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

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haue in the first place our hearts purged and purified from the filth of sinne For naturally our hearts are full of all vncleanenesse fountaines of maliciousnes and sinkes of sinne spiritually blind and foolish but vnto all impiety witty sharp-sighted and as the Prophet speaketh wicked and despightfull aboue all things auerse vnto all Ier. 17. 9. good and prone to all euill dead and dull to Gods seruice and full of life and vigour to the seruice of the diuell the world and our owne carnall concupiscence Finally they swarme with all noysome lusts as pride hypocrisie couetousnesse voluptuousnesse ambition malice enuie disdaine worldly loue and all manner of carnall corruption And therefore it is most necessary that our hearts be first cleansed and purged before wee can offer vnto God any acceptable seruice for what can issue out of these sinks and puddles of corruption but all manner of sinfull impiety and what streames of Gods seruice so pure in themselues which will not bee polluted if they runne thorow these dennes and ditches of all abominations Now this purging of the heart consisteth in the mortification of the flesh and its sinfull lusts and in spirituall renewing vnto holinesse and new obedience whereby we begin to hate all that euill which we formerly loued and to loue that good which we formerly hated to loath the tyranny of sinne and Satan vnto which with all willingnesse we subiected our selues in time past and to imbrace the true seruice of God in all sincerity which before we eyther neglected or performed after a formall cold and careles manner And finally haue our hearts and affections weaned from the loue of the world and earthly vanities vpon which in the dayes of our ignorance wee wholy doted as on our chiefe delight and treasure because we now see that they are vncertaine momentany and mutable worthlesse and vnprofitable yea to those that set their hearts vpon them hurtfull and pernicious And contrariwise adhere and cleaue vnto the Lord with all our soules as being all-sufficient and infinite in all perfection chusing him for our portion and inheritance our rocke and refuge and farre preferring him before all earthly treasures and delights And thus the Lord when he called Abraham out of Vr of the Chaldeans to bee his seruant withdraweth his heart from the loue of worldly things as being insufficient to preserue him from euill or to furnish him with any true good by promising that he himselfe would be his shield and exceeding great reward And thus he perswadeth him vnto vprightnesse of Gen. 15. 1. heart and to walke before him in holinesse of life because if hee would chuse him for his portion he should finde him almighty and all-sufficient and therefore able to preserue him from all danger and to relieue and Gen. 17. 1. supply all his wants though for his profession and practice of Gods true Religion he should be abandoned of all worldly helpes exposed to the malice of many and mighty enemies And thus Moses contemned the world and refusing the pleasures of Egypt and the honours of Pharaohs Court adhered vnto God and his pure Religion chusing rather to suffer Heb. 11. 25. affliction with his people then to inoy the pleasures of sinne for a season So Dauid being in his heart and affections like a weaned child and lothing the worlds brests from which he had formerly sucked the sweet milk of earthly Psal 131. 2. vanities with so much delight doth with all his heart and soule cleaue vnto the Lord chusing him for his portion and inheritance and esteeming him as his sole treasure The Lord saith he is the portion of mine inheritance Psal 16. 5 6. and of my cup thou maintainest my lot The lines are falne vnto me in pleasant places yea I haue a goodly heritage And when he was forsaken of all worldly helpes in the day of trouble hee was not like worldlings as a man forlorne and desperate but he cryed vnto the Lord and said Thou Psal 142. 5. 119. 57. art my refuge and my portion in the land of the liuing So elsewhere he professeth that all his ioy and comfort was in the Lord and the assurance of his loue the which was better and greater then was incident to worldlings in all their posterity There be many saith he that say Who will shew Psal 4. 5 6 7. vs any good Lord lift thou vp the light of thy countenance vpon vs. Thou hast put gladnesse in my heart more then in the time that their corne and their wine increased And thus the Church in the Lamentation was not in her greatest misery left hopelesse and helpelesse but cleauing to the Lord with her heart shee cryeth out The Lord is my portion saith my soule therefore Lam. 3. 24. will I hope in him §. Sect. 6 Of the causes of the hearts purity And these are the things wherein this purity of heart doth consist The principall efficient which worketh it in vs is the whole Trinity the Father Sonne and holy Spirit God the Father beginneth this sanctification and holinesse in our hearts by taking away their hardnesse and making them soft and tender and by giuing vnto vs his Spirit to purify them from the filth of corruption and to quicken them in the life of grace according to that promise I will giue them one heart and I will put a new spirit Ezech. 11. 19. 36. 26. within you and I will take the stony heart out of their bodies and will giue them an heart of flesh And againe After those daies saith the Lord I will put my Ier. 31. 33. Law in their inward parts and write it in their hearts And therefore if we would haue this grace we must with the Apostle haue our recourse to God praying for our selues as he did for the Thessalonians The very God of peace sanctifie you wholy and I pray God your whole spirit and soule and 1. Thes 5. 23. body be preserued blamelesse vnto the comming of the Lord Iesus Christ God the Sonne purifieth our hearts by shedding his precious blood that it might be a Lauer of regeneration wherein our polluted hearts might be cleansed For so deepely are they engrayned in the skarlet dye of sinne that nothing else will take away their spots and staines and bring them vnto snowy whitenesse It is onely his Crosse that crucifieth these carnall corruptions and the vertue of his death that killeth and mortifieth sin in vs. And this is that Fountaine which the Lord promiseth should be opened Zach. 13. 1. to the house of Dauid and Hierusalem for sinne and for vncleanenesse in which if our hearts be not washed they will remaine in their naturall filthinesse God the holy Ghost purifieth our hearts by vniting them to Christ by dipping and washing them in this Fountaine of his blood and so maketh Ioh. 3. 5. the death and merits of our Sauiour which are sufficient
corruption doth yet lye vnmortified in vs and preuaileth against vs notwithstanding our many purposes and promises to subdue and root it out then is this exercise seasonable that humbling our selues in an extraordinary manner wee may with all feruency desire the assistance of Gods holy Spirit for the healing of our selues and the Land by turning vs vnto God and for pulling vs out of these preuailing and raigning sins through serious and sound repentance for the subduing of our corruptions that they may no more leade vs captiue vnto sinne and bringing of them in subiection to the spirituall part And thus Paul in the sight and sense of his sinnes especially that haynous wickednesse in persecuting the Saints of God in his first conuersion is said to haue fasted three dayes Act. 9. 9 11. And Ezra with the people humbled themselues by fasting before the Ezr. 9. 3 6. 10. 6. Neh. 9. 1 2. Lord because they had grieuously sinned by taking strange wines the which raigned and swayed so powerfully amongst them that the authority of the Magistrates and preaching of the Prophets was not for a good while sufficient to pull them out of it The euill of punishment is also a sufficient motiue to make vs humble our selues before God by fasting and prayer and that either when some heauy iudgement is threatned and imminent that we may auert it or already imposed that we may bee deliuered out of it whether it bee priuate and concerne our owne person and family or publike respecting either the Church or Common-wealth Concerning the first when the heauy Iudgements of God are but threatned and ready to light vpon vs then the Lord especially calleth vs to fasting and mourning that vnfainedly repenting of our sinnes Esa 22. 