7 Allowance of secret sinnes this provoketh God many times to give men over unto some grosse open sinne that it may worke sense of sinne shame for sinne and true repentance in the elect may worke unto shame and eternall perdition of the reprobate Shun all sinnes therefore as much as in you lyeth if you would not have God leade you into temptation but especially take heed of those before mentioned Let all that beleeve in Christ and have thereby true interest Vse 5 in God draw comfort from this doctrine for God you see hath an overruling hand in the temptations and the sins of all men Satan therefore cannot winnow us nor buffet us no Luk. 2● 31 he cannot touch us but as
a master where is my feare It is the Lord let him do what seemeth him good saith good Eli 1 Sam. 3.18 Reason 2 Gods will take it of things to be done or suffered besides that it is soveraigne and absolute Rom. 7.12 it is holy equall and good And good is the word which thou hast spoken saith Hezekiah Isa 39.8 Whereas on the contrarie the will of Satan and of the flesh is starke naught Great cause therefore why Gods will should be done and be preferred before all other wills Reason 3 The end why God doth make knowne his will unto the sonnes of men Deut 6.1 is that that they should do it and submit unto it Christ did therfore redeeme Reason 4 man that as Peter saith they should no longer live the rest of their time in the flesh according to the lusts or wil of men but according to the will of God 1. Pet. 4 2. The chiefe heads to which the will of God may bee reduced are these First that men should perfectly know his will Secondly that they should perfectly obey it thus much the Law of pure nature taught before the fall Thirdly sith all have sinned and even after conversion do in many things sinne it is the will of God that men should be convinced of their sinne Act. 2.38 be penitent for it confesse it and aske him forgivenesse through Christ Iesus Fourthly when men have done this his will is 1. Ioh. 3.23 that they should beleeve what Christ hath done and suffered for them beleeving in him and relying upon him for pardon for obtaining of grace and for everlasting salvation Fiftly his will is that all that beleeve in him and that endeavour to live holily and righteously should hope stedfastly and be assured that they through Christ shall be for ever glorified Sixthly that in the meane time they bee thankfull for Gods goodnesse towards them in everie condition and that they patiently fruitfully and comfortably beare whatsoever afflictions they shall meete with in the way waiting when God shall accomplish all his promises to them in Christ unto their everlasting glory Vse 1 The greater number of Christians in name come here to be reproved because they are willingly ignorant of Gods will and wilfully disobedient nay as if that were not bad enough they cannot abide any that strive to walke according unto the strict rule of Gods holy commandments but are all for following the course of this world the wil of Satan Eph. 2.2.3 and lusts of the flesh in all manner of disobedience of Law and Gospell These may see how contrarie they are to their profession which in word can say Disswasives from disobedience to Gods will Thy wil be done but indeed do the contrarie God cannot brooke this abhominable dissembling howsoever they thinke of themselves these remaine yet children of wrath Ephe. 2.3 Ephe. 5. ● because they remaine children of disobedience They are yet in the power of sinne Rom. 6.16 for his servants they are whom they obey These men cannot scape without punishment He that knoweth not his masters will is worthy of stripes saith our Saviour But he that knoweth his masters will Luk. 12.47.48 and yet prepareth not neither doth according to his will shall be beaten with many stripes Disobedience is a dishonour to God so saith the Apostle to the hypocriticall boasters of the Law Rom 2.23.24 Through breaking the Law dishonourest thou God For the Name of God is blasphemed among the Gentiles through you And it doth exasperate God exceedingly he could not else have beene so much provoked by Adams and Eve's transgressing his will by eating the forbidden fruit a thing for matter small as to curse the whole world in such sort that it groaneth under the burthen of it unto this day and also to damne all men in eternall flames had not the very Sonne of God by taking the curse upon himselfe saved a chosen number of them How did Sauls disobedience provoke the Lord against him who because he rejected the word of the Lord 1. Sam. 15.23 the Lord rejected him Yet his fact was such as carnall reason could and did say much in excuse of it but it was disobedience Yet who more readie to presume that the wrath of God shall be farre from them in the evill day than such as will not do the will of God but take pleasure in iniquitie and are workers thereof They will crie Lord Lord Luk. 13.26.27 hast thou not taught in our streets and Lord Lord open unto us The Lord abhorreth this scraping of acquaintance with him saying Mat. 25.11.12 Depart from me I know yea not ye workers of iniquitie there shall be weeping and gnashing of teeth Wherfore let no willing transgressour of Gods will deceive himselfe nor suffer any man to deceive him for Ephe. 5.6 for such things sake commeth the wrath of God