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A10945 Seuen treatises containing such direction as is gathered out of the Holie Scriptures, leading and guiding to true happines, both in this life, and in the life to come: and may be called the practise of Christianitie. Profitable for all such as heartily desire the same: in the which, more particularly true Christians may learne how to leade a godly and comfortable life euery day. Penned by Richard Rogers, preacher of the word of God at Wethersfield in Essex. Rogers, Richard, 1550?-1618. 1603 (1603) STC 21215; ESTC S116354 833,684 644

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doth make the same knowne vnto his minde and beare witnes to his spirit that he is the Lords and teacheth him thus to reason If God will forgiue him who hath receiued grace to seeke without fainting wearines who longeth for it in a melting heart for offending him who desireth it more then al earthly pleasure and profit and is willing to cast away all impediments that may hinder it if he will forgiue such and he hath framed me to be such a one then doubtles he will be mercifull and forgiue me Thus God maketh him of whom I speake to see cleerely that he is his no more to be separated from him when he hath opened his heart as he did the heart of Lydia and causeth him to beleeue that the sonne of God who was giuen to the vnworthie world is giuen to him being one of the same For if earthly fathers be kind to their childrē crying to thē how much more the father of fathers For we must think that this afflicted person now mentioned doth often and deeply weigh the truth vnchangeablenes and perpetuitie of the pretious promises which hee heareth preached vnto him yea and that with more delight then he doth any thing els he weigheth what may be like to hinder and hold him from hauing his part in thē and when he considereth that God who willeth him not to feare is greater thē al that letteth him what hee may hee remoueth it though neuer so precious to him and considereth what doth giue him greatest encouragement and so imbraceth the same we must think when he once cōceiueth the incomprehensible excellencie of eternall life and how it maketh the soule alwaies cheereful euen here we must think I say that he weighing what his misery is without it counteth it the most soueraigne medicine to heale his sore and therefore he is readie to vse any meanes and bestow any diligence to come into the possession of it and to make it his owne especially when he seeth that it is so freely and mercifully offered Thus setting his heart vpon it as that which hee seeth would make him more happie then all the world though for a time he hath not been able to attaine vnto the assurance of it the diuell holding him backe by many lets and subtilties abusing his errour weakenes and simplicitie thereto yet the Lord suffereth him not to giue ouer till he hath waded thorough and ouercome all hinderances And if this be too hard to doe by himselfe he seeketh the helpe of others wheresoeuer they may be come by men of deeper insight and greater iudgement and experience in and about the will and purpose of God concerning saluation by whose louing trauaile counsell and labour he groweth more expert and resolute and so setleth his heart in beleeuing as he seeth he hath good cause and strong incouragement to his full quiet and contentation The Lord himselfe speaking thus If any thirst let him come to me and I will giue him the water of life to drinke So that as Iacobs hart failed when he beleeued not his sonnes report that Ioseph was aliue and the chiefe gouernour vnder Pharaoh yet when they told him the words of Ioseph and shewed him the Chariots which he had sent to carrie him the spirit of Iacob reuiued and he said I haue enough c. Ioseph my sonne is yet aliue So though the goodnes of the message shall be so farre beyond the expectation of him to whom it is brought as fearing the cleane contrarie yet when hee shall weigh and consider aduisedly the truth of the matter and certaintie of the promises and therein behold the depth of loue which is in God and that to the broken hearted though vnworthie it quickeneth the soule and refresheth it aboue all that can be expressed And so hee beholding his estate without these promises and what neede he hath of them and who it is that offereth them euen he who cannot be gainsaid that is the Almightie he imbraceth them and by little and little as he gathereth more strength by the infalliblenes of them so he beleeueth them and taketh exceeding comfort by them giueth God thankes and as he hath good cause he cannot satisfie himselfe therewith nor as he thinketh haue enough of them And thus doth his soule stay vp it selfe for seeing God doth giue it freely to him and he desireth it aboue all other things as seeing that he cannot bee safe without it who is hee which shall hinder it Thus are all teares wiped away the ragges are cast off the robes are put on the spouse is betrothed to Christ her husband and she by faith made partaker of all the good things which he bringeth with him who is giuen vnto his Church not poorely nor bare but to be her wisedome righteousnes sanctification and redemption And he that hath thus put on the Lord Iesus God will know him for his wheresoeuer he findeth him neither shall any take him out of his hands so saith our Sauiour himselfe My sheepe whom in the verse before he calleth those which beleeue in him My sheepe heare my voyce and I know them and they follow me and I giue vnto them eternall life and they shall neuer perish neither shall any plucke them out of my hands for my father which gaue them me is greater then all and none is able to take them out of my fathers hand Like vnto these are they all who shall glorifie God in this life separated from the world though annoyed by the people of it as the sillie sheepe are by the goates whose conuersation what it is another place shall declare and lay foorth hereafter And this is faith which making them inwardly perswaded in some sort by so cleere euidence as I haue said causeth them outwardly in time to professe the same more boldly without feare as occasion shal be offered although it be for y e time both weake and faint yet is it sound and sure and after experience in a godly life I meane the life that is led by faith it shall be strengthened better confirmed and procure withall rest to their soules For where the forementioned graces are as true contrition the heart broken with sorrow and meekened hungring and pining for mercie and grace confessing and forsaking the sinne with accusation and deepe groanes for pardon there is some true measure of sauing faith for Gods graces are not separated for our Sauiour pronounceth them blessed which haue these graces but none are blessed without faith therefore faith is there also because the spirit of Christ dwelleth in such and he dwelleth in his by faith therfore it must needs be in them Which thing I doe the rather stand vpon to proue seeing it is rather tried and discerned by these then knowne by it selfe without other holy affections going with it and for that many of tender age in Christ and yonglings cannot be certaine and throughly
and yet euen that maketh them complaine vntill they be inlarged and he that hath not this witnesse within him shall not doe best to sooth vp himselfe with a vaine confidence Thus I conclude that ioy and peace are inseparable companions of faith But here me thinkes I heare some obiecting thus If you zealous folke who glorie so much of the assurance of saluation and for that very cause be so ioyfull ye agree not within your selues for some which are of your mind are euer sad and sorrowfull To this I answere that many desire to be sure and grone for it in the Lords eares and in time shall be comforted being already pronounced to be blessed and sometime they are assured for a season and then are cheerefull and before this they cannot be so as they whose hearts the Lord hath opened more cleerely to behold that excellent mystery But further I say that it should trouble no wise bodie to see them mourne for a while after that which shall being atteined make them merrie for euer after And it is a meere cauill in them that twit Gods weake seruants for that which giueth so iust cause of mourning namely their doubting seeing they desire nothing more then to be assured And if they doe not mixe their feare and heauines with melancholy passions they offend not in lamenting after God while they long aboue all things to behold Gods louing countenance towards them But if their heauines make them waspish tuchie froward vnquiet rash in censuring them who are not in their estate I say these as mad and frantike passions are to be condemned But these obiecters say that this sad countenance and behauiour in them who are more religious than the most part of others causeth many to shun religion and to be afraide to ioyne themselues to their acquaintance and company and to meddle with muzing on the Scriptures or on Sermons more then to heare and reade them and so trouble themselues no further To this I say that we are not so to looke to exemples that we hurt and hinder our selues thereby from that benefit which the Scriptures doe most certainely direct vs vnto But if men would weigh things indifferently they who are so ready to challenge many good Christians for their heauines which yet they know tendeth to the seeking of comfort might see their owne fault greater whose mirth for the most part is ioyned with lightnes and profanenes holding goodnes and grace out of the company and not a reioycing for that they know God to be their most louing father without which their ioy is but follie yea madnes as Salomon speaketh of laughter which testifieth such ioy But to end this in few words let such as haue true hope in God though weakely moderate their heauines that they may offend as few as they may and they that finde fault with them for that let them know that they ought rather to pitie and pray for them and interpret all in the best manner and looke that their owne mirth and cheerefulnes be well warranted them or else it were farre better for them to haue part in the others heauines And for answere to this thus much But to goe forward as the due consideration of the greatnes and perswasion of the certaintie of his benefits will raise this ioy in the heart of him that possesseth it so likewise it will cause him to maruaile with reuerence to see his state so changed himselfe to be brought from so lowe a depth of extreame miserie to so high a degree of honour and glorie and so to be enriched by this fauour of God that he shall oft feare on the suddaine least it should not be so wondring at the greatnes of the same as Iudas the good Apostle did who considering the great kindnes of Christ brake forth into these words Lord what is the cause that thou wilt reueale thy selfe to vs and not to the world Yea and the woman of Samaria which had long lien in blindnes and superstition and in the fruites of both that is in cauilling and mocking yet when our Sauiour had ouercome her euill with good and conuerted her her heart was so set on the benefit which she receiued by him that she forgat her water-pot which in her who sauoured before only of the earth was a great matter and went admiring at her owne change to tell her neighbours of that welcom newes which had befallen her and was a meane of their conuersion also Ioh. 4.28.29 But Sauls conuersion did so cause him to wonder at Gods worke therein that it caused also them that beheld it to admire it to be amazed when they saw him preach the doctrine which he before pursued with the imbracers of it Act. 9.21 So great admiration doth this precious faith worke in them that obtaine it And yet if this holie and reuerent admiration at so great good things befallen those or other such should but then onely immediatly after the receiuing of them be felt the benefits might seeme the smaller but it is farre otherwise if it be duly nourished and maintained for they are so sweete and so farre aboue all that they can aske or looke for that except it bee through mens owne default they are euery day new and fresh and so farre from bringing tediousnes that the oftner they be daily considered and the longer they be inioyed the more they will cause wondring at the loue of the giuer and what should moue him to bestow so great a portion euen more then the whole world vpon so vnworthie an one as would haue thought a little before that it had been an happie estate not to haue been at all The Sunne in the beautie and strength thereof doth not more cause the eye to dazle then the viewing and beholding of this glorie which God communicateth with his beloued ones doth astonish and abash the heart to thinke of it which is so true that Dauid the man of God did many yeeres after hee felt himselfe beloued of God fall into this holie admiration as that God should doe such great things for his soule as deliuer him from the neathermost graue by which he meant hell And therefore it cannot be without grosse bewitching of many professors by Sathan that if they haue at the hearing of this tidings published meruailed a little they thinke they haue receiued this benefit with that reuerent account that it deserueth though after it waxeth a common thing with them for this they say it were foolish daily to bee wondring at one thing as when we first heard of it Full well all such declare what fruite they reape by it but if they did daily consider their vnworthines they should see more cause to wonder euery day then at the first if comparison may bee made in such a case It is to be wondred at that God pardoneth sinnes daily in that his mercie continueth daily to pardon them and for that