12. which are the causes the iudgement which is the effect may cease and be auerted And then this exercise is most seasonable and profitable because the sentence is more easily stayed then reuoked and the malefactour with lesse suite acquitted or pardoned then the execution put off after he once hath his doome besides that it is a greater benefit and much more safe and sweet to be kept from the fire then to be pulled out like fire-brands that are halfe burned and much more pleasing vnto God seeing he attaineth vnto the end of his threatnings which is not to punish for hee delighteth Ezek. 33. 12. Micah 7. 18. not in the smart of his children whom he correcteth but that by mature and seasonable repentance we may escape and so his mercy may be magnified in the forgiuenesse of our sinnes An example whereof we haue in Iehosaphat who by humbling himselfe by fasting and prayer escaped the inuasion of his many and mighty enemies and in the Nineuites who at Ionas preaching repenting of their sinnes were spared and preserued from that imminent destruction which was threatned against them Neither are Gods threatnings absolute but to be vnderstood with Ier. 18. 7 8. the condition of repentance namely that the punishment denounced shall be inflicted if we goe on in our sinnes but auerted if wee humble our selues before God and so leaue and forsake our sinnes But if wee haue neglected this duty till the Iudgement haue already seazed vpon vs then our best course is to doe it rather late then neuer and to labour by our sound humiliation to haue our sinnes first pardoned and then to haue the punishment remooued which we haue had no care to preuent Whether it bee a priuate iudgement inflicted on our selues as sickenesse pouerty losses disgraces and such like or publike lying vpon the Church and Common-wealth wherein wee haue our part and share either in our owne persons or by sympathy and compassion as being fellow-members Iudg. 2. 4 5. 3. 9. Dan. 9. 3. Ios 7. 6. Ioel 1 14. 2. 12 15. of the same body as the sword captiuity pestilence famine and the rest So likewise this exercise is profitable when wee addresse our selues vnto God as humble suters for the obtaining of some speciall and important benefit which is no lesse necessary for the good estate of our selues or others then hard and vnlikely to bee obtained or atchieued by any meanes of our owne deuizing And thus it is fit that wee should humble our selues before God by fasting and prayer when wee vndertake any waighty businesse either for our selues or the good of the Church and Common-wealth vpon which occasion Ezra Nehemiah and Hester Ezr. 8. 21. Nehem. 1. 4 13. Hest. 4. 16. Act. 13. 3. fasted and the Church when they sent foorth Barnabas and Paul about that great worke the conuersion of the Gentiles But especially wee haue iust cause of thus humbling our selues when we finde some great defect in any of Gods sauing graces and would labour earnestly with God by Prayer that it may bee supplied when wee finde our selues exceeding weake in faith and desire to haue it increased and strengthened when we feele our hearts hardned through the deceitfulnesse of sinne so as we cannot repent and would haue them suppled and softened that they may resolue and melt in vnfained sorrow for our sinnes when wee finde our affiance in God so feeble that it is ready to faint and faile in euery small triall or when we perceiue want of gifts and abilities in our selues for the well performing of the duties of Christianity or of our callings and would be suters to him who is the Fountaine and Author of euery good Iam. 1. 5 17. and perfect gift that hee will inable vs at least with competency and sufficiency of such gifts as are necessary for the discharge of our duty with comfort to our selues and profit to others but especially so as Gods glory may receiue no damage or detriment §. Sect. 4 The ends of a true fast And these are the causes which may moue vs to fasting The ends at which we must chiefely ayme in this action are of two sorts The first and principall is the glory of God which wee then most magnifie when we vilifie and abase our selues acknowledging our great vnworthinesse of his least mercies and extolling his grace goodnesse in that he doth not inflict vpon vs those fearefull Iudgements which our sinnes haue deserued In which respect it is quite contrary to the nature of a true Fast if we propound this as the maine end of it that we may satisfie Gods Iustice and merit by it at Gods hand the pardon of any of our sinnes or the ioyes in heauen in any part or degree For such a Fast is fit for none but Pharisees and proud Iusticiaries who would rob God of the glory of his free grace and mercie and our Sauiour Christ of the all-sufficiencie of his merits and satisfaction that they may in some part arrogate it vnto themselues by hauing some share in the praise of their iustification and saluation And they who thus fast the Lord may iustly charge them as he did the
28. working with their hands the thing that is good that they may haue to giue to him that needeth Finally if fearing God wee walke painefully in our callings wee shall not onely inioy the fruit of our labours but also bee blessed in this fruition according to that of the Psalmist Blessed Psal 128. 1. is euery one that feareth the Lord and walketh in his wayes for thou shalt eate the labour of thy hands happy shalt thou bee and it shall bee well with thee And if God seeth it fit that he should misse of this earthly happinesse he will aboundantly recompence it with euerlasting blessednesse in the life to come §. Sect. 4 That the Lord abhorreth idlenesse and negligence and seuerely punisheth it Contrariwise the Lord abhorreth idlenesse and negligence in our callings esteeming them that are slothfull more brutish and without vnderstanding then the dumbe brute creatures and therfore sendeth them to their Schoole to be instructed by them a Pro. 6. 6. Go to the Ant thou sluggard consider her wayes and be wise And therefore it is condemned in the b Pro. 26. 13 14 15. Scriptures c Matth. 20. 6. reprooued in the Parable Why stand ye here idle Forbidden in all our affaires d Rom. 12. 11. Be not slothfull in businesse Matched and rancked with wasting our owne goods and stealing from other men for he that is slothfull in his worke is the brother of him that is a great waster and the Apostle implyeth e Pro. 18 9. by that Antithesis Let him that stole steale no more but let him labour with his Eph. 4. 28. hands that an idle person is no better then a thiefe For he robbeth the poore of their right who depriueth them by his sloth of that reliefe which he might yeeld vnto them out of his honest labour And finally to be wicked and slothfull are words of like signification and fit to describe a person desperately naught and designed to destruction Whereof it is that our Sauiour ioyneth them together in the Parable of the talents Thou Matth. 25. 26. wicked and slothfull seruant c. But how much God hateth idlenesse and negligence in the duties of our callings it will better appeare if wee consider the manifold euils which hee causeth to accompany and attend vpon it §. Sect. 5 That idlenesse is the cause of innumerable sinnes The which are of two sorts both the euils of sinne and the euils of punishment of both which it is the cause producing the one and by due desert drawing vpon vs the other For the first idlenesse is a mother sinne and as we vsually say the roote of all euill for when the deuill findeth vs not imployed in Gods seruice he entertaineth vs into his and setting before vs the obiects and baites of worldly vanities he offereth to giue them vnto vs as the wages of iniquity if we will serue him in those sinfull lusts and workes of darkenesse wherein he will vse vs. When hee seeth vs like grounds vntilled and vnmanured and therefore vnfit to receiue the seeds of Gods graces he soweth in vs the weedes of all vice and sinne besides all those which grow vp in our hearts naturally and of their owne accord being grounds which in themselues are too too fertile to breed and bring foorth all fruits of impiety More especially idlenesse and neglect of our callings is a notable cause of heresies sects and schismes For when men want imployment in their owne affaires they grow curious and inquisitiue after other matters propound many vaine questions and needlesse doubts tending more to contention then the vse of edifying which when they haue resolued according to their owne humour and phantasie they goe hauing nothing else to doe from house to house to possesse others with their conceits and when they haue priuately trained vp many in their opinions at last they make a generall muster and become heads and captaines of that faction which themselues haue raised disturbing the peace of the Church by renting themselues from it and making warre against the truth as the miserable experience of these times doth too euidently shew Neither doth it alone make men busie and curious in matters of Religion but also in ciuill affaires for when men grow negligent in their owne businesse they haue leasure to intermeddle with other mens and hauing nothing to doe at home they range abroad carrying tales from house to house and sowing the seeds of discord and dissension among neighbours Of such idle busie bodies the Apostle complained in his time who walked 2. Thes 3. 