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A12198 The soules conflict with it selfe, and victory over it self by faith a treatise of the inward disquietments of distressed spirits, with comfortable remedies to establish them / by R. Sibbs ... Sibbes, Richard, 1577-1635. 1635 (1635) STC 22508.5; ESTC S95203 241,093 618

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unto blasphemy they imagine good men to be led with vaine conceits but good men know them to bee so led Not onely St. Paul but CHRIST himselfe were counted besides themselves when they were earnest for God and the soules of his people But there is enough in Religion to beare up the soule against all imputations laid upon it the true children of wisedome are alwayes able to justifie their Mother and the conscionable practise of holy duties is founded upon such solid grounds as shall hold out when heaven and earth shall vanish 2. Wee must know that as there is great danger in false conceits of the way to heaven when we make it broader than it is for by this meanes wee are like men going over a bridge who thinke it broader then it is but being deceived by some shadow sinck downe and are suddenly drowned So men mistaking the strait way to life and trusting to the shadow of their owne imagination fall into the bottomlesse pit of hell before they are aware In like manner the danger is great in making the way to heaven narrower then indeed it is by weake and superstitious imaginations making more sinnes than God hath made The Wisemans counsell is that we should not make our selves over wicked nor bee foolisher than we are by devising more sinnes in our imagination than we are guilty of It is good in this respect to know our Christian liberty which being one of the fruits of Christs death we cannot neglect the same without much wrong not onely to our selves but to the rich bounty and goodnesse of God So that the due rules of limitation bee observed from authority piety sobriety needlesse offence of others c. we may with better leave use all those comforts which God hath given to refresh us in the way to heaven then refuse them the care of the outward man bindes conscience so farre as that wee should neglect nothing which may helpe us in a cheerefull serving of GOD in our places and tend to the due honour of our bodies which are the temples of the Holy Ghost and companions with our soules in all performances So that under this pretence wee take not too much liberty to satisfie the lusts of the body Intemperate use of the creatures is the nurse of all passions because our spirits which are the soules instruments are hereby inflamed and disturbed it is no wonder to see an intemperate man transported into any passion 3. Some out of their high and ayery imaginations and out of their iron and flintie Philosophy will needs thinke outward good and ill together with the affections of griefe and delight stirred up thereby to bee but opinions and conceits of good and evill onely not true and really so founded in nature but taken up of our selves But though our fancy be ready to conceit a greater hurt in outward evils then indeed there is as in poverty paine of body death of friends c. yet wee must not deny them to bee evills that wormewood is bitter it is not a conceit onely but the nature of the thing it selfe yet to abstaine from it altogether for the bitternesse thereof is a hurtfull conceit That honey is sweet it is not a conceit onely but the naturall quality of it is so yet out of a taste of the sweetnesse to think wee cannot take too much of it is a mis●…ceit paid home with loathsome bitternesse Outward good and outward evill and the affections of delight and sorr●… rising thence are naturally so and depend not upon our opinion This were to offer violence to nature and to take man out of man as if hee were not flesh but steele Universall experience from the sensiblenesse of our nature in any outward grievance is sufficient to dam●… this conceit The way to comfort a man in griefe is not to tell him that it is onely a conceit of evill and no evill indeed that he suffers this kinde of learning will not downe with him as being contrary to his present feeling but the way is to yeeld unto him that there is cause of grieving though not of ever-grieving and to shew him grounds of comfort stronger then the griefe he suffers We should weigh the degrees of evill in a right ballance and not suffer fancie to make them greater then they are So as that for obtaining the greatest outward good or avoiding the greatest outward ill of suffering wee should give way to the least evill of sinne This is but a policy of the flesh to take away the sensiblenesse of evill that so those cheeks of conscience and repentance for Sinne which is oft occasioned thereby might be taken away that so men may goe on enjoying a stupid happinesse never laying any thing to heart nor afflicting their soules untill their consciences awaken in the place of the damned and then they feele that griefe re●…ne upon them for ever which they laboured to put away when it might have beene seasonable to them §. 