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A20762 A guide to godlynesse or a Treatise of a Christian life shewing the duties wherein it consisteth, the helpes inabling & the reasons parswading vnto it ye impediments hindering ye practise of it, and the best meanes to remoue them whereunto are added diuers prayers and a treatise of carnall securitie by Iohn Douname Batcheler in Diuinitie and minister of Gods Word. Downame, John, d. 1652.; Payne, John, d. 1647?, engraver. 1622 (1622) STC 7143; ESTC S121690 1,341,545 1,134

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14. if we hold out the beginning of our confidence stedfast to the end And therefore if we meane to haue any part in Gods promises we must constantly perseuere in the profession and practice of true godlinesse and the Christian duties of an holy life The second meanes of perseuerance is carefully to The second meanes of perseuerance is to auoyd the causes and meanes of apostacy and defection auoyd the causes and meanes of apostasie and defection And these are diuers first voluntary liuing in any knowne sinne which will harden the heart and dead the conscience and so make way for many others till wee be wholly carried away from God in a streame of wickednesse Secondly we must carefully take heed of the least declinations in Christian graces and holy duties for if we be once going downe the hill wee shall hardly keepe our selues from running headlong to the bottome vnlesse wee stop speedily in the very beginning And as for the preseruing of our bodies in a sound estate we labour with seasonable physicke to preuent diseases and when we finde our health to decline a little doe vse all good meanes at the first because if the sicknesse seaze thorowly vpon the vitall parts it will hardly be remoued and indanger our liues so must we take the same course for the good of our soules carefully obseruing the first declinations of our spirituall health that we may stop them at the beginning before they breake out into any extremities And considering that those diseases both of body and soule are most dangerous and desperate not which come suddenly with some sensible violence but which steale vpon vs by degrees vpon no apparant causes and impaire the health by little and little because they are hardly discerned and when they are knowne not easily cured as in the outward man the consumption hectique feuer and the like and in the inward and spirituall part carnall security hardnesse of heart and others of like nature let vs not therefore neglect the least declinations in sauing grace and holy duties but keepe a carefull watch ouer our selues that none of these diseases of our soules steale vpon vs and become desperate before we discerne them Let vs bee as good husbands for our soules as wee are for our clothes houses and grounds mending little holes before they teare out into great rents repairing the first decayes ere they become rotten and ruinous and making vp the breach as soone as wee discerne it before it come to an inundation and carry vs away in a floud of wickednesse And this counsell the Apostle giveth vs. Lift vp saith he the hands which hang downe and the feeble knees and make straight paths to your feet lest that which is lame be turned out of the way but let it rather be healed c. Looking diligently lest any man faile of the grace of God lest any root of bitternesse springing vp trouble you and thereby many be defiled A third cause of apostasie is a great opinion of our owne strength which causeth God to leaue vs that we may see our weaknesse as we see in the fearfull defection of the Apostle Peter And also a fond conceit that we are so rich in grace that we may spend vpon the stocke and labour for no more and that we haue already so well profited in religious duties that we need not take any care or paines to make any further progresse For there is no standing still in the wayes of Christianity but when we cease to goe forward wee begin to goe backward when in our owne opinion we are at the full we will begin to wane and decline towards a change and when our godlinesse is come to a standing water it presently declineth and neuer ceaseth vntill it be come to a low ebbe For the preuenting whereof let vs not measure our vertues and good proceedings by the false mete-yard of pride and selfe-loue which will make vs ouerweene our owne gifts and good parts nor compare our selues with our selues or others that come behind vs and haue not attained vnto Gal. 6. 4. our measure but with the perfect Law of God which like a looking-glasse will discouer our blemishes and imperfections and with our Sauiour Christ the perfect paterne of holinesse and righteousnesse according Ephes 4. 13 14 15. to whose Image we ought to be conformed A fourth cause of defection from God and godlinesse which we must shunne is the immoderate loue of the world and worldly vanities which cooleth and quencheth in vs the loue of God and of spirituall and heauenly things and so choketh in vs all good desires and indeuours of seeking after them that wee may obtaine them For as our Sauiour telleth vs we cannot serue God and Mammon Math 6. 24. Jam. 4. 4. And the Apostle saith that the amity of the world is enmity with God and therefore whosoeuer will be a friend of the world he is Gods enemy Which argument the Apostle Iohn vseth to disswade vs from this carnall loue Loue not the world saith he nor the things that are in the world If any man loue the world the loue of the Father is not in him A fifth cause is slacknesse 1. Ioh. 2. 15. and negligence in the vse of those meanes which both beget and begin Gods graces in vs and also nourish and preserue them when they are begun as the hearing of the Word reading prayer meditation the Sacraments and such like For as the strength of the body languisheth and consumeth if we refuse our bodily food whereby it is preserued so must also our soules needs fall into a consumption of all grace and goodnesse if we neglect that spirituall nourishment by which onely they are sustained in vs. A sixth cause is the grieuing of Gods Spirit dwelling in vs by quenching the good motions of it and defiling our soules with sinnes Ephes 4. 30. 1. Thes 5. 19. that waste the conscience being committed wilfully against the knowledge which loathsome filthinesse polluteth our soules and bodies and maketh this holy Ghest weary of his lodging going away to withdraw also with him his gifts and graces by which alone wee are inabled vnto all good duties And therefore if wee would not fall away from all grace and goodnes let vs louingly entertain the Author of them and not grieue Gods holy Spirit by resisting those good motions which he putteth into vs and by making our hearts and bodies which should be his holy temples and place of residence a loathsome stie of sinfull vncleannesse A last cause of apostacy is neere and inward familiarity with prophane and wicked persons who will corrupt vs with their euill examples and poyson vs with the contagion of their sinnes alluring and drawing vs by degrees Deut 7. 2 3 4. to accompany them in their euill courses vntill at last wee runne on Pro. 22. 24 25. with them into the same excesse of outragious wickednesse and so giue a
good powerfull iust bountifull a liberall rewarder of good and reuenger of euill according to the saying of the Apostle That which may be knowne of God is manifest in them for God hath shewed it vnto them then how much more clearely doth this light Rom. 1. 19. shine in the faithful when as it is renewed and made much brighter and clearer by Gods holy Spirit The Booke also of the creatures doth conuince all men that there is a God and that he is infinite in wisedome and power omnipresent and full of goodnesse according to that of the Apostle The inuisible things of him from the creation of the world are cleerely seene Rom. 1. 20. being vnderstood by the things that are made euen his eternall power and Godhead so that they are without excuse And therefore how much more may the faithfull profit by learning and reading this Booke who haue the holy Spirit for their Tutor which openeth their eyes that they may see Gods wisdome goodnesse and power shining in them and their hearts that meditating on them they may make an holy vse of this knowledge for the stirring of them vp to render vnto God prayse and thanksgiuing The Booke of grace also is either the internall writing of Gods Law and will in the heart and inward parts by the Spirit of God which the Lord promiseth to doe in the couenant of grace or the outward Booke of the Ier. 31. 34. holy Scriptures in which are contained all things necessary to be knowne of God and his will for the saluation of our soules And lastly Gods Ministers are his instruments whereby he reuealeth himselfe and his will vnto vs who doe expound vnto vs his written Word and vnfold the mysteries and difficulties thereof that we may vnderstand them And therefore if we would attaine vnto the knowledge of God and his will we are to vse the helpe of those instruments which he hath ordained for this purpose especially we are to desire that inward writing of the Spirit in our hearts and to make vse by reading and meditation of the Scriptures and by often hearing of them expounded and applied vnto vs by Gods faithfull Ministers CAP. VI. Of the obiect of sauing knowledge namely God himselfe and his attributes his Word and workes §. Sect. 1 That there is a God and how we may know it ANd these are the causes of sauing knowledge The obiect of it is God his will and workes Where first we are to know that there is a God who is to be worshipped and serued of vs. Vnto which we attaine by the light of nature which reuealeth this principle vnto vs and conuinceth all men of this truth by the Booke of the creatures in which the infinite wisedome power and goodnesse of the Creator shineth by the terrours of conscience following the commission of heynous sinnes though neuer so secret by the series and dependancy of causes one vpon another in the disquisition whereof there is no end till we come to the cause of causes who hauing his being of himselfe giueth being vnto all things by the goodly order which may be obserued in the creatures and the motion of the heauens and the celestiall bodies by the finall causes one thing being referred to another till wee come to the summum benum and supreme end of all things which is God by the accomplishment of Prophecies foretold long before their euents by the consent of all Nations in acknowledging this principle and finally by the iudgements and punishments executed vpon the wicked euen in this life by all which we come to the cleare vnderstanding of this truth that there is a God although in truth it is so euident in it selfe that no argument can be brought to illustrate it seeing nothing is so cleare and manifest §. Sect. 2 Who this God is and how he may be described Secondly we are to know what this God is or rather who he is For what he is in his owne essence he hath not reuealed in the Scriptures neither are we capeable of this knowledge nor any other creature seeing he is infinite and we finite But who he is he hath made knowne in his Word namely that he is Iehouah Elohim a Spirit infinite in all perfection one in nature and three in persons the Father Sonne and holy Ghost By which description it appeareth that God is primum ens and the first being who hath his essence of himselfe and giueth being to all things as his name Iehouah signifieth that he is vncreated and a Spirit as our Sauiour John 4. 23. the wisedome of the Father hath made him knowne vnto vs not so much thereby shewing his essence what he is which is ineffable and incomprehensible as distinguishing him from all corporeall substances That he is but one because he is infinite in all perfection wisedome power presence and the rest and it is against the nature of infinitenesse to bee more then one because hee made and gouerneth all as supreme Monarch in which Monarchy there can be no copartners and because he is the cause of causes from which all things haue their being and vpon which they wholy depend §. Sect. 3 Of Gods attributes and how they are ascribed vnto God Thirdly we must know that this diuine essence is infinite in all perfection The which perfection is seene in his properties which are not properly in God who is all essence and no qualities for whatsoeuer is in God is God but according to the capacity of our shallow vnderstanding neither doe they differ from his essence nor one from another for God is one and of a most simple nature admitting no diuision into parts faculties or properties nor yet any essentiall distinction but onely in our comprehension or maner of vnderstanding So as we must not take his properties to be any parts of his essence seeing euery essentiall propertie is his whole essence and therefore howsoeuer distinguished in respect of his diuers manner of working towards the creatures yet not in themselues but are inseparable one from another In which respect the wisedome of God is the wise God the power of God the powerfull God and so in the rest And his wisedome power mercy goodnesse iustice truth are all one in their essence there being in God but one most simple and pure act vnto which diuers names are giuen in the Scriptures to shew vnto vs how it is diuersly exercised towards the creatures §. Sect. 4 Of Gods primary attributes and how they may be described Now these Attributes are of two sorts First primary Secondly secondary Primary are those which declare vnto vs the essence of God as he is absolutely in himselfe of which there being no similitude in the creatures they are attributed vnto God alone without communication to any other And in this number are Gods Simplicity Infinitenesse Eternity Immensity Immutability and Omnipresence all-sufficiency and omnipotency His simplicity is an essentiall attribute by which
Job 22. 2. Psal 16. 3. profit or extend vnto him but for our owne good and benefit that he may crowne our obedience with eternall blessednesse For hee that keepeth the Law happie is he and he that heareth Christs Word and keepeth it is by Pro. 29. 18. Luke 11. 28. him pronounced blessed Lastly let vs often propound vnto our selues the examples of Gods Saints and Seruants that haue gone before vs and set before vs their obedience as a patterne for our imitation For more cheerefully may we trauaile in this way of holinesse and righteousnesse if wee see a plaine path beaten by those that haue gone before vs. But especially let vs set before vs the neuer-erring example of our Sauiour Christ who tooke more delight in doing his Fathers will then in his meate and drinke and in all things was obedient vnto him to the death euen the John 4. 34. Phil. 2. 6 7. bitter death of the Crosse as the Apostle speaketh §. Sect. 7 Of passiue obedience and patience in afflictions The second kinde of obedience is passiue and is called patience which is a fruit of our loue and thankfulnesse towards God whereby we submit our selues meekely and constantly to beare all those crosses and afflictions Gal. 5. 22. which it shall please God to lay vpon vs. The causes of which patience are diuers the first and principall is the Spirit of God of which it is a fruit Secondly a liuely faith which not only apprehendeth the promise of eternall happinesse with which our temporarie afflictions are not to be compared but Gods speciall promises of strength to indure all trials and of helpe and deliuerance in Gods due time Thirdly trust and affiance in God who hath promised to be with vs in all our afflictions and neuer leaue vs to our owne weakenesse or to the malice and fury of our enemies vpon which we conclude that though he kill vs yet we will trust in Iohn 13. 15. him But the loue of God is the next and immediate cause of our patience which maketh vs meekely to suffer whatsoeuer he imposeth who so loueth vs and whom we so loue For loue endureth all things and the greatest difficulties are not hard vnto it It is stronger then death the waters 1. Cor. 13. 7. Cant. 8. 6 7. of afflictions cannot quench it and the floods of calamities cannot drowne it The obiect of this patience is afflictions which the Lord imposeth for the tryall or correction of his children for all whom he loueth he chastiseth and whosoeuer will be Christs Disciple must denie himselfe take vp Heb. 12. Luke 9. 23. his Crosse and follow him that is that crosse and measure of afflictions which God himselfe imposeth vpon him Neither are we to take vpon vs burthens of our owne making but such only as the Lord allotteth vnto vs which are those alone that we cannot by lawfull meanes auoid or without falling into sinne The manner how we are to beare these afflictions is first voluntarily with a meeke quiet and contented minde as being sent of God for our good yea cheerefully and ioyfully as they are signes and seales of our adoption and speciall meanes to further and assure our euerlasting saluation Secondly we must beare them constantly so long as it shall please God to continue them vpon vs that is till he giueth vs honest Iam. 1. 4. and lawfull meanes to be freed and deliuered from them not thinking it inough that we haue borne some few or many afflictions but holding out vnto the end for he is not crowned who hath fought well for a time but he that neuer giueth ouer till he haue obtained the victory acording to that of our Sauiour Be faithfull vnto the death and I will giue thee the 2. Cor. 4. 16. Apoc. 2. 10. Crowne of life But of these points as also of the meanes whereby wee may be enabled with patience comfort and ioy to endure afflictions I haue written largely * Christian Warfare the third part elsewhere and therefore will content my selfe thus briefly to haue touched them in this place CAP. VI. Of the feare of God and humility which ariseth from it ioyned with his loue And of Gods externall worship with the body §. Sect. 1 Of the feare of God what it is and the causes of it THe fourth and last mayne vertue required in this Commandement is the feare of God whereby I vnderstand not that seruile and slauish feare which is in wicked men and the very deuils themselues in the apprehension of his iustice wrath and power in punishing sinne but that filiall and sonne-like feare whereby knowing beleeuing and remembring not onely Gods Iustice truth maiesty power and dominion our all creatures but also his infinite loue goodnesse and mercy towards vs in Iesus Christ we feare his displeasure who is so glorious and gracious as the greatest euill In which description is expressed the grounds and causes of the true feare of God namely the knowledge beliefe and remembrance of Gods attributes As first that hee is a iust God and will not let sinne goe vnpunished with which consideration Mat. 10. 28. our Sauiour inciteth vs to Gods feare because he iustly casteth into hell those that sinne against him Secondly that he is true of his Word in his promises to those that serue and please him and his threatnings against Psal 33. 7 8. those that displease and sinne against him Thirdly his maiesty and glory in that he is the supreme Lord and most glorious King of heauen and earth which is alone sufficient to strike an awfull feare of God in the hearts of all creatures Fourthly that he is a most powerfull and mighty God and so able to execute all his iudgements and not onely to kill the body but also to cast both body and soule into the euerlasting fire of hell as our Sauiour speaketh Lastly his dominion ouer all creatures whereby Luk. 12. 5. they are obnoxious and liable to his iustice and punishments is effectuall to strike feare into the hearts of all men according to that of Malachie If I be a master where is my feare and that of Ieremie Who would not feare Mal. 1. 6. Ier. 10. 6 7. thee O King of nations for vnto thee doth it appertaine For howsoeuer the faithfull being in Christ can receiue no hurt from these attributes for his iustice is satisfied for their sinnes and there is no condemnation vnto Rom. 8. 1. them his threatnings doe not belong vnto them but contrariwise his sweete and gracious promises his maiesty power and dominion are arguments of ioy and comfort seeing they are wholly for their protection and preseruation yet doe the children of God feare in respect of these attributes when they consider them in their owne nature and see the effects of them in wicked men euen as the sonne feareth his father when he seeth him punish his slaue though he be sure
XV. Of the good things which a good Conscience witnesseth to the faithfull 77 Sect. 1 That it witnesseth first pardon of sinne and reconciliation with God 77 2 Secondly it witnesseth our sanctification 78 3 Thirdly that we are in all estates blessed 79 4 That a good conscience maketh vs cheerefull in Gods seruice 79 CAP. XVI Of the signes and properties of a good conscience 81 Sect. 1 The first signe and the causes of it 81 2 The second is taken from the manner of working it in vs. 81 3 The third is the effects of it 81 4 That it is knowne by the properties of it and first that it is pure and peaceable 82 5 That it keepeth it selfe cleere before God and men 82 6 That a good conscience knoweth it selfe to be so 83 7 That a good conscience maketh vs merry and cheerfull 84 8 That it may bee knowne by the integrity and constancy of it 85 CAP. XVII Of the meanes whereby wee may get a good conscience and preserue it being gotten 86 Sect. 1 The first meanes is highly to esteeme it 86 2 The second meanes to know Gods reuealed will and apply it for vse 87 3 The third meanes is a liuely faith 88 4 The fourth meanes are the exercises of repentance 89 5 Of the meanes whereby a good conscience may be preserued 90 THE SECOND BOOKE of a godly life containing the maine parts and principal duties of it which wee ought generally to performe at all times and vpon all good occasions CAP. I. Of the maine duties wherein a godly life consisteth 92 Sect. 1 That a godly life consisteth in doing all those duties which God hath commanded 92 2 Of that Euangelicall obedience wherin a godly life consisteth 93 3 That this obedience must bee performed after an Euangelicall maner 94 4 That we must ioyne in it the duties of piety righteousnesse and sobriety 94 CAP. II. Of piety which is the summe of the first Table 95 Sect. 1 Of piety comprizing in it all the duties of Gods seruice 95 2 3 4 5. Reasons mouing vs to imbrace piety taken from the excellency profit and necessity of it CAP. III. Of our adhering and cleauing vnto God with full purpose and resolution of our hearts 99 Sect. 1 Of the summe of the first Commandement 99 2 Of adhering vnto God what it is and the necessity of it 100 3 The properties of sound resolution as first that it must be vniuersall 101 4 The necessity of our adhering vnto God proued by diuers reasons 102 5 Of the meanes whereby we may confirme our resolution of adhering vnto God 103 CAP. IIII. Of trust affiance and hope in God 105 Sect. 1 Of affiance in God and wherein it consisteth and of the reasons which may moue vs vnto it 105 2 Of the meanes of affiance 106 3 Of hope in God what it is and wherin it consisteth 107 4 Of the meanes of Hope 108 CAP. V. Of the loue of God and diuers vertues which spring from it 109. Sect. 1 Of the loue of God what it is and wherein it consisteth and of the measure and meanes of it 109 2 Of the zeale of Gods glory what it is and wherein it consisteth 110 3 Of reioycing in God what it is and the meanes whereby wee may attaine vnto it 111 4 Of thankfulnes vnto God what is required vnto it and the meanes of it 112 5 Of obedience vnto God what it is and wherein it consisteth and of the properties of true obedience 113 6 Of the meanes of obedience whereby we may be inabled to performe it 114 7 Of passiue obedience and patience in afflictions 115 CAP. VI. Of the feare of God and humility which ariseth from it ioyned with his loue And of Gods external worship with the body 116 Sect. 1 Of the feare of God what it is and the causes of it 116 2 That this feare of God is commended vnto vs in the Scriptures and of the profit of it 117 3 Of the meanes of obtaining this feare of God 118 4 Of humility what it is and the causes of it 119 5 Of the excellency and vtility of humility 120 6 Of the meanes whereby wee may attaine vnto humility 121 7 Of externall worship with our bodies 122 CAP. VII Of the duties which are required in the second Commandement as prayer hearing the Word and administration of the Sacraments 123 Sect. 1 Of the things generally required in the second Commandement 123 2 Of prayer and inuocation 124 3 Of the duties of Gods Ministers 125 4 Of the duties of hearers and first such as respect their preparation 125 5 Of the duties required in hearing and after we haue heard 126 6 Of the administration of the Sacraments 127 CAP. VIII Of the duties required in the third and fourth Commandements 129 Sect. 1 Of the sanctifying of Gods Name and how it ought to be done 129 2 Of the sanctifying Gods Name in lawfull oathes 130 3 Of the sanctifying Gods Name by making and performing our vowes 131 4 Of the sanctifying Gods Sabbath and what is required vnto it 131 5 Of the spirituall sanctification of the outward rest 132 CAP. IX Of the summe of the second Table 133 Sect. 1 Of the duties of righteousnesse towards our neighbours 133 2 Of the dutie of sobriety towards our selues 134 3 Of the duties of charity 135 4 Of the meanes and manner of working charity in vs. 135 5 What charity is and the properties of it 136 6 Of the obiect of charity which is our neighbours 137 7 The manner of louing our neighbors namely as our selues 138 8 That naturall selfe-loue is not the rule of charity but that which is holy and spirituall 138 9 The properties of lawfull selfe-loue 139 10 That wee must loue our neighbours as Christ hath loued vs. 139 CAP. X. Of the reasons which may mooue vs to imbrace charity 140 Sect. 1 Of the excellency of charity 140 2 Of the profit of it in respect of our neighbours 141 3 Of the profit of it in respect of our selues 142 4 Of the necessity of charity 142 CAP. XI Of the duties required in the fifth Commandement 144 Sect. 1 Of the generall duties required in the fifth Commandement 144 2 Of the duties of superiours in excellencie and of inferiours towards them 144 3 Of the duties of superiours in authority in generall and of inferiours towards them 146 4 Of the duties of superiours and inferiours in the family and first of man and wife towards one another 147 5 Of the duties of husband and wife towards the rest of the family 148 6 Of the duties of parents and children 148 7 Of the duties of Masters and seruants 149 8 Of the duties of Ministers and people 149 9 Of the duties of Magistrates and subiects 150 CAP. XII Of the duties required in the sixth Commandement 151 Sect. 1 Of the summe of this Commandement and of anger and hatred 151 2 Of the inward duties and vertues here
keepe a mans selfe vnspotted of the world §. Sect. 4 That the practice of godlinesse is the touch-stone of our faith Furthermore the iust doe liue by their faith which doth ingraft them into Christ their life and righteousnesse and a godly life is the touch-stone Hab. 2. 4. Ioh. 15. 2 5. which discerneth a true and sincere faith from that which is false and hypocriticall It is the signe of our spirituall vnion and incision for they that are ingrafted into the true Vine Christ doe bring foorth much fruit and they who doe not are either no branches at all or such as are dead and shall bee cut off It is the fruit which the tree of faith beareth by which wee may discerne a liuing from a dead faith Iam. 2. 8. and approoue and manifest it vnto others It is the breath of this life of faith and the operation of this facultie whereby wee may discerne whether it bee a liuing body and liuely sacrifice acceptable vnto God or a dead carcasse which hath onely the shew of a true body but stinketh in his nostrils when for an oblation wee offer it vnto Iam. 2. 26. him §. Sect. 5 That though a godly life is not the cause yet it is the way to euerlasting happinesse Finally a godly life though it doe not merit euerlasting happinesse with which it holdeth no proportion yet it is the way that leadeth vs therunto Heb. 12. 14. in which whoso trauaile shall at the end of their iourney surely attaine to eternall blessednesse And they who neglect it being quite out of the way can neuer come vnto that place of ioy For without holinesse wee shall neuer see God If we haue not our part in the first resurrection to newnesse of life we shall haue no part in the second to glory and immortality but liuing and dying dead in sinne the second death also will seaze vpon vs. And if we walke not in this subordinate way of holinesse and righteousnesse which leadeth to life and happinesse wee can haue no part in the Ioh. 14. 6. chiefe and principall way Iesus Christ without whom there is no saluation 2. Cor. 5. 17. For as many as are in Christ are new creatures They that are Christs haue crucified the flesh with the affections and lusts They that are baptized into him Gal. 5. 24. are buried with him by baptisme into death that like as Christ was raised vp from Rom. 6. 4. the dead by the glory of the Father euen so they also should walke in newnesse of Rom. 8. 1. life They that are in Christ walke not after the flesh but after the Spirit and to such onely there is no condemnation Finally they that are ingrafted into the true vine Iesus Christ shall bring foorth in him the ripe and sweet Grapes of holinesse and righteousnesse and bearing fruit shall be more and more Ioh. 15. 2 6. purged by our heauenly Father that they may dayly increase in fruitfulnesse So that there is no other way to assure vs of Christ and his benefits no other meanes to make our election and calling sure then by adding 2. Pet. 1. 10. one grace vnto another and bringing foorth the fruits of them all in a Christian life and holy conuersation §. Sect. 6 That all Gods Ministers should much inforce this doctrine and practice of a godly life All which as it euidently sheweth the excellencie profit and necessity of walking in this way of holinesse and righteousnesse as I shall more plentifully prooue hereafter so also how necessary and profitable it is for Gods Ministers who are appointed for guides vnto others that they doe not onely themselues walke in this way and shine as lights and patternes of godlinesse in their holy and Christian conuersation but also that they shine vnto them in the light of their doctrine teaching them the way which they should choose and what the acceptable will of God is vnto which they should conforme themselues in all holy obedience perswading and exhorting them to goe forward when they are dull and sluggish that their words may as the Wise man speaketh serue for goades to hasten their speede and admonishing and reproouing them when they leaue Eccles 12. 11. this way and wander in the by-wayes of sinne and wickednesse without which the godly life of the Minister is not sufficient and his exemplary actions but dumbe signes and oftentimes through humane frailty erroneous patternes if the Word preached doe not giue light and life vnto them In which regard among diuers of my worthy and godly brethren who haue profitably laboured in this Argument and offered vnto God their free-will offerings of great value I likewise haue aduentured to cast my poore mite into this Treasury that I may not only hereby more and more stirre vp and prouoke my selfe to walke more carefully conscionably and cheerefully in this path of piety but also may as much as lyeth in mee both by word and writing perswade many others to beare mee company CAP. II. Containing the definition of a godly life whereby we may know what it is and wherein it consisteth §. Sect. 1 What a godly life is both according to the Law and also Gospel NOw that we may more orderly proceede in handling of this Argument I will first shew what this godly life is and what the duties are which principally are required vnto it and then propound the helpes and meanes whereby we may be perswaded to enter into this Christian course and inabled to proceed in it conscionably and cheerefully And first if we define it in that legall perfection which God requireth this godly life is an absolute conformitie of all our actions and whole conuersation vnto the will of God which is the perfect rule of holinesse and righteousnesse as it is reuealed vnto vs in his Word especially in the Decalogue or ten Commandements vnto which we cannot attaine in this state of corruption and imperfection seeing we are not perfectly regenerate but are partly flesh and partly Spirit and haue the reliques of sinne remaining in vs which as an heauy burthen presseth vs downe in this way and like fetters on our legs Heb. 12. 1. so hindreth vs that we can but slowly and lamely proceed in our spirituall iourney as we may see in the example of the Apostle who professeth that hee could not doe the good which hee would but the euill which hee would not Rom. 7. 15 22. and that whilst he was delighted in the Law of God he found another law in his members warring against the law of his mind and leading him captiue to the law of sinne Notwithstanding we are to walke by this rule and in our desire and indeuour as it were with an holy ambition to aspire vnto it and though we cannot reach vnto this Sunne of perfection yet wee must chuse it for our marke and shoot towards it as high as we can and be sorry