11 12. disorderly and worked not at all but busied themselues in other mens matters and disquieted all whom they came among And such were those yong idle widdowes who wandred about from house to house and by being 1. Tim. 5. 12 13. idle became tattlers also and busie-bodies speaking things which they ought not And as it is a cause of schisme in the Church and dissension in families so also of sedition and rebellion in the Common-wealth whilest it maketh men inquisitiue after newes and to pry curiously into matters of state busie in censuring those that are in authority and so filling both their owne and other mens minds with discontents they become seditious and vpon all occasions ready to rise and rebell for want of other imployment and the rather that by fishing in troubled waters they may supply those wants and necessities which negligence in their callings hath brought vpon them therefore betaking themselues to Armes because pouerty Pro. 6. 11. and want like an armed man hath first assaulted them And this was the reason why Pharaoh fearing that the Israelites would rise and withdraw their neckes from vnder the yron yoke of his tyrannicall gouernement probably though falsly coniectured that want of worke was the cause out of that generall maxime and principle in policie that idlenesse maketh men seditious and rebellious whereas imployment in their callings so taketh vp their mindes that they haue no leasure to thinke of things impertinent to their priuate estate and affaires It is the cause also of couetousnesse and all the euils that doe spring from it as wrong and oppression in the mighty fraud and deceitfull dealing in the weake yea euen of theft robbery and piracie for when men through idlenesse and negligence in their callings become poore and haue nothing of their owne they greedily desire other mens goods to supply their wants and Pro. 28. 19. vse all vnlawfull meanes whereby they may compasse them Which caused the wise Agur to pray against penury want of necessaries lest being poore Pro. 30. 8 9. he should steale and so take the name of his God in vaine And this made the Apostle inhibiting stealing to inioyne labour as being the best meanes to Eph. 4. 28. keepe men from this sinne It is the cause likewise of gluttony and drunkennesse if want keepe not from this
delight in vs. Secondly we must heare it not as the word of man but as it is the Word of God by which wee shall one day bee iustified or condemned Thirdly wee must hunger after the sincere milke of Gods 2 Cor. 5. 20. Luk. 10. 16. 1. Pet. 2. 1 2. Word without the mixture of humane traditions carnall eloquence and worldly wisedome that we may grow vp thereby Fourthly wee are to heare with all attention hauing our eyes fastened vpon the Teacher and hanging vpon his lips as the child vpon the mothers brest like the hearers Luk. 4 20. and 19. 48. Nehem. 8. 3. Act. 20. 7. of our Sauiour Christ to which end wee must carefully banish all worldly cogitations and wandring thoughts and also all drowzinesse and sleepinesse seeing we would not so heare our equals and much lesse our superiours Fifthly we must heare with alacrity and cheerfulnesse and shake off all dulnesse and carnall wearinesse which makes no part of the Sermon pleasing but the conclusion onely Sixthly wee must heare with all due reuerence the Word as being the Word of God and not of man as from him and before him in whose presence the hils and mountaines shake and tremble Seuenthly with all humility submitting our selues vnto it as vnto the Scepter of Gods Kingdome to bee ruled and directed instructed and reproued by it and not rebell against Gods holy ordinance and repine and rage against our Teachers when they touch our consciences to the quicke and sharpely repro●e vs for our sinnes Lastly we must heare the Word with faith and a good conscience giuing credit Heb. 4. 2. vnto all the parts of it as well threatnings as promises and applying all to our owne vse with an earnest desire to profit by it and to lay it vp in the closet of our hearts that we may not be forgetfull hearers and like leaking Heb. 2. 1. and riuen vessels that will hold nothing §. Sect. 3 Of duties to be performed after the hearing of the Word After the hearing of the Word two duties are to be performed The first is that publikely in the Church we ioyne with the Minister in giuing praise and thankes vnto God for his mercy towards vs in feeding our soules with the bread of life and for the liberty he hath giuen vs to come in peace and safety into his holy Assemblies to heare vs speake vnto him in our prayers and to speake vnto vs by his Minister and Ambassadour and that priuately at home at least in some short manner wee renew our thankesgiuing and desire the Lord to write that which we haue heard in our hearts by the finger of his Spirit and to make it effectuall for the inriching of our hearts with sauing grace and the strengthening of vs to all holy duties And if our memory ability and gifts will serue it is profitable for vs and acceptable to God if we can frame our prayer according to that which we haue heard confessing those sinnes which haue been reproued bewailing those wants which haue been discouered desiring those graces which haue been commended vnto vs or praising God if we already haue them and desiring grace and spirituall strength that we may performe those duties vnto which wee haue been perswaded and exhorted The second duty is that we lay vp that which we haue heard in our hearts and memories that we may practise them in our liues For as it is not enough to haue good seed sowne in our grounds if wee doe not couer it that it may take root but let the fowles of heauen take it away nor to feed vpon wholesome meate vnlesse we retaine it in our stomackes that it may be digested and like good nourishment applied to all the parts of the body so it will little auaile vs to heare many Sermons and neuer thinke more of them after we are gone out of the Church and to receiue this spirituall food with greedy appetites if we keepe it not but presently cast it vp againe out of hearts surfetted with worldly cares and clogged and cloyed with the grosse humours of our sinfull lusts The which as I am perswaded is one chiefe cause why the most euen amongst diligent hearers haue after so long inioying the light of the Gospell so little profited either in knowledge or holy practice namely because they haue been so carelesse in keeping what they haue heard and haue put this spiritual treasure into broken bags and this precious liquor into riuen vessels Now the meanes to retaine and imprint the things which we haue heard in our hearts and memories is first to loue regard and set our hearts vpon them for euen old men as we say who are weakest in memory doe yet retaine those things which they most affect The second is that wee heare the Word with diligent attention obseruing the method of the Teacher and how he proceedeth from poynt to poynt fastening the former poynt in our mindes by casting our eye backe vnto it when as hee is leauing of it and proceeding to another For as it is not possible that the fault of the first concoction should be amended in the second seeing euery part and faculty is wholly taken vp about its owne proper worke so is it no more possible that we should remember that which wee neuer minded or that the memory should bring forth that which the vnderstanding neglected to lay vp by due attention and obseruation And therefore the Apostle telleth vs that we ought to giue the more earnest heed to the things wee heare Heb. 2. 