7. I have stood the longer upon this because Sathan and his instruments by bewitching the imagination with false appearances misleadeth not onely the world but troubleth the peace of men taken out of the world whose estate is laid up safe in Christ who notwithstanding passe their few dayes here in an uncomfortable wearisome and unnecessary sadnesse of spirit being kept in ignorance of their happy condition by Sathans jugling and their own mistakes and so come to heaven before they are aware Some againe passe their dayes in a golden dreame and drop into hell before they thinke of it but it is farre better to dreame of ill and when wee awake to finde it but a dreame then to dreame of some great good and when we awake to finde the contrary As the distemper of the fancie disturbing the act of reason oftentimes breeds madnesse in regard of civill conversation So it breeds likewise spirituall madnesse carrying men to those things which if they were in their right wits they would utterly abhorre therefore wee cannot have too much care upon what wee fixe our thoughts And what a glorious discovery is there of the excellencies of Religion that would even ravish an Angell which may raise up exercise fill our hearts We see our fancie hath so great a force in naturall conceptions that it oft sets a marke and impression upon that which is conceived in the wombe So likewise strong and holy conceits of things having a divine vertue accompanying of them transforme the soule and breed spirituall impressions answerable to our spirituall apprehensions It would prevent many crosses if we would conceive of things as they are When trouble of minde or sicknesse of body and death it selfe commeth what will remaine of all that greatnesse which filled our fancies before then we can judge soberly and speake gravely of things The best way of happinesse is not to multiply honours or riches c. but to cure our
whole course and tenour of 〈◊〉 lives when wee are not off and on 〈◊〉 and downe It argues an ill state of body when it is very hot or very col●… or hot in one part and cold in anoth●… so unevennesse of spirit argues a distemper a wise mans life is of one colour like it selfe The soule bred fro●… heaven so farre as it is heavenly minded desires to be like heaven above all stormes uniforme constant not as things under the Sunne which are alwayes in changes constant onely in inconstancie Affections are as it were the winde of the soule and then the soule is carried as it should be when it is neither so becalmed that it moves not when it should nor yet tossed with tempests to move disorderly When it is so well balaced that it is neither lift up nor cast downe too much but keepeth a steddy course Our affections must not rise to become unruly passions for then as a river that overfloweth the bankes they carry much slime and soile with them Though affections be the winde of the soule yet unruly passions are the stormes of the soule and will overturne all if they be not suppressed The best as wee see in David here if they doe not steare their hearts aright are in danger of sudden gusts A Christian must neither be a dead sea nor a raging sea Our affections are then in best temper when they become so many graces of the Spirit as when love is turned to a love of God joy to a delight in the best things feare to a feare of offending him more then any creature sorrow to a sorrow for sinne c. They are likewise in good temper when they move us to all duties of love and mercy towards others when they are not shut where they should be open nor open where they should be shut Yet there is one case wherein exceeding affection is not over exceeding As in an extasie of zeale upon a sudd●… apprehension of Gods dishonour and his cause trodden under foot It is better in this case rather scarce to be 〈◊〉 owne men then to be calme or quiet It is said of Christ and David that their hearts were eaten up with a holy zeale for Gods house In such a case Moses unparalleld for meekenesse was turned into an holy rage The greatnesse 〈◊〉 the provocation the excellencie of th●… object and the weight of the occasion beares out the soule not onely without blame but with great praise in such seeming distempers It is the glory of a Christian to be carried with full saile and as it were with a spring tide of affection So long as the streame of affection runneth in the due channell and if there bee great occasions for great motions then it is fit the affections should rise higher as to burne with zeale to be sicke of love to be more vile for the Lord as David to be counted out of our wits with Saint Paul to further the cause of Christ and the good of soules Thus we may see the life of a poore Christian in this world 1. he is in great danger if hee be not troubled at all 2. when he is troubled he is in danger to be over troubled 3. when he hath brought his soule in tune againe hee is subject to new troubles Betwixt this ebbing and flowing there is very little quiet Now because this cannot bee done without a great measure of Gods Spirit our helpe is to make use of that promise of giving the holy Ghost to them that aske it To teach us when how long and how much to grieve and when and how long and how much to rejoyce the Spirit must teach the heart this who as he moved upon the waters before the Creation so hee must move upon the waters of our soules for wee have not the command of our owne hearts Every naturall man is carried away with his flesh and humours upon which the devill rides and carries him whither he list he hath no better comsellors then flesh and blood and Sathan counselling with them But a godly m●…n is not a slave to his carnall affections but as David here labours to bring into captivity the first moti●… of sinne in his heart CAP. IX Of the soules disquiets Gods dealings 〈◊〉 power to containe our selves in order MOreover we see that the soule 〈◊〉 disquiets proper to it selfe besides th●… griefes of Sympathy that arise from the bodie for here the soule complaines 〈◊〉 the soule it selfe as when it is out of the body it hath torments and joyes of its owne And if these troubles of the soule be not well cured then by way of fellowship and redundance they will affect the outward man and so the whole man shall bee inwrapt in miserie From whence we further see that God when he will humble a man needs not fetch forces from without if hee let but our