upon the children of disobedience For this is most certaine that Christ commeth in flaming fire to render vengeance on them that know not God and that obey not the Gospell of our Lord Iesus Christ 2. Thess 1.8 Vse 2 Let all that professe the Name of God study to know and endeavour to submit their will to Gods will in al things let them bewaile the ignorance and rebelliousnesse of their owne and other mens evill hearts that with David they may say Psal 119.136 Rivers of waters runne down their eyes because they keepe not Gods Law Motives unto obedience to Gods will 1 Nothing pleaseth God more than to see his children to order their conversation aright and to finish the works he giveth them to do he hath not so much delight in burnt-offerings as in obeying the voyce of the Lord Behold saith Samuel 1. Sam. 15.22 to obey is better than sacrifice and to hearken is better than the fat of rammes Secondly the Lord is much glorified when his servants and children submit themselves to his will both in doing and suffering Ioh. 17.4 I have glorified thee on earth saith Christ to his Father this he maketh to appeare thus I have finished the worke which thou hast given me to doe The Apostle having resolved to keepe a good conscience saith be knoweth Christ shall bee magnified in his body Phil. 1.20 whether by life or death Thirdly this is the way to gaine the reputation and honour of wise men Eph. 4 17. Be not unwise saith the Apostle but understand what the will of the Lord is Deut. 4.6 And this is your wisedome and understanding in the sight of the nations Fourthly by doing Gods will wee shall come to more knowledge of his will Ioh. 7.17 If any man will doe his will hee shall know of the doctrine saith Christ whether it be of God or no. Act. 13.22 To fulfill Gods will is to be a man according to Gods owne heart Fiftly it is to approve a mans selfe to bee
God calleth to fasting prayer whether they be led thereto through superstition and a deluded conscience or through worldly discontentments or through any other cause they must know that they stand guiltie of most ungratefull refusing the gracious leave which God hath given them to make use of the good things of this life But if a man set so little by his life that he offer violence to himself by poysoning or otherwise by any meanes this man passeth all bounds of grace and nature 1. Tim. 5.8 he is not onely worse than an Infidel but worse than the bruit beasts For what beast doth not in his kind desire meat of God and when God giveth meat Psal 104.28 they gather it And what beast is it that doth either starve poyson or any way kill it selfe willingly Vse 2 Let every Christian assure himselfe that he may lawfully desire the things of this life He must therefore pray and use all good and lawfull meanes how to live in this world onely the manner how must bee considered scil that it be after we have sought Gods glory as hath beene taught Also it must be considered of whom by what meanes for whom for what time in what right and in what measure or wherewith we would have our wants supplied all which particulars are taught in this Petition Remembring alwayes that all desires in this Petition are conditionall scil if they may stand with Gods good will and pleasure It will be said Ob. If we seek the kingdome of God Matt. 6.33 all these things for this life shall be ministred unto us And that our Saviour saith Labour not for the meat which perisheth Ioh. 6.27 I answer that in Matth. 6. it is not said Sol. Seeke onely the kingdome of God but first that is seeke it chiefly And the promise of having all things for this life doth not exclude the lawful meanes to get them but rather assureth us that because God hath care of meaner creatures which can use no means to help them therefore if his own children shal til the ground sow shall spin and labour he would much more blesse their labours that they should not want Also Christs exhortation in Ioh. 6. is not absolute but comparative namely that of the two he would have them rather seeke for that which is spirituall and everlasting than for that which is corporall and perishing Notwithstanding these places or any thing else that can bee objected Iam 4 2. Iames said the cause why men had not was because they did not aske And the Apostle Paul commandeth to labour with the hands the thing that is good Eph. 4.28 that we may have to give to them that need Wherefore let everie man know what is Gods wil in this behalfe and let him pray unfainedly and labour diligently that he may live in this world as well as that which is to come They are to know that they may also pray against all temporall and bodily crosses as famine sicknesse warres and may use all good means to prevent and remove them But what meanes soever bee used prayer must be one 1. Chron. 