1. lest at any time we should let them slip Thirdly this may make vs rub our memories and make vs carefull to imprint in them the things which wee heare if we consider that our diligent hearing of the Word will not make vs happy vnlesse we also retaine it in our memories and practise it in our liues for so the Apostle Iames saith that if we looke into the perfect Law of Iam. 1. 25. liberty and continue therein being not forgetfull hearers but doers of the worke we shall be blessed in our deed And the Apostle Paul limiteth the promise of saluation made vnto the preaching and hearing of the Word to the condition of retaining it in our memories I declare saith hee vnto you the 1. Cor. 15. 1 2. Gospell which I preached and ye receiued by which also ye are saued if you keepe in memory that which I preached vnto you Fourthly wee must vnto our hearing adde meditation which is a notable meanes of imprinting it in our hearts and memories Fifthly wee must conferre with others that they may helpe vs where we are wanting and we them where they haue failed Sixthly Gouernours of families may helpe themselues and those which are committed to their charge for the better vnderstanding and remembring of what they haue heard by repeating the chiefe poynts of the Sermon after they are come home by strength of their memory or
to such an hidious summe that they are afraid to reuiew their reckonings heerein like Banquerupts who hauing consumed their meanes and made their estates desperate cannot indure to keepe any accounts or if they doe to cast vp their reckonings because their debts are growne so great that they haue no hope that they shall euer discharge them and therefore they will not grieue themselues in looking vpon those euils which they cannot auoyd Or like vnto foolish and desperate Patients who haue let their sores run so long without vsing the meanes whereby they might haue been cured that now they feare the remedy more then the disease and chuse rather to rot in their corruption then to haue their festred sores searched to the bottome Thirdly because they so ouermuch loue and minde worldly things that they securely neglect their spirituall estate and are so wholly taken vp in keeping their accounts with men that they can find no leisure to account with God Yea so wholly are they possessed with earthly vanities that they neuer so much as thinke of it as a thing necessary that they should spend any time in examining themselues and searching out their sinnes Fourthly because they presume so much of Gods mercy that they imagine that he wil forgiue all their debts in the grosse summe and neuer Eccles 11. 9. Math. 12 33. and 16. 2. and 25. 19. 2. Cor. 5. 10. trouble either himselfe or them in examining particulars though in many expresse places of Scripture he hath professed the contrary and though it will not stand with Gods infinite wisdome to forgiue such great debts before his debters take notice of them that they may loue him who hath forgiuen them so much be thankfull and render vnto him due praise for his infinite bounty Wherein what doe they else but make an Idoll of Gods mercy in separating it not onely from his Iustice but also from his Wisedome and Truth CAP. XXIIII Containing diuers effectuall reasons to mooue vs vnto this exercise of Meditation §. Sect. 1 That this duty is required in the Scriptures BVt that those who truly feare God may not bee carryed away in this common streame of negligence and corruption sporting themselues in the pleasures of sinne vntill they fall into the dead sea of endlesse destruction let them first consider that this duty of consideration and examination of our estates is strictly required of God and hath been alwayes practised by the faithfull The former is manifest by plaine testimonies of holy Scriptures Dauid exhorteth vs to stand in awe and sinne not and to commune Psal 4. 4. with our owne hearts vpon our bed and be still The Church in the Lamentations demandeth why a liuing man should complaine seeing a man is Lam. 3. 39 40. punished for his sinnes and therefore his best way is not to lye lamenting his paine but to finde out and remooue the cause that the effect may cease Let vs search and try our wayes saith she and turne againe to the Lord. So the Lord saith that the people of Israel vpon their freedome out of captiuity should remember their wayes and all their doings wherein they Ezek. 20. 43. had been defiled that they might be lothsome in their owne sight for all the euils Hag. 1. 5 7. which they had committed Thus the Apostle exhorteth vs to examine our 1. Cor. 11. 28 31. Gal. 6. 4 5. selues before we come to the Lords Table and telleth vs that if we would iudge our selues we should not be iudged of the Lord. So elsewhere Examine 2. Cor. 13. 5. your selues whether you be in the faith prooue your selues c. And thus in many Rom. 6. 17. 1. Cor. 6. 9 10. Ephes 2. 11. places he putteth those in mind to whom he writeth of their former sinfull estate out of which through Gods mercy they were deliuered that they might repent of their sinnes past and praise the Lord for their present condition The neglect of which duty the Lord complaineth of and condemneth in the Iewes as the cause of their grosse ingratitude and impenitency The Oxe knoweth his owner and the Asse his Masters crib but Esa 1. 3. Israel doth not know my people doth not consider So Ieremie I hearkened and Jer. 8. 6. heard but they spake not aright no man repented of his wickednesse saying What haue I done As on the other side the practice of this duty is commended vnto vs in the examples of the godly Thus Dauid performing himselfe what he perswaded vnto others saith that hee considered his owne Psal 119. 59. Luk. 15. 17. wayes and turned his feet vnto Gods testimonies So the Prodigall did begin his repentance by comming to himselfe as it were out of the dead swoone of sinne calling to remembrance his departing from such a gracious Father and his owne wandrings in the wayes of wickednesse in which he had lost himselfe as in an inextricable and endlesse Labyrinth And the Apostle often recalleth his sinnes to his remembrance to humble himselfe that had committed them glorifie God who had forgiuen them and comfort others who had alike falne and to incourage them with him to forsake their sinnes and turne vnto God by vnfained repentance §. Sect. 2 The great profit of this exercise of examination Vnto these precepts drawing vs and these examples leading vs to this duty of examination we may adde the great profit which may allure vs Plus teipsum explora quàm proximos nam illud lucrum tuum est hoc proximorum c. Nazianzen in sentent and the vrgent necessity which presseth it vpon vs. For first the benefits are manifold which accompany this exercise Examine thy selfe more saith one then thy neighbours for that is thy gaine this theirs Thou shouldest rather take an account of thy actions then of thy moneyes seeing these perish but they are permanent and shall continue with thee More especially this examination bringeth vs vnto a distinct knowledge of sinne which otherwise wee should onely see in generall view and as it were in the whole lumpe or masse It discouereth vnto vs their innumerable numbers both great and small and as the Sun-shine helpeth vs to discerne euery sluttish corner which before was not seene and reuealeth not onely the grosse vncleannesse of the house but much dust and innumerable moates which we not discerning thought the house cleane and free from them So doth this searching of our hearts lay open vnto vs many annoyances which before were hid and innumerable numbers of our lesser sinnes which wee thinking to be nothing supposed our selues to bee so pure that there was no need to be purged of them It sheweth vnto vs not onely our grosse offences but also the corruptions and imperfections of our best actions and with our errours and wandrings out of the way of truth our lamenesse and slownesse whilest we are walking in it It discouereth with the number of our sinnes their