owne hearts loose wee shall have trouble and worke enough though we were as holy as David God did not onely exercise him with a rebellious sonne out of his owne loynes but with rebellious risings out of his own heart If there were no enemie in the world nor devill in hell we carry that within us that if it be let loose will trouble us more then all the world besides Oh that the proud creature should exalt himselfe against God and runne into a voluntary course of provoking him who cannot onely raise the humours of our bodies against us but the passions of our mindes also to torment us Therefore it is the best wisedome not to provoke the great God for are wee stronger then he that can raise our selves against our selves and worke wonders not onely in the great world but also in the little world our soules and bodies when he pleases We see likewise hence a necessity of having something in the soule above it selfe it must be partaker of a diviner nature then it selfe otherwise when the most refined part of our soules the very spirit of our mindes is out of frame what shall bring it in againe Therefore we must conceive in a godly man a double selfe one which must be denied the other which must denie one that breeds all the disquiet and another that stilleth what the other hath raised The way to still the soule as it is under our corrupt selfe is not to parlee with it and divide government for peace sake as if wee should gratifie the flesh in something to redeeme liberty to the spirit in other things for we shall finde the flesh will be too encroching Wee must strive against it not with subtilty and discourse so much as with peremptory violence silence it and vexe it An enemy that parlees will yeeld at length Grace is nothing else but that blessed power whereby as spirituall wee gaine upon our selves as carnall Holy love is that which wee gaine of selfe-love and so joy and delight c. Grace
God should take his Spirit from us there is enough in us to defile a whole world And although wee bee ingrafted into Christ yet wee carry about us a relish of the old stocke still David was a man of a good naturall constitution and for grace a man after Gods ow●… heart and had got the better of himselfe in a great measure and had learned to overcome himselfe in matter of revenge as in Sauls case yet now wee see the vessell is shaken a little and the dregs appeare that were in the bottome before Alas wee know not our o●… hearts till we plow with Gods hei●… till his Spirit bringeth a light into our soules It is good to consider how this impure spring breaks out diversly in the divers conditions wee are in there is no estate of life nor no action wee undertake wherein it will not put forth it selfe to defile us It is so full of poyson that it taints whatsoever wee doe both our natures conditions and actions In a prosperous condition like D●…vid we thinke we shall never be 〈◊〉 Under the Crosse the soule is troubled 〈◊〉 drawne to murmur and to be sulle●… and sink downe in discouragement 〈◊〉 be in a heat almost to blasphemy 〈◊〉 weary of our callings and to qua●… with every thing in our way See 〈◊〉 folly and fury of most men in this for ●…s silly wormes to contradict the great God And to whose perill is it Is it not our own Let us gather our selves with all our wit and strength together Alas what can wee doe but provoke him and get more stripes Wee may be sure hee will deale with us as wee deale with our children if they be froward and unquiet for lesser matters we will make them cry and be sullen for something Refractory stubborne horses are the more spurred and yet shake not off the rider CAP. XII Of originall righteousnesse naturall corruption Satans joyning with it and our duty thereupon §. 1. BVt here marke a plot of spirituall treason Sathan joyning with our corruption setteth the wit on worke to perswade the soule that this inward rebellion is not so bad because it is naturall to us as a condition of nature rising out of the first principles in our creation and was curbed in by the bridle of original righteousnesse which they would have accessary and supernaturall and therefore alledge that concupiscence is lesse odious and more excusable in us and so no great danger in yeelding and betraying our Soule●… unto it and by that meanes perswading us that that which is our deadliest enemie hath no harme in it nor meaneth any to us This rebellion of lusts against the understanding is not naturall as our nature came out of Gods hands at the first For this being evill and the ca●… of evill could not come from God wh●… is Good and the cause of all good and nothing but good who upon the creation of all things pronounced them good and after the creation of man pronounced of all things that they were very good Now that which is ill and very ill cannot be seated at the same time in that which is good and very good God created man at the first right he of himselfe sought out many inventions As God beautified the heaven with starres and decked the earth with variety of plants and hearbs and flowers So hee adorned man his prime creature here below with all those endowments that were fit for a happy condition and originall righteousnesse was fit and due to an originall and happy condition Therefore as the Angels were created with all Angelicall perfections and as our bodies were created in an absolute temper of all the humours so the soule was created in that sweet harmony wherein there was no discord as an instrument in tune fit to be moved to any duty as a cleane neat glasse the soule represented Gods image and holinesse §. 