it being so great should bee so induring also For who can thinke vppon his slippes and rebellions I speake of the best of vs which breake foorth from him daily for the which the wrath of God is iustly prouoked against him and what might bee feared thereby and how notwithstanding them all hee may come to God for refuge by Christ and bee without feare as if hee had not sinned yea and hold fast his confidence that God yet loueth him who I say can consider this but hee must needes bee astonished at the inioying of so great kindnes when a cursed man no better then ourselues must be sued vnto and intreated by vs and all the friends that we can make and being displeased must be pacified with gifts and yet hardly holden from vexing imprisoning and pursuing vs to the death and may not be intreated Therefore magnifie the louing kindnes of our God for euer euen as it indureth for euer Psalm 118.4 For though naturall reason euen flesh beare a great stroke in this matter yet wee are not debtters to it and we haue great cause whiles we liue to doe this So that although I confesse that in nature it is otherwise that a man cannot alwaies admire the greatnes of some rare deliuerance or fortunate estate befallen him by his friend which at the first raised great admiration yet it ought to be farre otherwise with the spirituall man being a beleeuing Christian he I say hauing the louing countenance of God shining daily vppon him as before which is a treasure vnualuable should wonder at the continuance of it especially seeing he prouoking the Lord with his sinnes daily renued might therefore feare that such former comforts as had been inioyed might haue been turned into as great sorrowes and his light into darknes rather then be continued and multiplied And this he shall do vnles through vnthankfulnes the corruption of nature leading him thereto hee burie the same in obliuion and begin to affect too much and to bee ouer neere glued to things present and temporarie setting the creature before the Creator and the gift before the giuer For thereby he shall no doubt slacke his meruailing at that kindnes of God that hath neuer end although it be most precious whereas otherwise he shall be able from day to day to beare downe all transitorie things before him with the estimation and high prizing of it And this of the second companion of faith namely holy admiring the greatnes of Gods kindnes But that I may not dwell vpon this matter who haue purposed but in brief manner to shew what a traine of heauenly companions do attend vpon this faith and certaintie of Gods eternall fauour and to leaue the meditation of and vpon it to the reuerent and deuout reader Another therefore is heartie and vnfained loue in him who feeleth this loue of God shed into his heart returned to him againe The which although in hollownes and hypocrisie the most affirme boldly to be in them towards God before they haue found and felt themselues to be beloued of him yet the Scripture teacheth vs that it is farre otherwise seeing we haue not loued him but he hath loued vs first But when we see indeed what great things God hath done for vs from what dreadfull bondage he hath deliuered vs vnto the which in all our life we were in danger and to what gracious liberties and priuiledges he hath restored vs by forgiuing vs all our sinnes then we see iust cause to say with the Prophet I loue the Lord because he hath done so great good things for my soule and with the woman to be thus affected that seeing many sinnes are forgiuen vs therefore wee must needes loue much So that although before this we were louers of pleasures more then louers of God as others are yet now that we know Gods bountifulnes towards vs and the vanitie of our fond delights we haue our harts more set vpon God then vpon the best pleasures which we inioy And although sometime before this wee loued father mother friends goods more then God when wee were meerely naturall yet now that wee know God yea rather are knowne of God we haue our hearts set on him as being our chiefe treasure For this our spirituall kindred with Iesus Christ hath knit vs to him with a farre more neere bond of loue and therefore wee rest in him ioy in him and satisfie our selues with him for there shall be euer cause so to doe and that without wearines There is no end of his bountie and kindnes his mercie indureth for euer and who doth not see that such infinite loue of God to vs may prouoke and raise vp in vs truth of loue to him againe that we be euer filled with the fulnes of him as it is said of the spouse in the Canticles I am full of loue yea sicke chap. 5.8 And yet they who shall say to vs for thus doing What is thy welbeloued more then another welbeloued We may answere them that know not the loue of our welbeloued Our welbeloued is the chiefest of ten thousand wholy delectable his head as fine gold c. Cant. 5.10 But indeede I must say except wee haue tasted of this our loue shall be cold enough towards him as may be seene too commonly euen in many who worship God with vs that all the loue and mercie of God which they boast of cannot make them forsake their vile lusts But to proceede where these before mentioned are found how can there be but vnfained thankfulnes and acknowledging of this gift of God to his great praise when we shall weigh what he hath done for our soules and what solace he hath filled our liues withall which otherwise must needs be full of deadnes or deceiueable and vnsauourie follie They must of necessitie worke the same affections in vs which were in the man of God mentioned in the Psal 116.12 What shall I giue vnto the Lord for all his mercies I will praise his name before his congregation and commit my selfe wholy to his gouernment hereafter who heretofore hath regarded me so gratiously yea and we shall be prouoked daily to this honouring of him euen to sing a new song of praises to him who will renew his kindnes and goodnes daily vpon vs still so that we shall say that his first receiuing of vs was but the beginning of our happines So it shall follow that our hearts being daily exercised in praise and thanksgiuing the more wee doe it the more wee shall see cause to doe it still and so shall waxe thankfull still in all that God sendeth and so in all parts of our life euen in our troubles as it is written In all things be thankfull And although the world see none other cause but to murmure and rage in their afflictions yet shal we see Gods fauour to vs euen in them and knowing that they turne as well
desire and purpose of heart we doe it Psal 119.10 Act. 11.23 Outward when in our liues wee expresse and declare the same in our walking Act. 9.31 But to begin with the first We must haue our hearts prepared and readie to bee set on worke and imployed in any good seruice to God or our brethren as I shewed at large before in the renouncing of euill and therefore the lesse shall be spoken of it And this well ordering of the heart is a most precious grace of God as without the which no good can be well done But when wee haue such awe ouer our affections as to choose desire and delight in that which we know to be good and as occasion shall be offered yea and to bee vehemently grieued with that which hindreth vs therein the members and powers of our mindes shall be readie to put in vre and practise the same Therefore this inward readines of the minde and feruent desire of the heart we see must be blowne vp in vs and nourished as a sparkle or coale of fire that as it may bee obtained there may bee some abilitie and strength thereunto For the which cause the Lord requireth that wee loue him with all our heart soule and might This strength although where it is not knowne there is felt no want of it yet such as see it requisite in their actions doe soone feele it to be missing and a great piece of the beautie of those workes which are done without it to be wanting As when they are gone about coldly and in deadnes of spirit and so likewise they can best tell how well it beseemeth their actions who haue obtained it of God and testifie it throughout the course of their liues For when men vnderstand that God hath so appointed that they should be zealous in doing their duties as remembring that of him they shall receiue their reward and that his busines ought to be gone about feruently and with conscience though they haue no great example of such practise in the world it will harten them on with courage vnto the same by the helpe of his spirit which leadeth thereto And yet if the zeale of Gods house consumed them as the Prophet saith it did him this were no perfection but that which ought to be laboured for as euery one may attaine it and in the whole course of mens dealings and duties to God some measure of it in so much as where it is not found and inioyed of men they should count it their sinne And here this one thing is to be considered that our affections of choosing and imbracing good things be so ordered that they may be equally more slacke or strong as the goodnesse of the thing shall be greater or lesser as in praying to God rather then giuing their due to men Also that in an equall comparison the duties of holines to God be preferred before duties to men and with more bending our force and strength when we goe about to performe them rather then these And if it be demaunded here how we shall come by such grace as whereby we shall be able to imbrace choose and follow the good which we know I answere that we receiued such grace when we first beleeued in Christ whereby our hearts were purified and clensed from the strength of our old corruption which if we remember doth warrant vs not onely that our Lord Iesus Christ hath taken away the guilt and punishment of our sinne and imparted to vs and giuen freely his obedience but also grace and will to loue pietie and goodnesse and power as to kill sinne so to quicken vs to newnes of life So that if we feele it not vsually and ordinarily we haue lost and forgone it either through our forgetfulnes slouth or careles negligence or if it be through infirmitie weakened in vs wee ought to stirre vp our selues with cheerefull confidence to the recouering of it againe and not to be content to be spoiled of so great a treasure But if this earnest desire after goodnesse and vehement zeale of honoring God by that which we know be quenched whether it be ouerwhelmed with sorrow feare or such like passions or dulled and made blunt in vs through lightnes and in following the desire of our hearts amisse we are in no wise fit to honour God in any seruice Thus much of the first part of practise namely inward I will now goe forward with the second part which is a branch of the second rule and helpeth forward to the leading of a godly life that the beleeuers may by it be able to guide themselues aright and with much ease in respect of those who be not acquainted therewith And this it is that in well doing we stay not in our good desires and in the readines of the heart to doe good but procure accomplish and performe the same duties outwardly that we indeuor at least euen where we cannot performe as occasion shall be offered and that in one commaundement as well as in another so farre as it may be obtained So that in all parts of sanctifie and holines which shall be wrought in and by vs this ought to be as a perpetuall law that all the members of our bodies and our particular actions may all become most fit instruments and helps to shew forth and expresse the same And that is it which the Apostle to the Romans meaneth when he saith Let not sinne raigne in your mortall bodies that ye should obey it in the lustes thereof neither giue ye your members as weapons of vnrighteousnesse to sinne but giue your selues vnto God as they which are aliue from the dead and giue your selues as weapons of righteousnesse vnto God By this we see that not only the heart with her members that is the cogitations and desires in those which are iustified by faith must be consecrated to the honour and seruice of God but also the bodie with the parts thereof the eare in hearing the tongue in speaking the eye in seeing c. that so we should be his wholy and in one part of our life as well as another doe that which pleaseth him No man doubteth but that we should doe good works as well as haue our mindes and hearts inwardly purged but that we should be diligently giuen vnto euery good worke and make a trade of godlines to applie and follow it so that while we doe one good dutie we should not neglect another which in good husbandrie about things of this life is much regarded that few will grant or be readie to yeeld thereto yea and that our conuersation should be in heauen that is that our common course of life should be heauenly whilest we liue here vpon earth and that we should not only giue no occasion of offence in any thing but also in all things seeke to approue our selues as the faithfull seruants of God Thus much of the rules
which will not stand with this let it as deadly poyson be carefully auoided and reiected of thee Here followeth a prayer containing the summe of the life which is to be daily led of a true Christian A forme or paterne to teach and direct a Christian how to begin the day with meditation and prayer and confession of sinne and thankes after he hath first awaked with the Lord containing in it the matter of this Treatise necessarie for him to practise throughout the day following and for euery day The summe may be drawne out of it more briefly O Lord God most mighty and mercifull through Iesus Christ let that mind be in me which is in thy faithfull people and with the which thou delightest to be sought vnto sound and without hypocrisie humble meeke teachable to euery good thing fitly and readily disposed vnto euery good worke let me be framed this morning to the liking of the Christian course as I haue learned it out of thy word and haue tried that it is the only happie estate which here can be inioyed And with this mind let me enter into my meditation thansgiuing confession of sinnes and prayer For whom haue I in heauen ô Lord but thee or whom do I desire on earth in comparison of thee who doest whatsoeuer it pleaseth thee and hast all creatures euen the Diuels subiect to thee who as thou hast filled the whole earth with thy goodnesse so particularly thy mercies are wonderfull to me and that my soule knoweth right well And as in thy fauour is life and happinesse so thou as one abounding in loue and compassion hast counselled yea and commanded vs for our owne good to seeke it that we might be happie by it And yet lest we should be deceiued with the delusions and baites of this world and set our delight on them thou soundest this alarme in our eares daily that all things in this world are transitorie vaine and soone flitting away and we our selues with them daily drawing vnto our end Thou hast caused this to be published in our hearing that all flesh is grasse and the glory and beautie of it as the flower of the field that fadeth and that all things below the more they haue bene delighted in the more deeply they shall sting and vexe vs when they forsake vs. And lest we should iudge and hope of our estate after the deceiptfull dreames of our owne braine as we are most easily inclined to do thou hast liuely set out our whole shape as in a glasse to be full of miserie and cursednesse if we haue not yet attained to know that we are thy sonnes and daughters that our names are written in the booke of life These all and such like while I meditate vpon as also that thou wouldest haue vs euery day make our saluation more sure to be perswaded of thine vnchangeable loue I wonder at them and most of all to consider thine inestimable and vnutterable kindnesse in them all This draweth from me as there is exceeding great cause vnfeined thankes with ioy vnspeakeable and glorious especially for that I see thou hast done all this for me euen the vnworthiest of other that for my sake thou gauest thy deare sonne to death that he might bring me to euerlasting life that to me among other thou wouldest haue the glad tidings of it to be brought and preached to the end that I may know my selfe as surely to be one of thine as if I were gathered vp to my fathers to inioy thy presence most glorious already that of me among the rest of thy chosen ones thou hast an especiall regard and care against all things that might hurt me and wilt continue the same euen to my liues end when I shall feare neither trouble nor danger neither Diuell nor hell any more that thou hast granted me to know it by faith and in token thereof hast sanctified me and made me able to loue goodnesse and loath euill in some measure that thou hast wrought repentance in my heart whereby I indeuour to forsake all knowne sinnes and to please thee in all things that thou hast giuen me a delight in thy word whereas many find litle sauour in it that thou turnest mine afflictions to my good and teachest me the right and sober vse of my prosperitie that thou giuest me accesse vnto thy maiesty by prayer when I will and for whatsoeuer is needfull that I haue liberty to vse all other helpes for the maintaining of a godly life that I may rise vp when I haue fallen and offended thee and returne to thee againe that thou hast giuen me to striue against sinne and Sathan as a souldier of Christ and makest me to find ioy in the Christian life and thy seruice to be perfect freedome And yet for all this that thou giuest me hope of nearer communion with thee that thou assurest me that through thy power I shall be inabled to perseuere in this christian course to my liues end and that after it I shall be receiued into glory And further that thou hast not onely bestowed these great priuiledges vpon me which are proper and peculiar to thine owne children but also hast in most gratious maner prouided for the continuance of these vnto me and ministred abundantly vnto me the good things of this life as to liue vnder a most Christian and religious Prince and King defending and maintaining the Gospell against all Antichristian malice and tyranny and other aduersary power and the same truly and sincerely preached and by whom our liues liberties and liuings are peaceably continued I thankfully also acknowledge thy great mercy for the fellowship which I haue with thy good seruants in liuing with them and for that credite and fauour which thou grantest me among them also for conuenient habitation competencie of thy outward blessing good liking contentation and agreement in mariage or if ones state require it out of it for health and strength to walke in my particular calling and the benefit of a lawfull calling it selfe for freedome from grieuous paines and diseases from suite and seruice burden and bondage to Pope and tyrant and all other vnreasonable ones for blessing and successe in my lawfull affaires other benefits mention as thou shalt haue cause These thy mercies with many other daily renewed vpon me both to the comfort of soule and body do cause me I say to thinke my selfe infinitly beholding and bound to thy Maiestie and to say ô Lord what is man that thou so delightest in him and againe What shall I render vnto thee for all thy kindnesse which hath no end nor measure This loue therefore constraineth me contrary to my corrupt nature to be most willingly subiect to thy will and holy gouernement this maketh thy commandements not to be to me as sometime they were burdensome and vnwelcome but sweet and pleasant this causeth the strength of mine vnruly lusts and vnlawfull desires to wanze and be