hands because being created wee haue Act. 17. 28. Psal 104. 28. no power to subsist of our selues but wholy depend vpon God for the continuance of vs in our life and good estate for as the Apostle saith In him we liue moue and haue our being so that if he withdraw his assisting power we perish and returne vnto our dust By his all-ruling prouidence we are euery day in the yeere euery houre in the day and euery minute and moment in the houre preserued from innumerable dangers which otherwise would seaze vpon vs from the assaults of our many and mighty enemies and especially of that roring and deuouring 1. Pet. 5. 8. Lyon who is alwaies ready to destroy vs if wee were not preserued vnder the wings of the Almighty from his rage and malice By it wee are gouerned and directed in all our waies so as we cannot stirre a foote nor moue a hand nor open our eyes or eares nor speake a word if wee had not strength from him By it all the creatures become seruiceable vnto vs and worke together for our good which otherwise would bee our bane From God wee haue all the benefits which we inioy the Sunne which giueth vs light and vitall heate the ayre which wee breathe the earth which sustaineth vs the meate which feedeth vs the apparell which couereth our nakednesse and keepeth vs warme our health and wealth our peace plenty and prosperity and all other blessings fit both for necessity and for our comfort and delight And not onely the things themselues but all their vertue and vigour whereby they become profitable to those ends for which we vse them doe come from him and doe as meanes and instruments serue his Prouidence for the deriuing of all good vnto vs himselfe still remayning the chiefe and principall cause which worketh by them or can deriue vnto vs all things needefull without them if they bee wanting For it is he who feedeth vs by our meate by our clothes keepeth vs warme by our friends doth comfort and relieue vs for which vses they would be vneffectuall yea produce the cleane contrary effects if they had not from his blessing their power and efficacy Now to what end O man dost thou receiue daily at the hands of God such innumerable blessings but that thou shouldest acknowledge him the Author of them and praise him for all the good which he doth vnto thee Why doth hee preserue thy life but that thou shouldest liue to his glory Why doth hee make all his creatures in heauen and earth seruiceable vnto thee but that thou shouldest hereby be moued with more cheerefulnesse to serue him who hath created both them and thee Why doth he preserue thee from dangers and protect thee from enemies and deliuer thee out of troubles and afflictions but that thou shouldest glorify and serue him without feare in Psal 50. 15 Luke 1. 74 75. holinesse and righteousnesse all the dayes of thy life Why doth he giue the light of the Sunne but that thou shouldest shun the workes of darkenesse and serue him in the duties of thy calling Why doth he let thee breathe the ayre but that thou shouldst spend this breath in speaking singing to his praise Finally why doth hee feed and clothe thee and giue vnto thee those manifold blessings which thou inioyest but that by this rich wages hee may incourage thee to doe him faithfull and cheerful seruice which if thou neglectest and mis-spendest all the rich gifts which thou hast receiued to the dishonour of him that giueth them in the seruice of sinne and Satan and in satisfying of thine own carnall and sensuall lusts what dost thou hereby but bewray thine horrible ingratitude towards such a gracious and bountifull Lord and Master What dost thou but alienate his loue from thee and prouoking his wrath against thee mooue him in his iust displeasure to withdraw his gifts from thee which thou abusest or let thee inioy them in his anger to thy greater hurt leauing them with thee as testimonies to conuince thee of thy shamefull vngratitude and as talents lent vnto thee which when thou hast mis-spent to the dishonour of thy Lord or not imployed them in his seruice will but prepare for thee a fearefull account at the terrible Day of Gods last Iudgement CAP. XXXVII Two other reasons mouing vs vnto a godly life The first taken from Christ giuen vnto vs by his Father the other from the Couenant of grace made in him §. Sect. 1 Of the inestimable gift of Iesus Christ which should moue vs to loue and serue God THe fourth mayne benefit which God hath giuen vnto vs is his onely begotten and dearely beloued Sonne Iesus Christ to be our Head and Sauiour in whom we were elected by whom we were to be saued redeemed For being falne in Adam who was the head and roote of all mankinde and not onely partakers of the guilt and punishment of his sin but also of the corruption of nature deriued from him whereby we were disabled to all good and made prone vnto all euill it would not stand with Gods Iustice to elect or saue vs till it were fully satisfied and wee freed from this sinfull condition Which being a worke impossible to men and Angels in respect of that infinite price which was to bee payd God of his free grace and loue ordained and appointed in his eternall Counsell his Sonne to be our Sauiour and Redeemer and to this end to take our nature vpon him that hee might be vnto his elect the second Adam and the Head of his Church in whom he chose them to life and saluation which the first Adam lost both for himselfe and all his posterity For howsoeuer the free loue and meere grace and good will of God be the supreme and highest cause of our election and saluation and Christ in respect of it but a meanes or subordinate cause of working that for vs which Gods loue had first decreed neither was Christ the cause that moued God to loue vs John 3. 16. with this first loue and free grace but this loue the cause which moued God to giue his Sonne vnto vs to be our Sauiour and Redeemer yet may it be truely said that wee could no otherwise be elected then in Christ as our Head and the roote of all our righteousnesse that iustice and mercy meeting together God might be glorified in them both although we be not elected for him but of Gods absolute will and free grace which moued him to giue vs his Sonne and all other good which wee receiue by him And this the Apostle plainely affirmeth that God hath chosen vs in him before the foundation of the world and that he hath predestinated vs to the adoption of children by Iesus Christ Ephe. 1. 4 5. vnto himselfe according to the good pleasure of his will to the praise of the glory of his grace wherein he hath made vs accepted in his Beloued
Apostle perswadeth Christians in diuers callings to performe their duties in them that they might not cause the Word of God to be blasphemed 1. Tim. 6. 1. Tit. 2. 5. seeing it is the common custome of worldly and wicked men to to lay the faults of Professours vpon their profession and to impute their scandalous sinnes to their much going to Church and hearing of the Word as though their profession and hearing were the cause of their wicked and vnlawfull courses whereas in truth they would if they abused them not bee as strong cables to draw them from all impiety and vnrighteous dealing And contrariwise he would haue them to liue in an holy conuersation that they might adorne the doctrine Tit. 2. 10. of God our Sauiour in all things For men are apt to speake of the Religion and truth which wee professe either in the better or worser part according to the fruits which we bring forth of it in our liues thinking our Religion to bee pure and good if we approue our selues to bee so by our holy and Christian practice and conuersation but contrariwise if like those of whom the Apostle speaketh wee haue onely a forme of Godlinesse and in our liues deny the power there of or professe 2. Tim. 3. 5. that we know God but in our workes disclaime him being abominable and Tit. 1. 16. disobedient and vnto euery good worke reprobate wee shall open their mouthes not onely against vs but also against all Professours of Gods true Religion yea euen against the Religion and Doctrine of truth it selfe which we professe For if euer Dauid himselfe fall into foule sinnes it will not onely tend to his owne dishonour but also giue occasion to the enemies of the Lord to blaspheme as though he were 2. Sam. 12. 14. a patrone or approuer of such crimes §. Sect. 5 The 1. reason that we may auoid giuing of offence And so much of those reasons which respect God The second sort respect our neighbours from whom also wee may draw diuers arguments 1. Cor. 10. 