16.12 It was Asa his fault not that he did seeke to the Physitians for health but because he sought onely to the Physitians and not to the Lord. It may be objected Ob. It is good to be afflicted Psal 119.71 And Ieremie saith Correct us Lord. Ier. 10.24 Afflictions in themselves are evil they are fruits of sinne Sol. they also occasion men to sinne Therefore Agur prayeth that he might not be poore that is so needie as to be destitute of daily food and clothing lest saith he I steale Pro. 30.8.9 and take the Name of my God in vaine Yet is it most true which David saith But afflictions are good by accident through Gods gracious working of humiliation and repentance by them of themselves they are not good It is no good argument to say Afflictions do worke for our good therefore wee may pray for them or we must not pray against them For the very sinnes of Gods children through the infinite wisedome and power of God may and oft do worke much for their good yet in no case may be prayed for but alwayes prayed against The Prophet Ieremie doth not pray absolutely that hee might be corrected but as the case then stood betwixt God and his Church sith God was forced to correct them he desireth that the correctiō might be in judgement and moderation as a fruit of his fatherly love and not in extremitie as proceeding from his wrath and heavie displeasure The verie words do shew this sense for he saith Correct me but in judgement not in thine anger He doth in this case onely deprecate the greater evill of punishment and willingly submitteth himselfe unto the lesse Wherefore notwithstanding any thing that can bee said against it If any man be afflicted let him pray for we have a precept for it Iam. 5.13 We have also a promise God himselfe saith Call upon me in the day of trouble I will deliver thee and thou shalt glorifie me Psa 50.15 Give This word sheweth that the person of whom things needfull for this life are to bee had is our Father which is in heaven the means by which we have possession and use of them is by his gift not our deserts It doth therefore follow The having holding and comfortable Doct. 3 enjoying of all things needfull for this life is of the free gift of God Elihu saith He giveth meat in abundance Iob 36.32 That thou givest they gather saith David Psal 104.28 And Thou givest them their meat in due season Psalm 145.15 All things come of thee 1. Chron. 29.14 Therefore it was the manner of our Saviour alwayes before he did eate Mar. 6.41 14.22 Luk. 24.30 to blesse it asking his Fathers leave to use it with a blessing upon it So did the Apostle He tooke bread and gave thanks to God in presence of them all Act. 27.35 The earth is the Lords and the fulnesse thereof 1. Cor. 10.26 And though he made it for mans use and as the Psalmist saith Psal 119.16 hath given it to the children of men yet hath he reserved the right in himselfe to dispose of it to this or that person both what he pleaseth and as much or as little as seemeth good to him And when hee hath disposed of any parcell of his goods to any men they hold them but as stewards to be accountable to him their master and are but tenants at the meere will and pleasure of him their Lord. Therefore he must give both to have and to hold the things even of this life or they cannot rightfully be held by any man When men have all things Reas 2 needfull in their possession yet another gift of Gods blessing must be added else all they have will not availe them Luk. 12. All the rich fooles plenty could not continue
inwardly hee was more disposed and better accommodated to obedience then to disobedience being made of an holy disposition within and having the commandement of God from without yea an easie commandment given to Adam for his greatest good and that from that God who had newly made him after his owne likenesse and had made all the world for him Wherein now was God wanting in any thing towards Adam which hee ought to have done for him Man now being fallen not through any fault in God for God made him good but they sought out many inventions Eccl. 7.29 which caused their fall that God should elect whom he will in Christ to give them grace and according to their grace to give them eternall glory and on the other side that God shall reprobate others whom he will and leave them in their sinnes and for their sinnes to punish them with eternall death who can justly complaine or except against it If any man cannot fully comprehend these things and satisfie his owne reason herein yet he is to beleeve that it is so For this is an object of our faith rather then of dispute how it can be It is sufficient that the Scriptures say it is so That saying of the Apostle O man that art a man of a shallow reach and apprehension that art a creature and now art a sinfull creature who art thou that repliest against God Hath not the Potter power over the clay to make of the same lumpe one vessell to honour another unto dishonour Rom. 9.20.21 This should satisfie every Christian in this point Secondly that God by an act of his providence and power upholdeth the tempters and tempted giving them life and strength for action this is not subject to exception for herein man is much beholding unto God for that in and by him Act. 17.28 he doth live move and hath a being Thirdly hee by an act of his soveraignty doth let loose Satan and doth not hinder the tempter from tempting Qui cum possit non prohib●t ●ubet Indeed amongst men hee that doth not hinder evill when he may hinder it becommeth accessarie and is sa●●tie but this is because the law of nature and the law of God requireth that no man shall suffer his neighbour to be hurt or indamaged if hee can hinder in but the absolute Lord God is not tyed in any such bond unto his creature no not before Adams fall much lesse sine● Fourthly God doth sometim●● by