2. Therefore it is so farre that concupiscence should be naturall that the contrary to it namely Righteousnesse wherein Adam was created was naturall to him though it were planted in mans nature by God and so in regard of the cause of it was supernaturall yet because it was agreeable to that happy condition without which he could not subsist in that respect i●… was naturall and should have beene derived if hee had stood together with his nature to his posterity As hear i●… the ayre though it hath its first impression from the heate of the Sunne yet is naturall because it agreeth 〈◊〉 the nature of that element and though man be compounded of a spirituall and earthly substance yet it is naturall that the baser earthly part should be subject to the Superiour because where th●… is different degrees of worthinesse it is fit there should be a subordination of the meaner to that which is in ord●… higher The body naturally de●… food and bodily contentments yet i●… a man indued with reason this desire i●… governed so as it becomes not inor●…nate A beast sinnes not in its appet●… because it hath no power above to order it A man that lives in a soli●… place farre remote from company may take his liberty to live as it pleas●… him but if he comes to live under the government of some well ordered Citie then hee is bound to submit to the ●…wes and customes of that Citie under penalty upon any breach of order So the risings of the soule howsoever in other creatures they are not blameable having no commander in themselves above them yet in man they are to bee ordered by reason and judgement Therefore it cannot be that concupiscence should be naturall in regard of the state of creation It was Adams sin which had many sinnes in the wombe of it that brought this disorder upon the Soule Adams person first corrupted our nature and nature being corrupted corrupts our persons and our persons being corrupted encrease the corruption of our nature by custome of sinning which is another nature in us as a streame the farther it runnes from the spring head the more it enlargeth its channell by the running of lesser rivers unto it untill it empties it selfe into the Sea So corruption till it be overpowred by grace swelleth bigger and bigger so that though this disorder was not naturall in regard of the first creation yet since the fall it is become naturall even as wee call that which is common to the whole kinde and propagated from parents to their children to bee naturall So that it is both naturall and against nature naturall now but against nature in its first perfection And because corruption is naturall to us therefore 1. we delight in it whence it comes to passe that our soules are carried along in an easie current to the committing of any sinne without opposition 2. Because it is naturall therefore it is unwearied and restlesse 〈◊〉 light bodies are not wearied in th●… motion upwards nor heavie bodies i●… their motion
to maintaine what is evill or shifts to translate it upon false causes or sences to arme us against whatsoever shall oppose us in our wicked waies Though it neither can nor will be good yet it would bee thought to be so by others and enforces a conceit upon it selfe that it is good It imprisons and keepes downe all light that may discover it both within it selfe and without it self if it lie in its power It flatters it selfe and would have all the world flatter it too which if it doth not it frets especially if it bee once discovered and crossed hence comes all the plotting against goodnesse that sinne may reigne without controule Is it not a lamentable case that man who out of the very principles of nature cannot but desire happinesse and abhorre misery yet should bee in love with eternall misery in the causes of it and abhorre happinesse in the wayes that leade unto it This sheweth us what a wonderfull deordination and disorder is brought upon mans nature For every other creature is naturally carried to that which is helpfull unto it and shunneth that which is any way hurtfull and offensive Onely man is in love with his owne bane and fights for those lusts that fight against his soule §. 4. Our duty is 1. to labour to see this sinfull disposition of ours not onely as it is discovered in the Scriptures but as it discovers it selfe in our owne hearts this must must be done by the light and teaching of Gods Spirit who knowes us and all the turnings and windings and by-wayes of our soules better then wee know our selves Wee must see it as the most odious and lothsome thing in the world making our natures contrary to Gods pure nature and of all other duties making us most indisposed to spirituall duties wherein wee should have neerest communion with God because it seizeth on the very spirits of our mindes 2. Wee should looke upon it as worse then any of those filthy streames that come from it nay then all the impure issues of our lives together there is more fire in the fornace then in the sparkles There is more poyson in the root then in all the branches for if the streame were stopt the branches cut off and the sparkles quenched yet there would bee a perpetuall supply as in good things the cause is better then the effect so in ill things the cause is worse Every fruit should make this poysonfull root more hatefull to us and the root should make us hate the fruit more as comming from so bad a root as being worse in the cause then in it selfe the affection is worse then the action which may be forced or counterfeited Wee cry out upon partic●…r sinnes but are not humbled as wee should be for our impure dispositions Without the sight of which there 〈◊〉 be no sound repentance arising from the deep and through consideration of sin no desire to be new moulded without which we can never enter into so holy a place as heaven no selfe deniall till we see the best things in us are enmity against God no high prizing of Christ without whō