and ashamed in our selues that we can shoot no higher of which we haue the holy Apostle as a patterne for our imitation who forgetting those things Philip. 3. 13 14. which were behind namely the former part of his race in the way of godlinesse and reaching foorth vnto those things which were before to wit that Christian perfection vnto which he had not yet attained did presse towards the marke for the price of the high calling of God in Iesus Christ And this is that Euangelicall and Sonne-like obedience which God now vnder the Couenant of grace requireth of vs which if we labour to performe he will accept of vs in Christ and remember our sinnes no more but will Ier 31 34. Mal. 3. 17. 2. Cor. 8. 12. spare vs as a man spareth his sonne who serueth him accept of the will for the deede and couering the imperfections of our obedience with Christs perfect righteousnesse and washing away the pollution and corruption of it in his most precious blood he will be well pleased with vs and approoue of vs as though we had attained to perfect righteousnesse §. Sect. 2 That a godly life chiefely consisteth in Euangelicall and filiall obedience and what this is And in this filiall obedience doth that godly life principally consist which we now intreate of for it is nothing else but a feruent desire sound resolution and sincere indeuour to conforme our whole liues in all holy obedience to Gods will that we may please him in all things and glorifie his holy name by our Christian conuersation or if we would haue a more full description of it A godly life is the life of a Christian who being regenerate quickned and illuminated by Gods Spirit and ingrafted into Christ thereby and by a liuely faith assuring him of Gods loue and his owne saluation doth in loue and thankefulnesse towards him desire resolue and indeuour to please him in all things by doing his will reuealed in his Word and to glorifie his name by walking before him in the duties of holinesse righteousnesse and sobriety with faith a pure heart and good conscience all the dayes of his life In which description we are to consider two things First the person that leadeth this godly life and secondly the actions in this life performed by him the person is first named and then described by his state and properties Concerning the first he that leadeth this life is the Christian onely For as for the life of Heathens and Pagans seeme it neuer so strict iust and glorious as of Socrates Aristides Cato Seneca and such like it is voyd of all true godlinesse and not accepted of God because it is ioyned with ignorance of the true God and Iesus Christ idolatry will-worship infidelitie and all kind of heathenish impiety §. Sect. 3 That the regenerate onely can lead a godly life Neither doe all that beare the name of Christians leade this godly life but they who are so not in name and profession onely but in deed and truth that is such only who are in that state and qualified with those properties which are set downe in the former description As first that he be regenerate for they that are vnregenerate cannot performe any dutie of a godly life which is pleasing and acceptable to God because being out of the Couenant their persons and consequently their actions are not accepted of him but are the slaues of Satan held captiue to doe his will the 2. Tim. 2. 26. Eph. 2. 1 3. children of wrath and enemies vnto God and his grace dead in trespasses and sins and therefore no more able to doe the duties of holinesse and righteousnesse then a dead man is able to doe the actions of the liuing In which respect the Apostle saith that we are not of our selues able to thinke a good 2. Cor. 3. 5. Phil. 2. 13. thought nor so much as to will that which is good because it is God onely which worketh in vs both the will and the deed Neither can we better our estate by our own strength for as the Prophet teacheth vs as well may the Aethiopian Ier. 13. 23. change his blacknesse and the Leopard his spots as we doe well that are accustomed to doe euill So that the regenerate man alone can lead a godly life or performe any dutie acceptable vnto God for first Abel was accepted and then his sacrifice and our persons must first be sanctified before they Gen. 4. 4. can please God by our works of holinesse For as in the ceremoniall law the touching of holy things did not sanctifie and clense the polluted person but the person polluted did make the holy things to become vncleane as Haggai speaketh so the workes which in themselues materially Hag. 2. 12 13. are good and holy doe not sanctifie the vnregenerate man that doth them but through the taint and pollution of his sinne they also are polluted and defiled Now vnto this regeneration two things are necessarily required First that we haue the Spirit of God dwelling in vs And secondly the sanctifying and sauing graces of the Spirit which alwayes doe accompany it for the Spirit of God is the Author of our regeneration which begetteth vs vnto God according to that of our Sauiour Except a man be borne of water and the Spirit he cannot enter into the Kingdome of God And that Iohn 3. 5. of the Apostle But ye are washed but ye are sanctified but yee are iustified in 1. Cor. 6. 11. 2. Cor. 3. 2 3. Tit. 3. 5. the name of the Lord Iesus and by the Spirit of our God It is the Spirit which mortifieth our sinnefull corruptions by applying vnto vs the vertue of Christs death and so by destroying the kingdome of sinne raiseth vs out of the state of death and which giueth vnto vs the spirituall life of grace by applying vnto vs the vertue of Christs resurrection which inableth vs to doe the actions of the liuing It is the Spirit that leadeth vs into all Iohn 16. 13. Rom. 8. 14. truth and hereby assureth vs that we are the sonnes of God seeing wee performe vnto him filiall obedience And therefore they who will walke in the wayes of godlinesse must haue this holy Spirit to bee their guide They who would outwardly mooue in the actions of piety and righteousnesse must haue this inward cause to stirre strengthen and support them for as well may a blinde man trauaile vncouth wayes without a leader or the body mooue without the soule as we goe in this Christian way or doe the workes of God vnlesse his holy Spirit be our guide and strength The which must mooue vs in the first place to labour earnestly to haue this Spirit dwelling in vs and to vse to this purpose that powerfull meanes of effectuall prayer seeing our heauenly Father hath promised to giue his holy Spirit to them that aske him as our Sauiour hath Luke 11. 13. taught
effectuall liuely and full of spirituall sap faith springeth as it were the mayne body of the tree and from it all other vertues and graces like the boughes and branches and the profession and practice of Christianity in good workes and the duties of godlinesse like the leaues and fruits doe proceed and grow For first we know God and his sauing attributes and then by faith we apprehend and beleeue them And vvhen by an effectuall knowledge we conceiue by a liuely faith beleeue them as that Iehouah who is our God is infinite in all perfection omnipotent omniscient omnipresent and all-sufficient most good and gracious most mercifull and true then doe we trust in him loue him and grow zealous of his glory obey and serue him praise and reioyce in him and in all things submit our selues to his good pleasure And so when we know and beleeue the former attributes ioyned with his iustice and hatred of sinne they worke in our hearts the true feare of God humility and awfull reuerence moouing vs to honour and worship him in spirit and truth to imbrace and practise all vertues and holy duties because they are acceptable vnto him and to flye and forsake all vice and wickednesse because they are odious in his sight So that sauing knowledge as the roote doth comprize in it the life and sap of all other graces whereof it is that in the Scriptures it is put for them all and comprehendeth in it alone all Religion and the duties of godlinesse Thus the Lord prohibiteth vs to glory in our wisedome strength and riches but let him that glorieth glory in this that hee Jer. 9. 24. vnderstandeth and knoweth me And our Sauiour telleth vs that This is life eternall to know God and whom hee hath sent Iesus Christ It is the maine Ioh. 17. 3. ground and cause of all true obedience and therefore the Lord before he giueth his Law which hee would haue kept and performed prefixeth a Preface wherein he describeth himselfe that his people might know him I am the Lord thy God which brought thee out of the land of Egypt and out of the house of bondage And Dauid exhorting his sonne Salomon vnto Gods seruice doth first require that he should know him And thou Salomon my sonne know thou the God of thy father and serue him with a perfect heart 1. Chro. 28. 9. and a willing mind Neither will any doe him chearefull seruice till they Heb. 11. 6. know what a mighty and gracious Lord he is and what bountifull wages both of temporall and eternall blessings hee giueth vnto those that faithfully serue him It comprizeth in it the summe of all Gods promises concerning his gifts temporall and spirituall in the couenant of Grace I will put my Law in their inward parts and write it in their hearts c. and Ier. 31. 33 34. they shall all know me from the least of them to the greatest of them saith the Lord. It is the cause of all other vertues for before we know them we cannot so much as desire them as our Sauiour implyeth in his speech to the woman of Samaria If thou knewest the gift of God and who it is that saith to Iohn 4. 10. thee Giue mee drinke thou wouldest haue asked of him and hee would haue giuen thee liuing water More particularly it is the cause of faith for we cannot come vnto him nor beleeue in God till we know him and what hee Heb. 11. 6. is And affiance for as the Psalmist saith They that know thy name will put Psal 9. 10. their trust in thee for thou Lord hast not forsaken them that seeke thee Of our loue of God for we must know how louing and louely he is before we can loue him and as the Apostle saith We loue God because hee loueth vs first And the vsuall speech is There is no loue of that of which there 1. Ioh. 4. 19. is no knowledge To which purpose Augustine saith that we may loue Ignoti nulla cupido Inuisa possumus cupere incognita nequaquam Rom. 10. 15. things vnseene but not vnknowne Of our inuocation and prayer for how shall they call vpon him in whom they haue not beleeued and how shall they beleeue in him of whom they haue not heard It is the cause also of our conuersion vnto God and of turning to him from our sinnes by true repentance For the first grace wrought in vs by the Spirit is illumination whereby our mindes are inlightened with a sight of our misery and our hearts inflamed with a desire to come out of it And to this purpose it is said that the Apostle Paul was sent vnto the Gentiles first to open their Act. 26. 18. eyes and to turne them from darkenesse to light and then to recouer them from the power of Satan vnto God c. In a word by knowledge of God we attaine vnto all grace and peace requisite to life and godlinesse according to that of the Apostle Grace and peace bee multiplied vnto you through the 2. Pet. 1. 2 3. knowledge of God and of Iesus our Lord according as his diuine power hath giuen vnto vs all things that pertaine vnto life and godlinesse through the knowledge of him that hath called vs to glory and vertue So that grace and glory holinesse and happinesse are deriued vnto vs by this sauing knowledge and that in such measure as this knowledge is vnto which we haue attained Heere in this life our knowledge is but begun and so with it our sanctification and glory and that being but in part these are imperfect also but when we haue this knowledge in perfection wee shall be perfect also in righteousnesse and blessednesse and when the dim glasse is remooued and we see God face to face and know as we are knowne then shall we in his presence 1 Cor. 13. 12. haue fulnesse of ioy and pleasures at his right hand for euermore To which purpose Psal 16. 11. 1. Ioh. 3. 2. the Apostle also saith Beloued now are we the sonnes of God and it doth not yet appeare what we shall be but we know that when he shall appeare we shall be like him for we shall see him as he is §. Sect. 3 That ignorance estrangeth vs from God and the life of grace and glory Contrariwise want of this knowledge and ignorance of God and his will maketh vs strangers from God and the Common wealth of Israel and Ier. 31. 33 34. Ioh. 10. 14 4 5. howsoeuer we be the Church yet to be no true members of the Church For God hath promised to all that are in the Couenant of grace that hee will put his Law in their inward parts and write it in their hearts and that they shall all know him from the least of them to the greatest of them And our Sauiour saith that he knoweth all the sheepe of his fold and is knowne of them
and that they know his voyce and are able to discerne it from the voyce of a stranger And as it makes vs strangers from God and the Couenant of grace so also from the life of God or the godly life which he commandeth as we see in the example of the Gentiles who hauing their vnderstanding darkned were alienated from the life of God through the ignorance that was in them because of the blindnesse of their heart And contrariwise thrusts vs headlong into all manner of sin for as the Apostle saith in the same place When the Gentiles through their ignorance were thus estranged frō the life of God they became past feeling and so gaue themselues ouer to lasciuiousnes Eph. 4. 18 19. to worke all vncleannesse with greedinesse So Hosea hauing set downe a Catalogue Hos 4. 1 6. of many grieuous sins which made the Iewes liable to Gods heauy iudgements doth after shew that the cause of all their sin and punishment was because they lacked the true knowledge of God in the land Whereof it also is that sinners of all kinds are included vnder the name of ignorant persons who know not God So the Psalmist Powre out thy wrath vpon Psal 79. 6. Ier 10. 25. the heathen that haue not knowne thee and vpon the kingdomes that haue not called vpon thy name And the Apostle saith that the Lord Iesus shall come with 2. Thes 1. 7 8. his mighty Angels in flaming fire to take vengeance on them that know not God And therfore if we would haue any portion in Gods sauing graces or part in heauenly glory if we would not be strangers from God and aliants from his Church if we would performe any duty of a godly life or not be caried headlong into all wickednesse if we would not be subiect to Gods iudgements and fearefull destruction nor exposed to the imprecations of the faithfull in this life nor to the vengeance of a terrible Iudge when Christ shall appeare at his second comming let vs not liue in ignorance but vse all our indeuour to attaine vnto the sauing knowledge of God and his will Neither let vs with ignorant people content our selues with our own good meanings and blind deuotions as our guides in godlines for then our seruice of God will be but will-worship and the carnall conceits of our owne braines and all our Religion being nothing else but bodily exercise and Esa 1. 12. 29. 13. ignorant superstition will be reiected of God as odious and abominable §. Sect. 4 That God is the chiefe Author and efficient cause of sauing knowledge Seeing therefore knowledge is so necessary vnto a godly life we will a little further insist vpon it shewing what it is and the nature and properties of it whereby we shall be the better able to labour after it in the vse of all good meanes and know to our comforts when we haue attained vnto it Sauing knowledge then is a grace of God wrought in vs by his holy Spirit which inlighteneth our minds to know those things which are reuealed of God and his will by his Word and workes that we may make an holy vse of it for the sanctifying of our hearts and direction of our liues in all duties of holinesse and righteousnesse Whereby we may perceiue that not nature but God onely is the Author and efficient cause of this knowledge and so much onely doe we know of God as we are taught of God According to that couenant of grace in which God promiseth that hee Ier. 31. 33 34. will put his Law in our inward parts and write it in our hearts and that wee shall know him from the least to the greatest So our Sauiour speaking of his Elect saith that they all shall be taught of God And againe No man knoweth the Iob. 6. 46. Sonne but the Father neither knoweth any man the Father but the Sonne and he vnto whomsoeuer the Sonne will reueale him Neither is this knowledge a naturall habit of the minde but a grace of God which is not purchased by vs or our owne merits or therefore bestowed vpon vs rather then others because God foresaw that we would vse it when we had it better then they but Gods free gift promised in the couenant of grace The which he worketh Ioel 2. 28. in vs first by sending his Sonne his true essentiall wisedome who hath reuealed vnto vs his Fathers will and being the great Prophet of the Church hath made knowne vnto vs the counsels of God and all things necessary for our Saluation and that not onely nor chiefly to the wise of the world but to the weake and simple according to that of our Sauiour I thanke thee O Father Lord of heauen and earth because thou hast hid these Matth. 11. 25. things from the wise and prudent and hast reuealed them vnto babes And secondly his holy Spirit who was and is sent from the Father and Sonne to teach and lead vs into all truth as our Sauiour promised his Apostles And this is that holy anointing of which the Apostle speaketh whereby wee Iob. 16. 13. know all things and neede not that any teach vs but as this anointing teacheth vs of all things And that Collyrium or precious eye-salue which Christ Apoc. 3. 18. promiseth to giue to the Angell of the Church of the Laodiceans to inlighten their blind eyes in the knowledge of the truth So the Apostle telleth vs that we cannot see nor conceiue the things which appertaine to Gods Kingdome but God hath reuealed them vnto vs by his Spirit for the 1. Cor. 2. 10. Spirit searcheth all things euen the deepe things of God And hence it is that he is called the Spirit of wisedome reuelation and illumination and the Ephe. 1. 17. Iohn 16. 13. Spirit of truth because he is both light and truth himselfe and also inlighteneth our mindes which are naturally full of darkenesse and leadeth vs into all truth needefull for our saluation And therefore if we would haue this sauing knowledge we must goe to the chiefe Fountaine and Author of it and pray often and earnestly that he will for his Sonne and by his holy Spirit take away our naturall blindnesse and open our eyes that we may see the wonderfull things of his Law Psal 119. 8. §. Sect. 5 Of the instrumentall causes of sauing knowledge The instrumentall causes of this knowledge are first the Booke of nature secondly the Booke of Grace The Booke of nature for euen this light being sanctified by Gods Spirit is helpefull to the regenerate for the reuealing of God and his will vnto them And that both the eternall booke of nature which is the conscience and the externall Booke which is the great volume of the creatures For if there be in all men some reliques of the light of nature shining in their consciences which conuince them that there is a God and that this God is most
99 100. then our teachers if wee haue more care then they in keeping Gods Commandements For the feare of the Lord is wisedome and to depart from euill is vnderstanding Iob. 28. 28. Psal 111. 10. And as Dauid saith The feare of the Lord is the beginning of wisedome a good vnderstanding haue all they that doe his Commandements CAP. VIII Of a liuely and iustifying faith which is the second mayne ground of a godly life §. Sect. 1 That without fayth we cannot performe any duties of a godly life THe second mayn ground of a godly life is a true and iustifying faith without which we cannot performe any duty acceptable to God For before our workes can be acceptable our persons must be accepted neither can the actions of an enemy be pleasing vnto him with whom he is at emnity before they be reconciled we must first bee good trees before we can bring forth any good fruits and haue our hearts sanctified by faith before we can doe the workes of sanctification For who can bring a cleane thing out of an vncleane Not one saith Iob. And what is Iob 14. 4. 15. 14. man that he should be cleane and he that is borne of a woman that he shoud be righteous As Eliphaz speaketh First Abels person must be accepted before Gen. 4. 4. his sacrifice could be acceptable And we cannot be accepted in our selues being dead in sinne and the children of wrath as well as others till being by faith vnited vnto Christ God accepteth of vs in his best Beloued Without Heb. 11. 6. faith therefore it is impossible to please God for till our persons please him our actions cannot Againe Whatsoeuer is not done of faith is sinne and our Rom. 14. 23. best actions which seeme most glorious in the eyes of men will not indure the sight of Gods iustice because they are imperfect and stayned with the filth of our corruptions till hauing applyed Christ vnto vs by faith our vnrighteousnesse bee couered with his perfect righteousnesse and our corruptions be washed away with his blood And this was the cause why the Iewes who followed after the law of righteousnesse did not attayne Rom. 9. 31 32. vnto the law of righteousnesse because they sought it not by faith in Christ but by their owne workes of the law Moreouer we are wilde vines till we be ingrafted into the true Vine Iesus Christ and can bring foorth no good fruit for without him we can doe nothing But being planted into this liuing Iohn 15. 5. Stocke by a liuely faith we deriue from him such sap of grace that wee are made fruitfull in all holy obedience and as without him we can doe nothing so with him we are enabled to the performance of all good duties according to that of the Apostle I can doe all things through Christ that Phil. 4. 13. strengthneth me Furthermore faith is the prime grace that is after we are illuminated wrought in vs by the Spirit and the onely liuing Fountaine from which all true obedience floweth for till it purifieth the heart we haue Act. 15. 9. Gal. 5. 6. not so much as a desire to please God in the performance of any duty nor any power to produce a good action till faith worketh by loue and giueth 1. Iohn 4. 19. vnto vs life and motion And finally without faith there can bee no loue for wee cannot loue God till first we be assured that he loueth vs and without loue there can be no obedience for loue is the fulfilling of Rom. 13. 8. the law and therefore the want of loue is the roote of all disobedience and transgression But when by faith we are perswaded of Gods loue in Christ then doe we loue God againe who hath so loued vs and this loue worketh in vs a desire to please him in all things both by hating and forsaking that which he hateth and by louing and imbracing that which he loueth and commandeth So that according to the measure of our faith such is the measure of our loue and if our loue be great or small such also will be the fruits of our obedience §. Sect. 2 That faith and a godly life are inseparable companions Faith therefore and a godly life are inseparable companions being vnited together in the bond of loue which is stronger then death it selfe Cant. 8. 6. and as a godly life cannot possibly bee without faith no more then the fruit without the tree or a wel-built house without a foundation or breath without a liuing body So neither can a liuely faith be seuered from a godly life For being by faith assured of Gods loue we cannot chuse but loue him againe and approue our loue by our new obedience Being by faith ingrafted into Christ and so become trees of righteousnesse of Gods owne planting we cannot but bring foorth good fruits For as an euill tree Mat. 7. 17 18. cannot bring forth good fruit so neither can a good tree bring foorth euill fruit seeing the fruit alwaies followeth the nature of the tree And as men doe not gather Grapes of thornes nor Figges of thistles so neither Crabs of Apple-trees nor wild and sowre grapes of a good and fruitfull vine Finally faith and the fruits of obedience in a godly life are the one the cause and the other the effect which haue such mutuall relation that they argue and proue eyther the presence or absence one of another as if there be a Father there must needs be a child of which he is a father and if there be a child there must needs be a father of whom he is a child If there be a Sunne there must needs be beames spreading from it and if there bee beames there must needs be a Sunne from which they are spred If there be a liuing body it must needs moue and breathe and if there be a vitall breath then must there needs be a liuing body from which it is breathed And therefore as we may conclude that if there be no father sonne nor body there can be no child beames nor breath so where there is no faith there can be no fruits of obedience seeing these as effects doe arise and spring frō that cause And contrariwise as we may infer that if there be no child beames or breath there can be no father light or body so also that if there be no fruits of obedience in a godly life there can be no faith but onely some shew and shadow of it as a man though wanting a child is like a father the shaddow of the sunne in the water like vnto the sunne in the firmament and a dead carkasse like a liuing body nor yet a godly life Jam. 2. 18 26. and true obedience without faith but some glorious resemblance of it in outward appearance As a fatherlesse boy is like a child who hath a father the lightening hath some similitude of the beames of
haue in the first place our hearts purged and purified from the filth of sinne For naturally our hearts are full of all vncleanenesse fountaines of maliciousnes and sinkes of sinne spiritually blind and foolish but vnto all impiety witty sharp-sighted and as the Prophet speaketh wicked and despightfull aboue all things auerse vnto all Ier. 17. 9. good and prone to all euill dead and dull to Gods seruice and full of life and vigour to the seruice of the diuell the world and our owne carnall concupiscence Finally they swarme with all noysome lusts as pride hypocrisie couetousnesse voluptuousnesse ambition malice enuie disdaine worldly loue and all manner of carnall corruption And therefore it is most necessary that our hearts be first cleansed and purged before wee can offer vnto God any acceptable seruice for what can issue out of these sinks and puddles of corruption but all manner of sinfull impiety and what streames of Gods seruice so pure in themselues which will not bee polluted if they runne thorow these dennes and ditches of all abominations Now this purging of the heart consisteth in the mortification of the flesh and its sinfull lusts and in spirituall renewing vnto holinesse and new obedience whereby we begin to hate all that euill which we formerly loued and to loue that good which we formerly hated to loath the tyranny of sinne and Satan vnto which with all willingnesse we subiected our selues in time past and to imbrace the true seruice of God in all sincerity which before we eyther neglected or performed after a formall cold and careles manner And finally haue our hearts and affections weaned from the loue of the world and earthly vanities vpon which in the dayes of our ignorance wee wholy doted as on our chiefe delight and treasure because we now see that they are vncertaine momentany and mutable worthlesse and vnprofitable yea to those that set their hearts vpon them hurtfull and pernicious And contrariwise adhere and cleaue vnto the Lord with all our soules as being all-sufficient and infinite in all perfection chusing him for our portion and inheritance our rocke and refuge and farre preferring him before all earthly treasures and delights And thus the Lord when he called Abraham out of Vr of the Chaldeans to bee his seruant withdraweth his heart from the loue of worldly things as being insufficient to preserue him from euill or to furnish him with any true good by promising that he himselfe would be his shield and exceeding great reward And thus he perswadeth him vnto vprightnesse of Gen. 15. 1. heart and to walke before him in holinesse of life because if hee would chuse him for his portion he should finde him almighty and all-sufficient and therefore able to preserue him from all danger and to relieue and Gen. 17. 1. supply all his wants though for his profession and practice of Gods true Religion he should be abandoned of all worldly helpes exposed to the malice of many and mighty enemies And thus Moses contemned the world and refusing the pleasures of Egypt and the honours of Pharaohs Court adhered vnto God and his pure Religion chusing rather to suffer Heb. 11. 25. affliction with his people then to inoy the pleasures of sinne for a season So Dauid being in his heart and affections like a weaned child and lothing the worlds brests from which he had formerly sucked the sweet milk of earthly Psal 131. 2. vanities with so much delight doth with all his heart and soule cleaue vnto the Lord chusing him for his portion and inheritance and esteeming him as his sole treasure The Lord saith he is the portion of mine inheritance Psal 16. 5 6. and of my cup thou maintainest my lot The lines are falne vnto me in pleasant places yea I haue a goodly heritage And when he was forsaken of all worldly helpes in the day of trouble hee was not like worldlings as a man forlorne and desperate but he cryed vnto the Lord and said Thou Psal 142. 5. 119. 57. art my refuge and my portion in the land of the liuing So elsewhere he professeth that all his ioy and comfort was in the Lord and the assurance of his loue the which was better and greater then was incident to worldlings in all their posterity There be many saith he that say Who will shew Psal 4. 5 6 7. vs any good Lord lift thou vp the light of thy countenance vpon vs. Thou hast put gladnesse in my heart more then in the time that their corne and their wine increased And thus the Church in the Lamentation was not in her greatest misery left hopelesse and helpelesse but cleauing to the Lord with her heart shee cryeth out The Lord is my portion saith my soule therefore Lam. 3. 24. will I hope in him §. Sect. 6 Of the causes of the hearts purity And these are the things wherein this purity of heart doth consist The principall efficient which worketh it in vs is the whole Trinity the Father Sonne and holy Spirit God the Father beginneth this sanctification and holinesse in our hearts by taking away their hardnesse and making them soft and tender and by giuing vnto vs his Spirit to purify them from the filth of corruption and to quicken them in the life of grace according to that promise I will giue them one heart and I will put a new spirit Ezech. 11. 19. 36. 26. within you and I will take the stony heart out of their bodies and will giue them an heart of flesh And againe After those daies saith the Lord I will put my Ier. 31. 33. Law in their inward parts and write it in their hearts And therefore if we would haue this grace we must with the Apostle haue our recourse to God praying for our selues as he did for the Thessalonians The very God of peace sanctifie you wholy and I pray God your whole spirit and soule and 1. Thes 5. 23. body be preserued blamelesse vnto the comming of the Lord Iesus Christ God the Sonne purifieth our hearts by shedding his precious blood that it might be a Lauer of regeneration wherein our polluted hearts might be cleansed For so deepely are they engrayned in the skarlet dye of sinne that nothing else will take away their spots and staines and bring them vnto snowy whitenesse It is onely his Crosse that crucifieth these carnall corruptions and the vertue of his death that killeth and mortifieth sin in vs. And this is that Fountaine which the Lord promiseth should be opened Zach. 13. 1. to the house of Dauid and Hierusalem for sinne and for vncleanenesse in which if our hearts be not washed they will remaine in their naturall filthinesse God the holy Ghost purifieth our hearts by vniting them to Christ by dipping and washing them in this Fountaine of his blood and so maketh Ioh. 3. 5. the death and merits of our Sauiour which are sufficient
in themselues effectuall vnto vs for our purification For as the Poole of Bethesda had Ioh. 5. by the mouing of the Angell vertue in it to cure diseases but yet did good to none but those only which were put into it so though the blood of Christ be sufficient to cure the heart of the leprosie of sinne and to make it cleane yet it is of no efficacie vnto any sauing those who are by the holy Spirit dipped and washed in it seeing like the poore lame cripple wee are naturally impotent and cannot make any vse of these meanes of our recouery vnles we be assisted by the holy Spirit The instrumentall cause of this purificatiō is a liuely faith wrought in vs by the Spirit to this end the which we may apply vnto our selues Christ his death and precious bloodshed for our spirituall purging from sinne which is perfected in our iustification in respect of the guilt and punishment and begun in our sanctification by purifying our hearts from their natural corruptions Act. 15. 9. In which respect faith is said to purifie our hearts not materially or formally by any vertue inherent in it selfe but instrumentally by applying vnto vs the vertue of Christs death and bloodshed And vntill we haue this faith wrought in vs by the Spirit whereby we are assured of the riches of Gods grace in this life and glory and happinesse in the life to come our hearts remaine it their naturall filthinesse and are full of all carnall and worldly lusts neither is it possible that they should be perswaded to contemne the baites of worldly vanities and to tread vnder-foot the pleasures of sinne with which they are naturally so much delighted till they haue an offer of better things from God and haue some assurance that vpon their renouncing of the world and fleshly lusts and seeking after these richer gifts they shall most certainely attaine vnto them according to that of the Apostle Blessed be God and the Father of our Lord Iesus Christ 1. Pet. 1. 4. who according to his abundant mercy hath begotten vs againe vnto a liuely hope by the resurrection of Iesus Christ from the dead to an inheritance incorruptible and vndefiled and that fadeth not away reserued in heauen for you And this purged Moses heart from the loue of the world and made him willing to suffer afflictions with the people of God because with the eye of faith he looked vpon the recompence of reward And this caused the Saints of God Heb. 11. 25. to content themselues to dwel in tabernacles not to regard any earthly mansions because they looked for a City which hath foundations whose builder Heb. 11. 9 10. and maker is God the holy Martyrs to indure with patience ioy most cruell persecution not accepting deliuerance because by faith they were perswaded that they should obtaine a better resurrection Of which comforts of Heb. 11. 33. fayth wee haue great neede to be thereby supported vnder the Crosse and perswaded vnto the contempt of the world seeing Iesus the Author and finisher of our faith who was free from all worldly lusts and carnall corruption was by his heauenly hopes incouraged in his earthly sufferings for as the Apostle testifieth He for the ioy that was set before him endured the crosses despising the shame and is set downe at the right hand of the Heb. 12. 2. Throne of God CAP. XI Of the signes of a pure heart and the meanes whereby we may both obtaine and preserue it §. Sect. 1 Of the inward signes of a pure heart ANd these are the causes of a pure heart The signes whereby we may know whether our hearts bee thus purified or no are either inward or outward The inward signes are first the loue of holinesse and purity for as when our hearts are defiled with naturall corruption we loath sanctitie and loue and delight in impure lusts and the pleasures of sinne so when our hearts are purified by faith they are chiefly pleased with those things which please God and louing purity and piety they delight in the exercises of holinesse and righteousnesse And therefore when we loue purity and holinesse it is an euident signe that our hearts are pure and holy seeing the cause of loue is likenesse and where there is no similitude there can be no loue The second signe is hatred of sinne which vpon the same ground we naturally loue especially of those sinnes vnto which our corrupted nature is most inclined because they most molest and trouble vs and polluting the heart with their defilements hinder most our progresse in sanctification and holinesse And thus Paul when his heart was purified abhorred all corruption and delighted in Gods Law hating that sin most which he did most commit because like a Rebell it warred against the law Rom. 7. 15. of his minde and made him captiue to the law of sinne The third signe is our carefull auoyding all meanes and occasions of spirituall pollution for as he that hath filthy hands careth not to handle filthy things but when they are washed cleane will not willingly touch that which will defile them so an impure heart shunneth not the occasions and meanes of impurity because they cannot make it worse then it is in it owne nature in the quality though they may increase the pollution in respect of the degree yea rather being like filthy hogges naturally inclined vnto filthinesse they seeke the occasions of more vncleannesse and purposely wallow themselues in the sinke and puddle of sinne as often as they haue opportunity of satisfying their carnall lusts More especially he that hath a pure heart delighteth in the company of those who are pure and holy by whose Christian conuersation his purity and sanctification may be more and more increased and cannot indure the society of the wicked no not when like filthy dogs they fawne vpon him because he knoweth that the leprosie of sinne is of an infectious and spreading nature that he who toucheth pitch shall be defiled with it and that worldly men most defile when they most fawne and doe vs least hurt when they are farthest from vs. §. Sect. 2 Of the outward signes of a pure heart The outward signes of a pure heart are the fruits of sanctification and holinesse for the tree is knowne by the fruits and the fountaine by the Mat. 7. 17 18. streames that flow from it whether they be good or euill for a good tree cannot bring foorth euill fruit nor an euill tree good fruit as our Sauiour hath taught vs. If therefore the fruits we beare be pure and holy it is an euident signe that our hearts be purified and sanctified if the streames be cleere and sweete such also is the fountaine from which they spring and if the coyne wee outwardly spend and vse in our Christian trading one with another be currant of pure metall and the right stamp then is the treasury of our