an act of his wisedome propose some object whereby o●casion of sinne may be taken 〈◊〉 Bathsheba's washing her se●●e was ministred unto Davids sight and the wedge of gold Babilonish garment by Gods providence was presented to the covetous eye of Achan and this he doth to discover what is in mans heart and why may he not We think we may laysome siluer or sweetmeats in fit places here there to try our servants or childrens fidelity may not God doe the like much rather Fiftly he forbeareth to give saving grace but whom doth he wrong herein sith hee is not bound to give grace to any man Sixtly God doth by an act of his justice giving up a sinner to a further degree of sinne doth withdraw those gifts of the minde which once he gave which thing hee hath just cause to do if he please for what man hath not by his sinne deserved this punishment If a man abuse his hand why may not God wither it 1 Kin. 13.4 as he did Jeroboam's We hold this to bee good justice and is it not as good justice that those that have abused their powers of imagination of understanding and of discerning things that differ should bee punished by being deprived of the right use of them There is no lesse holy justice in this latter than in the former Lastly that God doth limit sinne for time and measure as he did the sinnes of the Romans for the elects sake Mat. 24.22 and that hee doth direct them to good ends as hee did the sinne of Ioseph's brethen in selling their brother Gen. 50.20 and sending him into Egypt for the good of Iacob and all his family here is matter of praise and glory to God no matter of exception against God If God act no further in sinne than hath been● said I hope it is manifest that hee may act thus farre and 〈◊〉 bee innocent Now God ha●● no further act in sinne Iam. 1.13 he tempteth no man Hee is no agent in sinne as it is a sinfull act for he doth not entice or solicite unto sinne he doth not incline mans will unto sinne by infusing or putting into it any evill which was not there before but only leaveth man to the temptations of his owne lusts the lusts of the world and of the devill The third thing considerable is what acts come betweene Gods act and the act of sinne or who are the immediate and proper actors of sinne as it is sin These agents and acts are either externall or internall the externall are the suggestions of Satan and the evill motions of men which propose entice and perswade unto evill the internall is a mans owne evill heart upon which the most blame doth lie For then a man is tempted saith Iames Iam. 1.14 when hee is drawne away by his owne lusts and is enticed Wherefore in those sinnes in which God is said to have most to do the fault was laid upon the person that wrought himselfe unto evill as upon the proper cause when still God is cleered As where God is said to harden Pharaoh's heart Exod. 7.3 the true and proper hardner was Pharaoh himselfe for so saith Moses When Pharaoh saw that there was respite he that is Pharaoh harned his heart Exod. 8.15 And whereas it is said God gave the Romans up to uncleannesse their acts of uncleannesse did not follow as properly caused by any act of God but from a cause in themselves for so hee saith Rom. 1.24 the dishonoring their owne bodies was through the lusts of their owne hearts Sinne is a concrete compounded of two things of the fact and of the obliquity of the fact wee 〈◊〉 distinguish betweene the ●●stance of the act and the for●● thereof wherein the sinfulnesse of the act doth lie God hee is a cause concurring to the substance of the act he concurreth not to the sinfulnesse of the act but onely denieth his grace which if he would have vouchsafed to bestow it would have hindered it which grace hee is not bound to give to any It was enough that hee gave a sufficient grace to Adam to stand if hee would So that wee may truly avouch that the devill or man that enticeth another or a mans owne selfe that enticeth himselfe Deus est ordinator uon author peccati are the true causes and authors of sinne but not the Lord who hath only a permitting an overruling and disposing hand in sinne as is is sin The
Lord and thou art exalted as head above all 1 Chron. 29.10.11 David calleth upon his soule and all that is within him to praise his holy Name Ps 103.1.2 The Apostle requireth that in every thing by prayer and supplication with thanksgiving we should make our requests knowne unto God Philip. 4.6 Also he saith Let us by Christ offer the sacrifice of praise to God continually that is the fruit of our lips giving thankes unto his Name Heb. 10.13 Reas 1 Praise and thankes are 〈◊〉 unto God for hee himselfe do most excellent being infinite in all holinesse of wisedome power mercy and all the rest of his divine attributes If there be any excellency in any creatures the praise belongeth unto God because hee made it excellent and if any good thing be bestowed upon any man whatsoever was the secondary meanes God was the first cause and 〈◊〉 the true giver thereof Of him are all things therefore to him be glory for ever Rom. 11.36 Reas 2 It is good pleasant and comely to praise the Lord Psal 147.1 It is good because it is the will of God being a part of his worship It is the best meanes to continue and make good unto us the good things we have 1 Tim. 4.4 It is the best meanes to procure