daily as I haue directed before to do if we delight not in reading or take not the benefit of christian exhortation and conference watching ouer one another and prouoking to loue and good workes and to take good by examples of one another and if we be not more humbled by our chastisements and our hearts more inlarged to serue God by his daily benefits but trifle out our pretious time after the manner of men of the world finding no such sauour in any of these as we do in earthly delights namely eating drinking sleeping playing and dealings about our profits the Diuell hath what he seeketh at our hands and keepeth vs farre enough off from our best portion Finally the want of our whole armour or any part of it whereby we defend our selues from euill on euerie side this though all the other were present should sensibly appeare to be wanting for the daungers and fals which we shold sustaine for want of the same The remedy against the wāt of the word preached is to relieue our selues with it where we may with most cōueniēcy inioy it but rather that we sue eanestly to liue vnder it which would be more generally granted of God if it were as a benefit which cannot be wanted sought for desired But whether of both so euer be let vs so partake it that we may feel our selues sēsibly as by good diet refreshed grow in grace in the knowledge of our sauiour Iesus Christ for which end it is among vs. The remedy of all the other wants seeing it is a faithfull practising of the daily direction of the which I haue spoken largely alreadie or any other such therfore it is sufficient to shew the Reader that all these wants the Diuell will hinder him by to the end that he may hold him back from the practise of the godly life and consequently from the sweete fruite which he might inioy thereby The which I speake to this end that he may be on the other side more incouraged resolutely to giue ouer himselfe thereunto daily seeing thereby all these euils and perils of this life so vnwelcome and so much feared may be in great part auoided If any obiect that these first kinds of lets though not so particularly are set downe before and the remedies as here they are and therefore that this is superfluous let such know that I therfore set these downe particularly to let thē see that a well ordered course is a remedie for and against all diseases and therefore I mention the manifold lets in this Treatise which come in the way to hinder it that they may see the better to set themselues against them and not to thinke their labour lost which they are moued to bestow in acquainting and exercising themselues throughly in the practise of Christian direction from day to day as it is drawne from Gods word And thus much of the first kind of lets whereby the Diuell hindreth vs through wants in good things he taking occasion from the corruption of our nature whereby we are prone to euill and vnapt to good to strengthen sinne in vs. Now I haue shewed how the Diuell troubleth many weake Christians by the wants before mentioned here I thinke not amisse to shew how some are troubled by feare of their owne wants without cause For experience teacheth what deadly heauinesse he raiseth vp in the hearts of many of Gods deare children by occasion of their wants in grace And among the manifold hurts which he bringeth by meanes thereof to many weake Christians this one is not to be omitted what grieuous and sore discouragements he oppresseth many tender consciences with while they espie some gfts of God in other which they thinke be not in themselues though they seeke aboue all things to please God as hauing had some sweet feeling of his fauour through faith These I say when they consider and deeply weigh their owne emptinesse of grace and barrennesse their manifold infirmities also which they beare about them the Diuell abuseth their weaknesse to an heauie and vncomfortable sorow which is also as vnprofitable to them In which state he driueth them to find out in themselues many disorders and fals sundrie out-strayings from their Christian course and how they cannot preuaile ouer their corruptions and so maketh the innocent soules not onely to thinke that they be farre worse then they are but also troubleth and disquieteth them beyond measure insomuch that they haue bitter sobs and make sore complaints against themselues in the meane while forgetting through vnthankfulnesse Gods manifold kindnesses towards them and what cause of reioycing rather and thanksgiuing they haue offered vnto them And in this case he keepeth some of them many yeares together perswading themselues that none are so bad as they nor such hypocrites c. when yet the things whereof they do most accuse themselues are meere infirmities and not any grosse or palpable trespasses This description of them that I say no more of them who seeth not how apparently it bewraieth the Diuels malice and subtiltie in hindring yea snaring them as I may say in such sort as they cannot wind out any way when yet as hath bene sayd there are no sincerer-hearted Christians then they nor who seeke the Lord more hartily for that measure of knowledge experience which they haue Now if they are blessed who feare and who are troubled for some wants in grace who is so blind that he seeth not that euen by this which is their sorow and in their owne account euen their miserie yet by this I say they proue themselues to be blessed and happie The speciall remedie for these is godly boldnesse to consider what God hath done for them in giuing them such hungring hearts after good things which could not be except they had tasted of those sweete graces alreadie and had some part or portion of the same They must be perswaded to more heartie thankfulnesse to God and see this their humilitie meeknesse loue of God and desire of heauenly things to be iust causes hereof Their vnkindnesse to God they do well to acknowledge and that is an especiall grace of God in them and that they find in their nature rebellion against goodnesse but yet not so that they shew themselues more vnkind by not confessing that they haue much cause to reioyce from him And therefore let them beleeue that their estate is rather to be highly accounted of euen as it is seeing the thirstie as dry sponges drinke vp much grace and the humble shall find rest to their soules then that for some wants of grace they should cast downe themselues halfe desperately as though God regarded them not when yet their estate is the estate of all Gods children among whom euen the best haue many wants of grace and know but in part nor beleeue but in part although they haue through experience
and infirmitie And thus I hauing answered the doubts of this sort of Gods people weak in faith I had purposed to haue proceeded no further to deale with them which haue the seale of God and which are marked to eternall life but to haue disclosed the packe of counterfeits and to haue proued that many such as say they are Christians and the elect of God and are not but doe lie that they are nothing lesse then the children of God for as the weakest in faith must not be depriued of their priuiledge as to thinke they are not y e Lords so must not the most glozing hypocrites be suffered to conceiue a false opinion or hope of that which is none of theirs as to dreame of happines This I say I had purposed next to haue entred into but in the meane while it commeth into my minde by occasion of such as I haue answered alreadie that is the faithfull who hauing receiued much comfort through their hope after an effectuall calling haue yet after that been troubled with doubtings by occasion of them I say I called to mind another sort of Gods deare seruants who are weaker then they deeplier grieued and therefore more tenderly to be regarded least that they being brused reedes should be altogether broken and as smoking flaxe should be vtterly quenched And these are they who hauing manifest signes of faith and the new birth in them yet by the subtill and cruell malice of the diuell although not without the wise disposing of the Lord to their great good and example of others are brought to this bondage that they are perswaded that they are vtter reprobates and haue no remedie against their desperation They feele they say the wrath of God kindled against their soules and anguish of conscience most intolerable and can finde no release notwithstanding their continuall prayers made vnto the Lord and in their iudgement stand voyde of all hope of the inheritance promised expecting the consummation of their miserie and the fearefull sentence of eternall condemnation Now this vehemencie of temptation though it bee enough of it selfe barely to shake and terrifie the afflicted yet when melancholie shall herewithall possesse the partie then is it made farre more grieuous for that raiseth excesse of distrust and feare and perswadeth it selfe of miserie where there is no cause and is the very seate of the diuell being an apt instrument for him both to weaken the bodie and to terrifie the minde with vaine and phantasticall feares and to disturbe the whole tranquillitie of our nature and one chiefe propertie of this is to feare a man without iust cause So many as are troubled with this latter I exhort to reade the treatise of Melancholie set foorth by Doctor Bright Phisition Anno 1586. vnto the which also I may referre them for the former point that is to say if they be deeply touched with the conscience of sinne alone how they may be comforted and deliuered out of it But seeing it is both appertaining to the matter which I haue taken in hand to say somewhat thereof and the other treatise not alway at hand I wil partly borrow from thence where it is largely and profitably set downe and partly adde my selfe somewhat for the staying and perswading of such weak ones as their case requireth And first they must be perswaded that they are not vnder the wrath of God neither is his anger kindled against them for all their feare that oppresseth them when their estate is to their owne feeling euen at the worst because they haue not sinned against the holy Ghost which sinne onely is able to shut them out from hope of saluation and yet many of them in their temptation do thinke that they haue And to proue that they haue not committed that sinne it may appeare by this that they haue not maliciouslie set themselues against the truth and Gospell of God nor wilfullie persecuted it against their conscience but doe imbrace it heartily and loue the same which they are not able to denie But it is a meere delusion and temptation of the diuell which holdeth them in this terror and bondage which time will discouer and lay open as they themselues shall hereafter most plainely see and discerne which many such as they are in the like case haue found in the end And though it be a temptation of the enimie purposed of him to their confusion yet from their louing and mercifull father a triall of their faith and patience and other vertues Indeed the ground hereof is their owne weakenes as I said before of the former sort of Gods Children vpon the which the diuell worketh although not to wring from them their hope which he shall neuer be able to doe yet to wearie their liues with heauines and discomfort And this our infirmitie Sathan doth sometime assaie without meanes that is onely by spirituall suggestion sometime by meanes and outward occasions of euill and forcible perswasions to sinne and rebellion against God For the first of these two it is certaine that he after a personall manner to the soule though not in bodilie shape to the eye without meanes of outward things tempteth vs in the very secret thoughts of our hearts For he being a spirit and by creation most excellent hath accesse vnto our spirits to trouble them and disorder all their actions as we see corporall creatures with corporall and bodilie force to annoy one another And as he is a spirit so the long experience which he hath of our corruption and miserie from age to age giueth him knowledge of our minds more perfectlie who gathereth it by the least signe of our inclination and will not that he knoweth our hearts for that is proper to God only but through his long acquaintance with our nature he conceiueth our intents and purposes and that oftentimes without signification either of speech or gesture And thus he being able to discouer the vanitie of our minds by the knowledge of our vniuersall corruption as he seeth occasion and whereto we most incline he suggesteth his temptations to sinne and disobedience Now if to these two we adde his malice for he is not called the enuious man for naught and his vnsearchable subtiltie and exceeding strength and that which is greater then all the rest that he most hurteth when it least appeareth when we least suspect it for which cause it is said that hee changeth himselfe into an angell of light 2. Cor. 11.13 14. we shall not meruaile though without any meanes or outward occasions he raiseth great terror and dismaidnes especiallie the Lord giuing him leaue so to doe for the good of vs which are exercised with them For besides that we are inticed sometime to the sinnes which by nature we loue we are also especiallie such as are thus brought low in the anguish and bitternes of their soule tempted to such euils as are very strange and such as we abhor the very