corrupted and disabled cannot be a sufficient ground of a godly life till after our regeneration it be renewed and restored in some measure vnto that integrity and perfection which it had in our first creation And this we call good conscience which is a maine foundation of godlinesse guiding and inabling vs to the performance of all good duties which God requireth In speaking whereof we will first shew what it is and then the causes of it the effects and fruits which spring from it the properties and signes whereby wee may know it and the meanes by which we may obtaine it if it bee wanting or preserue and keepe it if we already haue it Concerning the first A good conscience is that which being renewed by Gods Spirit and a liuely faith applying vnto vs the vertue of Christs death and obedience doth speake peace and truly testifie vnto vs according to the Scriptures that we are redeemed out of the hands of all our enemies reconciled vnto God iustified sanctified and shall perseuere in grace vnto saluation and that all our actions are warranted by the Word and accepted of God in Iesus Christ though in themselues imperfect whereby we are comforted in all things made cheerefull and diligent in Gods seruice and willing to doe all things which may be pleasing vnto him The causes of a good conscience are diuers The principall efficient is God the Father Sonne and holy Spirit The Father bestoweth this gift vpon vs who as in the beginning he first created and placed it in vs as an vncorrupted Iudge and vnpartiall witnesse betweene him and vs so it is he alone that doth renew and repaire the ruines thereof contracted through the fall of our first parents by which together with all other faculties conscience was corrupted and either so deadded seared and benummed that it had no sense and feeling at all or when it awakened out of this deadly swowne did nothing but accuse and terrifie vs or vniustly excuse and incourage vs in our sinfull courses by presenting vnto vs false comforts §. Sect. 2 Of the meritorious cause of a good conscience The meritorious cause of it is God the Sonne and our Sauiour Iesus Christ who satisfying Gods iustice and appeasing his wrath by his death and obedience freed vs from the guilt and punishment of our sinnes reconciled vs vnto God and made our peace with him vpon which followeth peace of conscience and freedome from the accusations and terrours of it For when by the Law of God or light of nature it is set a-worke to Rom. 8. 1 33 34. affright and disquiet vs in regard of our sinnes then shewing our pardon sealed by the blood of Christ it is calmed and quieted hauing nothing to lay to our charge which Christ our surety hath not satisfied for vs. Whereof it is that our Sauiour was prophetically named The Prince of peace and prefigured vnder the type of Melchizedech because hee is not Esa 9. 6. onely the King of righteousnesse by whom we are iustified but also King of Heb. 7. 2. peace as the Apostle speaketh who making our peace with God did thereby also procure for vs peace of conscience For the Iudge hath no authority to condemne nor the witnesse to accuse nor the Iaylour to imprison nor the executioner to punish and torment when the supreme Soueraigne King of heauen and earth being satisfied by the sufferings of his Sonne hath sent vs his free pardon and wee haue pleaded it in the Court of conscience Yea rather the Iudge doth then acquit and absolue vs and the witnesse saith nothing against vs but as a messenger of good things doth testifie vnto vs this ioyfull tydings And hence it is that our Sauiour was no sooner borne vnto vs but the holy Angels were sent as Gods Heralds to proclaime this peace Glory bee vnto God in the highest and in earth peace good will towards men The which peace our Sauiour Luk. 2. 14. wrought as a Mediatour betweene God and vs by satisfying his iustice and offering himselfe as an all-sufficient sacrifice for the sinnes of all his elect So the Apostle saith It pleased the Father that in him should all fulnesse dwell And hauing made peace through the blood of his Crosse by him Col. 1. 19 20. to reconcile all things to himselfe And else-where he affirmeth that we were without Christ being alients from the Common-wealth of Israel and strangers Eph. 2. v. 12. to 18. from the Couenant of promise hauing no hope and without God in the world but that now in Christ Iesus we who sometimes were farre off are made nigh by the blood of Christ For hee is our peace who hath made both one and hath broken downe the middle wall of partition betweene God and vs Hauing abolished in his flesh the enmity euen the Law of Commandements contained in ordinances to make in himselfe of twayne one new man so making peace And that he might reconcile both vnto God in one body by the crosse hauing slaine the enmity thereby And came and preached peace vnto vs both them which were a farre off and to them that were nigh And thus working our peace with God he brought also peace to our consciences when as by his blood hee had clensed them from the guilt and punishment of sinne for if the blood of Bulls and Goates sanctified to the outward purifying of the flesh how much Heb. 9. 13 14. more shall the blood of Christ who through his eternall Spirit offered himselfe without spot to God purge our consciences from dead workes to serue the liuing God Finally the conscience is renewed and sanctified by God the holy Ghost whilest he applieth Christ and all his benefits the vertue of his death and precious blood and maketh them effectuall for the purging of our consciences from all sinnefull corruption and spirituall defilements that wee may be inabled to performe pure and acceptable seruice vnto God §. Sect. 3 Of the instrumentall causes of a good conscience For the effecting whereof he vseth as his instruments the preaching of the Gospell and administration of the Sacraments and a liuely faith which by them both made effectuall by the inward operation of the Spirit is begotten and also confirmed and increased in vs. First the preaching of the Gospell is the instrument which the Spirit vseth whereby a good conscience is wrought in vs for when the Law preached and the curse threatned like a strange winde and tempest hath rent the mountaines and broken in pieces the rockes of our proud and hard hearts and as the earthquake and fire which Elias saw and felt hath terrified the conscience with the guilt of sinne and caused vs to hide our faces from Gods presence 1. King 19. 11 12 then the still voice of the Gospell causing these stormes to cease doth quiet and calme the conscience so as wee can without terrour yea with much ioy and comfort heare the voyce of God
haue others do vnto vs and consequently seeing we desire that our neighbours should with all the powers of their minde and body aduance as much as in them lieth our good in all things respecting our soules bodies and states Iustice and righteousnes requireth the same at our hands towards them namely that to the vttermost of our power we be euer ready to doe all things which tend to their good and to the preseruation of their honour person life purity chastity wealth and good name not so much as intertaining a thought or first motion in our minds or hearts which in any of these or other respects may tend to their hurt and preiudice Of which Iustice or righteousnesse there are two parts the one distributiue whereby we doe giue vnto euery one their due and that which of right appertaineth vnto them in which is to be obserued a geometricall proportion which hath respect in this distribution vnto euery man according to their place person and such other relations and circumstances and is in all things carried with due regard of equity and moderation The other is commutatiue which is vsually exercized in commerce and mutuall dealings and trading one with another as in changing borrowing lending buying selling letting setting and such like affaires of this life The generall rule whereof is that we keepe from no man his right but pay euery man his debt and due In which is to be obserued an Arithmeticall proportion performing all these duties of Iustice in a strict equality without any respect of place or person §. Sect. 2 Of the dutie of sobriety towards our selues The other maine duty is sobriety which comprehendeth vnder it all duties which respect our owne persons the which in a generall sense as 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Marke 5. 15. Luke 8. 35. Acts 26. 25. Tit. 1. 8. 2. 12 it is to be here vnderstood signifieth soundnesse of minde which ordereth all things to the good and safety of our persons and state And thus the word which is translated sobriety is taken in the Scriptures for a sound minde so it is said that the demoniacke was by our Sauiour Christ restored to his right minde And the Apostle saith that he was not mad but spake forth the words of truth and sobernesse that is of a right and sound minde which tended to the safety and saluation of himselfe and others and exhorteth all men to be wise vnto sobriety or to thinke soberly not straining Rom. 12. 3. their wits aboue the measure of their gifts which is the next way to cracke and lose them And thus elsewhere hee opposeth these two the one against 2. Cor. 5. 13. the other to be sober and to be besides our selues Sobriety therefore is a vertue or habit proceeding from a sound minde spirituall wisedome and iudgement whereby wee are enabled to rule and order our selues with all our powers and faculties of minde and body and all things else about which they are exercised to our good safety and saluation First it ruleth and ordereth the minde to the vsing of all good meanes whereby it may be more and more inlightened with sauing knowledge the memory as a faithfull register to retaine good things the conscience to performe its office rightly in excusing and accusing the will to chuse the good and refuse the euill and in all things to be conformable to the holy will of God the affections to couet after spirituall and heauenly things with vnlimited desires and temporall good things with moderation temperance and purity and the body in all holinesse and honour that it may be a fit temple for the holy Ghost and a ready instrument vnto the soule for all good actions And thus it ruleth the whole man and euery faculty and part of him as they are exercised about their seuerall and particular obiects causing the minde to approue or condemne the memory to retaine or cast out the conscience to accuse or excuse the will to chuse or reiect the affections to loue and desire or to hate and contemne the body to doe or leaue vndone all things good or euill when they are propounded vnto them And in respect of these seuerall sorts of obiects this vertue of sobriety hath place and is commanded in euery precept of the second Table For as it ruleth and ordereth vs about the preseruation of our honour and authority it is required in the first Commandement as about the good preseruation and saluation of our liues our soules and bodies in the sixth as about our chastity purity temperance and sobriety in the vse of meates drinkes and apparrell in the seuenth as about our goods and possessions either in getting or vsing them righteously and iustly in the eighth as about the preseruing of our good name in the ninth as about withstanding the first motions and suggestions vnto sinne and the recouering of originall righteousnesse and holy concupiscence in our mindes and hearts in the tenth and last §. Sect. 3 Of the duties of charity But seeing our Sauiour hath comprized both these duties of righteousnesse and sobriety vnder charity and hath made loue the whole summe of Matth. 22. 39. 19. 19. Gal. 5. 14. the Law our loue towards God of the first Table and our loue towards our selues and our neighbours of the second Table I will consider of them both vnder this one first generally and afterward more specially in euery seuerall Commandement For charity and true loue towards our selues mooueth vs out of a sound and right minde to performe in thought word and deed all good duties which tend to our safetie and saluation and charity towards our neighbours as it mooueth vs to loue them as our selues so to performe all duties of righteousnesse and mercy which we doe vnto our selues or would haue others doe vnto vs. Now this charity is a gift or grace of God infused into our hearts by his holy Spirit which out of the sense of Gods loue towards vs in Christ working true and feruent loue towards them againe doth mooue vs to loue our selues and all men as our selues and as Christ hath loued vs for Gods sake and in obedience to his Commandement It is a gift of God and no naturall habit for naturally as wee are haters of God and men so euen of our selues neither is any hatred of an enemy so hurtfull and pernicious vnto our soules and bodies as carnall selfe-loue which is a chiefe cause and meanes of depriuing vs heere of all grace and of glory and happinesse in the life to come And therefore the Apostle exhorting vs to loue one another telleth vs where we must haue this gift Let vs saith he loue one another 1. Ioh. 4. 7. for loue is of God Neither is it a common gift of God but a sanctifying and sauing grace of his holy Spirit for as the loue of God towards vs as the cause so our loue towards God as the effect of it is shed
when as we carefully obserue what sinnes most distract vs in all good exercises and hinder our growth in godlinesse and what they bee into which through frailty we most often fall and whereby we haue beene most ouertaken And when wee haue by these meanes taken notice of them we must with most diligence and resolution arme our selues against them seeing by them wee haue most dishonoured God and wounded our owne consciences and are in greatest danger to be ouercome and led captiue to hell and destruction being like bordering enemies which haue a strong party in our selues and haue best opportunity to take all aduantages against vs. §. Sect. 2 Of the meanes to work in our hearts a true hatred of sin Now the meanes whereby we may be armed against all sinnes in generall and these in particular are many The first and principall is to worke our hearts to a deadly and vnreconcilable hatred against them by meditating of the infinite Maiesty and goodnesse of God against whom they are committed how great and glorious he is in himselfe and how good and gracious vnto vs who hath giuen vs all the good things which wee inioy or hope for yea his chiefest Iewell his best beloued Sonne to die for vs By considering that it is aboue all things most hatefull and displeasing vnto God and maketh all creatures in whom it is most odious though neuer so much beloued of him As we see in the example of the reiected Iewes Adam cast out of Paradise the Sonne of God himselfe who bearing our sinnes did beare all his Fathers wrath and could not bee reconciled till by his sufferings he had made full satisfaction to his Iustice That it is most haynous and capitall being committed against so infinite a Maiesty as appeareth by those dreadfull and eternall punishments which Gods righteous iudgement inflicteth on those that commit it in this world and the world to come that it is the greatest folly in the world hazarding the eternall saluation of our most precious soules which are of more worth then many Monarchies and plunging them into hell and euerlasting destruction for the momentany and vncertaine fruition of earthly vanities That it pierced the Lord of life and nailed him to the Crosse causing him to be condemned that came to saue vs and to be put to a shamefull death who came to giue vnto vs euerlasting life That the deepe dye of it so stained our soules that nothing could wash away the filthy spots that it left behind it but the precious blood of Christ That it vexeth and grieueth the good Spirit of God dwelling in vs by defiling our bodies and soules which are his Temples doth make him weary of his lodging That aboue all things it delighteth the deuill as being the child and darling of this hellish parent and maketh vs to become fit roomes for him to reuell in and to passe his time with most delight Let vs consider of the manifold euils which it causeth vnto vs both priuatiue and positiue in this life and in the life to come For it depriueth vs of all good and bringeth with it all euill It separateth betweene our God and vs and turneth the greatest loue into the most dangerous enmity It defaceth his Image in vs and stampeth vpon vs the image of the deuill It frustrateth the end of our creation which was to glorifie God by our worshipping and seruing him yea of our Redemption by Christ if wee liue and die in it without repentance It casteth vs like out-lawes out of Gods protection and maketh vs like slaues subiect to the tyranny of Satan It is the cause of all the euils of punishment which are inflicted vpon the creatures in this life and the life to come It blindeth the minde and hardeneth the heart debarreth vs of all sweete communion with God and depriueth vs of the inestimable comforts of his holy Spirit It weakeneth our faith and woundeth our conscience taketh away all inward peace and filleth our hearts with shame and sorrow and our faces with blushing or which is worse with impudency It depriueth vs of Gods eternall and most comfortable presence and of the ioyes of his heauenly Kingdome and plungeth vs headlong into hell and destruction Finally let vs adde vnto these whatsoeuer other euils we can imagine and then conclude that sinne as the cursed mother of them all hath bred them in her hellish wombe §. Sect. 3 Of the meanes whereby we may be strengthened against sinne And when by these meditations wee haue wrought our hearts vnto a true hatred of all sinne there are other meanes to be vsed of vs that wee may be strongly armed against it As first that wee doe thorowout the whole day entertaine and nourish good and holy desires and firme and constant resolutions that we will resist and withstand it in what manner or forme so euer it shall set vpon vs. For nothing will bring more easie and assured victory then Christian courage and resolution to fight and striue against it grounded not on our owne strength but vpon the power and promises of God and that we will let passe no good meanes vnassayed whereby we may ouercome Secondly wee must keepe a daily and continuall Pro. 4. 23. Heb. 3. 13. watch ouer our selues and especially ouer our hearts that wee be not surprised on a sudden nor hardened or hartened in any wicked course through the deceitfulnesse of sinne of which we shall haue occasion to speake more fully heereafter Thirdly we must be no lesse carefull in flying all occasions inducements and prouocations vnto sinne then the sinfull acts themselues for if we wilfully cast our selues into these tentations it is iust with God to deliuer vs vnto euill Fourthly we must make conscience of committing of the least sinnes which being admitted will make roome for the greatest and withstand sinnes in the first degrees as soone as they are suggested by the deuill the world or our owne flesh casting out this hellish wild-fire before it hath by the least abode inflamed our concupiscence or before this seede of impiety hath gotten any warmth or growth Fifthly we must be so bold and valorous in Gods assistance as that in the meane time we be suspicious and fearefull in respect of our owne weakenesse and frailty and the might and malice of our innumerable Pro. 28. 13. 1. Cor. 10. 12. Phil. 2. 13. enemies taking good heede whilest we stand of falling and working out our saluation with feare and trembling Sixthly wee must daily walke with God and carry our selues continually as in his sight and presence who not onely taketh notice of all our actions but also will cause vs one day to giue a strict account of them either to reward them Gen. 5. 24. Gen. 17. 1. 2. Cor. 5. 10. graciously if they bee good or to punish them seuerely if they be euill Lastly let vs daily and continually resigne our selues ouer into the hands of God who is
haue betimes performed this duty priuately by themselues CAP. XVII Of singing Psalmes and reading the Scriptures in the family §. Sect. 1 That singing of Psalmes is inioyned in the Scriptures and practised by the faithfull VNto prayer we adioyne that holy exercise of singing Psalmes in the family which though it bee not in practice next in order according to ordinary vse yet I would not seuer it from the former seeing it is a religious duty and like vnto it being a notable meanes whereby wee praise God and render vnto him thankes for all his benefits And though it be not tyed vnto any part of the day nor yet euery day to bee necessarily performed and though in no family it be alwayes alike seasonable as in the time of mourning for some priuate or publike calamity but in the time of reioycing when we haue occasion to praise Gods holy name for his gifts and blessings conferred on vs according to the Apostles rule Is any man among Iam. 5. 13. you afflicted let him pray Is any merry let him sing Psalmes And though in some families it can seldome be done for want of leasure and opportunity vnlesse it be on the Sabbath and in some places not then for want of conuenient company to ioyne together yet where it may conueniently be performed in respect of company leasure and other occasions it is an excellent duty which is no wayes to be neglected For first it is inioyned in the Scriptures The Prophet Dauid in many places exhorteth to it O come saith he let vs sing vnto the Lord let vs make a ioyfull noise to the Psal 95 1 2. Rocke of our saluation Let vs come before his presence with thanksgiuing and Psal 100. 1 2. make a ioyfull noise vnto him with Psalmes Make a ioyfull noise vnto the Lord all ye lands serue the Lord with gladnesse come before his presence with singing Sing aloud vnto God our strength make a ioyfull noise vnto the God of Iacob c. Psal 81. 3. 47. 6. 68. 4. Esa 42. 10. Sing vnto him a new song play skilfully with a lowd noise So the Prophet Esay Sing vnto the Lord a new song and his praise from the end of the earth And Ieremy Sing ye vnto the Lord praise ye the Lord for he hath deliuered the Ier. 20. 13. soule of the poore out of the hands of euill doers The Apostle Paul likewise exhorteth vs to speake vnto the Lord in Psalmes and Hymnes and spirituall Eph. 5. 19. Iam. 5. 13. Songs singing and making melody in our hearts to the Lord. Of which wee haue the Saints of God in all ages examples for our imitation in the time both of the Law and the Gospell and in the purest ages of the primitiue Church who were complained on to the persecuting Emperours for their diligent performance of this duty day and night Yea our Sauiour Christ himselfe at the celebration of his last Supper is sayd with his Disciples to haue concluded that holy action with singing of a Psalme Which examples that we may imitate let vs further consider in the next place that it is a notable meanes to rowze vp our drowzie and dead hearts and by the sweete melody affecting our outward sense to rauish them with ioyfull delight and make them cheerefull in Gods seruice which was the cause why Elizeus being to prophecie and finding his Spirit dulled with the vnpleasing presence of the idolatrous King who together 2. King 3. 15. with Iehosaphat was to haue the benefit of his good indeuours desireth a Musician to play before him to stirre vp his heart vnto the more cheerefull performance of this duty Secondly it is an acceptable seruice vnto God as being a singular meanes to glorifie him when as our hearts are filled with thankfulnesse and our mouthes with his praises according to that of the Psalmist Whoso offereth praise glorifieth me the which in the Psal 50. 23. same Psalme he preferreth before oblations and burnt sacrifices Finally Vers 13. 14. Apoc. 5. 9. 14. 3. it is an heauenly exercise of the glorified Saints which we shall performe with them in that place of ioy and happinesse if wee take delight in it whilst we liue in the earth §. Sect. 2 How we may sing Psalmes in a right maner Now if we would performe this in an acceptable maner our care must be that it be done with our soules as wel as our tongue and lips And first with our minds both vnderstanding what we sing so as we may say with the Apostle I will sing with the Spirit and I will sing with the vnderstanding also and applying our minds vnto it with due attention not suffering them to be carried with wandring thoughts Secondly we must sing with our hearts also according to that of the Apostle Speake to your selues in Psalmes singing Eph. 5. 19. and making melody in your heart vnto the Lord which elsewhere he calleth singing with grace in our hearts to the Lord the which Dauid practised Col. 3. 16. I will praise thee saith he with my whole heart And this we shall doe if we Psal 138. doe apply and fit them to the matter of the Psalme and put on the same affection which Dauid had in penning them as humility in the confession of sinne feruencie of desire in petitions and suites alacrity and cheerefulnesse in prayses and thanksgiuings assent and beliefe in prophecies and predictions teachablenesse and willingnesse to learne in doctrines and instructions readinesse to obey in commandements and exhortations c. and at all times and in all things reuerence of Gods maiesty in whose presence we performe this duty In the meane time we must take heed that we doe not apply his imprecations which were vttered by a propheticall spirit against those who were desperate enemies to God as well as Dauid against our priuate enemies with a reuengefull desire that those euils may befall them seeing our Sauiour hath taught vs to pray for them But wee must either make vse of them for doctrine and instruction or if we apply them it must not be against particular persons but against all those whatsoeuer whom the Lord in his wisedome knoweth to be desperate enemies vnto him and his Church Secondly our care must bee that we doe not make it a bodily exercise singing Psalmes for recreation only and as wee doe other songs for meere pleasure and sensuall delight but we must performe it as a religious duty of Gods seruice and striue in it to please him rather then our selues We must not seeke to delight the eare and affect the heart with the ayre musicke and sweetnesse of the tune but that there being an harmony betweene it and the voyce we make sweete melody in Gods eares which if it be wanting our best musicke as one saith is no Aug. Confess lib. 10. cap 33. more acceptable to God then the barking of Dogs the lowing
Cor. 5. 10. Math. 12. 36. will take an account of vs for euery idle word which wee esteeme as winde and therefore much more will call vnto a reckoning our precious time spent in idlenesse and vanitie and will make vs exceede in euerlasting punishments as wee haue in this life exceeded in momentanie pleasures Apoc. 18. 7. Luk. 6. 25. §. Sect. 3 That they must be so vsed as that they may refresh the body not pamper the flesh The third caution to be obserued in our recreations is that wee vse them so as they may refresh the body but not pamper the flesh and Gal. 5. 17. Rom. 8. 12 13. 1. Pet. 2. 11. Gal. 5. 13. that wee so indeuour by them to cheare our friend as that wee doe not strengthen our enemie For the flesh lusteth against the spirit and the spirit against the flesh and therefore wee must not vse such recreations or after such a manner as may feede and fat it with carnall delight neither are wee debters vnto it to liue after it seeing this life bringeth death but rather as the Apostle exhorteth let vs abstaine from fleshly lusts because they fight against our soules and so vse this gracious liberty which God hath giuen vs that the spirituall part may take occasion of doing good duties and not the flesh of plunging vs into sinne §. Sect. 4 That in our recreations we must auoid giuing of offence The fourth caution is that in all our recreations wee doe not giue any scandall and offence neither vsing such before our weake brethren 1. Thes 5. 22. though lawfull in themselues whereat they sticke or stumble with some scruple of conscience nor yet carrying our selues offensiuely in such as they approue either by spending vnseasonably our time in them or too much of that which is in moderation allowable or with any lightnesse and vanity or by giuing our selues ouer to some vnruly passion Yea as much as in vs lieth wee must abstaine not onely from these faults themselues but also from the least shevv and appearance of them and not onely take care to doe those things which are true and iust pure and louely Phil. 4 8. Pro. 22. 1. Eccl. 7. 1. but also which are of good report not onely taking care to be vertuous but also to bee so esteemed and haue the reputation and praise all pride and vaineglory being auoided which as the shaddow the body doth attend and waite vpon it And seeing recreations are things indifferent we are rather vtterly to forbeare them then to giue vnto our brethren any iust cause of offence because the greatest danger that can heereof come vnto vs is but the hazard of our health whereas by offending them wee may indanger the losse of their precious soules for which Christ hath shed his blood In which regard if the Apostle was so charitable that he would Rom. 14. 15 21. refraine from his lawfull foode rather then offend his weake brother then how small is our charity if we will not forbeare for this cause or at least in offensiuely vse our sports and recreations §. Sect. 5 That all due circumstances must be obserued in our recreations and what they are The fifth caution is that we obserue in our recreations all due circumstances As first that it be decent and beseeming our person place and calling neither is it fit that age and youth Magistrates and common people should vse the same recreations lest for the gaining of a little vaine sport they lose their grauity and with it their authority and that reuerence which is due vnto them from their inferiours in respect of their age and gouernment Secondly that it be apt and fit for our callings and to refresh and make vs more able for the well-performing of the duties belonging to them For that recreation is best which commeth neerest to the end for which we vse it and best fitteth vs to attaine vnto it as rest of the body and exercise of the minde for those that are wearied with corporall labours and bodily exercise for them whose callings doe wholly stand in the study of the minde Or at least some easie exercise after the greater labour of the body or some slight and pleasant imployment of the minde after that it is wearied with more serious and earnest studies In which regard I haue always thought the play at Chests most vnfit for Students and Schollers because it as much occupieth and wearieth their intellectuall faculties as their other studies and on the other side violent exercises vnmeete recreations for those vvho ordinarily spend their strength in painefull labours of the body because both these faile of their proper end which is to refresh the body and minde but contrariwise doe more weary and tyre them and so make them vnfit for the duties of their callings And although as I confesse there is some recreation and delight in change and variety of imployment both of body and minde yet it tendeth not greatly to the refreshing of either but rather deludeth men with a false shew and remedieth not the euill but onely depriueth them of the sense of it whilst their pleasure lasts and causeth them to spend and consume themselues with more delight Thirdly in respect of the circumstance of time there is required that our recreations be seasonable according to the saying of the wise Salomon To euery thing there is a season Eccl. 3. 1 4. and a time to euery purpose vnder heauen a time to weepe and a time to laugh a time to mourne and a time to dance In which regard there is required that first our recreations doe not goe before but succeed the labours of our callings vnlesse in case we may thereby be the better inabled for the performance of them as when they shake off dulnesse and drowsinesse and make vs more actiue and cheerefull for imployment which rarely happeneth in the labours of the body but sometime falleth out in the studies of the minde as we see in the example of Elisha who by musicke 2. King 3. 15. was better fitted for prophecie whilest it made him more apt to receiue diuine reuelations For wearinesse is a kinde of disease and recreation is of the nature of a medicine and therefore as it is preposterous that the cure should precede and goe before the malady or the medicine the sickenesse vnlesse it be such as is fit to preuent it so that wee should refresh our selues with recreation before labour hath caused wearinesse for this were to apply the salue to a sound place which doth no good but if it hath any great strength and attractiue vertue will rather cause it to pimple and draw off the skin And therefore as Salomon saith of the vse of wine Giue strong drinke vnto him that is ready to perish and wine vnto those Pro. 31. 6 7. that are of heauy hearts that he may forget his pouerty and remember his misery no more so