those good things which wee yet have not It is well pleasing unto God for he saith He that offereth praise glorifieth mee Psal 50.23 It doth become the upright to bee thankfull Psal 33.1 for it doth shew their humility and dependance on God acknowledgment that they in all things are beholding unto God This reproveth all those who Vse 1 notwithstanding they have the great booke of the creation and frame of the world to looke upon and the booke of the Scriptures to looke into both which doe set forth the unspeakeable excellencies of God yet never admire him nor speake of him to his praise whereas if a mortall man shall doe some curious piece of worke shewing therein some rare skill and invention his worke shall be gazed on and admired and the workman praised of every one and hee shall be halfe deified And if a friend shall save their lives or deliver them out of prison or doe any other such speciall kindnesse unto them they thanke him and acknowledge themselves beholding unto him as long as they live whereas God which gave power and will to the same friend to doe thee good and doth give them all other good things who would also deliver them from the bondage of sinne and Satan a●● from eternall death he is forgotten and is never thanked by them yea many of those who in their distresse doe seeke unto him and are holpen even they like the nine Lepers never returne to give thanks Luk 17.17 It is ten to one as we say if any give glory to God Most men ascribe the praise of all good things which they have unto nature fortune lucke or chance unto their wit or to their hands or to their friends to any person or thing rather then unto God without whom they could have had nothing These men are wilfully blinde if they doe not see that Gods hand doth all things But if they see that all things are of God and yet will not give him the praise and thankes they doe much wrong God in depriving him of his honour and doe manifest themselves to be utterly unworthy of all good There is no sinne can bee more hatefull then ingratitude There is no sinne can bee more hurtfull to the committer of it for it doth provoke God and cause him in wisedome and justice to take away from them those good gifts which once hee gave unto them As he did with his daughter Israel of whom he saith Hos 2.8.9 Because she did not know that I did give her corne c. Therfore will I returne and take away my corne in the time thereof And for this cause God giveth men over unto reprobate mindes because they having meanes to know God and cause to be thankeful Yet they doe not glorifie God neither are thankefull Rom. 1.21.28 Vse 2 Let all that professe the name of God learne hereby to bee alwaies as readie to speake of God and to God in praises and thanksgiving as to aske and receive any thing from him by petition For which cause we must consider the workes and word of God for they testifie of him Gods infinite wisedome power mercy and goodnesse and all other his excellencies are seene in the creation preservation and redemption of man and are all clearely revealed in his word In so much that when David did consider the heavens and the worke of his fingers hee breaketh forth into an holy admiration of God saying O Lord our Lord Psal 8.1.9 how excellent is thy name in all the earth And the Apostle could not speake of the worke of redemption by Christ but he saith concerning God To whom be glory for ever Amen Gal. 1.5 Eph. 3.21 If wee would but consider how little good and how much evill wee deserve at Gods hands how that it is his mercy wee are not consumed and if wee would consider how little evill Lam. how much good wee receive every day of his meere goodnesse we could not chuse but be thankefull Wherefore wee must bewaile our barrennesse of heart and with David call upon our soules and all that is within us to blesse and praise his holy name Psal 103.1 We must call his benefits to remembrance and tell our soules what great things the LORD hath done for us recounting one benefit after another untill we have convinced our hearts of our dutie and have enforced our selves unto thankfulnesse But our thanks must not be verball onely like that of the proud Pharisie saying Lord I thanke thee Luk. 18.11 they must be heartie and reall which is then then wee shew that wee do indeed acknowledge our selves bound and beholding to God for those things for which we say we give him thanks namely when we use his gifts as he hath appointed to his glory and when we give our selves both in soule and body to his service thus let us give thanks it is good it is pleasant it will become us Then this nothing more pleasing unto God nothing more profitable unto us for everie heartie thanks is a reall effectuall begging of continuance and blessing upon what we have and of new supplies unto what wee have not such shall never want good gifts because God knoweth he shall never want hearty thanks Thine is kingdome He saith not thou hast a kingdome but which is more thine is kingdome that is all kingdome and soveraigntie is thine in originall right and is not a derived soveraigntie as all other governments are Whence we learne Absolutenesse of authoritie Doct. 3 and Soveraigntie is properly and onely in God The Lord made that great Monarch and earthly king of kings Nebuchadnezzar to acknowledge and proclaime