32. to perswade vs to an holy conuersation And first because we shall being vnblameable auoid giuing vnto them any iust offence eitherby laying stumbling blockes in their way whereby they should be hindred from the professing of the true Religion when as they are able to take exceptions to the liues of Professours or if they bee religious bee grieued in their righteous soules when they see our liues full of blots and blemishes or make the weake fall by our ill 2. Pet. 2. 7 8. example The which we must carefully auoid because our Sauiour Matth. 18. 7. pronounceth a fearefull woe against those by whom such offences come and contrariwise labour with the Apostle to exercise our selues Acts 24. 16. dayly in this that wee may haue alwaies a conscience void of offence towards God and towards men Secondly we may be moued to the practice The second reason of al holy duties of a godly life that we may gaine those that are without to Christ to imbrace that true Religion which we professe For if we haue our conuersation honest among the Gentiles they seeing our good 1. Pet. 2. 12. workes will glorifie God in the day of their visitation And this argument the Apostle Peter vseth to perswade wiues vnto their dutie that they which 1. Pet. 3. 1. obeied not the Word might without the Word be won with their Christiā conuersation The which so much preuailed with the Apostle Paul that he vtterly denied himselfe and his owne will and became all things to all men that he might gaine some to Christ and was content to please all 1. Cor. 9. 19 22. Chap. 10. 33. men in all things not seeking his owne profit but the profit of many that they might bee saued And how much more then should we with all willingnesse walke in such a course of holinesse and righteousnesse which in gayning others will profit our selues and not onely saue them by gayning them to Christ through our good example but assure our selues also of our saluation Finally wee may be perswaded vnto all The third reason holy and Christian duties because they so much tend to the good and profit of our brethren who are in the same holy communion with vs. First because by the light of our godly liues we shall moue them together with vs to glorifie our heauenly Father who is the Author Matth 5. 16. and Fountaine of all good things which they see in vs. Secondly because we shall edifie them by our good example and moue them to imitate those good things they shall see in vs and by our communion and fellowship with them like kindled coales on the same heape wee shall inflame their zeale and by an holy emulation make them striue to match vs in their Christian duties as the Apostle sheweth in the example of the Corinthians whose zeale in Christian beneficence 2. Cor. 9. 2. had as hee saith prouoked many And thus hee perswadeth Timothy to bee an example vnto beleeuers in word in conuersation in charity 1. Tim. 4. 12. in spirit in saith in puritie And exhorteth vs all to consider one Heb. 10. 24. another to prouoke vnto loue and to good workes To which purpose nothing can bee more effectuall then good examples when as we see those duties constantly performed by our brethren with much comfort and delight which wee feared as tedious troublesome and almost impossible and in this regard durst not vndertake them Finally wee shall doe good to our brethren euen in the duties themselues both of piety by teaching admonishing exhorting comforting and counselling them that neede our helpe and also of mercy by feeding the hungry clothing the naked visiting the sicke and such like workes of Christian charity whereby wee minister vnto their necessities CAP. XL. Of such reasons moouing vs to the duties of a godly life as respect our selues §. Sect. 1 The first reason taken from that dignity vnto which God hath called vs. IN respect of our selues there are also many effectuall arguments and reasons which may mooue and perswade vs vnto all duties of a godly life As first that high and heauenly dignity vnto which God of his free grace and goodnesse hath called vs out of a most miserable and wretched condition which should effectually mooue vs to walke worthy this high and excellent Eph. 4. 1. calling as the Apostle exhorteth vs. For wee were in darkenesse and in the shaddow of death but the Lord hath called vs into a marueilous light reuealing cleerely vnto vs the knowledge of himselfe and his will the great mystery of saluation by Iesus Christ and the meanes whereby we may be made partakers of the fruits and benefits of it in which respect it becommeth vs to walke as children of light circumspectly not as fooles Eph. 5. 8 15 16. 1. Th. 5. 5 6 7 8 Col.
the world vse such spite and spleene towards the most outragious offender that euer liued as it doth to the Saints and seruants of God for the truth sake For towards them oftentimes it quite blunteth the poynt and edge of humane lawes and commonly moderateth and mitigateth the extreme rigour of them in their punishments but against the faithfull it sharpeneth the poynt and edge where none is yea deuiseth new lawes when the old restraine their malice And whereas they content themselues with those punishments which the lawes determine against the most notorious and hainous offenders and when they are forced for the safety and preseruation of humane societies to execute them they doe it as the Law requireth and oftentimes with some pity and compassion contrariwise when they haue to doe with those who being Gods faithfull seruants haue made themselues liable to their lawes they sport themselues in their torments and out of meere malice to them for their Religion and piety they execute the Lawes with all sauage cruelty adding both by their words and actions many outrages ouer and aboue those punishments which the Law requireth as we see in the example of our Sauiour Christ and the theeues crucified with him For whereas they contented themselues with their simple death without any additaments of malice they could neuer satisfie their spitefull rage in vexing and tormenting our Sauior Christ but vsed him with all contumelious reproch spitting vpon and buffetting him scourging and crowning him with thornes scoffing and deriding him mocking and moing at him giuing vnto him when he thirsted gall and vineger and insulting ouer him in mirth and triumph when they saw the bitter anguish of his soule The which also is to be obserued in the examples of those punishments which haue been inflicted vpon most hainous malefactours as murtherers traytors paricides and vpon the innocent Martyrs of Iesus Christ if wee compare the one with the other Of which no other reason can be giuen but that the world loueth her owne and hateth those which belong vnto God affecting the persons of wicked men and setting themselues onely against their crimes not out of any loue towards God or simple hatred of their sinnes as being transgressions of his Lawes but out of selfe loue because their offences are against humane lawes which if they should not be preserued and maintained obserued and obeyed societies could not subsist nor the safety and welfare of their owne estates bee otherwise vpheld Whereas contrariwise it maligneth and hateth euen the very persons of the godly as being the members of Iesus Christ onely for their profession of Religion and practice of holy duties and in these respects can neuer sufficiently disgorge its malice against them §. Sect. 2 That it hath alwayes been the lot of the godly to bee persecuted in the world Now the meanes to remoue the former impediments are manifold The first is to consider that it hath alwayes from the beginning of the world been the lot of Gods children to be persecuted of the wicked in which regard it is vnto vs a notable and comfortable euidence that wee loue God and are beloued of him when the wicked world maligneth and pursueth vs with all rage and cruelty for righteousnesse sake For thus Cain persecuted Abel because his seruice was accepted of God Thus Pharaoh and the Egyptians raged against the Israelites when they did but make mention of going into the Wildernesse to offer sacrifice Thus the wicked Kings and more wicked Priests persecuted Gods true Prophets the Scribes and Pharises the Apostles of Iesus Christ the idolatrous Emperours the Christians of the Primitiue Church and the limmes of Antichrist the holy Martyrs because they professed Gods true Religion and brought forth the fruits of it in their holy practice More particularly Dauid often professeth that he was maligned by his wicked enemies without cause onely because he did that which was good and sought in all his courses to be approued of God And the Apostle Paul in many 2. Cor. 11. 