may not be burdensome to others and of performing the duties of our particular callings in the which actions we may haue proofe of the grace that is in vs I meane patience righteousnes hope faith loue that so our whole conuersation may bee well ordred and proportionable to other holie duties and therefore in these respects we may be willing and content to liue while God will haue it so that wee may shew foorth the vertues which he hath giuen vs amongst men which otherwise should be hidden and it could not otherwise be seene of men that any can possibly liue godly who hath an hand in the world when in the meane while God forbiddeth not the actions mentioned but commaunds them only he chargeth that in doing of them we be not tainted neither haue our consciences defiled The 2. cause why I say that we should not contemne life and other lawful liberties is because vpon this principle falsely grounded and as falsly vnderstood that wee should forsake the world diuers haue troubled many weake people abused them saying and teaching and that vnder a great pretence of godlines that when we begin to be deuout and to sauour of religion wee ought to leaue the world that is to say depart from our earthly callings and dealings and also from the societie and fellowship of men who are occupied therein And to the end that greater deuotion and pietie may be bred in vs we are say they to goe aside into Abbeyes Frieries Armetages and Cloysters where we may neither heare nor see any such dealings And as the opinion is plausible to the ignorant and vnstable though palpable to them that are staied in iudgement so it hath deceiued many and the diuell hath shewed himselfe as an angel of light in perswading that such a kinde of life is the highest degree of holines although it hath been and easily may be proued to be the denne and depth of abomination For though many haue of a good meaning at the first gone apart from secular affaires and betaken themselues to liue in sequestred places because they would not be troubled with earthly dealings yet subtile theeues arose afterwards of the popish prelacie who abused this to horrible mischiefes for we must not be ignorant of this that when men will venture without their warrant the longer they doe it the further they fall into the depth of sinne as a man once gone out of his way goeth further astray till he seeke to come in againe Which hath been the cause why much wickednes hath in time broke forth in the Papacy where the people haue been hartned to this monasticall life and superstitious deuotion as idlenes whoredome sodomitry hypocrisie and most cruell murthering of the soules of many infants which were misbegotten So that not to digresse too farre this is the second reason why I made plaine my meaning in saying that the contempt of the world is not the wearines of our life the leauing of our affaires in the world or the forsaking of our particular calling as though no man may be godly and a beleeuer that vseth these but to proue that one may be a contemner of the world that vseth them all and by consequent that he who is sure of his saluation by faith may haue this grace to despise the world which I haue set downe as the sixt propertie or inseparable companion of faith To proceede therefore when we see that we be thus made rich by the Lord after that we haue fastened on his promises whereas we were before so vnlike to find the least part of such preferment we begin to lament our former vnkindnes to our God which we dailie offered him when as yet we knew no such thing and are ready to be reuenged on our selues for it as the woman in Luke bewailed her vnkindnes which she had shewed to her Lord and Sauiour before and did now witnes it after she had felt his loue so sweete by washing his feete with her teares and wiping them with the haires of her head For we cannot be ignorant that when he sought vs we fled from him and refused to come such fruites we yeelded him of all his patience and long suffering whereby he sought to winne vs we were as the vines of Sodome and our grapes as bitter as Gomorrha euen as much as if we had offered him the venome of Dragons in a cup and the poison of Aspes to drinke It was the vnspeakeable mercie of God that we were not consumed when we regarded not to know him nor to haue acquaintance with his waies though he sent his ministers dailie amongst vs to reclaime vs. We therefore now are ashamed to thinke what we haue done and are deepely grieued to remember that we should finde him so louing and gracious to vs who had done all this iniurie vnto him And therefore we sorrowing thus haue been brought to a greater care of ordering our waies aright and desire to please him yea to be euen angrie with our selues and to seeke an holy reuenge at our owne hands that thus we may declare that we doe vtterly condemne our former course of the which who would haue said that the Lord would euer haue pardoned it and haue brought vs to be wearie of it But thus it hath pleased him to get himselfe honour in this world by shewing himselfe gratious and kinde to vs so vnworthie ones that we may be examples as the Apostle speaketh of himselfe to all that shall in time to come beleeue in him to eternall life that they may the more easilie be perswaded that he will receiue them to mercie Euen this made Dauid say Remember not O Lord the sinnes of my youth and againe if thou shouldest looke streightly what is done amisse who should abide it And to come to the last we seeing and knowing our selues thus to be redeemed out of so deepe miserie we wishing the same good to our brethren which we our selues haue receiued of God declare vnto them how we are redeemed as occasion is offered as Philip and Andrew did priuately Iohn 1. and Paul publikely being called thereto For we cannot chuse but speake the things which we knowe the loue of God constraining vs as well to them who knowe the same that we may reioyce together as to them who know it not that they being yet in the estate wherein we were may be perswaded to make speede out of it And the rather remembring that as it is our dutie being conuerted our selues to strengthen others so also because if we turne any from their euill waies we haue been meanes to saue so many soules from death Neither are we of their mindes who thinke it both vnciuill and vnseasonable either among strangers or their owne neighbours to acquaint the ignorant and wandring soules with this heauenly matter or to build vp the weake in the more sound and cleere
obey it euen this faith I say must be planted in them as well as faith to be saued because by it as well as by this Gods people must liue afterwards and be vpholden And this doctrine because it is occupied about the promises of this life and the commandements of God which are to guide vs to full sanctification here I did not therefore ioyne it with my discourse of faith in the former treatise but referred it to this place as the fittest where I teach how to liue godly to the attaining whereof the beleeuing that I haue spoken of is a speciall helpe and furtherance And so I wish the christian reader to marke well that which I say about this matter for it is one of the hardest points in all christianitie to practise and one of the darkest to conceiue and see into and to be rightly perswaded of and setled in and a point in deed lesse stoode vpon and taught and made cleere by Preachers themselues in their Sermons and Catechizings and yet our liuing by faith throughout our whole life which is the fruit of it is as plainely taught and brought to light in the Scriptures as any need to desire it and namely in those places to the Hebrues and the Galathians one The iust shall liue by faith the other I liue no longer but Christ in me and the life that I leade is by faith in the sonne of God As if they both should say Christ by his spirit doth draw his faithfull ones to be led and guided by the word of truth which he hath set downe to them and they desire no other life then that which there they are moued and perswaded vnto whether we meane the commaundements or promises I said that this beleeuing which I speake of is not much laide open in publike teaching but only this which is the effect of it that we ought to be obedient to the word of God and therefore it is that the forwarder sort of good hearers except some few who haue been throughly made acquainted with it and exercised in it by long experience doe little see into it namely that they may vndoubtedly be perswaded that God will make them able to obey his will as they are fit to reach vnto it and that he hath promised if they once come to know that they are beloued of him that he will afterwards be with them to quicken their will and draw their affections and strengthen them to doe their duties as it was said by the Angell to Mary Haile thou that art freely beloued the Lord is with thee Many of Gods deare children when they are somewhat staied about the assurance of their saluation after that they haue been long labouring about it and then come to heare that they must leade new liues many of them I say are willing to goe about it but they are much discouraged because they see not how they shall be able And least any should obiect that Paul himselfe was so troubled who said To will is present with me but I finde no meanes to performe that which is good I answere he complained not of that which I doe that is that he had no hope in God nor no promise of strength from him to performe for he said the contrarie in sundry places I am able to doe all things through the helpe of Christ which strengtheneth me And againe I liue no longer but Christ in me but he complained that for all the hope of helpe that he had yet the rebellion of his flesh and nature that was vnreformed did mightily resist him And this hinderance he had and we all shall haue while we liue But what is that to this that besides this rebellion of the old man they haue this also to hinder them that they cannot tell whether they shall haue strength to make them able or no nor whether God haue giuen them any promise that their burthen shall be made light and that Christ himselfe will beare the greatest part of it for them that so it may be made easie This it is that killeth the heart of right good christians when they are ignorant of it and when they be not well grounded in it and throughly perswaded of it that God will make them able and fit for so great a worke as the leading of a godly life is euen like the burthen of the Israelites who were inioyned their taske of bricke that they had made in times past which worke was hard enough and yet themselues to seeke and prouide their strawe This I am sure hath troubled many who yet were willing and readie to doe any duties required of them and hath been the cause why they haue gone about the seuerall actions of their life the bearing of their trouble and the offering vp of their prayers the more deadly and vncheerefullie and therefore the more aukely and wearisomely And for the benefit of many good soules I will say that which hath been acknowledged vnto me by sundrie well approued christians when I haue in conference set downe plainelie to them the point which now I write of namely how necessarie it is to beleeue in generall whatsoeuer other promises or precepts in the word of God as well as the promises of saluation by Christ Oh haue many said if wee could haue holpe vp our selues out of distrust feare and vncomfortable dumpes by applying the promises of God concerning grace necessarie for vs outward deliuerance from daungers and good successe in our lawfull dealings of this life wee might with much ease and peace haue staied vp our selues when for want therof we were sore plunged and almost fainted and with halfe the toyle which wee vsed for it wee might haue vpholden our selues in hope with comfort For many houres yea and sometime daies wee haue beate our braines and reasoned to and fro with heauie hearts how to wade thorough some afflictions and how to bee contented with some accidents which were like to fal out and come to passe and this we did because we missed of the right way of trusting to Gods prouidence that he would turne all to the best without which resolution who can quietly rest in any vncertainties here below So effectuall and good a meane it is to be led by faith and to haue it as a daily companion with vs. By which wee hauing perswasion of the greatest benefit of all other namely Christ we might the more easily haue assured our selues we see now of any smaller whether any trouble to haue a good issue out of it or any good thing as it should haue been expedient for vs to inioy it And wee may say truly wee know nothing to haue been the cause of so much and so long vnprofitablenes and heauines these many yeeres as this that we haue not been rooted and grounded in faith as we haue had a care to please God For wee being subtilly vndermined by Sathan to
and desire as their frailtie doth permit for they know who haue so farre been instructed that they cannot loath some sinne and loue other that were but halting but as he who taught them that they should not commit adulterie taught also they should not lie nor steale in like manner they who are taught of him doe so iudge and therefore disclaime the one and the other For how can they loath one sinne and loue another which were to do contraries And as pure and sweete water and filthie cannot come from one fountaine so neither doth the heart reformed send foorth good and euill So that as one in prison hardly dieted feedeth with great appetite and greedines vppon scrappes and parings and is well at ease if he may fill his bellie with them who yet when he is set at libertie and conuersant with his friends where hee findeth varietie and plentie cannot fall to his old fare againe but wondreth now how he could finde sauour in euery mans leauings euen so it is with him who hath besotted and made drunken himselfe with the deceitfull baits of sinne who if like a swine he may fill himselfe with that which his heart desireth and his eye lusteth after he is safe and hath what he would but when he shall see his estate as in a glasse how shamefull and daungerous it is and hath but tasted of the heauenly priuiledges and liberties of a Christian he casteth out that former draffe as vomite and by no meanes can be brought to be in loue with it againe Behold such honour giueth God to his seruants that their old conuersation wherein they liued sometimes with the rest of the world and could by no meanes be drawne from it they haue it in most vile account and detestation and they which were of the synagogue of Sathan shall worship God among the faithfull This is the power of faith which hath changed their heart that it is able to make him who hath it to ouercome I say not himselfe but euen the spirituall craftines whereby the diuell deceiueth many thousands and euen the poysoned baites and allurements of the world also O power vnconquerable and not to be matched If there were any earthly stay or fleshly hold in any sort comparable to it which is impossible in what price and reckoning should it be had think we If there were any thing which at mens request could giue the life of their enemie into their hands or helpe them with long life or satisfie their desire with abundance of wealth and varietie of sinfull pleasure oh how welcome should that be But consisider O ye seruants of God and behold it ye mightie and wise of the world here is a greater and another manner of treasure then all these and bringeth other delights then these are able This suffereth you not to pine away with desire of your enemies death but it will make you as it did Dauid to turne your hearts towards your greatest enemie which is true manhood and wisedome and to preserue his life when you had him in your hands to kill him And this suffereth not you to hunt about the world for varietie of sinful pleasures as though there were no better vse to bee made