and none shall bee able to plucke vs out of his and his Fathers hands It is he that confirmeth vs vnto the end that we may 1. Cor. 1. 8. Esa 54. 10. bee blamelesse vnto the Day of our Lord Iesus Christ The promises of God which in Christ are yea and Amen vnto the glory of God by vs are they which stablish vs in him and it is hee that hath sealed vs and giuen vs the 2. Cor. 1. 21 22. earnest of the Spirit in our hearts And therefore if wee would perseuere in grace and in the wayes of godlinesse we must beg it at Gods hands and pray for our selues as the Apostle for the Colossians that he will replenish Col. 1. 10 11. vs with knowledge of his will in all wisedome that wee may walke worthy the Lord vnto all pleasing being fruitfull in euery good worke and increasing in the knowledge of God strengthened with all might according to his glorious power vnto all patience and long-suffering with ioyfulnesse And as he prayeth for the Thessalonians that the Lord will make vs to increase and abound in loue 1. Thes 3. 13. to the end that he may stablish our hearts vnblameable in holinesse before God vnto the comming of our Lord Iesus Christ with all his Saints THE FIFTH BOOKE OF A GODLY LIFE CONTAINING IN IT THE HELPES AND MEANES WHICH INABLE VS VNTO IT CAP. I. Of the rules of a godly life whereby we may be directed in the right performing of all Christian duties And first of such rules as respect the causes of it both principall and subordinate §. Sect. 1 Of the helpes inabling vs to leade a godly life HAuing shewed what the godly life is and the duties wherein it consisteth with the properties belonging to them which serue as way-markes and signes whereby wee may know that wee are in a right course it now remaineth that wee intreat both of the helpes whereby we may be furthered in the wayes of godlinesse and also of the impediments which hindring vs in our Christian course are to bee carefully remooued out of the way if we would trauell in it with any ease and comfort and come happily to the end of our iourneys For as they who are to run a race for a corruptible crowne thinke it not sufficient to know perfectly the way with the nature and properties of it as whether it be long or short vp or downe the hill rough or plaine but also carefully vse all helpes which may further them in the race and remooue all impediments which may hinder their speed and frustrate their hopes of comming seasonably to the goale and winning the Garland so must we all take the same course in running of the spirituall Race of a godly life that we may obtaine that Crowne which is heauenly and immortall The helpes whereby wee may bee furthered and inabled to leade a godly life are either the meanes which tend to the aduancing of it or the arguments and reasons which may induce and perswade vs to vse them and to practise all Christian and holy duties in the whole course of our liues cōuersation The meanes respect either direction or practice The former consisting in certaine rules which are to be obserued that we may profitably proceed in the wayes of godlines The other in wel vsing of certaine special meanes which God hath ordained sanctified to this end that they may inrich vs with his spirituall sauing graces strengthen vs to the performing of those Christian duties which belong to a godly life The rules to bee obserued haue either reference to such things as belong to all Christian duties or to the duties themselues §. Sect. 2 The first rule is that wee make God the supreme end of all Christian duties and wholly deny our selues in them Of the former sort are such as concerne either their causes or their circumstances The causes are chiefe and principall or else subordinate and Mat. 5. 16. 1. Cor. 10. 31. 1. Pet. 2. 12. instrumentall The chiefe and principall cause of working all holy duties in and by vs is God himselfe the Father Sonne and holy Spirit Concerning whom this first rule is to bee obserued that seeing God is the chiefe Author of all good duties which can be performed by vs that therefore we also make him the supreme end of them propounding vnto our selues his glory in the vndertaking of any action as the mayne motiue that induceth vs vnto it And seeing he is first and last in all holy duties which are performed of vs and both beginneth continueth and finisheth his workes of grace in and by vs yea seeing wee our selues are wholly his 1. Cor. 6. 20. both by right of creation preseruation and redemption therefore being his and not our owne we must deuote and consecrate our selues wholly and all our actions and intentions to his seruice performing all Christian duties not as acts of our owne wills to please or profit our selues but as workes which he willeth and commandeth and are therefore pleasing and acceptable in sight So that this must be our first step entrance to the Christian duties of a godly life vtterly to deny our selues and our owne wills and acknowledging God to be all in all wee are to resigne both our persons actions to be directed and guided as he pleaseth and to make his will in all things the rule of ours not performing the duties of a godly life because they are pleasing vnto vs or plausible vnto others but because God requireth them and it is his will that being sanctified we should glorifie 1. Thes 4. 3. him in bringing forth much fruit We must if we wil be Christs Disciples in the very first place deny our selues and take vp our crosse and follow him We Ioh. 15. 8. must not like vntamed Heifers run range which way we list but we must take vpon vs his easie yoke and light burthen and casting off our pride and Mat. 11. 29. selfe-will we must learne of him to be humble and meek in spirit We must be content to be not what we would but what God wil haue vs both doing and suffring whatsoeuer he cōmandeth or imposeth We must go the way that nature shunneth if God chuse it for vs and walk with Peter not whither Joh. 21. 18. we would but whither we would not An example of which obedience we haue in the Saints of Macedonia who resigned themselues vnto the Lord in doing 2. Cor. 8. 5. his wil in him to the direction of his holy Apostle And in Paul also who before his conuersion applied himselfe to do his own wil and to please the Act. 9. 6. chiefe Priests but no sooner was he cast down humbled but presently he offreth himselfe to Gods seruice and desireth to be guided by the will of Christ Yea our Sauiour himselfe who is the most perfit patterne for our imitation though his
more They are trees of righteousnesse of Gods planting which alwayes Esa 61. 3 11. flourish and when they come once to bring foorth their fruits they neuer grow dry and barren but are still purged and pruned by him that Joh. 15. 2. set them that they still bring foorth fruit in more abundance heerein vnlike other trees and resembling onely the Palme and Cedar in Psal 92. 14. that they continually flourish and most exceed in fruitfulnesse in their old age as the Psalmist noteth Gods children are not like false conceptions and dead moles in the wombe which quickly come to full growth and then standing at a stay proue abortiue births but staying their appoynted time are perfected by degrees in their shape parts and all their lineaments and after their birth stand not at a stay for there are no dwarfes in Gods family but grow from strength to strength and from stature to stature till they come to a perfect age in Iesus Christ §. Sect. 3 That except we grow in grace we can haue no sound comfort in our estate And therefore when there is no growth in grace nor in the practice of holy duties we can take little comfort in such a state but as it is a griefe to parents when as their children grow in age and not in wisedome and an ill signe that nature is out of frame and hindred in her course when as in their bodies they stand at a stay and though they eate and drinke and sleepe yet doe not grow at all in their stature so haue we more iust cause to grieue when after many yeeres we remaine children in knowledge and weaklings in all sauing grace and may take it as an ill signe that there is little grace in vs or some notable impediment which doth stop and hinder it in its operations when as hauing inioyed for a long time the spirituall food of the Word and Sacraments we grow not vp thereby nor any whit increase in our strength and stature Wee are pilgrims and trauellers as we professe towards our heauenly home who are still going on and euery day dispatch some part of the way but if we stand at a stay and after many yeeres spent are no more forward in our iourney then we were at our first setting forth it sheweth plainly that we are no true trauellers but loyterers that lazily lye lusking in our Inne or that we haue not gone in the right way that leadeth to our Countrey Wee would bee counted souldiers in the Christian warfare and professe that wee fight against the spirituall enemies of our saluation but if Satan in euery tentation preuaileth with vs if the world hath so allured vs by her bewitching baits that we are in league and loue with it if after many yeeres wee haue got no conquest ouer our corruptions pride couetousnesse voluptuousnes malice enuie and such like but that they still raigne and rule in vs as in former times it is a signe that we either are none of Gods Souldiers seeing we haue made a peace with his enemies or that wee are notable cowards who iustly deserue to be casheered and that there is little grace or goodnesse in vs seeing so long time and large meanes haue so little improoued and increased it Doubtlesse saith one he is not good who will Minimè pro cer●o est bonus qui melior esse non vult vbi incipis nolle fieri melior ibi desinis etiam esse bonus Bernard Epist 91. Nemo perfectus est qui perfectior esse non appetit c. Bernard Epist 243. not be better and when thou ceasest in thy desires to become better thou ceasest also to be good And againe no man hath attained to any perfection who doth not desire and labour to be more perfect and so much the perfecter doth euery man approue himselfe by how much the more earnestly he striueth after perfection Moreouer true vertue knoweth no end nor is circumscribed with time and the feare of the Lord indureth for euer The iust man thinketh with Paul that hee hath neuer apprehended that which hee pursueth nor euer saith I haue enough but alwayes hungreth and thirsteth after righteousnesse so that if he should liue for euer he would also for euer desire still to be more iust and would striue with all his strength to proceed from good to better For he is not a mercenary that hath hired himselfe to doe God seruice for a yeere but a sonne of the family which continueth for euer Finally let vs labour daily to grow in grace by exercising it continually in the duties of godlinesse both because otherwise we can haue no assuracne that it is true and substantiall but hypocriticall and a bare shadow seeing all true grace is growing grace like the graine of mustard-seed small at the first and great afterwards and also because if we doe not increase our Lords Talents he will take them from vs and giue them to faithfuller seruants and seeing through our negligence we haue depriued our selues of the substance he will also take away from vs the shew and shadow according to that of our Sauiour Vnto him that hath shall be giuen and he shall haue abundance Math 13. 12. Luk. 8. 18. but from him that hath not shall be taken away euen that which hee seemeth to haue §. Sect. 4 That if we desire to grow in grace we must carefully vse the meanes which may further vs in it and what these meanes are Now if we would attaine to this Christian growth wee must vse all good meanes which may further vs in it for in vaine hee professeth his great desire to be rich who neglecteth all good husbandry and meanes of thriuing or to grow in strength and stature who will not vse food and clothing which are the ordinary meanes to attaine vnto them Yea if wee desire spirituall growth in grace and goodnesse we must take more then vsuall paines seeing as to the augmenting of the body there is required more meat and better concoction then for the preseruing of it in that stature and strength vnto which it hath already attained so vnto our growth in grace and increasing of our spirituall stature it is necessary that we more diligently vse the meanes and receiue the food of our soules in greater quantity and with better stomackes then onely to hold as wee say life and soule together and to preserue our graces in their bare being and present plight Now the meanes of increasing in grace and proceeding in the practice of all Christian duties are the same by which they had their first beginnings as the carefull and conscionable hearing of the Word preached for we must like new-borne babes desire the sincere 1. Pet. 2. 1. milke of the Word which is also the seed of our Regeneration and new-birth if euer wee meane to grow vp thereby So also the reading of the Word and vse of the Sacraments meditation holy conferences of
which wee haue spoken in part and shall say more in the following discourse But aboue all inuocation and prayer desiring God who is the Authour of our spirituall birth and being and also of our preseruation and growth in godlinesse that hee will perfect his good Phil. 1. 6. 2. Cor. 13. 9. Phil. 1. 9 10 11. Col. 1. 9. and 4. 12. Heb. 13. 21. 1. Pet. 5. 10. worke which he hath begun in vs sanctifie vs throughout in our soules and bodies and bring vs from one degree to another till at last wee come to a perfect man in Christ whereof we haue the holy Apostles in many places as fit precedents and examples who by their feruent prayers craue at Gods hands this growth in grace for themselues and others Finally if we would be good proficients in Gods seruice wee must often thinke of the worthinesse and excellency of our heauenly Master who is the chiefe Goodnesse and infinite in all perfection and therefore aboue all deserueth our best paines and diligence of his inestimable loue towards vs shining in our Creation Preseruation and that great worke of our Redemption by the death of his deare and onely Sonne for who would not loue him that hath so loued vs and labour to approoue it by striuing to serue him daily in more perfection Of the Passion and sufferings of Christ which will make vs thinke that we can neuer doe too much for him who hath done and suffered so much for vs. Of the perfection which the Law requireth vnder the penalty of a fearfull curse and of the gracious promises and sweet incouragements of the Gospell belonging to all those who striue and labour daily to attaine vnto this perfection Of the manifold and inestimable blessings both temporall spirituall and eternall which God hath partly put presently into our hands and partly confirmed vnto vs by infallible assurances all which liberall and bountifull wages if we be not too too ingratefull will make vs daily to double our diligence in doing him seruice Finally we must oftentimes meditate of the breuity of our liues and vncertainty of this short time compared with the excellency and eternity of our heauenly happinesse promised to all them who spend this momentany and vncertaine time in the duties of Gods seruice the which if any thing will moue vs to improoue the time present to the best aduantage seeing we are not sure of another day like wise Merchants who lay hold of a good penny-worth when it is offered and the prudent Pilot who setteth vp all his sailes whilest the wind and tide fauour him because he is vncertaine how long it will last and his opportunity being once past cannot be recouered at his owne pleasure CAP. V. Of the meanes whereby we may be inabled to leade a godly life and first of the ministery of the Word §. Sect. 1 That if we will leade a godly life we must vse the meanes inabling vs vnto it VNto the rules of direction which helpe and further vs in the duties of a godly life wee are to adde the consideration of certaine speciall meanes respecting practice whereby wee may be the better inabled to performe them For as God in his Decree hath ordained the ends at which we must chiefly aime that we may attaine vnto them so also the meanes which conduce vnto these ends As for example hee hath propounded his glory as the supreme end of all things and withall diuers meanes whereby it is aduanced and magnified as our faithfull seruice and obedience to his Commandements faith in Christ and such like He hath ordained vs to saluation and that we may attaine vnto it hee hath linked his Decree to this end by certaine subordinate causes and meanes as Creation Redemption Effectuall calling Iustification Sanctification and Preseruation Hee hath decreed that we should liue our naturall life vnto our appoynted time but withall that we should vse the meanes of food clothing sleepe physick by which it is preserued and maintained And thus also as hee hath ordained that we should liue the life of grace so likewise that wee should vse the helpes and meanes which hee hath appoynted for the beginning continuing and finishing of it which if wee neglect wee can haue no more hope of attaining vnto it whatsoeuer faire pretences wee make of our feruent desires to atchieue this end then of comming to happinesse being destitute of holinesse without which the Apostle telleth vs Heb. 12. 14. we shall neuer see God or of liuing to old age without the vse of the meanes meate drinke and apparell or of liuing to Gods glory when as we delight in the workes of darknesse and shine not in the light of an holy life The which as it must make vs carefull to vse all good helpes appoynted by God for the inabling vs vnto the duties of a godly life so our second care must be that wee vse them as meanes and not supreme and principall causes but relying our selues chiefly vpon God his wisedome and goodnesse power and promises the death and Resurrection of Christ effectually applyed vnto vs by the holy Spirit let vs vse these meanes as being his ordinances which hee hath appoynted to serue his prouidence yet without putting our trust and confidence in them as sufficient in themselues to conferre grace or to inable vs vnto the duties of a godly life seeing without the chiefe Worker assisting vs in the vse of them by his holy Spirit they are able to doe nothing and contrariwise if they be wanting he is all-sufficient without them to make vs liue holily in this world and happily in the life to come Now these meanes are either ordinary and in continuall vse vpon all occasions or extraordinary and to be vsed but at some times when some speciall causes mooue vs vnto them and both of them either publike or priuate or else mixt and to be performed sometimes publikely in the Congregation and sometimes priuately by our selues or with others The publike meanes are the ministery of the Word the Sacraments and prayer The which admit of a double consideration in respect of their diuers relations to seuerall ends For as they are duties performed vnto God that wee may glorifie him by doing vnto him seruice in them they are parts and branches of piety and a godly life in which sense we haue already intreated of them but as they helpe and further vs for the begetting and increasing in vs of all spirituall graces and the inabling of vs vnto all other Christian duties they are the meanes of a godly life in which sense we are now to speake of them Wherein they may be resembled vnto coyne and treasure the which is not onely a part of our wealth but also the meanes of purchasing and procuring house lands goods and all other riches or vnto the hand which in one relation is a part or member of the body but in another respect an instrument and speciall meanes for the
soules no lesse then our bodies need their daily bread and to be refreshed continually in their spirituall strength which is abated through our naturall corruption and many slips and falls into sinne as also with the daily and hourely tentations of the diuell and the world In which respect these priuate meanes haue this preeminence aboue the publike that though they are not so powerfull and yeeld lesse nourishment yet we may haue them at our pleasure and feed vpon them as oft as we will supplying what is wanting in their vertue and efficacy by their daily and continuall vse Finally by the priuate meanes we are fitted and prepared for the well-performing of the publike as by reading prayer meditation c. we are inabled to heare the Word preached with profit seeing they not onely inlarge our hearts that wee may heare it with delight reuerence and attention but also fasten it in our minds and memories and make it fruitfull in our liues and not onely helpe our vnderstandings that we may better conceiue of what is spoken being well acquainted with the holy Scriptures but also inflame our affections with the loue of Gods publike seruice when as we haue thought before-hand of the excellency profit and necessity of it So likewise by these priuate meanes we are made more fit for publike prayer whereas thereby we are made better acquainted with our wants which need supply our sinnes to be confessed and the benefits receiued for which we are bound to returne vnto God praise and thanksgiuing and by often conuersing with God in our priuate prayers we are more incouraged to goe with boldnesse and confidence vnto the Throne of grace vnto which wee cannot attaine if wee estrange our selues from him by our seldome approching into his presence Finally we cannot come as worthy ghests to the Lords Table vnlesse by our priuate exercises of meditation examination and prayer wee be prepared whereby we renew our faith repentance and charity towards our neighbours and come furnished with such sauing graces as are needfull and necessary for the receiuing of the Sacrament with fruit and comfort And therefore it is no maruell if those who content themselues only with the publike meanes of saluation and altogether neglect these priuate helpes leauing all their Religion and deuotion at the Church doore and neuer looking after it till their next returne doe prooue such vnthriuing Christians weake in knowledge feeble in grace and slacke and faint in all the duties of a Christian life For as we would not wonder to see one leane and feeble in body that should content himselfe with liberall sustenance one day in the weeke and fast all the rest so there is as little cause to maruell at the small growth spirituall leannesse and weaknesse of these carelesse Christians after they haue long inioyed the publike means of saluation seeing they rest wholly vpon them and neglect all priuate duties as it were their daily sustenance and so by long fasting are infeebled in their strength and abated in their appetite that they can neither receiue the food publikely offered nor yet disgest and turne it into nourishment when they haue fed vpon it Whereas our soules need more continuall and daily nourishment then our bodies seeing there are no fewer causes of the impairing and abating of their strength §. Sect. 2 That Christiā watchfulnesse is not a bodily but a spirituall exercise Now these priuate meanes are manifold All which may bee reduced vnto two kinds both which containe vnder them diuers particulars the first are such priuate helpes and meanes as are to be vsed by our selues alone the second sort are such as may be vsed both by our selues and also with others ioyning with vs. Of the former sort the first is Christian vigilance or watchfulnesse which well deserueth the first place because being rightly knowne and practised it will serue as a guide to direct and leade vs in all the rest Whereof my discourse need not to be so large as the argument is excellent and necessary seeing it is so religiously and learnedly The spirituall watch handled in a Treatise lately published that were not this Worke imperfect without it I should haue needed to haue said nothing of it seeing little can be added which hath not been better said already But that we may proceed in handling of this poynt I will consider the nature of this watchfulnesse and the meanes which inable vs vnto it In the former we will examine what it is and wherein it consisteth and the ends whereto it tendeth or the obiects about which it is exercised For the better explaning of the first poynt wee are to know that waking watching and watchfulnesse and contrariwise sleeping and neglect of watching are not here vsed in their natiue and proper signification but are metaphoricall words borrowed from the state and disposition of our bodies and from thence transferred to our soules and spirituall estate For we are said to sleepe whilest wee continue in the state of vnregeneration dead in trespasses and sinnes or when being recouered by the quickening power of Gods Spirit regenerating and reuiuing vs we doe in respect of some acts and operations relapse againe into our former condition And wee are then said to awake when we rise out of this estate either in our first conuersion or when we renue our repentance after our falling into sinne and doe againe recouer the operations of spirituall life And finally wee are said to watch when being through our naturall corruption inclined and disposed to fall into our former sleepe of sinne wee doe with all care and circumspection obserue our selues that wee be not ouertaken with spirituall sloth but that we may continue waking and able and actiue for the well-performing of all Christian duties and of our spirituall life in grace In which regard their ignorance and errour is much to bee pitied who imagine that they haue well obserued and kept the Christian watch vnto which we are exhorted in the Scriptures when as hauing abridged themselues of their sleepe and naturall rest they haue thereby wasted and wearied their bodies and weakened their corporall strength this errour arising out of another that the flesh by which the Scriptures vnderstand our originall and naturall corruption the body of sinne and death is nothing else but the body it selfe and that mortification of the flesh consisteth chiefly in the macerating and tormenting pining and pinching of our bodies by depriuing them of all necessaries and among others of their naturall rest and sleepe the which errour I haue at large refuted in Christian warfare the fourth part another place But we are to know that as we may nourish the flesh and consume the body and contrariwise nourish the body and mortifie the flesh so we may take our bodily sleepe as all the faithfull haue done in the state of Regeneration and yet maintaine the spirituall watch and watch euen whole nights as Iudas that betrayed Christ
small difference betweene Meditation and Contemplation yet as the Schooles define it there is some in degree Meditation being an exercise of a lower and meaner nature within the reach of all Christians which will put out their hand vnto it Contemplation more high and heauenly fit only for such as by long exercise haue attained to much perfection That exercised about any spirituall obiect not onely originally in the vnderstanding but also imaginary and brought vnto it by the Ministery of the senses as the creation of the world the death and passion of Christ and such like but this about things chiefly intellectuall sublime and heauenly as the nature and attributes of God the Trinity of persons in Vni●● of essence the ioyes of heauen and others of like nature Finally it is an exercise which of the most is performed with much difficulty because of their weakenesses and want of vse being hindred in their spirituall flight by hauing the waight of earthly cares and distractions as it were hanging at their heeles and the wings of their soules somewhat besmeared with the lime of worldly vanities but this of great Proficients who by much practice haue brought their Art into an habit and are able with ease yea with much pleasure and delight to soare with the Eagle an high pitch in their heauenly thoughts and to spend heerein great part of their time not stooping towards the earth but when they are forced by naturall necessity which being satisfied and their bodies and mindes somewhat refreshed they doe as weary of the earth raise vp their soules and renew their wonted flight §. Sect. 3 Of the efficicient cause or person who is to meditate The efficient cause or person who is to performe this exercise is the Christian onely and the man regenerate for holy things must not bee Hag. 2. 13. touched with prophane hands seeing they doe not sanctifie them but are polluted with their vncleanenesse Neither can they that are dead in sinne doe the actions of the liuing and are so farre from performing this holy duty in any acceptable manner that they are not able so much as to thinke a good thought Neither is it enough that we be once purged from their guilt and punishment in our iustification by the death and bloodshed of Christ applyed by faith or that we be freed from the corruption of sinne in the first acts of our sanctification but seeing wee doe daily renew our sinnes and thereby defile our soules and bodies we must daily clense them by renewing our repentance and not presume to vndertake this holy worke liuing and lying in our spirituall defilements but we must wash our soules as sometimes the Israelites their clothes before we presume to approach vnto this mount of Meditation wherein God hath promised to be seene and to clense the Tables of our hearts with the teares of true contrition before we goe about to haue any holy impressions written in them And seeing sinne like a thicke cloud doth dimme and dazle the eyes of our mindes so as we cannot see holy and heauenly things wee must first dispell them by vnfained repentance before we can receiue any comfort of diuine and heauenly light And being to entertaine our Bridegroome Christ in his spirituall presence into our hearts as it were into our houses and to solace our soules in a more heere communion and familiarity with him we are first to purge them from all noysome defilements which will make our company lothsome vnto him and though wee cannot so sufficiently purifie them that they may bee worthy to entertaine so pure and holy a ghest yet at least in a sincere affection let vs labour to doe the best we can that it may not appeare to be a fault of negligence but of our spirituall pouerty and impotency which disableth vs to giue him any better welcome The formall cause of this exercise is a serious cogitation or intentiue deliberation Neither is this worke of the Lord to be done negligently and slightly letting the reines loose to our cogitations that they may wander whither they list but wee are to intend the whole powers of our mind vnto it and to set them strictly to this holy taske not suffering them to wander abroad whither they please but to apply themselues to that which they haue vndertaken vntill they haue brought their worke vnto some good perfection The subiect-matter of our Meditation is something diuine spirituall and heauenly vnto which our thoughts for the time it lasteth are to be restrained and not suffered to wander after or to intermingle with them any worldly things The finall causes or ends of it are the glory of God and our owne saluation both which are aduanced when as wee handle after an holy manner in our Meditations some such holy and spirituall matter as may tend to the bettering of our iudgements and increase of our inward sanctity by working in our hearts the loue and feare of God zeale and deuotion in his seruice an vtter hatred of sinne and a sincere purpose to please him in all things and to glorifie his Name by performing more carefully and conscionably all the duties of a godly life §. Sect. 4 That Meditation is an exercise which belongeth to all Christians And thus we see generally what Christian Meditation is and the causes of it the which being a singular and effectuall meanes of working in our hearts a great increase of all sauing graces and of strengthening vs to the duties of a godly life is not to be appropriated vnto any one profession or sort of men which were a dangerous Monopolie tending to the inestimable preiudice of the Christian Common-wealth when such a singular commodity as is profitable for all is ingrossed into the hands of some few but is to be laid out in common to all the faithfull who are any way interessed in grace or godlinesse Neither ought any sort or sexe to thinke that they are exempted from this exercise vnlesse they thinke themselues so strong in grace that all meanes of spirituall growth are needlesse or so weake and impotent that they hold them boot lesse seeing such exemption is no prerogatiue but a disfranchisement at least in part of their spirituall freedome and a losse of a singular priuiledge which the Lord in that great Charter of his Couenant made in Christ hath granted vnto them For he hath not onely allowed all the faithfull to haue the Booke of his Law in their hands to reade it or in their mouthes to talke of it but with the finger of his Spirit hath written and ingrauen it in their Jer. 31. 34. hearts that they may continually thinke and meditate vpon it Yea hee hath not onely left it vnto vs as a gracious liberty which we may take and leaue at our pleasure but hath strictly imposed it vpon all his people as a necessary duty These words which I command thee this day shall be in thine Deut 6. 6 8.