23 24 c. words setteth downe the grieuous persecutions which hee often suffered at their hands who were enemies to Gods truth But as these holy Saints of God were not by all these persecutions discouraged in their course of godlinesse but the more boysterously the stormes of malicious rage blowed against them the more firmely and constantly they held the cloke of their Christian profession and holy practice according to that of Dauid Many are my persecutors and mine enemies yet doe I not decline from Psal 119. 157. thy testimonies so must we doe in this case following their good example if we would haue any comfortable assurance that God will thinke vs worthy to be ranked in this number And this argument taken from these examples our Sauiour vseth to arme his Disciples against this discouragement Reioyce saith he and be exceeding glad seeing your reward is great in Mat. 5. 12. heauen for so persecuted they the Prophets which were before you Yea our Sauiour Christ himselfe hath begun to vs that wee may not feare to pledge him and hath drunke the deepest draught in this bitter cup of worldly persecutions For what mischiefe could hell it selfe raise vp out of her infernall bowels what cruell rage and exquisite vexations and torments could malicious wit deuise which were not inflicted vpon this innocent Lambe the Lord our righteousnesse Now what can be a more effectuall reason to moue vs with all patience and cheerfulnesse to indure the greatest extremities for Christs sake then to remember what grieuous torments he hath suffered for vs who were strangers and enemies vnto God and the children of wrath as well as others For if our great and glorious Generall and Soueraigne King hath thus exposed himselfe to the extremest dangers and thrust himselfe into the thickest crowd of enemies where he hath receiued grisly and mortall wounds that hee might rescue and recouer vs who were taken captiue by them and set vs at liberty how valiantly should we fight his battels euen vnto blood against the enemies of our saluation especially considering that he looketh vpon vs incourageth vs to the fight supporteth and strengtheneth vs with his grace and holy Spirit defendeth and succoureth vs when we are ouer-matched raiseth vs vp when wee are foyled and holdeth in his hand the Crowne of victory being ready to set it vpon our heads when wee haue finished the fight And this argument our Sauiour vseth to incourage vs in all our sufferings and persecutions Remember saith he the word that I said vnto Joh. 15. 20. you The seruant is not greater then his Lord. If they haue persecuted mee they will also persecute you And so likewise the Apostle Peter For as much then 1. Pet. 4. 1. saith he as Christ hath suffered for vs in the flesh arme your selues likewise with the same mind for he that hath suffered in the flesh hath ceased from sin c. The which
in the Canticles I sleepe but my heart waketh or like Cant. 5. 2. vnto the sleepe or rather disease in sleepe which Physicians call Ephialtes wherein they feele this waight of carnall securitie lying heauy vpon their hearts and striue with all their might to shake it off but are notable till God assist them by his Spirit and throughly awaken them by his Word For the faithfull in this securitie doe carefully and conscionably vse the meanes whereby they may be freed from it as the diligent hearing of the Word Meditation Prayer and such like and are much grieued in themselues that they performe these duties with so much dulnesse and drowsinesse and that they so little profit by them And this was the case of Dauid who being somwhat awakned by Nathan doth flye vnto God by Prayer desiring to bee awakned more throughly and to be more and more quickned by Gods Spirit and to recouer the operations and feelings of it which were so much abated in him Create saith he in me a cleane heart O God and Psal 51. 10. renew a right Spirit within me Cast me not away from thy Presence and take not thy holy Spirit from me Restore vnto me the ioy of thy saluation and vphold me with thy free Spirit And againe My soule cleaueth vnto Psal 119. 25. 88. the dust quicken thou me according to thy Word Quicken mee after thy louing kindnesse so shall I keepe the testimonie of thy mouth So the Church complayneth vnto God of this securitie and hardnesse of heart O Lord why hast thou made vs to erre from thy Wayes and Esa 63. 17. hardned our heart from thy feare Returne for thy seruants sake the Tribes of thine Inheritance §. 6 Of the causes of carnall securitie in the faithfull First prosperitie worldly or spirituall Now the causes of this carnall securitie in the Faithfull are principally these First their abuse of worldly prosperitie and temporall benefits with which God hath blessed them when as being in themselues common gifts which hee bestoweth as often and in as great plentie vpon the wicked as the godly they notwithstanding esteeme them as speciall Testimonies and Pledges of his loue and so out of this false ground conclude that hee will watch ouer them with his Prouidence and keepe them still in this flourishing estate safe and sure from all afflictions and troubles which mooueth the Lord that hee may waken them out of this securitie in which they were more apt to rest vpon his gifts then vpon the Giuer or at least vpon the Giuer for the gifts sake to depriue them of this prosperitie in which they trust and to hide his Face from them in respect of those earthly pledges of his loue As wee see in the example of Dauid I said saith he in my Psal 30. 6. prosperitie I shall neuer be moued thou Lord of thy fauour hast made my Mountayne to stand so strong that is Thou hast so established my Kingdome euen as Mount Sion the seate thereof which cannot be remoued But thou diddest hide thy Face and I was troubled In which securitie 2. San. 24. Dauid was when he numbred the people trusting ouer-much in the arme of Flesh and multitude of his Subiects but was awakened out of this sleepe by the message of the Prophet and that grieuous plague whereby so many of them were destroyed Yea sometime this carnall securitie in them is caused through their spirituall prosperitie and the ioyfull feelings of Gods fauour in the pledges of sauing graces which maketh them to thinke these comforts will alwayes last and that in the strength of them they shall hold out in the profession and practise of true godlinesse vnto the end and so rest more vpon the Springs or Streames of these sanctifying Graces then vpon God himselfe who is the Fountayne of them Which moueth the Lord to stop the course by spirituall desertions as it were at the head of the Riuer and to giue them ouer to their owne strength without any flow of fresh supply whereupon these streames in their sense and feeling are soone wasted with the scorching heate of tentations so as they returne to their naturall drynesse And to this securitie new Conuerts are most subiect who like fresh-water Souldiers thinke that they haue wholly conquered all their spirituall Enemies because they haue gotten the better of them in some light skirmishes and that they are sure and firme for euer falling because they haue such feelings of Gods assistance and the ioy and comfort that doth accompany it whereas in truth God tendring their child-hood and weaknesse doth hold them vp in their wayes because hee would not at their first venturing to goe haue them discouraged by their falls and knowing that like vntryed Souldiers they are faint-hearted and easily discouraged from fighting in the spirituall warfare he giues them victorie in some small skirmishes that they may be heartned to indure constantly and couragiously in sorer conflicts The which they misse-construing and attributing too much vnto their owne strength and valour the Lord to driue them from this ill-grounded securitie doth leaue them to themselues and suffereth them to fall and to bee ouertaken with some danger vpon which they become oftentimes in