of the time which is so pretious but this will make you with Moses to renounce them when yee might haue them and to finde greatest pleasure in doing so and yet in forgoing them to thinke your selues plentifully rewarded Finally this will not suffer you to fret and to be vnquiet in thinking vpon the day of death and to put the remembrance of it farre from you by wishing long life but it will make you sigh and groane to be out of your life and with Paul to account it a prison to liue in the bodie still and as the Preacher saith to reckon the day of death when you must liue here no longer better then the day of birth which is the beginning of life O ye men of this world if ye can tell vs of greater commodities and tidings of better things then these and assure vs how we may come by them wee will forsake and leaue all and reioyce with you If ye cannot but rather your best things are those which I haue spoken of alreadie namely great riches pleasures your enemies death and desire of long life to your selues the vanitie vncertaintie and danger of the which I haue set downe alreadie then renounce you all that ye cannot safely keepe and reioyce with vs doe but taste and see how good the Lord is and when you see what is best imbrace it or els I will pronounce the saying of the Prophet against you which in time shall most surely finde you out and take holde of you although you hide your selues from it Behold and wonder and vanish away for I will worke a worke in your daies that if a man tell you the truth ye shall not beleeue it More might be said of this point but the treatise is too long now I will returne againe to shew that the beleeuing Christian doth renounce the sinfull course which all the world besides lieth and walloweth in though some more then others who as I haue shewed that he renounceth al kinds of wickednes so hee doth it not in some good moode onely neither crieth out of his old conuersation when he seeth shame or daunger approch he doth not I say then onely signifie his mislike of it but vpon good deliberation hee maketh protestation no more to haue to doe with it as Ephraim was counselled to say being called to repentance What haue I to doe with Idols which yet before had been her glorie So whatsoeuer others doe he is resolued to forsake it and casteth off all such behauiour as a loathsome and ragged garment And this is it which our Sauiour acquainted his Disciples and followers with after that they had testified Peter answering for the rest that they beleeued in him vnto saluation He that will be my disciple must denie himselfe which is as much as vngodlines and worldly lusts for then onely indeed and not till then are men fit to heare of any such thing but doe keepe out of the sound of such doctrine as much as they can which is the cause at this day that many professing the Gospell yet neuer know what this meaneth namely to abstaine from the filthie lusts which fight against their soule Others which doe and must needs heare such things taught that all Gods seruants doe and shall disclaime their liues past and be ashamed of them it is pitie to thinke how coldly they receiue it Some of them scorne it and mock and so turne it off that way some neuer conceiue it some are often accused and made afraid to see their liues so farre off from that which is taught them but soone forget it because they see the most of the world to doe so Some are
other notable effects therefore to looke to themselues euery way so carefully that they may euer keepe themselues fit to be helped and benefited by them and with the same well ordered hearts and minds to attend vnto and applie to themselues the prayers which either before and after the Sermon are vttered or the other which through the whole action of Gods worship are read in their hearing And not to be led by opinion that they can take no profit by them nor as the common sort doe who after long going to Church doe prooue too truly that they haue taken no good by them being not indeede able to shew how they should pray or behaue themselues in that action But seeing they haue libertie to heare Gods word preached where they may most commodiously inioy it for so they are willed not onely themselues but to call vpon their children to heare Sermons and the Ministers are vrged as well by their preaching as by their liuing to giue good example therefore to take their part in both with cheerefulnes and thanksgiuing And in singing of Psalmes such as can not reade should attend to them who are neerest them in the congregation that they may ioyne with them and consent to the action of praising God with the rest of the assemblie and not to gaze and tosse vaine imaginations and phantasies where they should lift vp pure hearts and hands to God And as for such as refuse to come to take part in the worship of God altogether as the Brownists and such like let them beare their shame before men and their peace shall be small to Godward while they sit at home with their owne bare reading for their diet who scorne the best liberties of the word preached prayer and the Sacraments in the publike assemblies For so I vnderstand they doe as well otherwaies as by the confession of themselues and that before the Magistrate examining what they did while by the whole moneth and quarter they absented themselues from the publike meetings answere was made by the examinate they sate at home and read by themselues Let all iudge by what spirit such are led and guided Now hauing described and shewed the nature and vse of the publike meanes I thinke it needfull before I doe more particularly enter into the discourse of the priuate to say somewhat of the necessitie of them as well as of the publike For that thousands of the professors and of them which are of the visible Church amongst whom wee must hope that God hath many of his elect are little acquainted with the priuate but doe thinke it needles for them to hearken after the same And besides some of the deare children of God for want of ordinarie teaching haue little vse of them and therefore it is much the worse with them For these causes therefore and such like this is to be knowne and holden in firme perswasion that the priuate are in some sort as needfull as the publike for they may be vsed at all times whereas the publike cannot as in persecution For it being of necessitie that as our bodies so our soules should haue some daily refreshing therefore seeing the publike cannot daily bee had we must vse priuate as I said before and therefore they are both authorised and commaunded by one God And the publike are but a part of the helpes which God hath prouided for the profiting of his Church and therfore without the priuate they doe the lesse profit For mens comming to Church besides which a great number know no other seruing of God cannot doe that good to the best Christians which is to be looked for if it bee not accompanied with these as may bee seene in euery part of the publike worship of God For hearing of the word read and preached doth little profit where it is not ioyned with preparation to heare reuerently and attentiuely and where it is not mused on after yea and as occasion shall offer conferred of also and if reading priuately where it may be inioyed be not vsed what is more manifest then this that almost al in a congregation doe by and by forget that which they haue heard and make little vse of it in their liues And what greater cause can be rendred hereof then this that they neuer looke after matters concerning their soules when they are about their priuate dealings and as we say out of the Church Euen so what vse doe such make of the Lords Supper who for the most part besides that they cannot tell how to prepare themselues to it so if some Ministers more carefull ouer the peoples soules then others doe teach and examine them about the knowledge they haue yet cannot they be brought to trie themselues indeede in what true faith and vnfained repentance they come seeing they are not wont through the whole quarter before their receiuing to beate their braines or trouble themselues about such matters Whereby it may be gathered for certaintie that whatsoeuer the Scriptures speake in the commendation therof they be in little account and reckoning with them And if they doe not priuately before the receiuing of the Sacrament nourish these good graces of God in themselues very carefully for I speake euen of the better sort of Christians as well as of others who seeth not that they shall haue much adoe to bring their hearts willingly to sift themselues and to seeke for those gifts at that time So to say the same of the publike hearing of prayer in the assemblie it is not onely to bee doubted that they pray there in hypocrisie drawing neere to God with their mouthes their hearts being farre from him if they doe neglect to pray alone and secretly to God and in their familie but also the publike prayer groweth common with them that is wearisome a bare ceremonie and for fashion so farre is it off that they be eased and comforted by it as I can prooue by too sure experience at this day in such as haue not learned to make conscience of priuate prayer but doe separate the one from the other And by this which I haue said it may appeare how necessarie it is that the priuate helpes should be vsed of al such as haue their part in the publike And besides as our necessities doe require it so the Lord commanding the same he hath giuen time and libertie from our other busines and duties either in familie or otherwise to vse holily and continue the same So that our worldly affaires ought to giue place to them which through ignorance many count ridiculous and foolish and others though they will not speake so grossely yet being giuen ouer to the world so griplie will put aside little or no busines for the seruing of God Although it is manifest that where God is most purely and best serued their other busines as these earthly haue best successe These few lines I thought good before further discoursing of the priuate
and the manifold and great priuiledges which wee inioy daily through the inestimable kindnes of God toward vs but specially of those things which we haue most speciall neede of These and such like are the matter of our meditation and as oft as we goe aside to thinke with purpose and desire of heart vpon these things or any of them for the better calling of our mindes out of the world then we are said to meditate so when in or about any of these we sigh moane complaine to God or reioyce and are quickened in our hearts by such occasions euen that also is meditation and most commonly ioyned with prayer Of which two holie exercises the booke of the Psalmes is full namely that 119. Psalme where the man of God setteth downe his meditations which he had in euerie state of his as either lamentation complaints or supplications in his affliction or ioy and thankes for deliuerances and prosperitie By this vnderstand what manner of exercise meditation is Euen such an exercise it is which is required of thee from time to time as may be conuenient through thy life that by recording holie and diuine things especially those which may make thee sound in the matter of thy saluation a little time when thou maist best may bee bestowed of thee to drie vp thy fleshly and bad humours of earthly mindednes and worldlines c. or to quicken thy dull heart least after thy sleepe in sinne the diuell maketh thee forget thy former well ordrednes And because I am too sure that few are acquainted with it though it bee an helpe most profitable to godlines I will somewhat more at large speake of it that the practise of it may be more common and that they which vse it with the other helps may much more cheerefully go through their course How necessarie this heauenly exercise and recourse to God is may easily be conceiued for that the hearts euen of good Christians are so seasoned with vnsauourie thoughts desires and delights of follie vanitie and much other naughtines seeing the best are chaunged and reformed but in part that they thinke it vtterly impossible to bring them to any better point and therefore many by this errour doe not greatly goe about it yet if such noisome poysons be suffered to lurke and remaine in them we know they doe not onely as sowre weedes choake the plants of grace in them but also grow vp and bring forth most noisome and dangerous fruits as by wofull experience men feele and trie And for the weeding these out of the ground of their hearts there is no meanes so auaileable as this considering oft and deepe meditating on them namely what swarmes of wicked cogitations and lusts do lodge in the heart and to finde them out also to bring them into a vile account to be wearie and ashamed of them and so to entertaine better in their roome I say there is no helpe more auaileable to hunt and purge them out because although by the word we know them by conference we doe reuiue the remembrance of them and by reading we doe both yet all these runne out of our riuen heads and abide meanly with vs to suppresse our corruptions and to tame our harts vntill wee bring our selues to often and much musing and debating of the good things which we heare and reade of that so we may digest them and of the euils which wee heare that we may abandon them euen as worldlie men ponder deeply their affaires which are weightie Now when we see so farre into the danger of them and be wearied with the noisomnes of them that we will tie our selues oft to gage these hearts of ours to sift our thoughts to accuse and condemne them as we find cause by the filthines and shame of them and herein will deale truly as we loue our soules then doe wee begin to breake the knot of such cursed swarmes and to chase away the lurking litter of prophane thoughts and desires out of our hearts then we waxe more watchful against them after and make more conscience of them adioyning thereto inward and earnest requests to God for assistance and blessing Then also we shall furnish our hearts more gratiously with heauenly cogitations and holy desires all which make greatly for the well passing of our daies Therfore no man that will weigh how great things are wrought in our hearts by holie meditating vpon our estate and vpon Gods bountifulnes towards vs namely euen a framing of vs after the image of God shall neede to doubt how necessarie it is And so much the more wee are to thinke it because it is well knowne by Scripture and tried by experience that our hearts are deceitfull aboue measure and thereby we beare our selues in hand that if wee doe once obtaine thus much of them that wee can commend that which is good and speake against euill we are readie to thinke our estate to be right marueilous good when yet in the meane while if wee doe not finde our hearts in our secret meditations and when wee search our thoughts alone by our selues how they stand affected that we can feele vnfained hatred of euill to be in them and loue to goodnes wee doe but deceiue our selues And in euery little triall we shall finde it otherwise then wee would thinke I meane that sinne sitteth neerer and is faster glued to vs then wee did imagine For as he which goeth to warre is first trained and made fit to vse his weapon at home and the scholler trieth masteries priuately before he come forth to dispute openly So a good Christian will trie what he can doe against his affections and sinne alone by himselfe in his solitarie meditation and resolue against the same accordingly as he seeth the difficultie thereof to require before he can in his common dealings with all sortes and companies be strong from temptations and falles and free from offence giuing in his words and deedes And therefore on the contrarie this is the cause why so many bewray themselues to be hypocrites before men for that they haue no triall of the truth and simplicitie of their hearts alone by themselues in iudging and proouing the vprightnes of them before God and therefore haue not sought strength of him against their infirmities Oh how doth this communing with the Lord in secret and debating with our selues about our mortalitie and corruption and of his fauour in vanquishing them how I say doth this as oyntment mollifie our hard hearts and make them to relent and doth relieue them pleasantly with the sweetnes of it How doth this estraunging of our selues from worldly impediments drawe vs into neare and heauenly communion with our God How doth it make vs acquainted with the manifold rebellions of our nature with our blindnes securitie earthlines and infinit other loathsome filthinesses which neither wee our selues will take knowledge of while we carry our selues in many