it and haue a plaine example to leade vs as it were by the hand and to inable vs to frame the like vpon other occasions The reasons may be reduced to the same heads which I propounded in the generall consideration of this duty all which doe specially and chiefly belong to this kind of meditation as being aboue the other much more excellent profitable and necessary For if it bee a priuiledge of excellency to come into Gods sight then much more for some good time to continue and conuerse with him if wee may thinke our selues highly aduanced if we may for the least moment be admitted into his presence and suffered to salute him then how much rather when we may be permitted to haue free conference with him and our soules in his presence But as it is truly said of all things excellent that they are also hard and difficult so may both these be truly verified of this exercise then the which as no other is more excellent prayer and contemplation excepted which exceed in some degrees in the same kind so there is none besides them of greater difficulty First in that our corrupt nature is not more auerse vnto any other duty both because we take our whole delight in things that are connaturall and subiect to the senses and our mindes are soone tired with meditating seriously vpon those things which are meerly intellectuall and abstracted from the senses and also because our carnall hearts which take their chiefe pleasure and contentment in thinking vpon and affecting worldly things are ready to murmure and repine when they are restrained of their liberty and kept hard to this spirituall taske and to breake loose and fly out euery hand-while that they may roue and wander after their wonted delights Secondly because in other spirituall exercises as hearing the Word reading and conferring with others we haue but to deale with men as we conceiue it at least in respect of immediate actions obiects and intercourse which wee performe with greater alacrity because the senses are exercised in them about outward things But in this exercise of meditation wee are soone wearied as the senses exercized about excelling obiects both because the subiect matter about which we discourse in our minds is spirituall and heauenly and also because vve cast vp our accounts lay open our sinnes search out our vvants and vveaknesses seriously examine our hearts hovv vvee haue behaued our selues in the doing or neglecting of our duty and laying them naked before God without all hypocrisie confessing our sins of which we finde our selues guilty accusing our selues where wee are faulty discouering our wants and weaknesses wherein we are defectiue all which are not done before our equals but before the glorious King of heauen and earth as malefactors before their Iudge whose might and Maiesty soueraignty and power of life and death may iustly ouer-awe vs. The which difficulties notwithstanding must not so much discourage vs from this exercise as the excellency must incourage vs to vndertake it with so much the more strong resolution and earnest indeuour §. Sect. 4 The singular profit of ordinary meditation To which purpose let vs further consider that as this kind of meditation is aboue all other most excellent so also it exceedeth in vse and profit For it is the spirituall food of the soules by which they liue and thriue in all sauing graces and are strengthened vnto the performance of all Christian duties It weaneth our soules from the world and worldly vanities and sequestreth and appropriateth them to religious vses More especially it inlighteneth our vnderstanding and maketh vs in discoursing of spirituall things to see them much more cleerly and perfectly for as wee are wont to say of our bodily parts and members Vse them and haue them because their exercise is the meanes to continue their health and increase their strength so may it also be truly said of the inward faculties of the soule the vnderstanding and discourse of reason which if they bee vsed grow more strong and vigorous but if we accustome them to sloth and idlenesse they will soone languish and waxe faint and weake in their functions and operations Now by this inlightening of the mind wee come to a more cleere knowledge of God and Iesus Christ whom to Joh. 17. 3. know is life eternall By it we vnderstand more perfectly his Word and will in which respect meditation may be fitly called the hearts commentary and are thereby guided in the way of his Commandements For if by meditation we bind them continually vpon our hearts when wee goe they Pro. 6. 22 23. shall leade vs as the Wise man speaketh By it also we attaine vnto the true knowledge of our selues and of our owne hearts which are so deceitfull that they cannot otherwise be well discerned For as our Sauiour hath Mat. 12. 34 35. taught vs such as the thoughts are such also is the heart such as the streames are such likewise is the fountaine from which they spring And therefore euill thoughts doe argue an euill heart euen as contrariwise good thoughts and holy meditations doe shew that the heart is good also For howsoeuer our words and workes are liable to much hypocrisie because in them we may often aime at worldly respects and to approoue our selues vnto men rather then vnto God yet it is not so with our thoughts which are onely knowne to God and our owne consciences and not subiect to the view and censure of any other By it wee come to the knowledge of our manifold corruptions and the malignity of our natures and to discerne the blindnesse and worldlinesse of our mindes the peruersenesse of our willes the security and hardnesse of our hearts and innumerable other vices and corruptions which otherwise would bee vnknowne vnto our selues euen as they are now vnknowne to others Yea by this disquisition we doe not onely finde out this noysome filth and heapes of vncleannesse as it were in secret corners but also are set aworke to vrge out of our hearts and mindes these wicked thoughts and filthy lusts which would otherwise like pernicious humours in the body lye lurking in them and bee the causes of our soules sicknesse and innumerable euils and being emptied of these wicked thoughts and noysome lusts wee are heereby mooued and stirred vp to replenish our mindes and hearts with heauenly cogitations and holy desires and when wee haue admitted them to hold them fast that the other may not returne and recouer their possession Moreouer by this Meditation our memories are exceedingly strengthened and made faithfull Registers of good things Our consciences are preserued pure when as heereby wee are kept from falling into any knowne sinne or if wee haue falne through infirmity doe not lye in it but purge away these spirituall defilements by faith applying vnto them the blood of Christ and by rising out of sinne through vnfained repentance Our iudgements likewise heereby are much improoued
be fit matter for vs to meditate on of which I will heere set downe some of the chiefe and principall that those who are weake in knowledge and yong beginners in this exercise may be so sufficiently furnished that they need not to neglect it for want of matter §. Sect. 4 That the Scriptures them selues and the things reuealed in them are fit matter for Meditation As the nature of God his actions and decree And that we may proceed in some order we may make the matter of our Meditations either the Scriptures themselues or else the things reuealed in them The Scriptures themselues are a fit subiect for our Meditation by considering that they are the Word not of man but of God and so to be heard and read loued and obeyed of vs that in this regard they are most excellent and to be preferred aboue all other writings most certaine and infallible most perfect and all-sufficient most ancient and durable and finally that they are plaine and easie giuing light to the simple most profitable and necessary to saluation and therefore to bee read and studied of all men The things reuealed in the Scriptures are either those which respect faith and are to be beleeued or else manners and are to bee practised The things to be beleeued are either those which concerne God or the Church The former respect God himselfe or his actions and workes From God himselfe we may haue plentifull matter of diuine Meditation as first that there is a God and the vses that wee are to make of it what this God is and how he hath reuealed himselfe vnto vs in his essence and persons his attributes and names Of which I haue spoken in the beginning of this Treatise and haue briefly described Gods nature and attributes as his simplicity infinitenesse eternity immutability omni-presence all-sufficiency which being rightly vnderstood and remembred will affoord excellent matter of holy Meditations The actions of God are either his decree or the execution of it In the decree it selfe we are principally to meditate vpon our election to saluation the causes and effects and properties of it especially the infallibility and certainty and how and by what reasons and signes being sure in it selfe we may come to be assured that our names particularly are written in the Booke of life In the execution of the decree which is either generall or speciall we haue plentifull matter of Meditation In respect of the generall execution we may meditate first of the workes of creation which were not made all at one instant as they might as easily if God had so pleased but in sixe dayes that by this orderly proceeding we might the better be inabled to meditate vpon them And heere we may meditate on the heauens their glory and beauty their greatnesse and durablenesse their motions and constant order How they are adorned with the glorious brightnesse of the Starres Moone and Sunne be-spangling this vaulty roofe of Gods great building euery one exceeding another in beauty and brauery Thus wee may meditate vpon the diuers regions of the ayre and the creatures contained in them the presaging Commets fiery exhalations the Meteors of the middle region clouds and winds thunder and lightning raine snow haile and frosts whose hidden treasures and true causes none can pry into but he that made them the disagreeing elements ioyning in an excellent harmony for the perfecting of all compound bodies Neither doth the earth and creatures therein contained affoord vnto vs lesse matter of Meditation as trees plants and flowers of excellent beauty and almost infinite variety growing from silly seeds in outward shew not differing many of them one from another The excellent workemanship of the brute creatures the endlesse variety of their inward formes and outward shapes their qualities and properties their life sense and motions with the exquisite organs and instruments euery small particle hauing for these purposes their speciall and necessary vse Their generation whereby being corruptible in themselues they become after a sort incorruptible in their kinds after their death liuing in their posterity Secondly wee may meditate vpon the prouidence of God whereby he preserueth all things which he hath created gouerning and directing them to those ends for which he hath made them especially that mayne end of setting foorth his glory And that he doth thus rule and dispose not onely in a generall manner of all things but of euery particular euen such as seeme to bee of least moment and most casuall and contingent §. Sect. 5 Of the execution of the Decree in the creation and gouernment Againe the particular execution of Gods decree in the creation and gouernment of Angels and men affordeth vnto vs plentifull matter of Meditation As the felicity and glory of the blessed Spirits the Image of God in them their alacrity and cheerefulnesse their speed and diligence in doing Gods will and in ministring vnto the elect for their preseruation and the furthering of their saluation The fall and misery of the euill angels their malice towards God and his elect and their policy and power in seeking their destruction by drawing them to sinne which should double our diligence in arming our selues against all their tentations So also we may haue abundant matter of meditation ministred vnto vs from that which is reuealed in the Scriptures concerning man As his Creation whereby God made mans body of the dust of the earth the Image of God in man consisting in wisedome righteousnesse and true holinesse his felicity in the state of innocency the immortality and excellency of his soule the beauty health and vigour of his body his dominion ouer the creatures the ioyes of Paradise Likewise in our meditations we may consider that man continued not in this blessed estate but fell from it and that the cause hereof was sinne Where we take occasion generally to meditate of sinne what it is how horrible grieuous and contrary to Gods pure nature and how much in this regard hee hateth and detesteth it the fearefull properties of it both in respect of the guilt and punishment temporall as all the calamities and miseries of this life and our spirituall seruitude to Satan and eternall as the losse of heauenly happinesse and euerlasting condemnation both of body and soule More especially wee may meditate on the fall of our first Parents what it was and wherein it consisted the causes of it outward and inward and the lamentable effects which followed vpon it As Gods fearefull curse vpon themselues and vpon the creatures for their sake the defacing of his glorious Image in them the sense of their nakednesse and terrour of conscience accompanying it the losse of their dominion ouer the creatures their thrusting out of Paradise the visible place of Gods presence their separation from him and all other euils both of sinne and punishment The wretchednesse of all mankind in the state of disobedience and vnbeliefe by reason of that corruption which followed
and royall priuiledges as the present pay and earnest of their heauenly happines for their better incouragement in all Christian duties of which wicked worldlings that vtterly neglect them are wholy destitute Whereof we are to take the better notice because howsoeuer they generally belong to all Gods children yet many take little comfort by them either by reason of their ignorance which causeth them not to know them or their carelesnesse which will not let them seriously consider of them or their earthly-mindednesse which maketh them with Lots wife more to looke backe vpon the pleasures of Sodom then vpon those priuiledges which lye before them as they are going on in the waies of godlinesse and to cast their eyes so much vpon the false splendor and brightnesse of worldly vanities that being dazled therwith they are not able to discerne spirituall and heauenly excellencies or finally because they are so negligent in the duties of Gods seruice and weaken their faith with so many slips and fals wants imperfections that they are not able to make vse of their priuiledges nor to apply them vnto themselues with any comfort assurance And to speake nothing of that reward which vertue and holy duties bring with them in their owne excellency and in the conscience of well-doing nor of the foulenesse of vice which is punished in it selfe and with those checkes of conscience and terrours of minde accompanying sinfull actions which make the heart sorrowfull and full of disquietnesse when there is nothing but mirth and iollity in outward appearance in which regard notwithstanding piety in the seruice of God is much to be preferred before the pleasing of our owne sinfull lusts though there were no after-reckoning no heauen or hell rewards or punishments there are many speciall and rich priuiledges wherewith God euen in this life crowneth that faithfull seruice which is done vnto him The first and fountaine of all the rest is that God loueth them aboue all other his creatures with a speciall and singular loue which mooueth him to multiply all his fauours vpon them in all things which may further their temporary good and euerlasting happinesse For he loueth those that feare and serue him with an euerlasting loue and hauing set his affection vpon them he loueth them to Ier. 31. 3. Ioh. 13. 1. the end which hee hath notably manifested vnto them in that this loue could not be broken off by their enmity against him but when they were yet sinners and enemies he sent his Sonne his onely Sonne the Sonne of his loue to die for their sinnes that they by him might attaine vnto euerlasting Ioh. 3. 16. Rom. 5. 8 10. life and happinesse In him hee hath adopted them for his sonnes and children and loueth them as a tender father loueth his child accepting Ioh. 1. 12. 1. Ioh. 3. 1. Mal. 3. 17 18. graciously of all their imperfect seruice passing by all their infirmities and pardoning all their sinnes Yea hee numbreth them among his chiefest Iewels and indoweth them with such speciall testimonies of his loue that it is easie to discerne betweene the righteous and the wicked betweene him that feareth God and him that serueth him not But though the loue of a father bee great towards his child yet it doth not sufficiently expresse Gods loue towards his and therefore hee compareth it to the loue of a tender-hearted mother towards her sucking infant And yet this commeth short as it needs must for how can that which is finite reach to that which is infinite and therefore hee saith that though a woman may forget her sucking child yet he will not forget them And in this regard to expresse Esa 49. 15. the greatnesse of his loue he taketh a resemblance from the highest degree of loue amongst men which is of an husband towards his wife Hos 2. 19. yea of a Bridegroome to his Bride vnto which the loue of parents and friends yea of any other thing in the world giueth place seeing they are coupled in such neere vnion and communion that they are no more two but one flesh so that the one in louing the other loueth himselfe and cannot Gen. 2. 24. make much of his Spouse but he cherisheth his owne flesh as it were in another body The which infinite loue of God towards those that serue him giueth vnto them full assurance as of his present fauours so especially of heauenly happinesse For if the Lord delight in vs then hee will assuredly Num. 14. 8. bring vs into this heauenly Canaan which floweth with a large streame of farre greater blessings then milke and honey euen with a flood of pleasures which are at Gods right hand for euermore If the Lord so dearely loue Iob. 17. 21 24. vs then he will delight in our company and where he is there we shall be also 1. Iob. 3. 2. For where should the children bee but in their fathers family Where should the Bride be but with her Bridegroome who take their chiefe pleasure in the mutuall fruition of one anothers loue The which high and holy priuiledge is a most effectuall reason to make vs diligent in all the duties of Gods seruice which assureth vs that we are in this loue and liking with God vpon which dependeth our eternall happinesse For if men thinke it such an high prerogatiue to bee the fauourites of great Princes that they think all paines and seruice too little which may endeare them to their loue because this alone intitleth them to all other benefits of honours riches and pleasures which a kingdome can yeeld vnto them then with what cheerefulnesse should wee performe all holy duties of Gods seruice which assure vs that wee shall be and are his speciall Fauourites who hath heauen and earth at his disposing with all the rich treasures and ioyfull pleasures contained in them in the assurance whereof our Sauiour telleth vs that wee haue much more cause to reioyce Luk. 10. 20. 1. Pet. 1. 8. then in the gift of miracles or that the foule spirits are subdued vnto vs §. Sect. 3 That God watcheth ouer the godly with his special prouidence and the benefits of this priuiledge The second priuiledge which God vouchsafeth vnto all those that leade a godly life is that louing them with this fatherly loue he watcheth ouer them with his prouidence to conferre vpon them all manner of good For howsoeuer all things in heauen and earth are subiect to this all-seeing and all-ruling prouidence yet after a more speciall manner he watcheth ouer those that feare him as his owne peculiar people and though his power and presence extend to all the world like the power of a King vnto his whole Dominions yet he is heereby chiefly beneficiall to those that feare and serue him as being of his owne family yea his adopted children in Iesus Christ Thus the Psalmist saith that the eyes of the Lord are vpon the Psal 34. 15.