the sight and sense of their weaknesse as cowardly and fearefull as they were before confident and couragious and vncomfortably complaine as men forlorne and forsaken of all hope And this an ancient Father well obserued Some saith hee thinke the sweetnesse of their imitation Quidam dulcedin●m incheationis putant sublimi●a●em confirmationis ideò cum tentatio s●quitur derelictos se à Deo putant Greg. in Moral lib. 24. cap. 7. the height of their confirmation and therefore when a tentation followeth they iudge that they are vtterly forsaken of God And againe For the most part euery one newly conuerted herein slippeth and fayleth that whilest hee is entertayned with the sweet sense of some gifts of grace for his initiation or entrance into the course of Christianitie hee thinketh that hee hath attayned vnto the confirmation of perfection and esteemeth it the consummation of full measure not knowing that they are but the allurements of inchoation whereof it commeth to passe that whilest he is touched and shaken with the tempest of some tentation he suspecteth himselfe to bee despised of God and in the high way to vtter destruction whereas if hee would not giue too much credit to the comforts of his first entrance he would in his prosperitie prepare his mind to indure aduersitie and would afterwards so much the more firmely resist Vices comming to incounter him by how much hee had more wisely foreseene them §. 7 The second cause is spirituall pride Another cause of carnall securitie in the faithfull much like vnto the former is spirituall Pride whereby they ouer-weene their owne abilities and the measure and strength of their gifts and graces receiued And so leauing their onely sure dependancy
thee In God I haue put my trust I Psal 56. 3 4. will not feare what flesh can doe vnto mee Thus the Church triumpheth ouer all her troubles and remaineth secure in cases of greatest feare in sole confidence of Gods protection God is our refuge and Psal 46. 1 2 3. strength a very present helpe in trouble therefore will wee not feare though the earth be remooued and though the mountaines be carried into the middest of the sea c. And so likewise the Apostle Paul What shall we say then to these things if God bee for vs who can bee against vs who Rom. 8. 31. to 39. shall lay any thing to the charge of Gods Elect it is God that iustifieth who is hee that condemneth c. Who shall separate vs from the loue of Christ shall tribulation or distresse or persecution or famine or nakednesse or perill or sword nay in all these things we are more then Conquerours through him that loued vs and thereupon he concludeth I am perswaded that neither death nor life nor Angels nor principalities nor powers nor things present nor things to come nor height nor depth nor any other creature shall be able to separate vs from the loue of God which is in Christ Iesus our Lord. Yea so solely and wholly doe the faithfull ground their spirituall securitie vpon the Lord that when they excell and abound in wisedome strength and all earthly helpes it is not encreased and when they are depriued of them all it is no whit lessened and abated because the Lord in himselfe is all-mightie and all-sufficient and hath by all these meanes no strength added vnto him nor yet is any whit weakned when all these inferiour comforts and encouragements are taken away And this the Lord requireth of Abraham that hee should be secure in his sole protection Feare not Gen 15. 1. 17. 1. Abraham I am thy shield and thy exceeding great reward And againe I am the almightie God or the God all-sufficient walke before me and be thou vpright And of the Church Feare not thou worme Iacob and yee Esa 41. 14. men of Israel I will helpe thee sayth the Lord and thy Redeemer the holy One of Israel Intimating thus much that though the Church were so sensible of her owne weaknesse that shee was as vnable in her owne strength to resist the malicious rage of her cruell enemies as a seely worme yet shee had cause enough to bee secure and without 2. Cor. 12. 9. feare because the Lord who is all-sufficient and taketh delight to manifest his power in weakenesse had promised his helpe §. 4 That the regenerate onely are the subiect of spirituall securitie Thirdly I say that this Christian securitie followeth our regeneration iustification and peace with God because there is no true securitie to those who are vnregenerate vnder the guilt and obnoxious to the punishment of sinne and who haue God for their enemie who is able and readie euery minute to consume and destroy them There is no sound securitie to those who by hellish charmes haue rocked conscience asleepe which is euery day in danger to be awakened and being rowzed vp will catch them by the throat and hale them to answere for all their crimes at the vnpartiall Barre of Gods fearefull Iudgement In which regards I may conclude with the Prophet that there is no such peace to the wicked for when they are once awakened Esa 57. 20 21. out of this sleepe of carnall securitie they are like the troubled Sea when it cannot rest whose waters cast vp mire and dirt But it is the faithfull only who being truely conuerted from their wicked wayes iustified and reconciled vnto God and hauing peace with him haue also peace of conscience that are capable of this grace of spirituall securitie §. 5 The grounds of spirituall securitie on which it resteth Fourthly I lay downe the grounds of Christian securitie wherevpon it resteth namely knowledge beliefe and remembrance of God and his sauing attributes Wherein it is quite contrarie to carnall securitie which is grounded on the ignorance not beleeuing and forgetfulnesse of them which the greater they are the greater is the carnall mans securitie euen as contrariwise spirituall securitie encreaseth in strength as we doe more and more encrease in the contrarie graces Fiftly I shew what feare spirituall securitie expelleth namely that onely which is carnall and seruile For as for that holy filiall and spirituall feare of God our gratious Father in Iesus Christ it is no way opposite to this Christian securitie yea they are mutuall causes one of another and so the more the one encreaseth the more vigour and strength it ministreth to the other The more happie we find and feele our selues in our secure resting vnder Gods protection the more Nihil potest esse securius quam illi omnia committere qui nouit suis cultoribus congruè profutura praestare Cassian in Psa 72. we feare to displease so gratious a Father vnder the wings of whose prouidence we enioy such sweet securitie and the more wee feare to offend him the more secure wee are in his loue and fauour For as one sayth nothing can be more safe and secure then to commit all things vnto him who knoweth how to giue most fitly all things profitable to those that feare and serue him §. 6 Of the continuance and perpetuitie of spirituall securitie Sixtly I adde the continuance and perpetuitie of the Christians securitie not for a spint alone like carnall securitie till the conscience be awakened with the threatnings of the Law or the smart of Gods seuere Iudgements but in all estates and at all times though not alwayes alike and in the same proportion in his sense and feeling In which respect the Christian findeth it to encrease or diminish as hee thriueth or decayeth in those graces which are the causes which both breed and nourish it and as he is more diligent and carefull or more negligent and remisse in vsing the meanes whereby it is obtained and preserued But when the Christian thriueth in spirituall grace is watchfull ouer all his wayes and endeauoureth in all things to please and serue God and so preserueth inwardly peace with him and peace of conscience then is there no outward thing that can disturbe his peace or depriue him of his spirituall securitie which he hath in the assurance of Gods fauour and protection but he constantly retaineth it at all times and in all estates and enioyeth secure peace in the middest of warres and troubles and a quiet calme in the greatest stormes and tempests of worldly calamities As for example in the time of extremest dangers he is secure and safe as though there were no perill approching so as he can say with Dauid I laid mee downe and slept Psal 3. 5 6. I awaked for the Lord sustained me I will not be afraid for ten thousands of people that haue set