needlesly of other mē or of their dealings was wont to be cōmon with them and in solitarinesse a spending of their thoughts and desires after the like manner vainely vntill they were able more wisely to discerne how to giue euery dutie in the day his time and how to occupie both the one and the other throughout the day But they haue with heartie thankes to God protested that after they had attained to this they saw farre more clearely into the practise of Christianitie then euer before they did and found the Lords yoke farre more easie to them and themselues setled with more sound peace in the leading of their liues This report of some Christians whom I know well I haue set downe where by this little the rest may be coniectured for the better encouraging of the reader to be acquainted with a daily direction for the course of his life and that he should not rest in a generall and vncertaine obedience to God And let nothing that I haue said of them be thought needlesse or vnmeete for vs as long as we can see good reason for this which they did But know wee that this kind of seruing God both may bee and is and hath bene God be thanked vsed of many of Gods seruants though I will not say in a like maner and ought to be of the rest as euery one shall be able to see into it And therefore I purpose to thrust no fancie nor conceit vpon any but that which all well aduised persons must iustifie to be the commaundement of God and which bewrayeth too plainely that many professors of the Gospell haue not so much sought for the sound practise of a godly life by reading the stories of holy men in the word of God as to report generally that they haue bene holy neither haue reaped that benefit by the Scripture in enioying a sweet life aboue other men as the Lord in much mercie hath affoorded them For though the sect of the Family of loue the Church of Rome and sundrie other lying spirits do fancie a course which the Scripture knoweth not and some of them also fantastically haue for euery day in the weeke deuised an order to be followed as the reading of certaine taskes nothing lesse then proper to direct their liues yet in this which I here propound namely that we should be daily directed in our whole course I haue followed no fancie and dreame of man but haue in all good conscience spoken from God and drawne it from the Scripture both for the learned and simple high and low one and other and is neuer in vaine to the right vser of it although I deny not but that a skilfuller handler of it might haue set it downe farre more exquisitely But from whence is the difficultie that it is no more in practise being a treasure of so infinite value and that so many pray and some of them often to leade a godly life yet when and where they should not there they fauour themselues and say they are weake and vnable From whence I say is this but from hence that they will put no diligence thereunto to obserue their waies in which they prosper and contrariwise also there is no aunswerable trauell nor labour for skill and experience in this Christian course to that which is in all other but euery litle is tedious to them and wearisome They are seuen yeares at other trades to learne them though they be apt to them and forward in them before they are thought fit to occupie by themselues But yet without seuen yeares or seuen moneths diligent exercising of the rules of christian life for before they be conuerted to the obedience of God what reckoning is to be made of their professing they will be thought fit to do as the best in this trade of christian liuing although it be cleane against their nature Nay I say more he is a rare man who can be perswaded to be guided by religion and the rules thereof but seuen weekes constantly I may truly say seuen dayes for if he who would but so long giue ouer himselfe to liue by faith and walke with God he would neuer seeke to be loosened and set at libertie againe to his old life but would renounce it vtterly so great should his aduantage be in this course and trade And as I know that this is the maine and greatest cause why so fewe are lights and examples to others so when people are taught the truth clearely concerning this matter for I am sure that it is neglected of many through ignorance let them either resolue to be gouerned through the day and from day to day or let them looke to find small reioycing in the christian life with much vncomfortablenesse which otherwise need not to be And therefore in the feare of God let men thinke and iudge of themselues as Gods word teacheth them yea let them professe as they be or let them looke to find as they be and not as they professe But as the most do handle the matter they shall find it harder to practise a christian life after seuen yeares twise told then the hardest trade after halfe seuen And as it is with many of them who neuer learned their occupation well that they are neuer skilfull in it nor thriue by it as others do so one especiall cause why many neuer practise godlinesse to the welfare of their soules neither prosper nor be well liking therein is because they neuer soundly learned how to liue godly for continuance and constantly one day as an other but peeced and patched vp the same with here a good deede and there another and in being sometime deuout and zealous the most of their actions being vnregarded and of many of them it may truly be said the power of godlinesse was neuer throughly rooted and setled in their hearts These rules and the like for the daily directing of a Christian are to be well conceiued and approued in our conscience to be such as are very fit and profitable to guide vs the which whosoeuer hath the spirit of God doth or may discerne because they are according to the word of God and practise of his children and so he yeeldeth to them and of euery such they are duely and daily to be regarded so farre as God giueth him to conceiue of and see into them this indeuouring to practise them will bring a man increase daily of sound libertie and freedome from bondage to his boisterous passions and vnruly life and recompence an hundred fold in sweet peace all his losse in earthly and vaine delights which he was wont to make the flower of his garland And seeing they will worke vpon the simplest whose heart is vpright and which the Lord hath opened to conceiue them therefore when thou seest that thou art such a one and that thou hast felt them these rules of directiō I meane to perswade and draw thee on to follow them
haue said of these that while they purpose alone by themselues to thinke how shamefull and odious their sinne is yet for want of good experience and due consideration they suspecting no such daunger as the diuell intendeth against them he sendeth them away many times either as ill armed to resist it as they were before or else so handleth the matter that they grow to a further liking and entertaining of it And is it any maruell For when they are thus ouer-matched by Sathan that while they go about to thinke of the renouncing of their sinne they are brought contrarily to like of it this disaduātageth them sore much more and holdeth them more strongly in feare and perswasion that they shall still liue in bondage and subiection to it then if they had neuer at all gone about to resist it as he who maketh a fray when he hath proued the strength of his enemie and hath felt and perceiued his owne weakenesse to be farre greater then he looked for is much discouraged from attempting the like another time And many of these sleights are in our common aduersarie the diuell which diuerse true hearted yet vnexperienced Christians not knowing nor being acquainted with are much astonished when they first proue it to be so and are discouraged for long time after when they see what hard successe they haue had And it must teach vs all to come better armed then that we should thinke with a bare desire to ouercome our sinne or in hauing onely a cold mislike of it these weapons fray not so mightie and subtile an enemie But we will take no knowledge of it and that we haue neede to walke in feare alwaies and therefore we must of necessitie smart for that we would not be warned till we say as many haue said Oh that we had bene wiser Therfore both at such times when we enter by our selues into the consideration of our sinne to the end we may grow further out of liking with it and at all other times let vs indeuour to follow that which hath bene said concerning this point namely that we deale wisely in our owne behalfe as by the former cautions we haue bene aduised Thus in some sort I haue shewed how we should looke to our selues when we are alone and how we should be occupied in that time of the day wherein we are free from the workes of our calling and from companie that is to say In keeping our selues from idlenesse and vaine wandrings and if it may be in doing some good at leastwise readie and prepared thereto that we may alwaies euen alone as in companie suspect our selues and passe our time in feare and be mindfull of Sathans enterprises Also such caueats or cautions as I haue thought needfull I haue added whether we be occupied about things lawfull or things which are holy in our solitarinesse or in auoyding things which are euill and if for all that which I haue said of directing vs to the well spending of the time alone it shall not be able to perswade some I thinke it the best way to shame them with the examples of the heathen Philosophers and to send them to learne of them who refuse to be taught of the Scriptures And amongst the rest Marcus Tullius Cicero may be one who although he knew not Christ nor his doctrine yet he had such a continuall loue to learning and vertue that as his writings do testifie how he was occupied in the eyes of others so this one of his sayings sheweth how he passed his time alone I being wearie saith he of liuing amongst wicked men with whom all places in a manner do swarme I betake my selfe vnto solitarinesse as much as I can yet that none may thinke me to trifle out my time idlely that I say no more let my bookes which were many volumes speake how in my solitarinesse I haue bene occupied But let vs heare another which was before Tully whose example is recorded of him and of that wise man Cato expressed in his owne words thus Publius Scipio African the first of that name was wont to say That he was neuer lesse idle or vnoccupied then when he was free from busines and that he was neuer lesse solitarie then when he was alone Which speech manifestly declareth that he did vse to thinke of weightie matters when he had laid the doing of them aside for a season and that he was wont to commune with himselfe when he was alone So that neither he was idle at any time and yet that he had no neede of companie to find him occupied And whereas most men cannot tell what to do when they haue not some worke to set themselues about but become vtterly idle except their heads be running after some euill he was both profitably exercised and the better quickened and sharpened by such intermission to returne to publike affaires and busines againe Therefore as hath bene said he by the keeping of his mind occupied and by searching out those things which by musing and contemplation he attained vnto was neuer either alone or vnoccupied This was reported of Scipio a Heathen who could occupie himselfe in no better things then momentanie and earthly as moral vertues gouernment of commonwealths and the searching out of naturall causes of things which all are done by mans reason But ô wofull people we that the like cannot be said or truly reported of vs who haue such varietie of heauenly things concerning the immortality of our soules the glorious rising againe of our bodies and the incomprehensible and euerlasting happinesse which God hath bequeathed and freely bestowed vpon vs to be enioyed of vs some here and some hereafter in the world to come and yet we are soone glutted with them that in our solitarie refreshings and recreations of our minds we can seldom looke vp aboue that which we may see with our eyes as though such heauenly matters had no sauour with vs but were wearisome and tedious This Scipio when he had bene much taken vp in ciuill affaires and dealings amongst men could with pleasure and delight thinke by himselfe alone of things profitable of wisedome learning ciuill gouernment in warre and peace c. But we if we haue taken a litle paine in companie we giue our minds the bridle in our intermission solitarines to thinke of that only almost which they desire and as for serious matters we blush not to say We wil not meddle with them but lay them aside whereas who doubteth but that the end of all our knowledge being Vse and practise to keepe our hearts in an heauenly manner subiect to our God from time to time we haue farre greater neede of meditation and keeping of our minds in frame then this Scipio or such like in their kind How rare are those men and yet ridiculous for their labour who acquaint themselues with this meditating of the law of God and of the infinite varietie of holy things therein