occurrent The which ioy far exceedeth all the ioyes of the world For they satisfy not but leaue the soule empty so that the ioy of one pleasure doth but stirre vp the appetite to hunger after another which if it should not be inioyed leaues nothing but sorrow behind whereas this as our Sauiour speaketh is a full ioy in the fruition of God partly in sense and feeling according Iohn 15. 11. to that of the Psalmist O taste and see that the Lord is good Psal 34. 8. and partly in the assurance of faith which maketh vs reioyce in expectation of full fruition Worldly ioy is short and momentany like the crackling of thornes vnder a pot which causeth a suddaine blaze as suddenly Eccles 7. 6. goeth out but the ioy of the Spirit is lasting and permanent and Iohn 16. 22. no man as our Sauiour saith can take it from vs. That consists in eating and drinking and the inioying of such company as are like our selues but this in the soules fruition of her beloued Spouse whose loue is Cant. 1. 2. better then wine seeing his fauours are so full of rauishing delight that the heart is not able to containe them as we see in the example of the Spouse in the Canticles who being brought by her Bridegroome into his banketing house was so filled that she euen surfeted of his delicacies which forced her to cry out Stay me with flaggons Comfort me with Cant. 2. 4 5. apples for I am sicke of loue Of which sweete and gracious entertainment of the faithfull soule the Psalmist also speaketh They shall bee abundantly Psal 36. 8. satisfied with the fatnesse of thy House and thou shat make them drinke of the riuer of thy pleasures Finally the ioy of worldlings accompanieth their prosperitie but when the euill day commeth it leaueth and forsaketh them and is turned into sorrow and griefe of heart but the godly reioyce euen in their tribulation affliction in their assurance of Gods loue and because they know that they shall worke together for their good these light and momentany afflictions causing vnto them a farre Rom. 5. 3. Rom. 8. 28. 2. Cor. 4. 17. Iam. 1. 2. most excellent and an eternall waight of glory They account it all ioy as the Apostle Iames speaketh when they fall into diuers tentations knowing that the tryall of their faith worketh patience And when they are persecuted for righteousnesse sake they being blessed in their sufferings reioyce Matth. 5 10 11 and are exceeding glad because their reward is great in heauen And thus the Apostle saith that the Thessalonions receiued the Word in much affliction 1. Thes 1. 6. and with ioy in the holy Ghost And that the Hebrewes tooke ioyfully the spoyling of their goods knowing themselues that they had in heauen a better and induring substance The which ioy is a supernaturall gift and fruit of the sanctifying Spirit which all cannot attaine vnto but the faithfull only and therefore the Apostle prayeth for the Romans that Rom. 15. 13. the God of hope would fil them with all ioy and peace in beleeuing that they might abound in hope through the power of the holy Ghost It is a priuiledge wherin wicked men haue no portion but is peculiar to the godly in whom the Kingdome of God is begunne in this life which none inioy but they Matth. 6. 33. which seeke also his righteousnesse seeing it consisteth not onely in peace Rom. 14. 17. and ioy in the holy Ghost but also in righteousnesse as the Apostle speaketh and therefore seeing those things cannot bee separated which God hath conioyned we must labour after righteousnes if we would be partakers of this ioy vnto which if we doe attaine we shall assuredly be filled with it For if the Apostle reioyced in it as in his Crowne Phil. 4. 1. 1. Thes 19. 20. and ioy when he had beene a meanes of conuerting others and bringing them into the way of truth and righteousnesse and if the Apostle Iohn reioyced so greatly that he professeth he had no greater ioy in any outward Ioh. Epist 2 4. and Epist 3. 3 4. thing then when he saw his children walking in this way then what inestimable ioy must this needs cause vnto vs when our selues by walking in the way of holinesse and righteousnesse doe attaine vnto the assurance of our owne happinesse §. Sect. 5 The last speciall priuiledge is Christian liberty The last speciall priuiledge peculiar vnto the godly which the Spirit bringeth is Christian liberty whereby being freed out of the hands of all Luk. 1. 74. our spirituall enemies we serue the Lord in holinesse and righteousnesse without feare and so attaine vnto the glorious liberty of the sonnes of God seeing his seruice is perfect freedome and haue power and dominion ouer all the creatures so as wee may vse them to all purposes both for necessity and comfort hauing full right and interest in them by our adoption The which priuiledge also is a fruit of the Spirit according to that of the Apostle Where the Spirit of the Lord is there is liberty And is deriued vnto 2. Cor. 3. 17. vs when as the holy Ghost by a liuely faith applyeth vnto vs the vertue and efficacy of Christ Iesus his death and satisfaction whereby this liberty was first purchased for vs in which respect our Sauiour also challengeth vnto himselfe this power and prerogatiue of setting vs at liberty as being our alone Redeemer who hath deliuered vs out of the hands of all our spirituall enemies If saith he the Sonne shall make you free you shal be free Ioh. 8. 36. indeed We were subiect to the wrath of God but our Sauiour hath freed Gal. 3. 13. vs from it and by satisfying his Iustice hath reconciled vs vnto him We were vnder the curse of the Law but hee hath freed vs by being made a curse for vs. Wee were the wretched slaues of Satan and in the state of death and condemnation but hee by his death hath destroyed him that had Heb. 2. 14 15. the power of death that is the deuill that he might deliuer them who through the feare of death were all their life time subiect to bondage Wee were seruants to the world and the vassals of the earthly Mammon but Christ hath ouercome the world both for himselfe and all his Elect Ioh. 16. 33. and so set vs at liberty out of this thraldome Wee were the seruants of sinne which made vs slaues to all other enemies and obeyed it in the wicked lusts thereof for as our Sauiour saith Hee that committeth sinne Joh. 8. 34. is the seruant of sinne For his seruants wee are whom wee obey whether of sinne vnto death or of obedience vnto righteousnesse And though with the Rom. 6. 16. Iewes wee were ready to boast of our freedome and as it were out of our store to promise liberty vnto
and infect the soule And no more possible is it to walke daily among snares and not be caught or to liue amongst the eues and not be robbed then to preserue our selues from being intangled in the nets and grinnes of the wicked and to bee spoiled of all Gods graces if wee take delight to consort our selues with such as are gracelesse and vngodly So Salomon telleth vs that in the transgression of an euill man there is a snare whereby he doth not onely more and more intangle himselfe but also all others that beare him company For society and familiarity ariseth out of likenesse of mindes and manners and cannot long continue if it doe not either finde or at least make this similitude and correspondence according to that of the Prophet Can two Amos 3. 3. walke together and not be agreed And as possible it is to reconcile light and darkenesse truth and falshood good and euill as the faithfull and infidels godly Christians and prophane worldlings both retaining their owne properties and dispositions For an vniust man is an abomination to the Pro. 29. 27. iust and he that is vpright in his way is an abomination to the wicked Neither let any so much presume vpon their owne strength as to imagine that they can retaine their sincerity though they keepe wicked company and rather conuert them to good then be peruerted by them vnto euill seeing this is a matter of great difficulty To bee good saith one among the Inter bonos bonum esse salutem habet inter malos vero etiam laudem c. Bern. in Epist good hath in it health and safety among the wicked to be so is also commendable and praise-worthy in that happinesse is ioyned with much security in this much vertue with difficulty For as hee who is running downe the hill can sooner pull with him one that is ascending then hee who is going vp can cause him to ascend that is running down so he who holdeth an headlong course in wickednes can more easily carry with him one that is ascending the hill of vertue being a motion cōtrary to naturall disposition then he can cause him to ascend with him For in common experience we see that the worser state preuaileth more in altring the better to its condition then the better to make the worse like it selfe The infected are not so soone cured by the sound as they tainted with their contagion Rotten Apples lying with the sound are not restored to soundnesse but the sound are corrupted with their rottennesse Dead carkases vnited to liuing bodies are not thereby reuiued vnlesse it be by miracle as we see in Elizeus and Paul but the liuing if they continue any time vnited to the 1. King 4. 34. Act. 20. 10. dead partake with them in their mortality and corruption And thus it is also in our spirituall state wherein the worser more preuaileth to corrupt the better then the better to reforme the worse For they being wholly flesh are more earnest and diligent in the deuils seruice to draw others vnto his Kingdome then true Christians can be in the cause of God seeing they are but in part regenerate and the flesh opposeth the Spirit in all good actions which either respect themselues or their neighbours And therefore wicked men will leaue no meanes vnassayed but will imploy their whole strength and indeuour to draw others with them into the same excesse of worldlinesse and wickednesse For first they will infect them by their vnsauoury speeches and filthy communication which is a powerfull meanes to taint those that beare them company with their wickednesse according to that of the Apostle Euill words corrupt good manners Secondly 1. Cor. 15. 31. by their exhortations and perswasions as the Wiseman excellently Pro. 1. 10 11 12. 5. 3. 7. 13 14 21. sheweth in diuers places vnto which Syrens songs wee are apt to giue heed vnlesse wee submit our selues to be guided and directed with the voyce of Wisedome and be powerfully restrained with the contrary motions of Gods Spirit Thirdly wicked men doe much hinder them who keepe them company in the wayes of godlinesse and prouoke them to accompany them in their sinnes by their euill examples especially when they see them thriue and prosper in their wickednesse as we see in Dauid who though hee were a man according to Gods owne heart yet his foot had almost slipt when he saw the great prosperity of the vngodly being ready to conclude that he had clensed his heart in vaine and washed his hands in innocencie The which tentation is of greater force when wee haue the Psal 73. 2 13. euill example not of some few but of the multitude or of some great and eminent persons whose actions aboue others are most exemplary Finally wicked men draw on those who keepe them company to haue fellowship with them in their wickednesse by their faire promises alluring baites and liberall offers of rewards And thus those sinfull wretches of whom Salomon speaketh draw on their companions to ioyne with them in violence and oppression by offering vnto them part of the spoile and large rewards to incourage them in their wickednesse Wee shall finde Pro. 1. 11 13 14. say they all precious substance we shall fill our houses with spoile Cast in thy lot among vs let vs all haue one purse Which dangerous impediment if wee would auoyd let vs with all care and diligence make choyce of good company which will both by their words mutuall exhortations and good examples helpe vs forward and better our speed in the wayes of godlinesse like runners in a race who by striuing who shall out-runne one another doe all come to the goale in shorter time and with much more speed then if they should runne alone and haue no other to contend with them And contrariwise let vs with like care shunne familiar society with wicked men though in worldly respects it is profitable vnto vs assuring our selues that though for the present wee finde some benefit by such society yet in the end our spirituall losse will farre exceed our worldly gaine Or if wee bee so settered and hampered with such neere bonds of consanguinity alliance necessary intercourse of dealing or neere neighbourhood that wee cannot goe farre from them yet at least let it bee our griefe that wee are constrained to liue with them and come into their company more often then wee would according to the example of holy Dauid who cryed out in this case Woe is mee that I soiourne in Mesech that I dwell Psal 20. 6. in the tents of Kedar and of Lot whose righteous soule was much grieued 2. Pet. 2. 7. when liuing among the Sodomites hee was forced to see their filthy conuersation And to this end let vs remember first the many exhortations vsed in the Scriptures inciting vs with all care and circumspection to shunne and auoyd the society of the wicked Bee
suggestion and slight occasions some dreadfull iudgement threatned if we doe not yeeld to the tentation doe disturbe and disquiet the minde and take away all inward peace and tranquillity which should comfort and incourage vs in well-doing and so maketh vs to neglect altogether all good duties or to performe them to no purpose and profit by reason of our doubting and incredulity our trouble of mind and disquietnesse Yea oftentimes the body is so infeebled partly by these inward vexations griefe and heauinesse and partly by beeing restrayned from the comfortable vse of Gods creatures that they are disabled vnto all good duties and become weake sicke and vnfit instruments to be vsed by the soule in the seruice of God Now the cause of these scrupulous feares and troubles of minde are diuers For first on Gods part they are either fruits and effects of his iustice hereby punishing our former sinnes and especially because wee haue neglected his holy feare and to performe vnto him the duties of his seruice which he hath required of vs it being iust with God that because we would not harbor his feare in our hearts we should haue thē replenished vexed with causles feares of Bug-beares shadows because we would not serue him by yeelding obedience vnto his will that therefore wee should become slaues to our owne superstitious phantasies sometimes imposing vpon vs obedience vnto them and when wee are ready to performe it pulling vs backe with some new suggestion so that wee stand in an astonished manner neither daring to doe it nor leaue it vndone seeing both alike threaten the same danger Or else it is an effect of Gods mercy when as he conuerteth these effects of his Iustice to their good vsing them as meanes of their contrition and humiliation whereby they are fitted and prepared for true repentance and haue a resolution and indeuour wrought in them of seruing God in all good duties that so they may either be freed or at least secured from all those euils which these scrupulous feares doe threaten against them Secondly on our part they are caused first by our sinnes whereby we haue iustly brought these vexations vpon vs. Secondly by our ignorance and want of iudgement which maketh vs that wee cannot distinguish betweene the suggestions and tentations of Satan and our owne thoughts betweene the bare imaginations of our mindes vnto which we giue no entertainement and the consent of our wills vnto them By reason whereof wee either condemne our selues of such sinnes as we neuer committed seeing we haue at the first entrance of such thoughts and suggestions resisted and like Wilde-fire haue cast them out of our mindes and hearts or that our sinnes in this kinde are much more grieuous then they are as though we had giuen full consent vnto them because we haue a while harboured them in our mindes by reuoluing and thinking too long on them before we haue beaten them backe and quenched them by the shield of faith Thirdly such scrupulosities and superstitious feares arise commonly from the naturall humour of melancholy abounding in vs which maketh feareful impressions in our imaginations and disquieteth our mindes and hearts with terrible apprehensions which haue no true ground in themselues especially when as this humour is as it were leauened and set a working and boyling with the guilt of sin tormenting the conscience or with the sense and smart of some great and extraordinary crosses and afflictions Lastly the diuell laboureth to hinder vs in the duties of a godly life by making vs scrupulous and superstitious For when he can keepe vs no longer in carnall security by reason that wee are naturally timorous and haue some feare of God through the sight of our sins and apprehension of his iudgements begun in vs then he indeuoreth to turne our feare to false obiects that so fearing those things which are not to bee feared he may keepe out of our hearts the true feare of God which should be in vs the fountaine of true obedience And when he can no longer continue vs in open prophanenesse being now resolued to performe some seruice vnto God he will moue vs all he may to spend all our time and strength about trifles and things of no worth that in the meane while we may neglect mayne and substantiall duties which are necessary for the setting forth of Gods glory and the furthering and assuring of our saluation Secondly by these scrupulous feares hee distracteth our mindes turmoyleth our hearts and disturbeth and disquieteth our consciences so as we cannot at all performe any duties of Gods seruice or if wee doe yet so vncomfortably and with such anxiety and distraction with such doubting and infidelity that they can neither bee acceptable to God nor profitable for our owne saluation Lastly when our hearts are possessed with these scrupulous feares he easily withholdeth vs thereby from performing those holy duties which God requireth whilst hee suggesteth that some fearefull iudgement shall be fall vs if we doe them because we are vnworthy or vnprepared or else presseth vs to doe them out of these feares that wee may escape that which he threatneth to impose And so to performe Christian duties not out of true grounds and to right ends as loue filiall feare and obedience to God to the end we may glorify him but out of slauish terrour that we may escape that violēce which he threatneth vpon our neglect Whereof it will come to passe that the best duties thus performed are not any true seruice of God but rather of the deuil seeing feare of him not the loue of God his terrible threatnings and not faith in Gods promises moueth vs vnto them §. Sect. 2 Of the meanes whereby we may be freed from superstitious scrupulositie Now the meanes to be freed from this impediment are First that wee forsake our sinnes and turne vnto God by vnfained repentance and so apply his gracious promises vnto vs by a liuely faith that being reconciled vnto vs he may keepe vs safe vnder his prouidence and protection and not iustly for our sinnes giue vs ouer to the Tempter to be terrified with his feares and turmoyled with his false suggestions Secondly wee must labour to haue our mindes illuminated with sauing knowledge the light whereof will easily discouer the falshood and vanities of these superstitious scruples and feares and to attaine vnto spirituall wisedome and sound iudgement that thereby wee may be enabled to discerne betweene our owne thoughts which we entertaine with consent of will and the tentations of the deuill which wee haue resisted the good motions of Gods Spirit which are alwaies agreeable to his Word and the suggestions of the diuell which haue no ground or warrant from it Thirdly we must take heed that we doe not take any thing vpon the deuils bare suggestion seeing he is a lyer from the beginning who by his falshood laboureth to deceiue destroy vs for what were this but to beleeue in
are so bitter and vnpleasant to the flesh that they make vs immoderately sorrowfull and to breake out into some impatiency as though they were signes of Gods wrath and displeasure and not of his fatherly loue correcting vs for our amendment Seuenthly and lastly this sorrow ariseth in the hearts of weake Christians when as they compare themselues with others that haue made a better and greater progresse in the graces of Gods Spirit and in the duties of a godly life being hereby moued to think that the graces which they see in others are wholly wanting in themselues because their lesser light is obscured by a greater and seemeth nothing because it is not of equall brightnesse Or if they haue any at all yet that it is false and hypocriticall because it is but of slender growth and much inferiour to those which we obserue in many others whom notwithstanding we haue as much exceeded in meanes as they vs in the fruits of them By which sorrowes and heauinesse arising from these and such like causes the poore Christian doth more more weaken the operation of Gods graces in him in the duties of a godly life because he doth too much already apprehend their weaknesse and more disableth himselfe because he seeth his inability For hauing with immoderate griefe weakened his body and spent his spirits oppressed his heart and terrified his conscience he is made lumpish and dull vncheerfull and vncomfortable in all the duties of Gods seruice For the remouing of which impediment we must carefully take heed that we doe not disioyne faith from our repentance but as wee haue one eye vpon our sinnes that wee may sorrow for them so the other eye vpon our Sauiour Christ who hath fully satisfied for them Secondly we must not dreame vpon any perfection of sanctification in this life though we labour after it and then we shal not be too much deiected and mourne immoderately for our imperfection whereas if we fancy vnto our selues a farre greater measure of grace and holinesse then it is possible for vs to attaine it will be a cause of excessiue sorrow when we finde how farre we come short of our hopes Thirdly we must looke vpon Gods graces and the fruits of them in holy obedience as testimonies of Gods loue and euidences of our sanctification and not as being any meritorious causes of his fauour and our saluation For then we need not to stand so much vpon the quantity and degree of them as vpon their sincerity and truth which when we finde we may reioyce in the assurance of Gods free grace and loue through Iesus Christ Whereas if we looke vpon them in their worth and worthinesse the sight of their imperfections will bereaue our hearts of all sound comfort Fourthly we must consider that the first and least degrees of true grace are accepted of God and will make vs also acceptable vnto him For hee will not breake the bruised reed nor quench the smoking flax He respecteth Math. 12. 20. and tendreth his young lings and weaklings as well as those who haue attained to greater strength and he hath pronounced them blessed who Math. 5. 6. hunger and thirst after righteousnesse as well as those which are perfectly righteous Finally as we must take notice of that wee haue not that wee may labour after it so also we must not neglect what wee haue that wee may be truly thankfull vnto God from whose free grace we haue receiued it among which we may number spirituall life whereby onely we can be sensible of our wounds and weaknesse the sight and sense of our sinnes by which we are moued to deny our selues and to fly vnto Christ hungring desires of grace and holinesse seeing wee haue Gods promise that they shall be satisfied And so we shall ioyne faith with our repentance ioy with our mourning loue and thankfulnesse with our meeknesse and humility §. Sect. 5 Of desperation and that it is a great impediment to godlinesse Finally these scrupulous feares and carnall sorrow if they bee not remoued or moderated will bring vs by degrees into that fearfull gulph of deepe despaire whereby we shall cast off all hope of Gods mercy and reiect the all-sufficient merits and satisfaction of Iesus Christ through our incredulity as though the multitude and hainousnesse of our sinnes did farre exceed them And this is the very cut-throat of all piety and the diuels strongest and most horrid chaine to inslaue men in his seruice and to hinder them from entertaining so much as a thought or desire of seruing God in the duties of a godly life For it wholly discourageth a man from proceeding in such a way as offreth no hope of bringing him to his iourneys end It maketh a seruant wholly to neglect his duty when as hee is quite cut off from all expectation of reward It causeth men to giue themselues to all sensuality voluptuousnesse and prophanesse when they haue no other hopes but what this present life offereth vnto them and the rather that they may hereby put off for a little while their terrours of conscience and griefes of minde as it were by drinking of cold water in the fit of a feauer And wanting faith by which wee are vnited vnto Christ in whom a lone we can bring forth fruits of holinesse and righteousnesse how can we otherwise chuse but be vtterly barren in all true obedience and like wild Oliue trees bring forth onely fruits of impiety and wickednesse Which impediment if we would remoue we must remember that the Lord is infinite in grace and mercy as he describeth himselfe Exod. 34. 7. in his Word so that though our sinnes be many and grieuous yet they are infinitely exceeded by them for his mercies are aboue all his workes Micah 7. 18. That he taketh delight in shewing mercy toward repentant sinners seeing hereby he exerciseth his nature and magnifieth his holy name in the manifestation of his grace and goodnesse That he loued vs when we were his enemies yea so loued vs that he sent his onely begotten and dearely Ioh. 3. 16. beloued Sonne to dye for vs and therefore will not now reiect vs when as through Christ we sue and seeke to be reconciled vnto him That he hath made his free couenant of grace with vs wherein hee hath promised the remission of all our sinnes vpon the alone condition of faith bringing forth the fruits thereof in vnfained repentance and that his promises are indefinite without exception of any sinners and therefore shall assuredly belong vnto vs if we doe not reiect them through vnbeliefe That the merits and satisfaction of Christ are of infinite value and an all-sufficient satisfaction for the sinnes of the whole world if they were applyed by faith and that he hath giuen vnto vs his couenant in writing and ratified it by his Sacraments which he hath annexed as seales to the great Charter of our peace that there might no place be
place of paines labour and reserueth his Sabbath of rest for the world to come after wee haue finished our worke Heere we must worke in his Vineyard and the night of death must come before wee shall bee called to receiue our wages Heere wee must keepe our markes and there inioy the riches which wee haue gotten by our spirituall trading Heere wee must fight the Lords battels being couered with sweat and blood and there wee shall obtaine the Crowne of victory Finally heere wee must trauaile like poore Pilgrims and then take our ease when we haue finished our iourney and are come safe to our heauenly home Fourthly let vs call to minde the labours of the Saints which haue gone in this way before vs and especially of our Sauiour Christ himselfe who trauailed for our sakes not onely vnto wearinesse and sweat but euen vnto blood and not foolishly imagine that wee may take our ease and yet come timely and safely to the end of our hopes seeing our Sauiour hath told vs that the Kingdome of heauen suffereth violence Mat. 11. 21. and the violent take it by force and that wee must striue to enter into the Luk. 13. 24. straight gate with all earnestnesse and constancie because many shall seeke to enter and shall not bee able Lastly let vs consider the punishments denounced against those who idly sit still and refuse to trauell in the wayes of godlinesse For it casteth them into a deepe sleepe whereby all the operations of Gods graces are hindred yea it emptieth the sluggard of them all like him who wanting meate is famished with hunger According to that of Salomon Sloathfulnesse casteth into a deepe sleepe and Pro. 19. 15. the idle soule shall suffer hunger And as it depriueth him of all grace in this life so also of glory and happinesse in the life to come for hee onely must haue the wages who hath laboured in Christs Vineyard And contrariwise plungeth him into euerlasting death and destruction For the sloathfull and vnprofitable seruant must bee cast into outer Mat. 25. 26 30. darkenesse where shall bee weeping and gnashing of teeth And therefore if nothing else will mooue vs yet at least let vs take some paines in Gods seruice which being small and momentany shall bee euerlastingly rewarded that wee may escape the endlesse paines of hell For if wee cannot for a little while indure the kindly heate of the Sunne how shall wee bee able to suffer the skorching and tormenting flames of hell fire If wee are impatient of a little sweate and labour in the duties of Christianity and of our callings let vs thinke with our selues how much more intolerable the endlesse torments of the damned will bee vnto vs. §. Sect. 8 Of wearinesse in well doing and how it hindreth vs in all Christian duties And first that which proceedeth from an ill disposition of the body The last impediment which hindreth vs in the duties of a godly life is wearinesse in well-doing which proceedeth from a twofold cause The first outward which is the ill disposition of the body to the performance of Christian duties proceeding either from externall causes as hunger thirst heate cold excessiue labour in worldly imployments and such like or from inward infirmities and diseases which make the body faint and feeble weake and vnable to take any paines in the duties of a godly life For seeing the soule vseth the body as its organ and instrument for the performing of all outward actions and seeing there is such sympathie and familiarity betweene them that they mourne and reioyce together hereof it must needs follow that when the body is indisposed to the duties of Gods seruice the soule is thereby vnfitted for them when the body is feeble and faint the faculties of the soule cannot be strong and vigorous in their actions and operations When the body is weary and full of paine it must needs affect the mind and much distract it in all good duties And finally when the toole and instrument is blunt and dull vnfit and vntoward the most cunning Artificer must needs be hindred and much faile in his curious workemanship For the remoouing of which impediment wee must vse our best indeuour that wee may haue a sound minde in a sound body and to vse all good meanes of diet and Physicke for the preseruing or recouering of our health and to auoid intemperance insobriety and excessiue labour about worldly imployments Yea wee must auoyd immoderation and excesse euen in the exercises of mortification as fasting watching and the rest For as luxuriousnesse delicacie and sloth doe weaken the body for want of exercise and intemperance and insobriety doe make it feeble and vnfit for any imployment so likewise the contrary extremes and ouer-rough and rigorous handling of it doe exhaust and consume the spirits and make it so weake and faint that it is ready to sinke vnder euery burthen And therefore wee must carefully obserue the meane and auoyd both extremes especially that vnto which our corrupt nature inclineth and carryeth vs whether it bee to sensuality which pampereth the body with excesse or will-worship Col. 2. 23. and superstition in not sparing of it which is not much lesse dangerous then the other although it bee nothing so common and ordinary For as if we would make speedy iourneys our Horse must neither be pampered nor starued seeing by the one he is made either resty or out of breath and by the other so enfeebled that hee will not be able to beare vs so is it with our bodies which carry our soules and therfore they must be vsed with like prudence and prouidence §. Sect. 9 Of wearinesse in well-doing arising from the auersenesse of our wils vnto good duties The second cause is internall which is the ill disposition of the minde and will being auerse vnto all good duties and vertuous actions and prone vnto all euill delighting in worldly vanities and pleasures of sinne and dis-affecting and lothing spirituall exercises as being wearisome and tedious difficult and troublesome to our corrupted nature The which is a notable impediment to our well proceeding in the wayes of godlinesse for either this vnwillingnesse causeth such wearinesse that it will make vs either not to enter into the Christian course or soone desist and returne againe into our former wayes of wickednes sensual delights or else it will make vs vnsettled and vnconstant in all good duties doing them onely by fits and flashes when the good mood of deuotion commeth vpon vs and neglecting them when other things which better please vs come in the way or finally it quencheth our zeale and feruour of loue vnto the duties of Gods seruice so that wee performe them weakely and wearily coldly and formally with much dulnesse and spirituall deadnesse The which impediments if wee would auoyd wee must labour and striue against this wearinesse and faintnesse in well-doing and indeuour all wee may to take
away both these causes and effects of it And first wee must rowze vp our spirits and stirre vp Gods graces in 2. Tim. 1. 6. vs as the Apostle exhorteth that wee may not bee weary of well-doing by 2. Thes 3. 13. considering the waight and worth the profit and necessity of Christian and religious duties in comparison whereof all worldly things ought to be neglected as vaine and of no value Let vs remember that all the promises of grace life and saluation shall be assured vnto vs if we faint not whereas we shall haue no part or interest in them though we haue made neuer so good beginnings or proceedings if we doe not still goe forward and hold out vnto the end For if we indure Matth. 24. 13. to the end we shall be saued if we fight vnto the death we shall receiue the Crowne Apoc. 2. 10. of Life But if wee lay our hand vpon the Plough and looke backe we shall Luk. 9. 62. not be though worthy of the Kingdome of heauen Finally let vs dayly renue the meanes of Spirituall life and strength that so they also may be renued and repayred as hearing reading meditation prayer watchfulnesse holy conferences and the rest without which the soule will grow faint and languish like the body which is depriued of corporall food but especially when we feele our faintnesse and languishing wearinesse let vs vnite all the powers of our soules in prayer vnto Almighty God desiring him by the inward operation of his holy Spirit to quicken our deadnesse and strengthen our weakenesse that we may not waxe wearie of well doing but continue constant vnto the end Now concerning the effects of this slothfull wearinesse which are also great impediments to a godly life as hindring vs from entring into it or proceeding in it inconstancie and vnsettlednesse in performing Christian duties and want of feruencie in our loue and zeale in doing of them I shall not neede to adde any thing here for the remoouing of them seeing I haue spoken before of perseuerance and constancie in the dayly performance of all Christian duties and of that feruour of loue and zeale which ought to be vsed in doing of them And therefore thus much shall suffice to haue spoken of those impediments which arise from the flesh and corruption of our nature and also of the helpes and meanes whereby wee may remoue them CAP. XIII Obiections against a godly life made by the flesh answered and first such as pretend impossibility and difficulty §. Sect. 1 That a godly life is possible vnto vs. BVt the flesh doth not onely hinder vs in the duties of a godly life by those reall impediments which it casteth in our way of which I haue before spoken but also by suggesting into our mindes many strong obiections which tend to this maine end that wee may be discouraged from entring into the course of Christianity And first the flesh is ready to obiect that in this state of frailty and corruption it is vtterly impossible to lead a godly life in that manner as it hath beene before described For who can bring that which is cleane out of that which Iob 14. 4. is vncleane Who can leade such a life as is pleasing and acceptable vnto God whose pure eyes can indure nothing which is impure and imperfect seeing the Prophet telleth vs that our best righteousnesse is as Esay 64. 6. a polluted cloth and the Apostle who so farre exceeded vs that now liue in piety and righteousnesse notwithstanding complayneth that he could not doe the good he would but contrariwise did the euill he would Rom. 7. 15. not And therefore it is in vaine to wearie our selues about impossibilities and so to lose both the pleasures of this life and that which is to come And thus the flesh perswadeth vs to play the bankerupts and to resolue that because we cannot pay all our whole debt that therefore wee will pay nothing at all To which I answere with our Sauiour Christ that those things which are impossible to vs are both possible and easie vnto God who hath promised to assist vs if we desire and indeuour to serue and please him Secondly I answere that though nothing will please God but that which is pure and perfect all our best actions are full of corruption imperfection yet this need not to discourage vs from doing the best we can seeing Christ who hath perfitly fulfilled the Law for vs couereth our imperfections with his most perfect righteousnes washeth away our corruptions in his most precious blood so that we may doe the best we can then what is wanting on our part shal be supplied on his For what the Law could not doe in Rom. 8. 3. that it was weake through the flesh God sending his owne Son in the likenes of sinfull flesh and for sin condemned sinne in the flesh that the righteousnes of the Law might be fulfilled in vs who walke not after the flesh but after the Spirit as the Apostle speaketh Thirdly though that perfect obedience which the Law requireth be impossible vnto vs in respect of our frailty corruption yet that Euangelical obedience required in the couenant of grace namely that beleeuing in Christ we desire resolue indeuor to please God in al things is not so Though we haue no ability to performe seruice vnto God in that exact perfection which the Law requireth yet if we doe that which we are able in sincerity truth with vpright hearts good cōsciences we shal through Christ be accepted of God For he reiecteth not the least indeuours of his faithfull seruants who desire Nehem. 1. 11. to feare his name He will not breake the bruised reed nor quench the smoking Matth. 12. 20. flax till he bring forth iudgement vnto victory He spareth vs as a father spareth Mal. 3. 17. his sonne that serueth him and if we haue a willing mind we shal be accepted according 2. Cor. 8. 12. to that we haue and not according to that we haue not He pittieth our frailties and infirmities like as a father pittieth his children that feare him Psal 103. 13 14. out of this pitty pardoneth them For he knoweth our frame remembreth that we are but dust And though he hath most pure eyes which can indure no pollution yet he beholdeth not iniquity in Iacob neither doth he see Num. 23. 21. peruersnes in Israel Nor is he any accepter of persons but in euery nation he that Act. 10. 35. feareth him worketh righteousnes not according to the rigor of the law from which Christ hath freed vs but in the truth and vprightnes of his heart is accepted of him And thus was Dauid accepted as a man according to Gods own heart because he applied himselfe to obserue his precepts alwaies Psal 119. 112. to the end notwithstanding his grieuous sins and fearefull fals
to flee securitie pag. 50. § 3. That the examples of securitie fearefully punished in others ought to be warnings vnto vs. pag. 51. § 4. That Christs holy Apostles haue giuen vs many warnings to take heed of it pag. 52. § 5. That carnall securitie is a most dangerous sicknesse of the soule pag. 52. § 6. That it is a disease hardly cured pag. 53. § 7. That it is the cause of all sinne pag. 54. § 8. That it emptieth the heart of all grace and prepareth and maketh it fit to receiue Satan and all his tentations pag. 54. CHAP. IX Wherein is shewed that carnall securitie is the cause of many fearefull punishments § 1. THat carnall securitie depriueth vs of Gods fauour and protection and dispoyleeh vs of spirituall grace pag. 56. § 2. Of some speciall graces whereof it depriueth vs. pag. 57. § 3. That Gods Spirit will not dwell in a secure heart pag. 57. § 4. That carnall securitie depriueth vs of eternall happinesse pag. 58. § 5. That it exposeth vs to positiue euills and first to all dangers pag. 58. § 6. That it exposeth vs to Gods fearefull Iudgements pag. 59. § 7. The former point illustrated by Examples pag. 60. § 8. That it plungeth men into euerlasting condemnation pag. 60. § 9. That carnall securitie is a fearefull punishment of other sinnes pag. 61. CHAP. X. Of the meanes whereby we may be preserued from carnall securitie As first auoyding and taking away the causes of it § 1. THe first remedie is to auoid ignorance and to labour after knowledge pag. 63. § 2. The second remedie is to consider and meditate often on Gods Attributes pag. 63. § 3. The third meanes is to cast off all selfe-confidence pag. 65. § 4. That it is a notable meanes to weaken selfe-confidence if we consider the strength of our spirituall enemies pag. 65. § 5. The third remedie is to vse well our prosperitie pag. 67. § 6. The fift remedie is to shun customable sinning pag. 68. § 7. The sixt remedie is to make precious account of Gods grace and forbearance pag. 68. § 8. The seuenth remedie is to shun presumption pag. 69. § 9. The eighth remedie is to vse carefully the meanes of saluation pag. 69. § 10. The ninth remedie is to heare the Word with Faith pag. 71. § 11. The tenth remedie is to apply the Word vnto our selues pag. 71. § 12. The eleuenth remedie is not to misapply the promises pag. 71. CHAP. XI Wherein are set downe diuers other remedies whereby we may be preserued from carnall securitie § 1. THe first remedie is to withstand securitie in the first degrees of it pag. 72. § 2. The second remedie is to nourish in our hearts the true feare of God pag. 74. § 3. The third remedie is to make great account of a soft and relenting heart pag. 75. § 4. The fourth remedie is examination of our estate pag. 76. § 5. The fift remedie is to esteeme much of priuate admonitions pag. 77. § 6. The sixt remedie is to visit those who are in affliction pag. 79. § 7. The seuenth remedie is to meditate on the tentations and sufferings of Christ pag. 80. § 8. The eighth remedie is to consider that securitie in this life is vnseasonable pag. 81. § 9. The ninth remedie is to meditate often on the last iudgement pag. 82. § 10. The last remedie is frequent and feruent prayer for Gods blessing vpon all the former meanes pag. 83. THE CONTENTS OF THE SECOND BOOKE Intreating of Spirituall and Christian Securitie CHAP. I. Wherein spirituall securitie is defined and the definition explaned § 1. THat all securitie is not to be condemned but that it is in some kind commendable and to be desired pag. 85. § 2. The description of spirituall Securitie pag. 86. § 3. That God is the authour of spirituall Securitie pag. 87. § 4. That the Regenerate onely are the subiect of spirituall Securitie pag. 88. § 5. The grounds of spirituall Securitie on which it resteth pag. 88. § 6. Of the continuance and perpetuitie of spirituall Securitie pag. 89. CHAP. II. Of the Causes and Effects of spirituall Securitie § 1. THe causes of spirituall Securitie respecting God pag. 90. § 2. The causes of spirituall Securitie respecting God pag. 91. § 3. Of the particular causes of spirituall Securitie first sauing knowledge pag. 92. § 4. The second cause a liuely Faith in Christ. pag. 93. § 5. The third cause Charitie pag. 93. § 6. The fourth cause the true feare of God pag. 94. § 7. The last cause is new obedience pag. 94. § 8. Of the effects of spirituall Securitie pag. 95. CHAP. III. Of the meanes of spirituall securitie whereby it may be obtayned or preserued and increased § 1. THe first meanes is highly to esteeme it and to seeke it from God and in him pag. 96. § 2. The second meanes is to labour to be in the number of Christs Disciples and Sheepe of his flocke pag. 97. § 3. The third meanes is that we labour to be in the couenant of Grace pag. 98. § 4. The fourth meanes is to labour to haue the causes of it in vs. As first the Spirit of adoption and the chayne of sauing Graces pag. 99. § 5. The fift meanes is to labour to be indued with those speciall sauing Graces which are the causes of it first knowledge and remembrance of God and his Attributes Secondly Faith Thirdly Affiance fourthly loue of God fiftly the feare of God sixtly Christian righteousnesse seuenthly new obedience pag. 100. § 6. The sixt meanes contempt of the World pag. 101. § 7. The seuenth meanes to keepe our hearts vpright and our consciences pure pag. 102. § 8. The last meanes is Christian watchfulnesse and often examination of our estates pag. 103. FINIS Of Securitie first in Generall what it is lib. 1. chap. 1. § 6. In speciall and of the seuerall kinds which are 1. Natural which are either that in the state of lib. 1. Innocency which was holy and good chap. 1. § 6. Of corruption which is carnall in handling whereof is shewed 1. What it is and this is illustrated by Testimonies chap. 2. Examples chap. 2. 2. The causes of it which are twelue in number chap. 3. 3. The diuers kinds of it distinguished by the diuers degrees of it in which respect it is either naturall c. 4. § 1. affected and voluntarie § 2. subiects in which respect it is cōsidered as it is either in the Vnregenerate cap. 4. § 3. Regenerate where of the c. 4. kinds which are either insensible and not perceiued § 5. sensible and discouered § 5. causes of it which are two prosperitie § 6. pride § 7. 4. how we may know one kind from another where is shewed that they differ in their Causes and effects chap. 5. § 1. and 6. Subiects and properties chap. 1. § 6. 7. 5. The signes of it which arise from their seuerall Causes chap. 6. Effects and other arguments
Idoll of a mercy in God falsely fancied vnto themselues whilest they seuer it from his Iustice which will not let the sinnes of such presumptuous wretches goe vnpunished and from his Truth which hath denounced fearefull Iudgements against them who securely abuse his patience and long suffering which should leade them to repentance and make them sorry and ashamed that they should offend so gracious and mercifull a God as an incouragement to hearten them on in their course of wickednesse and to make them contemne his Iudgements and Threatnings §. 8 The eight cause the neglect or contempt of the meanes of grace and saluation The eighth cause is the neglect or contempt of the meanes of spirituall grace and eternall saluation as of hearing the Word the vse of the Sacraments Meditation Prayer holy Conferences and such like For as these are the meanes of working our hearts to the true feare of God repentance and spirituall watchfulnesse so the neglect of them causeth carnall securitie hardnesse of heart and boldnesse in sinning And as all other Vices get head and strength by forsaking the vse of the meanes whereby the contrarie Vertues are wrought because they are the priuation of them and therefore the remouall of the one from that subiect which is capable of them is the placing of the other as wee see Light succeed Darknesse and Darknesse Light Rest Labour and Labour Rest so is it in these the putting away of the feare of God by neglecting the meanes whereby it is bred and nourished in vs is the cause of entertayning carnall securitie And so likewise as all other Vices being admitted doe mutually strengthen one another that they may keepe firmer and surer possession against the Vertues which they oppose so is it betweene these for the more we neglect the Word Sacraments and the rest the more secure wee shall be in all sinfull courses and the more strong wee grow in carnall securitie the more negligent wee waxe in those holy Exercises And therefore the Prophet ioyneth them together as mutuall causes of one another They stopped their eares that they should not heare and made Zach. 7. 11 12. their hearts as an Adamant stone §. 9 The ninth cause hearing the Word without Faith The ninth cause is the hearing of the Word without Faith giuing no credit either to the threatnings of the Law or promises of the Gospell Heb. 4. 2. For as the Word is vnprofitable if it bee not mixed with Faith in those that heare it as the Apostle speaketh so it becommeth in this respect by accident through our corruption dangerous and hurtfull Either it is the sauour of life vnto life or the sauour of death vnto death 2. Cor. 2. 16. Either it weakneth and killeth Vice or giueth more strength and vigour to it either it softneth our hearts like Waxe or hardneth them like Clay either it worketh them to Gods feare when we beleeue his Promises and Threatnings or maketh them more carnally secure when wee giue no credit to them For the Word of God proceeding out of his mouth shall not returne vnto him void but shall accomplish that which pleaseth him and prosper in the thing whereto hee sends it Esai 55. 11. as the Prophet speaketh And as oft as we heare it either it setteth vs forward in the right way that leadeth to saluation or through our corruption and vnbeliefe it maketh vs to goe faster and more securely in the wayes of death and destruction It will make our hearts melt like the heart of good Iosiah or to become more hard like the heart of Pharaoh and wee shall receiue Gods Ambassadors with feare and trembling as the Corinthians did Titus or with proud neglect and 2. Cor. 7. 15. scornefull censures fore-stalling preiudice and resolued obstinacy as the Athenians did the Apostle Paul So the Lord speaketh of some Act. 17. 18 32. who should take occasion vpon hearing the curses of the Law to blesse Deut. 29. 20. themselues in their hearts saying I shall haue peace though I walke in the imagination of my heart to adde drunkennesse to thirst And the Prophet from the Lord saith of the people of the Iewes that whilest they heard and vnderstood not and seeing perceiued not their hearts were made Esa 6. 9. more fat their eares heauie and their eyes more blind which is not caused by any naturall propertie of the Word but by accident through mans corruption that doth abuse it and so maketh that a curse which was ordayned for a blessing Like the weake and tender eye that is made more blind by the bright beames of the Sunne which cause stronger sights to see and discerne the better or the weake eare which is made more deafe by too much hearing of loud sounds or the sicke stomacke which becommeth more sicke by receiuing holesome nourishment whereby one strong and healthy would bee confirmed in health and by well digesting of it minister vigour and strength to the whole body §. 10 The tenth cause the not applying the Word preached The tenth cause is the not applying of the Word preached or read vnto our selues for our owne vse and benefit but putting it off to others as though it concerned them and not vs especially admonitions and reprehensions for sinne and the threatnings of Gods Iudgements against those that continue in them without repentance For so are men blinded with pride and selfe loue that they can see no faults in themselues or if they doe yet they seeme so small and veniall that they are scarce worth the reprouing and so defectiue are they in charitie towards their Neighbours that they can easily spie the least Motes in their eyes and make of euery Moll-hill a huge Mountayne And this maketh them to shift all rebukes for sinne and denunciations of punishment from themselues vnto others to whom they thinke they more fitly belong and so blesse themselues and securely liue in sinne as though they were free from all danger Yea though they be neuer so faultie in those Vices that are reproued yet if in truth they can find out any that in the iudgement of the World doe goe beyond them in those kinds then can they heare them sharpely rebuked without any sting of conscience or sense of the smart of their owne sinnes yea with much pleasure and delight And thus haue I often heard after some powerfull Sermon against couetousnesse a greedie Muck-worme nothing moued for his owne auarice because hee hath beene able to picke out of a whole Citie or Countrey some one supposed to bee more wretched then himselfe vnto whom hee hath applyed all that was spoken And so when pride hath beene rebuked or profanenesse or worldlinesse or any other sinne I haue noted that those who haue highly offended in these kinds in the iudgement of all others haue like innocents securely blessed themselues applying nothing spoken to their owne vse because they could point at others that haue exceeded them
though in the winter of tentation it lyeth hid and bringeth forth no fruits and there is a seed of Gods 1. Ioh. 3. 9. grace and holy Spirit euer remayning in him though hidden vnder the clods of sinne and corruption which being watred with the dew and fruitfull showres of Gods Word and Spirit will sprout vp and bring forth plentifull fruits But in the Worldling there is a roote of bitternesse and his heart had neuer the seeds of Gods grace and holy feare sowen in it and therefore nothing is to bee expected to spring out of it but the Thornes and Thistles of carnall and sinfull actions The carnall securitie of the Faithfull doth but take away from them the comfort of their present condition but not of times past when as they haue had the sweet feelings of Gods loue shed abroad in their hearts and working them to his feare vpon which grounds they may bee recouered out of this sleepe with some comfort when as they know that their state is not desperate But the securitie of Worldlings depriueth them of all true consolation past and present and abuseth them with false comforts which will end in Horror and Despaire The securitie of the regenerate is at the worst but a syncope and casteth them for a time into a swound or trance leauing no apparance of spirituall life in respect of motion and outward actions but it will not be long ere they recouer and shew that life was onely hid but not quite taken away by the functions and operations of it in holy and Christian duties But the securitie of the vnregenerate is the swound of death out of which they neuer recouer till by their last summons they are awakned to come vnto iudgement The securitie of Beleeuers in the highest degree is but like the frost which worketh them for the time to a stony hardnesse but the Sunne-shine of the Word heate of Gods Anger and fire of Afflictions thaweth them bringeth them againe to their wonted softnesse and causeth them to resolue and melt in the teares of true Repentance but the securitie of the wicked maketh them like Bricke-bats the more hard the more they are heate by the former meanes yea of more then adamantine hardnesse so as nothing will soften them and cause them to relent Finally the securitie of Gods Children when it is at the worst doth onely like ashes hide and couer vnder it the true feare of God so as it yeeldeth for the time no light or heate and yet it liueth in them and will reuiue when Gods Spirit bloweth vpon it and giueth a fresh supply of grace as it were of more fuell But the securitie of the vngodly like water doth quite extinguish it or rather it could neuer bee kindled in them because there is contayned in their hearts a mayne Flood or Sea of carnall corruption §. 3 Of the differences betweene carnall securitie in the Faithfull and Wicked and first in respect of their causes And thus wee see that howsoeuer the carnall securitie of the wicked and godly are alike in many things yet there are diuers mayne differences betweene them though it be considered in the regenerate in the highest degree and so insensible that it depriueth them of all sense and spirituall feeling of their dangerous estate and condition But if we compare that carnall securitie which is ordinarily in the regenerate and is more subdued and abated by the Spirit of God with that which is in the vnregenerate Worldlings we shall find that the differences betweene them are many and much more perspicuous and easie to bee discerned For first they differ in respect of their causes from which they spring not so much because they are diuers in their nature for for the most part they are the same euen the same flesh and naturall corruption and the same fruits which arise from it but in respect of their diuers measure and degree For the securitie of the vnregenerate is a fruit of flesh in its full strength and vigour but that of the regenerate as it is mortified weakned and subdued to the spirituall part That proceedeth from palpable ignorance from vtter forgetfulnesse and totall neglect of God in his sauing Attributes which are the onely causes that worke Gods feare in our hearts and so reigneth and ruleth in them without opposition and resistance like a King in his Throne But this ariseth from these causes as they are abated opposed and in part subdued by their contrarie vertues the Knowledge Remembrance and Consideration of God and his Attributes of Wisedome Iustice Power Mercy and Goodnesse And therefore being much weakned in its naturall strength like the causes of it it doth not vsually in Hostile manner assault vs in the open Field but like a Tyrant deposed from his Regency or a slye Rebell that wanteth force it secretly and cunningly stealeth vpon vs insinuateth and windeth it selfe into our hearts at vnawares when wee least suspect it and fighteth against the feare of God out of ambushments and vpon aduantages and sometimes giueth it the foyle and for a time maketh it giue place but being renued and strengthned by the Spirit of God it re-encountreth carnall securitie driueth it from its Holds and againe bringeth it vnder subiection And the like might be said of all other causes of securitie before mentioned were it not ouer long to stand seuerally vpon them all which in the vnregenerate are in their vigour strength and sole Regency hauing no opposites to moderate and weaken them but in the regenerate they are in part mortified by Gods Spirit subdued and deposed from their Rule by those Graces which are contrarie to them and answerably their securitie is either totall or but in part stronger or weaker according to the qualitie and nature of the causes from which it springeth §. 4 The second difference in their effects Secondly they differ in their effects which in the one are more strong and permanent in the other more weake and momentaine For the securitie of the vnregenerate striketh with a deadly blow all the powers of the soule and bringeth them into a deepe Lethargie which depriueth them of all sense and feeling of their disease and consequently of all desire to be cured of it yea it maketh them like the blind and dumbe Shepheards of whom the Prophet speaketh to delight Esa 56. 10. in sleeping vnwilling to be awakned and angrie with those who vse any meanes to rowse them vp So that the more they sleepe the more they may till at last they are brought to eternall death and destruction or if by the Trumpet of the Word sounding loud in their eares they bee somewhat disturbed in their carnall rest either with Pharaoh they will not at all acknowledge the voyce of the Lord nor Exod. 5. 2. haue any desire of reconciling themselues vnto him by vnfayned repentance but vse all meanes to quiet their minds that they may fall into their deepe sleepe againe as shunning
Now what can argue greater securitie then through our want of consideration to mistake our repentance as a thing being in our owne power and therefore at our command whensoeuer wee call for it whereas it is the free gift of God and therefore to be receiued with all care and diligence whilest the acceptable Time and Day of saluation lasteth wherein the Lord graciously offereth this gift vnto vs What can more conuince vs that our hearts are in this dead sleepe then caresly to put off a thing of such importance as our repentance is which concerneth vs no lesse then our eternall Saluation or Damnation vnto after-times which are most vncertayne we hauing no assurance no not so much as of one minute What sheweth more euidently our carelesse retchlesnesse then Luk. 17. with the old World and the filthy Sodomites to liue impenitently in our sinnes Eating and Drinking Buying and Selling Building and Planting till wee bee swept away with the Deluge of Gods Iudgements and be consumed with his inflamed Wrath. Or with Belshazzar Dan. 5. to feast and carowze till the Finger vpon the Wall writ downe the sentence of our condemnation Finally if securitie did not besot vs how could we be so be-fooled as to conceiue that we may more fitly and conueniently repent long hereafter then at the present when we haue by abusing Gods patience incensed his wrath and moued him to withdraw his gifts and graces When wee haue hardned our hearts with customable finning so as neither Gods Word nor Works Mercies nor Iudgements can pierce into them When as we are distracted with infirmities of body and cares of mind sense of present euills and feare of worse How could we be perswaded to imagine that wee shall more easily make vp our reckonings betweene God and vs when they are growne so great as they are sufficient to fill Zacharies large roll then when they are in Day-bookes and short Zach. 5. 2. Scrowles that we can better come out of Satans bondage when he hath long held vs in his captiuitie and worne vs out and lamed vs with his gyues and fetters of sinne then when wee are first come into his thraldome Or that we can pull vp sinne when by time and continuance it is like an growne Tree rooted in vs then when it was newly planted and as it were in the tender twigs if our hearts were not hardned and the eyes of our vnderstanding quite blinded with this carnall securitie §. 8 The fourth signe is hypocrisie The fourth signe is Hypocrisie when as we make outward shew of holinesse and nourish corruption in our hearts tipping our tongues with a golden and glorious profession and angling for prayse and commendations by presenting vnto the sight of men some seeming good actions that wee may more cunningly hide and disguise our secret sinnes For as sinceritie and Gods feare accompanie one another according to that of the wise Man He that walketh in his vprightnesse Pro. 14. 2. feareth the Lord as wee see in the example of Iob who is said to haue Iob 1. 1. beene a man perfect and vpright and the cause thereof is rendred because he was one that feared the Lord So Securitie and Hypocrisie are neuer seuered but as the Cause and Effect goe still together For if we were not blinded with securitie we could neuer be so foolish as to imagine that we may please God with outward shewes that being a Spirit he will be content with outward and bodily seruice that he can be satisfied with the seruice of the outward Man and that in the Church onely and when we are in good and religious Companie and let the Deuill and the World haue the heart at all times and the whole Man in places secret and vnseene How could we hope to be out of danger when wee are in the darke and doing the works of darknesse seeing Night and Day are to God alike and his piercing eye searcheth and seeth euen the hidden secrets of the heart and reynes if our carnall securitie did not make vs beleeue that as wee regard not God but haue remoued him farre from our thoughts so hee as little respecteth and thinketh of vs. Like the foolish Lapwing who hauing hidden his head becommeth secure thinking that hee is no more seene then hee himselfe seeth others §. 9 The fift signe is to feare Man more then God The fift signe is when we feare Men more then God being more carefull to please and more loath to displease them then his Maiestie Matth. 10. 28. Exod. 1. 17 18. Heb. 11. 23. Dan. 3. and 6. For as the true feare of God maketh vs to neglect men in comparison of him according to the commandement of our Sauiour Feare not them that kill the body c. and the example of the good Midwiues and the Parents of Moses who feared God more then Pharaoh of Daniel and the three Children who regarded not the Kings Edict either commanding Idolatrie or forbidding Gods true worship and the Apostles who professed that they feared God more then Act. 5. Men So it is the nature of carnall securitie to make vs feare and respect men because their rewards and punishments like vnto it selfe are carnall worldly present and subiect to the senses and to neglect God though his be vnspeakable and euerlasting because being future and for the time to come and as yet not to be seene or felt we neuer consider nor thinke of them Herein much like vnto foolish children who feare more the Schole-master threatning to whip them because of the present smart then the deserued threats of their iust Father though they concerne them no lesse then their reiection out of his fauour for the present and dis-inheriting from their patrimonie in time to come §. 10 The sixt signe immoderate feare in time of danger The sixt signe of carnall securitie is immoderate feare in time of danger For it is an ordinarie thing with Vices when they are a little checked and crossed to turne into their contrarie extremes As of presumption into despaire prophane mirth into deepe melancholy insolent pride into most abiect basenesse as wee see in the example of Benhadad who being exalted in the opinion of his vnresistable forces 1. King 20. 3. 10. 32. gloriously boasteth that the King of Israells siluer and gold wiues and children were alreadie his before the battaile because the dust of Samaria could not suffice for handfulls for all the people that followed him but being put to the worse in the battaile hee becommeth cowardly base sending his seruants with halters about their necks to acknowledge his seruice and to beg for life And thus it fareth with carnall securitie which in the time of prosperitie and safetie is bold and confident but when danger approcheth entertayneth all feares and is presently daunted and dismayed with the shaking of a leafe As wee see in the example of the Apostle Peter who was most confident and