learned better then the other to sustaine the same For where faith is in Gods promises without which they cannot heartily loue heauenly things they must know that they haue a liberall portion and therefore ought to lift vp their hearts out of their deadly dumps and as these and such like directions do counsell them let them grow forward but without discouragement yea though their measure be small and they in their owne iudgement be the backwardest of others Of small beginnings come great proceedings of one little sparckle a mightie flame and the talle Okes were sometime but small akornes he hath well begun who hath in truth begun and he hath much who feeleth that he wanteth much and he who in an humble and a meeke spirite hungreth after knowledge and grace hath made good proceeding towards the attaining of both and shall in time be satisfied therewith This I speake to incourage those whom Sathan abuseth by occasion of some wants of good things in them when in the meane while if they knew so much there is no cause but contrariwise of reioycing Thus much of the first kind of lets CHAP. 8. Of the second kind of generall lets namely The vnmortified affections wherewith he oppresseth the beleeuer And first Of feare that they shall not perseuere and of pride in their gifts NOw I hauing shewed how the former kinds of lets should be remoued the second kind followeth which containeth the sinnes and corruptions that are in vs whereby the Diuell hath exceeding great aduantage against vs to hinder vs from this heauenly course which we should walke in And they are besides the ignorance and blindnesse that is in vs of which I haue spoken before our vnruly and vnmortified affections and the worldly lusts which if they preuaile and be suffered to rule in vs they thrust out with violence all grace and goodnesse Of these I will mention some particulars euen the most dangerous if comparison may be made of all the rest and the Reader may the better iudge of the other I adde if comparison may be made because they are all so raging that when they are stirred vp in vs and set on fire a man cannot tell which is most odious in it selfe and worketh most furiously and that most disguiseth vs who make our selues bondmen thereto For proofe of that which I say when filthie lusts are kindled and haue gotten some strength in a good Christian though that be neuer without his owne great fault how doth it trouble and disquiet him yea wound and accuse him he thinking it the loathsomest and most shamefull of all others as indeed there need no worse thing to annoy and disturbe him and it causeth him oft to say Oh what can be more irkesome vnsauorie and shameful then this Euen as the people said in Samuel of their wilfulnesse We haue sinned many other waies but especially in asking a King so I say that sin seemeth to a penitent christian when he commeth to himselfe most odious wherewith he hath felt his heart most intangled But to proue that true which I sayd so doth he cry out of the rest when he remembreth how he hath beene deceiued by them a worldly and greedy mind seemeth most wearisome and vnbeseeming of all other to him and biteth most deeply when that hath possessed him and when he hath offended by anger malice feare impatience peeuish conceitednesse and the rest he saith the same of them euerie one for the time wherein it hath bene the chiefest prouoker of him to offend is most cried out of euen as if there were no other to be compared with it thus he speaketh of them I say when he repenteth And by this it may appeare when there are many of these euery while assaulting and as it were arresting a poore Christian which suffer no other good thing to be in place where they be that if he be not strengthened armed against these and such other of that kind he can neuer keepe a setled course and daily continue the same in a godly life Of these therefore as I sayd I will mention some that the beleeuing Christian may the more carefully auoide them And herein this aduice is not vnprofitable that euery one marke with which he is most incombred and most easily ouercome of as feare anger vncharitablenesse c. and by what occasions he is readiliest drawne to them that he may the more preuaile ouer them by such helpe as he shall haue ministred to him The remedies so farre as I shall adde here shall either be set downe seuerally with the seuerall lets or one remedie for sundry lets or where neither is know that the daily direction which we haue beene moued to practise shall be the remedie in such a case And among the vnmortified affections I will begin with that which troubleth the most of them till God giue them release or deliuerance and that is A fearfull doubting of their perseuerance I meane that poore Christians shall not so soone begin to be drawne out of the world to any liuely hope of saluation and care of pleasing God and so haue escaped one bondage but he plungeth them into another holding them vnder dreadfull feare and distrustfulnesse that they shall not perseuer to the end of a godly life especially in sore trials and when persecution and strong temptations shall come And this feare he doth fasten vpon them the more easily seeing that affection of feare is most nearly glewed to them and besides when they see examples of faintings in many professors and how cruel the vngodly prophane scorners Atheists Papists and persecuters are among whom they liue this feare is soone strengthened and confirmed in them For which cause our sauiour forewarned his Disciples of it saying Feare not them which kill the body but are not able to kill the soule but rather feare him which is able to destroy both soule and body in hell and Saint Paule In nothing feare your aduersaries c. For this cannot be predominant but it feebleth vtterly the powers of the mind as the raising of the mudde in a spring troubleth the pure water and consequently holdeth backe the instruments of the body from practising well any kind of dutie In these fetters therefore of feare and most painefull and irkesome streights he holdeth them or if any escape and so begin to reioyce in their hope againe yet shall they not attaine thereto nor grow therein distrusting themselues and resting in the promise of God nor be deliuered out of their feare but with much difficultie and striuing and yet if they be it shall not be at once but by litle and litle while the word of God soketh into their hearts as the soft raigne into the hard ground For I must confesse that as all passions are troublesome and do much vnsetle vs for the time so feare and sorow do this most of all especially when the things about which we feare
they are most prone and besides except they haue a wise care to keepe themselues beseeming the Gospell especially in those parts of their liues which lye open to greatest daungers that therein they be best furnished and if they take a foile and sustaine a checke to their conscience yet to seeke the curing and ease of it by due humiliation speedily But this will not much preuaile except their owne hearts haue bene brought to take sound delight in the christian course and waine themselues from that which they shall know to be against it and to be glad to be aduised and directed how to recouer But of this second kind of lets thus much CHAP. 10. Of worldly lusts and namely The loue of carnall pleasure and the inordinate desire of riches BVT further as he findeth best oportunitie he deceiueth vs many other wayes and namely in taking vp our hearts in endlesse foolish and vaine desires of things which we neither can nor ought to enioy as the lust of the heart of the eye and the pride of life and so feeding vs with the ayre euen with most vaine and deceiptfull dreames besotteth vs with too much pleasure-taking in transitorie liberties and commodities of this life which pull our mindes as much from godly duties as they carie them after such vnsauourie follies About many daungerous fantasies he occupieth our heads that we may neglect the seeking of better things especially in the time when we should be best occupied I meane by these all sorts of worldly lusts which are more noysome and daungerous then the euill affections mentioned before though one would think we had litle need to be shaken and distempered with greater then they but rather studie how to make them weakened and subdued in vs. These worldly lusts are lusts of the flesh which belong to the present state of this life and world as the exceeding loue and desire of pleasures riches and estimation or honor c. For if he can fasten our delights on these we are caried headlong as the chariot by wild horses is ouerturned I will shew the daunger we are in by meanes of these worldly lusts in two kinds The lustes of the flesh properly so called and the inordinate desire of riches and cares of the world How a true Christian may possibly be disguised by these I say that he shall be thereby as another man and sometime grossely ouercome of them I will first shew and then adde some remedies against them The first is when he shall be drowned in sensualitie and the sottish pleasure of the bodie so that he is blind and imporent and hath no power to consider what the Scripture saith Fauour is deceiptfull and beautie is a vaine thing And what is the cause of this for it would not easily be beleeued that a true Christian should fall so farre The cause is this that he hauing giuen his heart libertie to desire stolne waters and to count them sweet when he should rather haue loathed and cast them vp as vomite and haue made a firme couenant against the nourishing of such delights and he hauing giuen his eye leaue also to feed it selfe with such sights he was made vtterly blind And that being done his prayers became feeble and weake though sometime attempting it to expell and driue out such sottishnesse but it lodged in him and made him a slaue vnto it Which cannot be plainelier seene then in Sampson a man of great gifts as may be gathered by the storie but made so impotent by the looke of a woman that he yeelded himselfe to her lure most reprochfully and being caught with that which was precious in her became a foole in Israell who had bene wise enough before to rule the whole land And to this bondage doth a man indued with grace bring himselfe when he will not see the daunger which he cannot but know is readie to meet with him For can a man take fire in his bosome and not be burnt No more may such an one who will be caried of his raging lusts looke to be free from great euill and daunger But behold further what goeth with it euen this that he is senslesse at the sight of it when he should rather tremble to behold in what estate he is For besides that he knoweth he doth euill which makes his sin the greater his prayers are lost which he bestoweth about it his burden of conscience is importable the losse of grace thereby is vnspeakeable the griefe of the godly that heare of it vnutterable and the reioycing of the wicked vnsatiable And yet this is not so to be taken as though it could be no otherwise with any of Gods people for many are free from that slauerie who yet haue the same allurements but they giue not place to their vnruly desires beleeuing that which is taught them How deare it will cost them Oh subtilties of Sathan hardly to be discerned and deceiptfulnesse of the heart not to be trusted so soone to let loose not a filthie man or woman onely giuen ouer to euill desires who can do no other but fulfill the same to the vttermost but a sonne and daughter of Abraham who doth loath and abhorre such wickednesse and yet to be taken in such a time that they should be readie to venture vpon that which must needs worke their vndoing and to wish that by the enioying whereof they were better be dead But I must say such do purchase to themselues the iust fruite of their labours for though they may be sealed vp by the spirit of God to saluation for of such onely I speake yet what then Ought they not therefore to be more holy and beware of the least occasions of emboldening them to sinne And of all other sinnes to be most suspicious and fearefull of those to the which they know that they are most prone and inclined and by the committing whereof they are sure that their shame and sorrow must needes be greatest Which two when they are by their iust deserts once brought vpon them they will confesse with vs then that we cannot be too circumspect and warie and that it is no precisenesse to beware of the deceiptfulnesse of sinne at any time or in any place or companie the which grace yet and care was thought to be too much austeritie till they smarted so bitterly for the want of it But euery one can tell that this is true He that standeth furthest from a raging flame is freest from burning and he who goeth farre off from the brimme of a riuer is safest from drowning A word to the wise is more then an hundred stripes to a foole And I pray God that numbers of them who mocke some for their precisenesse haue not oft times iust cause to blush and be wounded for their bold sinning I meane as well the sinne which I now here speake of as other kinds and all for this that
their roome euen as Daniel was deliuered out of the lions denne the Lord shutting their mouthes that they should not hurt him but his accusers being throwne in after that he was deliuered the lyons had the mastery ouer them and brake their bones or euer they came at the ground of the denne The whole story of the Bible is full of such examples wherein this is most cleerely to be seene how God hath deliuered his trusting in him from and out of many and great dangers and calamities So that if God doe this for his then his seruants may assuredly looke for it And yet I would all should know that I doe not bring these as I might many others to this end onely that I might prooue that God hath deliuered his children out of troubles for so hath he done the wicked also as Ishmael in the wildernesse and the Philistims from Saule neither is that the thing which either I intend or if I did were that any priuiledge or peculiar blessing to the godly forasmuch as the wicked may haue their part in it as well as they But I bring these examples to prooue that Gods people may be sure that he will of fatherly loue deliuer them from many namely when they haue sought vnto God in their troubles to God I say and not to creatures assuring themselues that as it is he that hath smitten them so he shall heale them And in that they haue vsed those meanes for their deliuerance which God hath taught them to vse namely fasting and praier with confidence as Mardocheus Iehosaphat and in that they haue rested vpon God as they did in the Psalme 124. 8. 20.7 and not on a brused reede as oft-times Israell did and in that when they doe looke for deliuerance certainly they haue first a promise thereof from God as Iosua had against the king of Hazor and his company and Gedeon against the Amalekites and the Midianites when they doe I say obtaine deliuerance thus and after this maner this is a singular priuiledge vnto them for then they know that it commeth from God and therefore they may haue great comfort therein and receiue such deliuerances as pledges of his fauour And thus are Gods seruants onely deliuered out of their troubles the vngodly haue no part with them in this fellowship And yet I doe not say that euen they are alwaies thus affected and furnished with this grace alwaies to beleeue and looke for it as oft as God deliuereth them out of any daungers and troubles that is it indeed which they should daily aime at and yet they can haue no sound comfort to their hearts more then other men haue vnlesse they doe thus waite vpon God by sound hope and seeke to him in their necessities and distresses after this maner but haue onely outward helpe and succour or an end of their troubles as the wicked may haue little considering from whence they come or whether they haue them in Gods fauour or displeasure But before I goe any further I must heere answer an obiection For it wil be demaunded of me What profit may we reape by the examples before alleadged whereby I prooued that deliuerances out of aduersities dangers are not priuiledges except they haue a promise thereof from God before and beleeue the same What is that to vs will these men say forasmuch as God doth not at any time speake vnto vs as he did in ages past vnto our fathers Iehosaphat indeed they say might well and easily be perswaded that God would giue the Moabites his enimies into his hand when he by his prophet had said to him To morrow goe out against them and the Lord will be with thee So Iosua and in like maner Gedeon but where hath God thus spoken to any of his faithfullest seruants in this last age of the world parsonally or particularly in trouble say they that he will deliuer him and remoue his afflictions from him Therefore none of them can be certaine thereof and therefore not so well ordered in their troubles as they were I answere That God doth not indeed speake to vs after that maner that he did to our fathers as we are certified in the epistle to the Ebrewes but hath left his whole minde to vs in his word wherein he hath so fully declared his will in all things as is sufficient and in the weightiest matters he hath spoken as plainely to vs as to them And concerning this one thing namely of deliuering vs out of distresses and afflictions if they be inward as sinnes and corruptions he hath promised if we beleeue the same that he will giue vs grace to mortifie our sinne and if we doe not ouercome and subdue the same as we would yet that his grace shall be sufficient for vs and the best of our forfathers had no more If they be outward visitations and crosses as sicknesses pouerty c. he hath promised also that if it be expedient and for the best to vs he will pull vs out of them and howsoeuer he doe in our sufferings that which he doth shall be the best for vs. And there was no other thing said to the body of the church in the former ●g●s but generall promises which were made to all the faithfull excepting that for some especiall causes some particular promise of deliuerence was made to some certaine persons and for waighty causes and yet those were not made for all times nor in all troubles as may be seene by the answere of Dauid who being driuen out of Ierusalem by his sonne Absolon rising vp against him most traiterously vnnaturally said vnto Zadok the priest Carry the arke of God againe into the city If I shall finde fauour in the eies of the Lord he will bring me againe and shew me both it and the tabernacle thereof but if he thus say I haue no delight in thee behold heere am I let him doe to me as seemeth good in his eies It it cleare by this that Dauid in his trouble did not know whether God would deliuer him or no neither did he know what the end should be nor had any promise from God that he should returne againe to Ierusalem in peace and behold the arke and tabernacle any more yet Dauid sought to the Lord and humbled himselfe and was not so amased with the affliction as strange as it was but that he remembred the Lord and praied to him and worshipped in token that he had made God his stay and defence whatsoeuer the issue of his sore triall should be The like is to be seene in the example of Sidrach Misach and Abednego who when they heard the straight charge of king Nabucadnezar That whosoeuer should not at the sound of the instruments of musicke fall downe and worship the image which he had set vp should be cast into the midst of an hot fiery