seeing they who faile in this point alone must needs faile in all the rest applying vnfit if not hurtfull medicines which weaken the body and strengthen the disease But yet it is not enough that the sicknesse by the symptomes and signes be plainly discerned and the causes and effects properties and qualities of it well knowne if the learned Physician and sicke Patient proceed no further but it is also required for the effecting of the cure that there bee first a willingnesse in the Patient to be healed of his infirmitie with a resolution to vse the medicines which shall be prescribed and then skill and faithfulnesse in the Physician to prescribe such as are effectuall for his recouerie And thus it fareth with the spirituall diseases of the soule the Patient and Physician For wee must first labour to know what the sicknesse is by the signes thereof and then be carefull in prescribing applying the best remedies And therefore hauing plainly discouered this dangerous disease of carnall securitie by the signes of it it remayneth now that we come to the cure and shew the meanes whereby he who findeth himselfe sicke of this pernicious disease may be recouered to spiritual health And first because the skill in the physician is nothing in prescribing the best means except there be also a wil in the Patient to vse apply them I wil vse some motiues to perswade all that find themselues affected with this sicknesse to desire with all earnestnesse that they may be cured that so they may be made willing also to apply the remedies And because all physick both for body and soule is in it selfe or at least in conceit vnpleasant to the Patient and none are willing to vse it but those who feele the payne or see the danger of their disease therefore it is fit that wee set downe the nature properties and effects of this carnall securitie that so a desire may be wrought in those who are subiect vnto it to be cured of it The which is more necessarie in that this sicknes is not painfull to the Patient but insensible like the lethargie or dead palsie yea in truth most pleasant and delightfull to the most so that he who hath it is naturally loth to be cured of it because he liueth at ease without disturbance inioyeth quietly all his worldly comforts and goeth on to his destruction with a cheerfull heart merry countenance And therefore the lesse he feeleth the paine the more he needeth to see the danger and seeing himselfe cannot apprehend it because this disease affecteth the mind and taketh away the vnderstanding so as it cannot naturally be discerned by the partie that hath it I will shew how desperate and pernicious it is vnto all those who doe not vse the meanes wherby to be recouered §. 2 That Christ hath giuen vs speciall warning to flee securitie The danger of this disease hereby appeareth in that Christ the great and chiefe Physician of our soules doth so carefully giue warning of it vsing all meanes to let all those that are his to see the danger and to take such courses as they may preuent it or being tainted and ouer-taken with it may be awakned and rowsed vp out of this sweet yet pernicious slumber And this he doth both by Parables Examples and Admonitions and Exhortations which he presseth and enforceth from them For first this is the mayne scope of the Parable of the wise and foolish Virgins of which they being possessed with the true feare of Matth. 25. God stood carefully vpon their watch expecting the vncertaine comming of the Bridegroome and so when hee came were receiued with him into the bridall Chamber of eternall blessednesse but the other being secure and retchlesse spent their time in ease and sloth not vsing any meanes to bee prepared against the time of his approching who being taken vpon the sudden vnprouided and vnfurnished of the oile of sauing grace and the light of an holy life were excluded from the marriage feast and depriued of the fruition of heauenly happines To this end also tendeth the Parable of the wise and faithfull and the euill and vnfaithfull Seruant the one expecting daily his Masters cōming carrieth himselfe in all his affaires and towards his fellowes so wisely and honestly as if his Master were alreadie present and he is for his Matth 24. 45. Luk. 12. 42. reward pronounced blessed and made Ruler of all his Master hath for his fidelitie and care at his comming The other being made secure because his Lord delayeth his comming behaueth himselfe so as though he thought he would neuer come smiting his fellow seruants and eating and drinking with the drunken who is taken vpon a sudden by his Master and in a day when he looketh not for him and for his reward is cut off and appointed to haue his portion with the Hypocrites where shall Luk. 12. 18 19. be weeping and gnashing of teeth Finally at this our Sauiour also aymeth in the Parable of the rich Man who abounding in all prouision and hauing more Corne and Fruits then roome to bestow them in giueth himselfe to secure rest and ease saying to his Soule Thou hast much goods laid vp for many yeeres take thine ease eate drinke and be merry But out of this secure slumber hee is quickly awakned with Gods voyce saying Thou Foole this night thy soule shall be required of thee and then whose shall those things be which thou hast prouided §. 3 The examples of securitie in others seuerely punished ought to be warnings vnto vs. To this purpose our Sauiour also produceth examples mouing vs to bee wise by the experience of others harmes As the example of Luk. 17. 26. those who liued before the Flood and of the people of Sodom and Gomorrah who liued securely in their sinnes eating and drinking buying and selling planting and building marrying and giuing in marriage as though they had beene free from all danger and sure that those pleasures would haue euer lasted But the issue of this sinfull securitie was that they were surprised with Gods fearefull Iudgements at vnawares For no sooner was Noah entred into the Arke but the Flood came and drowned them all and presently after that Lot was gone out of Sodom those sinfull and secure Cities with all their Inhabitants were terribly consumed with fire and brimstone And from both these Parables and Examples the Lord raiseth admonitions and inforceth exhortations mouing vs to shake off carnall securitie and being affected with Christian feare to stand carefully vpon our watch and to be instant in prayer that we may be found readie at Christs appearing Watch therefore for you know not what houre your Lord doth Matth. 24. 42. come And againe Let your loynes be girded about and your lights burning Luk. 12. 35 36. And ye your selues like vnto them that wait for their Lord when hee will returne from the wedding that when hee commeth and
carelesse after it is committed when wee haue before our eyes the examples of those who daily commit greater sinnes with greater securitie because for the present they liue in impunitie and are not by God called to a reckoning Againe if we would preserue our hearts and consciences soft and tender we must walke with God and set our selues in his presence as Enoch did and so shall wee make scruple not onely of open and manifest but of secret and vnknowne sinnes because he being alwayes present they are seene and knowne of him Not onely of such sinnes as are great and haynous but euen of the least and first degrees of wickednesse thinking no sinne small which will lesson those sweet ioyes and comforts we haue in our communion with God and change his gracious smiles and influences of his fauour into an angrie and frowning countenance For if we doe without feare fall often into lesser sinnes we shall in a while liue securely in those which are greater and as Sheepe and lesser Cattle though lighter of body yet by their multitude trample a path-way as soone as greater and heauier beasts that come more seldome and in lesser droues so will these lesser and lighter sinnes in respect of their multitude and often hapning harden the heart and cause it to become like a beaten path vnfit to receiue the seed of Gods Word or to bring forth any fruits of godlinesse Finally wee must attentiuely harken to the voyce of conscience when it checketh vs for sinne or approueth vs for well-doing restrayneth vs from euill or inciteth vs to good and not suffer the voyce thereof to be drowned with the clamour of our lusts which will make it wearie of speaking and admonishing when it admonisheth and speaketh in vaine and willing to let vs goe on securely in our courses seeing wee refuse to take counsaile and direction from it And we must take heed of knowne and voluntarie sinnes which wound the conscience and being often reiterated make it seared and benummed and casteth it as it were into a trance in which it hath no sense and feeling For if this bee our case needs must wee sleepe in deepe securitie when as our Watch-man sleepeth that should awake vs needs must we like desperate Malefactors be without feare of Law and punishment when wee see no witnesse to giue euidence against vs. Our care therefore must bee that wee may auoid this fearefull estate to keepe the conscience pure from the defilements of sinne or if it bee defiled to purge it presently by renuing our faith and repentance To preserue it in as much life and sense as wee can or if wee perceiue that it beginneth to grow stupid and benummed we must quicken and stirre it vp by meditating in the Law and by summoning it often to giue an account before the supreme Iudge of its neglect of dutie and deadnesse and backwardnesse in giuing euidence §. 4 The fourth remedie is examination of our estate The fourth meanes is that wee often and seriously examine our estate in the Audit of conscience and as in Gods presence how it standeth Psal 4. 4. 119. 59. betweene him and vs and whether it thriueth and groweth better or decayeth and waxeth worse in spirituall graces and in the practise of Christian and holy duties As whether sinne and corruption increaseth in strength or whether it is daily more and more mortified and subdued in vs. Whether wee profit or thrine in our spirituall growth by the meanes of our saluation and the vse of Gods holy Ordinances and waxe richer in all spirituall graces or whether we spend of the stocke and grow more faint and poore in them With what appetite we feed on the food of our soules and how wee are strengthned and increased thereby in knowledge faith affiance loue and the feare of God and with what alacritie and cheerfulnesse we serue God in all holy duties Whether wee get or lose ground in the spirituall Warfare or haue the better or goe by the worst in the conflict of tentations against the Enemies of our saluation Whether wee goe forward or backward or stand at a stay in our owne conceit in the spirituall Race and whether we be in such an estate as that we could be content to heare our last summons to giue an account of our Stewardship before Gods Tribunall How wee haue and doe spend and imploy his Talents committed to our keeping whether to the honour or dishonour of our Lord and Master and the profit or hurt of our fellow seruants and whether wee in these respects keepe our accounts so euen as that we are daily readie to giue vp our reckoning if our great Lord and Soueraigne doe call vs to it And if we exercise our selues much and often in such trialls and examinations wee shall daily grow in Gods feare and leaue no place in our hearts for carnall securitie to lodge in wee shall like those that doe often looke their faces in the glasse keepe our soules and consciences from these sinfull spots and from being besmeared and ouer-growne with this dirt and filth of carnall securitie and like good Factors wee shall become warie and carefull in managing our Masters businesse if with them wee often looke vpon our Bookes of account and summe vp our reckonings betweene him and vs. But if with the Elephant being guiltie of our owne foulenesse and deformities we shun drinking in such cleere waters as will discouer them vnto vs if like Helen in her age wee will not looke our faces in the glasse of Gods Law because we would not see our spirituall wrinkles if like vnthrifts and banke-rupts we will keepe no Bookes of reckoning or if we haue any doe cast them into the furthest corner of our memorie and seldome or neuer looke vpon them then may wee well keepe our consciences spotted and our hearts defiled and our liues vnreformed and bee vtterly ruined in our spirituall estate and yet continue long in this miserable condition with much securitie §. 5 The fift remedie is to esteeme much of priuate admonitions The fift meanes is that wee much esteeme the priuate admonitions and reprehensions of our godly and faithfull friends For in nothing Eccles 4. 9 18. more then this is the saying of the wise Man verified Two are better then one for if they fall the one will helpe vp his fellow but woe to him that is alone when hee falleth for hee hath not another to helpe him vp When men are apt through their drowsie sloth to neglect their waightie businesse or to forslow their iourney by ouer-sleeping themselues they hold it a great kindnesse in those that will awaken them and call them vp betimes though it bee not pleasant for the instant to be broken of their sleepe But what businesse so waightie as to make our election and calling sure what iourney more important then to trauaile towards our heauenly Countrey and wherein are wee more sluggish and apt to
it alwayes produceth euill and pernicious effects as hath sufficiently beene shewed in the former discourse But besides this there is a Securitie which is good and warrantable commendable and to be desired and imbraced of vs grounded on iust causes and rightly assumed of those vnto whom of due it appertayneth namely the securitie of the faithfull hauing its foundation not vpon any thing in themselues or any inferiour meanes and secundarie causes but vpon God alone his Power Prouidence and Promises made vnto them in Iesus Christ For after that wee are regenerate by the Spirit of God and being reconciled are become his Children by adoption and grace and so like Children in the fauour of our heauenly Father and receiued vnder the couert of his protection then beginneth that created Securitie which was in the state of Innocency to be renued in vs the which though we cannot attayne vnto in the highest perfection in this life because our knowledge faith and loue which should cast out all feare are imperfect yet is it much firmer surer and more permanent then that of our first Parents because that rested on the condition of their obedience and this vpon the freedom of their will which was mutable and changeable but this renued securitie resteth vpon the couenant of Grace made in Christ and his Righteousnesse and Obedience which are vnchangeable and euerlasting and hath no condition on our part but a liuely faith bringing forth fruits of vnfayned repentance and these Graces also are the free gifts of God which after he hath once bestowed he neuer againe taketh Rom. 11. 29. from vs. And this securitie euery Christian ought to labour after and so much the rather because we shall neuer be freed from that carnall securitie which is so dangerous and pernicious before we haue giuen entertaynment vnto this other in our hearts For some shelter Man naturally desireth and will haue vnder which shrowding himselfe he may be safe either in Truth or in Opinion and so freed from horrors and feares which otherwise like hellish Furies would haunt and vexe him Which was the cause as I haue shewed why our first Parents being depriued through their fall of their created securitie grounded vpon the knowledge and remembrance of God and his sauing Attributes were so apt to be abused by Satan imposing in stead thereof a false and counterfait securitie contrariwise grounded on ignorance and forgetfulnesse which whilest through the blindnesse of their minds it freed them from feare because the causes of their feare could not be discerned by them it did expose them to much the greater danger because they were in the case of those who are in the time of their sleepe assaulted with many mightie and malicious Enemies and doe not so much as dreame of their approching But yet such is mans nature that he had rather be couered with Fig-leaues then haue no clothing and haue in his hands a Reed and paper Buckler which haue no strength to defend him but what he giueth them by a false opinion rather then no weapons at all and will choose rather a counterfait securitie which may serue for the present to preserue him from true horrors and feares that he may not be tormented before the time rather then hee will haue none at all In which respects it is the onely way when we would perswade men to cast off carnall securitie to offer them in stead thereof Christian securitie which deliuereth from all dangers not onely in shew and opinion but also in Deed and Truth excelling the other in worth more then massie gold a rotten gilded post and in strength more then Armour of proofe a painted shadow or an impregnable Fort a paper Wall §. 2 The description of spirituall Securitie And to this purpose I thought it necessary to adde something of it to the former discourse hoping that men wil with more ease be moued to cast away that intoxicating and pernicious poyson which maketh them to sleepe out the tortures of an euil conscience depriueth them of their senses that with them it may take away their feares when in stead thereof I offer vnto them this soueraigne Cordiall which will expell them and arme the heart with true Christian courage and resolution In speaking whereof I will first shew what it is the nature causes and effects of it and then the meanes whereby wee may be enriched with this inestimable treasure Concerning the first it may be thus described Christian securitie is a grace of God following our regeneration iustification and peace with him through Iesus Christ whereby acknowledging beleeuing and remembring the all-seeing wisedome omnipotent power infinite goodnesse and mercie of God towards vs in Christ wee doe without carnall and seruile feare in all estates and at all times rest quietly and contentedly vpon his promises and prouidence for the supplying of all our wants protection from all dangers and deliuerance from all euils §. 3 That God is the authour of spirituall securitie In which description I shew first the Fountaine from which it springeth not from nature whose poisonous breasts doe now giue no such milke not from our owne wisedome power endeauours or any worldly causes or secundarie meanes but from God himselfe the Author and Fountaine of euery good and perfect gift who of his free grace bestoweth this blessing vpon those that feare and serue him And Iam. 1. 17. as it proceedeth from him so vpon him as the only sure foundation it resteth and relyeth and not on humane pollicie and strength or any creature or earthly thing whatsoeuer So the Lord propoundeth this ground of Christian courage and securitie and no other Feare thou not for I am with thee be not dismayed for I am thy God I will strengthen Esa 41. 10. 13. Ier. 30. 10. 46. 27 28. Heb. 13. 5 6. Psal 3. 5 6. 4. 8. thee yea I will helpe thee yea I will vphold thee with the right hand of my righteousnesse I the Lord thy God will hold thy right hand saying vnto thee feare not I will helpe And vpon this alone holy Dauid securely resteth I layd mee downe and slept I awaked for the Lord sustained mee I will not be afraid of ten thousand of people that haue set themselues against me round about And againe I will both lay me downe in peace and sleepe for thou Lord onely makest mee dwell in safetie Yea though I walke through the valley of the shadow of death I will feare no Psal 23. 4. euill for thou art with mee thy rod and thy staffe they comfort mee And elsewhere The Lord is my light and my saluation whom shall I feare Psal 27. 1 3. The Lord is the strength of my life of whom shall I be afraid Though an host should encampe against mee my heart shall not feare though warre should rise against mee in this will I be confident And in another place What time I am afraid I will trust in
will Ezech. 34. 22 to 31. set one Shepheard ouer them and he shall feede them euen my seruant Dauid that is Iesus Christ the Sonne of Dauid hee shall feede them and he shall be their Shepheard And I the Lord will be their God and my seruant Dauid a Prince among them I the Lord haue spoken it And I will make with them a couenant of peace and I will cause the euill beasts to cease out of the Land and they shall dwell safely in the Wildernesse and sleepe in the Woods c. §. 2 The causes of spirituall securitie respecting our selues The causes of this spirituall securitie on our part are those vertues and graces receiued from God which haue the promise of it and make vs fit and capable to receiue and apprehend it when as the Lord of his free grace doth offer it vnto vs. The principall whereof is the Spirit of adoption crying in our hearts Abba Father which sealeth vp Rom. 8. 15 16. in our hearts the assurance of Gods loue and beareth witnesse with our spirit that we are children of God And if Children then Heires and Heires of God and Co-heires with Christ who as we suffer together so shall we be glorified together The which Spirit of adoption is opposed to the Spirit of bondage and freeing vs from all seruile feare doth inuest vs with the priuiledge and together with it the peace of securitie of the Children of God And this Spirit also is accompanyed with an whole Armie of spirituall Graces which taking vp and as it were manning the Fort of our hearts doe keepe them and vs safe and secure in all assaults of danger and the spirituall encounters of tentations so as they shall neuer bee able to make vs fall away or alienate vs from Gods vse So the Apostle Peter telleth vs that if we giue all diligence 2. Pet 1. 5 6 10. to make our Calling and Election sure by adding one Grace and Vertue to another this golden Chaine will so keepe and strengthen vs that we shall neuer fall that is neither from the estate of Grace in this life into the state of sinne and death nor from our assurance of the state of Glorie in the life to come into that miserable condition of condemnation and destruction §. 3 Of the particular causes of spirituall securitie first sauing knowledge But besides these Graces in generall there are speciall Graces which are the causes of this spirituall Securitie both because the promise of it is made by God vnto them and because in this respect wee become capable of it and fit to apprehend and receiue it when the Lord in mercy bestoweth it vpon vs. The first of these is the sauing Knowledge and remembrance of God and his sauing Attributes of Wisedome Power All-sufficiency Mercy Goodnesse Loue and Truth not onely as they are infinitely in God and of his Essence and Nature but as they extend and are exercised towards vs. For when we acknowledge and remember that God is infinite in all goodnesse and perfection is our God and we his Seruants and Children that he is infinite in wisedome and knoweth what is best for vs how to preuent all dangers to supply most fitly and fully all our wants and to deliuer vs most seasonably from all euill both of sinne and punishment that he is infinite in power and able to doe whatsoeuer he will and can at pleasure destroy our Enemies and defeate all their projects and purposes and arme vs with strength in our greatest weaknesse so as we shall be able to ouer-come them and withstand all their tentations that he is al-sufficient and by himselfe able to supply all our wants as well without as with meanes and a rich portion which is sufficient to make them who inioy him happy in the absence of all earthly good and presence of all temporall miseries that he is infinite in mercy goodnesse and loue towards vs in Christ and therefore as willing as able to doe that for vs which he knoweth to be best and most fit to make vs eternally happy and that he is also infinite in truth most infallibly verifying and accomplishing his Word and gracious Promises made vnto vs of Grace and Glorie temporall protection and euerlasting saluation then doe wee cast our selues securely vpon his prouidence for supply of all our wants protection from all dangers and deliuerance out of all miseries and afflictions So that as carnall securitie is caused through the ignorance and forgetfulnesse of God and his Attributes so Christian securitie which is opposite vnto it is caused by the knowledge acknowledgement and remembrance of them §. 4 The second cause a liuely Faith in Christ The second cause which produceth this spirituall securitie as the fruit and effect of it is a liuely faith in Christ and firme affiance and Rom. 5. 1 3. confidence in God For being iustified by Faith we haue peace with God and peace of Conscience and with them inward securitie and spirituall ioy euen in afflictions and tribulations So being by Faith ingrafted into Christ and become members of his body we may be secure in his power and protection assuring our selues that hee will preserue his owne members from all euill prouide for them all necessaries and defend them from the malice and power of all Enemies so as they shall not be able to hurt and destroy them which were to suffer a mayme in his owne blessed Body If we by Faith relye our selues vpon this Rocke of strength then though the Rayne descend and the Floods come and the Winds blow and beate vpon vs yet we are secure Matth. 7. 26. from all danger because wee cannot sinke or fall being founded vpon a Rocke If wee beleeue Gods Promises of preseruation and protection there is no cause of feare in the greatest extremities because we are sure of helpe and deliuerance which is certainly promised to all the faithfull according to the saying of Iehosaphat Beleeue 2. Chron. 20. 20. in the Lord your God so shall yee bee established beleeue his Prophets and yee shall prosper If beleeuing in God we put our affiance in him and cast our selues wholly vpon his prouidence and protection this will worke in vs this spirituall securitie For he that dwelleth in the secret of Psal 91. 1 2 3 c. the most High shall abide vnder the shadow of the Almightie Hee that maketh the Lord his refuge fortresse and trust shall bee deliuered from the snare of the Fowler and from the noysome pestilence Hee will couer him with his feathers and vnder his wings shall he trust his Truth shall be his shield and buckler He shall not be afraid for the terror by night nor for the arrow that flyeth by day c. because hee hath made the Lord his refuge and the most high his habitation There shall no euill befall him neither shall any plague come neere his dwelling For hee will giue his Angels charge ouer
in the greene pastures and be led by him by those still waters of peace and securitie yea though he lead vs into places of feare and danger euen through the valley of the shadow of death yet may we be secure and feare no euill seeing hee is with vs and with his rod and staffe doth comfort vs. Yea wee must labour after a neerer vnion with Christ and to be espoused vnto him and then wee being his Spouse and hee being our Bridegroome wee may rest securely vnder his powerfull protection seeing by the institution and law of marriage he is bound both to defend and prouide for vs and because hee that toucheth vs toucheth him hee that offereth any iniurie vnto vs doth offer it as it were to his owne person then may we with the Spouse in the Canticles sit downe securely vnder his shadow Cant. 2. 3 6. with great delight and sleepe in safetie when his left hand is vnder our head and his right hand doth embrace vs. Or if we would be neerer vnto him for our greater safetie and securitie let vs labour to become members of his blessed body vnited vnto him by his holy Spirit and a liuely faith seeing then there will be no place for feare because hee that toucheth vs toucheth the apple of his eye hee that doth Zach. 2. 8. vs any hurt hurteth and offereth violence against his owne bodie and he that seeketh to plucke vs from him shall goe about an impossible worke euen to plucke a member from the bodie of Christ which he tenderly loueth seeing he hath all power in heauen and earth committed vnto him so as no creature is able to preuaile against him §. 3 The third meanes is that we labour to be in the Couenant of Grace Thirdly if wee would obtayne this spirituall securitie wee must labour to be within the compasse of the couenant of Grace which God hath made with vs in Iesus Christ For such onely as are in the Couenant haue right vnto the Promises of Gods grace and prouidence watching ouer them for the endowing them with all good and of his power and protection to shield and defend them from all euill Such onely haue God for their Lord and King and are the peculiar People and Subiects of his Kingdome ouer whom hee hath taken charge and receiued them vnder the safegard of his protection As for others they are strangers vnto him whom he respecteth not yea they are no better then Rebels and Out-lawes who haue no benefit by his protection and therefore can haue in them no true securitie but may well feare with Cain that being exiled out of Gods presence they shall be like Fugitiues and Vagabonds vpon the earth and that it shall come to Gen. 4. 14. passe that euery one that findeth them shall be ready to slay them Whereas if we haue the Seale of the Couenant stamped vpon vs we are thereby secured from all euill for when the destroying Angell is purposely sent from God to spoile and make hauocke of all yet his commission is restrayned so as hee may not hurt those which are in the Couenant but those onely who haue not the Seale of God in their foreheads Now the meanes to be in this Couenant with God is to performe the Apoc. 7. 3. 9. 4. condition of Faith bringing forth the fruits thereof in heartie repentance and amendment of life which wee must therefore aboue all things labour after that we may haue interest in the former priuileges And because through our frailtie and infirmitie we are apt to wound and weaken our Faith by our sinnes and this shield is oftentimes shrewdly battered with beating backe the fierie darts and bullets of Satans tentations And our repentance also is ready to grow faint and languish both in respect of our griefe for sinne past and resolution to leaue and forsake it for the time to come and so by weakning the Couenant not in it selfe but in our apprehension wee are ready to lose our inward peace and to haue our securitie disturbed with feares therefore as we often sinne so doth it become vs often to renew our Couenant with God by renuing the condition of Faith and Repentance that so also with them wee may renew our securitie according to that in Iob If iniquity be in thine hand put it farre away and let not Iob 11. 14 15 18 19. wickednesse dwell in thy Tabernacles For then thou shalt lift vp thy face without spot yea thou shalt be steadfast and shalt not feare And thou shalt be secure because there is hope yea thou shalt digge about thee and thou shalt take thy rest in safetie Also thou shalt lye downe and none shall make thee afraid yea many shall make suite vnto thee §. 4 The fourth meanes is to labour to haue the causes of it in vs. As first the Spirit of adoption and the chayne of sauing graces Fourthly if we would haue spirituall securitie we must indeauour by all meanes to haue those causes of it in our selues of which I haue spoken As first the Spirit of adoption whereby being assured that we are Gods children through Christ we may securely rest vpon the prouidence and promises of our heauenly Father for the prouiding of all things necessarie for the supplying of all our wants preseruation from all dangers and protection from all enemies For if earthly Parents according to their power performe all these things to their children so as they are secure and without feare when they are in the sight and presence of their able friends how much more will our heauenly Father who infinitely exceeds them in power and loue For if he be so infinitely gracious that he preserueth those which are strangers vnto him how much more those who are of his owne Family if hee doth good vnto all how much more those who are of the Matth. 5. 45. Gal. 6. 10. house-hold of Faith if he prouideth for the yong Lions and Rauens that call vpon them and richly clotheth the Lillies and Flowres of Matth. 6. 26. 30. the Field how much more will hee defend and preserue feede and clothe his owne Children whom hee hath loued so deerly that hee Rom. 8. 32. hath not spared to giue his best beloued and onely begotten Sonne to the death for their redemption and saluation So also we must labour after the gifts and graces of the Spirit which haue the promises of Gods protection made vnto them so that if we haue them we may be secure in his helpe and assistance because if he be with vs it mattereth Rom. 8 31. not who oppose against vs if we are destitute of them then being hopelesse and helplesse there is no place for peace and securitie Againe these sauing graces are the only meanes whereby we may make our Calling and Election sure which if we doe no worldly thing can 2. Pet. 1. 10. disturbe our peace or dampe our ioy but if for