reward 26 And lest I should be thought to say like to the Poets vaine More then the truth in praise therof and so should seeme to faine 27 Full many a thousand euen of them who haue their time ill spent And vnto vaine delights their yeres and all their strength haue lent 28 And haue not chose the better part in wisdome for to grow Haue cri'd out fearefully at length and said It hath beene so 29 All pleasure Folly they did call which heeretofore they found And sorrow'd that they had no part in that which was most sound 30 They haue cried out of idle life and of their youth mispent That to the reading of good bookes their hearts they haue not bent 31 For what though men should set themselues to seeke a pleasant life In all things ease and peace to finde and to be voide of strife 32. Full true it is that without this their pleasure is but paine Right soone it shall depart from them and sorrow come againe 33 Where are the mighty and the proud and flanting ones become Some 100 yeeres agone they died and such as had their roome 34 The rolls of kings and princes great and chronicles of late Record to vs full many a one who liu'd in pompe and state 35 A time they had their time is gone their glory is decaied And sinne to such as died not well a wofull hire is paide 36 And as for men of lower place whom better we did know Whose crowne was beauty ease and wealth and did in dainties flow 37 Behold it is with them as if they neuer heere had beene As if no pleasure or no pompe of theirs had once beene seene 38 And such as doe remaine as yet and liue as they haue done Shalt finde the same which they haue found when once their race is run 39 So that small cause there is we see this kinde of life to choose And for the same the sauour sweet of heauenly life to loose 40 But such as doe in wisdome ioy and take delight therein Shall haue with peace a place on earth and greater gaine shal win 41 Therefore mine owne desire shall be to take this for my part The water streames and pastures sweet of Gods word with my heart 42 And such as these few reasons may perswade vnto the same I wish them that which to my selfe at this that they may aime 43 Then happy we throughout our life what euer vs befall Thrice happy eke when we go hence and God vs home shall call 44 Let the words of my mouth please thee and thoughts of heart ô God And in the same continually let me make mine abode 45 As haue the daies of sorrow beene so may our comfort be That as we did not praise thee then so may we now praise thee A TABLE CONTEINING the summe and substance of the whole boooke in the principall points of it The first Treatise CHAP. 1. ASsurance of Saluation the ground of all Most men are deceiued about it Papists thinke it impossible Carnall Protestants thinke it easie Weake Christians full of doubting Three generall heads or parts of this Treatise Three branches of the first head CHAP. 2. MAn created happie fell into miserie Two parts of mans miserie The first His sinne Mans sinne what Euery part corrupted Vnderstanding conscience will Affections Conuersation Thoughts desires outward behauiour Mans best actions abhominable Few thinke it thus The second part of mans misery The curse Which bringeth all plagues After this life In this life The creatures cursed for mans cause Much more himselfe In all he takes in hand In his body diseases c. In his senses deafnesse In his friends and kindred c. He hath no right to any thing that he inioieth and shall be called to iudgement for it Men shift off this This curse is to all To harden the heart against it dangerous The curse vpon the soule To be giuen vp to vile lusts To be darkened in his vnderstanding Hastening to endlesse woe and not see it Hardnesse of heart Desperation madnesse c. Remedilesse feares c. Hell paines extreame easelesse endlesse The necessitie of this knowledge of mans miserie If this doctrine displease men they may thanke themselues The doctrine of the Gospel must go with this CHAP. 3. OF the knowledge of redemption and deliuerance It must be knowen as well as our misery Foure things to be considered in it 1. What it is and wherein it consisteth Merit ouerthrowne 2. By whom it is wrought 3. How it is reueiled 4. How it is receiued and imbraced Faith what How it is wrought CHAP. 4. KNowledge of our miserie and redemption necessarie to saluation They are most light who haue most cause to mourne The person that shall be saued beleeueth and applieth generall things particularly to himselfe Heereby the heart is troubled Few hearing the doctrine of miserie thinke it to be their owne case They are hardned and make it cōmon Their woe at the time of death Answer to such as would not haue the law preached The law is to be preached But not without the Gospell Effects and fruits of the law preached in the faithfull The ignorance of the law how dangerous Great fault in the minister that teacheth not the law Consultation the second worke Consultation necessarie Prooued Without it sorrow for sinne profiteth little They that cannot counsell themselues must aske The complaint of the penitent sinner What his thoughts are 1. About his owne estate 2. Concerning the minde of God towards him He is secretly vpholden by the promise Humiliation the third worke How necessarie it is What great fruit it brings A secret desire of forgiuenesse the fourth worke From what ground this ariseth Or what breedeth this desire Many are long ere they come to this point and the cause why How feruent this desire ought to be To the humbled soule the tidings of saluation most welcome til then little set by This desire continueth till the thing be obteined What staieth and vpholdeth him in this case He resolueth neuer to walke in his former estate and why How Sathan laboureth that men should not come to this point and by what meanes What hee is the better for this resoluing Confession and crauing of pardon the fifth worke How this is done How great a matter this is To forsake all for it and highly to price it the sixth worke Obiect 1. Can these or any thing that man doth be accepted without faith Answ Although none of these things be faith yet they are not without it We cannot discerne the very moment when faith is wrought Obiect 2. Must we thus prepare our selues to receiue faith Answ It is not in our power It is gods onely worke to doe it To apply Christ and his promise the seuenth worke God sealeth vp his promises to the beleeuer How the beleeuer reasoneth with himselfe He weigheth all things heereto belonging He seekes helpe of others How he groweth
vp with dreames and hurtfull thoughts These lusts be causes of all woe CHAP. 7. 3. EVill lusts concerning our selues Fretting when we be crossed of our will Excessiue delight in aboundance Pride of life Frowardnesse Selfe-loue c. The word of God maketh his Children wary against these A speciall part of a godly life to renounce these It is not done without daily striuing Lusts marre all Weake seruice accepted if it be sound He that obserues these lusts and resists them is occupied in a godly life All ouercome not these alike The better sort how farre they come and how Examples of such The weaker are not to distrust for not matching the best These lusts are resisted of all beleeuers in their measure They who be ruled by their lusts can claime no part in a godly life The weake may stay their comfort in these three speciall graces 1. That they haue a cleere knowledge of their saluation 2. That they account it as their chiefe treasure 3. That they be set forward in some good course whereby they may grow in faith and obedience These three must be earnestly laboured for The chiefe end of this booke is to set forward a weake Christian How to make godlinesse a pleasure The gaine of such a course Why God witholds some grace from his Causes in our selues of not growing Ignorance Slouth Fauouring sinne Timorousnesse and vnbeleefe Remedy of our vnbeleefe CHAP. 8. HOw the minds of the godly are occupied Three ages of Gods children 1. Childhood 2. Middle age 3. Old age The highest degree of Christians How the mindes of such are vsually taken vp The best are molested sometimes with lusts They are not comparable to the Apostles Paule had speciall priuiledges These are called fathers The second sort of the godly in battell The practise of such Sinne is odious to them though not euer ouercome ef them These are sometime discouraged Glad to vse all helps Set against smaller sinnes They are held vnder their infirmities for their good The third sort of the godly About what their thoughts are chiefely occupied The dangers that these are subiect vnto 1. Danger in comfort 2. Danger when they feele want of comfort Many defects are in these Yoong Christians compared to children These must grow Their duty Gods children are in danger sometimes to be dazeled and without feeling Yet euen in this estate they differ from hypocrites and vnregenerate How they differ These degrees may in some respect fall one into another Examples of these three sorts of Gods people CHAP. 9. OVtward wickednesse must be renounced Prooued 1. by doctrine of the scriptures 2. by examples The sinnes that he loued best are renounced of the beleeuer CHAP. 10. FOure sorts of men which hope for saluation and yet renounce not open sinnes 1. Grosse offenders The vngodly will scorne professours if their liues be faulty Such are seldome reclaimed 2. Sort of bad professors ignorant and carelesse The wofull estate of such Yet there want not such as flatter them in it Many laugh at the rude for their homely speeches who yet are like them in qualities 3. sort Ciuill professors Some of all these three sorts are sometimes prickt in conscience Notes of their hypocrisie Sudden flashes of grace 4. sort Schismatickes They are taunters railers and slanderers of their bretheren Censurers of others Soone ripe in their owne conceit Inordinate liuers Worse in dealing then men who professe no religion These with the former are farre from a godly life Other disorders of such professors Earthlinesse Vnquietnesse Vnprofitablenesse Pride of life Ill educating their children Vncharitable surmises CHAP. 11. OBiect Are all such damned Answere No if they repent God shoales out some from others h. Infirmities in all The godly somewhat infected with common corruptions Difference betweene the falles of the godly and the wicked The godly fall not but when they are secure and take liberty How we may be fenced No warrant of not falling dangerously We may be preserued from soule falles The ends why God suffers some to fall so 1. To humble men 2. To magnifie his mercy in forgiuing great sinnes 3. In regard of others Otherwise no feare of falling Gods tendernesse ouer his Sweet comfort to the weake What infirmities the godly be subiect to The state of weaker Christians These differ much from all wicked What the sinne of infirmitie is The wicked sinne boldely Their sorrow is carnall CHAP. 12. THe heart purged must so be kept How the heart is kept What danger growes when the heart is not kept Great labour thus to keepe the heart With this heart it is easie to renounce euill An ill gouerned heart the cause of all disorder Little acquaintance with our hearts brings great bondage An high grace to liue well without the whip The faithfull in part thus kept downe Sinne is not shaken off as a burre Grace to vanquish sinne may be attained and more and more from day to day The good treasurie of the heart being kept bringeth forth good things A peece of heauen to liue with such as keepe their hearts well Without it nothing sauoury The fruite of a well ordered heart The looking to the heart in a good moode onely dangerous The heart may alwaies be lookt to An other cause why the heart should be lookt to otherwise it will not be ready to any duty How we may be fitte to pray and meditate The onely way to curbe vp our lusts is to looke to our hearts Without this small fruite or comfort This clensing of the heart is not perfect This clensing though weake is a great priuiledge CHAP. 13. THe second generall branch of the life of a beleeuer More hard and excellent to doe good then to eschew euill Not to rest in eschewing euill Three branches of this second part of this treatise 1. Setteth downe rules to direct to the practise of duties 2. Sheweth wherein this part of godlinesse consisteth 3. Answereth obiections Necessity of rules to liue well by The first rule to liue well is Knowledge Knowledge what To grow in this knowledge With this knowledge must goe Delight in it Without this delight no fruite of knowledge Knowledge an excellent gift But without the salt of grace vnsauory The second rule Practise Practise is first in an hearty desire Our affections must be stronger as the good is greater As we desire so must we indeauour to doe good All parts of our bodies must be giuen to serue God Make a trade of godlinesse Vertues that further vs to the former rules 1. Vprightnesse 2. Diligence 3. Constancie or perseuerance Vprightnesse what Pretences in good actions Necessity of these rules and vertues Vnarmed venturing abroad is cause of sore wounds CHAP. 14. OBiect We cannot doe as we desire Ans 1. Gods grace shall be sufficient 2. The best desire without looking for Gods helpe is vaine Why Paul ouercame not all rebellion Paul was not caried into grosse iniquitie We may looke for the like grace