our natures our perso●… and our actions are abominable in Go●… sight nor any solid peace setled in the soule which peace ariseth not from the ignorance of our corruption or compounding with it but from sight and hatred of it and strength against it 3. Consider the spiritualnesse and large extent of the law of God together with the curse annexed which forbids not onely particular sinnes but all the kindes degrees occasions and furtherances of sinne in the whole breadth and depth of it and our very nature it selfe so farre as it is corrupted For want of which we see many alive without the law joviall and merry from ignorance of their misery who if they did but once see their natures and lives in that glasse it would take away that livelinesse and courage from them and make them vile in their owne eyes Men usually looke themselves in the lawes of the State wherin they live and thinke themselves good enough if they are free from the danger of penall statutes this glasse discovers onely foule spots grosse scandalls and breakings out Or else they judge of themselves by parts of nature or common grace or by outward conformity to Religion or else by that light they have to guide themselves in the affaires of this life by their faire and civill carriage c. and thereupon live and die without any sense of the power of godlinesse which begins in the right knowledge of our selves and ends in the right knowledge of God The spiritualnesse and purity of the law should teach us to consider the purity and holinesse of God the bringing of our soules into whose presence will make us to abhorre our selves with Iob in dust and ashes contraries are best seene by setting one neere the other Whilest we looke onely on o●… selves and upon others amongst whom we live we think our selves to be some body It is an evidence of some sincerity wrought in the soule not to shunne that light which may let us see the soul corners of our hearts and lives 4. The consideration of this likewise should enforce us to carry a double guard over our soules David was very watchfull yet we see here he was surprized unawares by the sudden rebellion of his heart we should observe our hearts as governours doe rebells and mutinous persons Observation awes the heart We see to what an excesse sinne groweth in those that deny themselves nothing nor will be denied in any thing who if they may doe what they will will doe what they may who turne liberty into licence and make all their abilities and advantages to doe good contributary to the commands of overruling and unruly lusts Were it not that God partly by his power suppresseth and partly by his grace subdueth the disorders of mans nature for the good of society and the gathering of a Church upon earth Corruption would swell to that excesse that it would overturne and confound all things together with it selfe Although there bee a common corruption that cleaves to the nature of all men in generall as men as distrust in GOD selfe-love a carnall and worldly disposition c. yet God so ordereth it that in some there is an ebbe and decrease in others God justly leaving them to themselves a flow and encrease of sinfulnesse even beyond the bounds of ordinary corruption whereby they become worse then themselves either like beasts in sensuality or like devills in spirituall wickednesse though all be blinde in spirituall things yet some are more blinded though all be hard hearted yet some are more hardened though all be corrupt in evill courses yet some are more corrupted and sinke deeper into rebellion then others Sometimes God suffers this corruption to breake out in civill men ye●… even in his owne children
THE SOVLES CONFLICT with it selfe AND VICTORY over it self by Faith A Treatise of the inward disquietments of distressed spirits with comfortable remedies to establish them Returne unto thy rest O my soule for the Lord hath dealt bountifully with thee By R. Sibbs D. D. Master of Katherine Hall in Cambridge and Preacher of Grayes Inne London The Second Edition LONDON Printed by M. F. for R. Dawlman at the Brazen Serpent in Pauls Churchyard 1635. TO THE RIGHT WORSHIP FVLL Sir IOHN BANKES Knight the Kings Majesties Attourney Generall Sir EDWARD MOSELY Knight his Majesties Attourney of the Duchie Sir WILLIAM DENNY Knight one of the Kings learned Counsell Sir DVDLY DIGGES Knight one of the Masters of the Chauncery And the rest of the Worshipfull Readers and Benchers with the Auncients Barresters Students and all others belonging to the Honourable Societie of Grayes Inne R. SIBBS Dedicateth these Sermons Preached amongst them in testimony of his due Observance and desire of their spirituall and eternall good TO THE CHRISTIAN READER THere be two sorts of people alwaies in the visible Church One that Satan keepes under with false peace whose life is nothing but a diversion to pre sent contentments and a running away from God and their owne hearts which they know can speake no good unto them these speake peace to themselves but God speakes none Such have nothing to doe with this Scripture the way for these men to enjoy comfort is to be soundly troubled True peace arises from knowing the worst first then our freedome from it It is a miserable peace that riseth from ignorance of evill The Angell troubled the waters and then cured those that stept in It is Christs manner to trouble our soules first and then to come with healing in his wings But there is another sort of people who being drawen out of Satans kingdome and within the Covenant of grace whom Satan labours to unsettle and disquiet being the God of the world he is vexed to see men in the world walke above the world Since he cannot hinder their estate he will trouble their peace and dampe their spirits and cut a sunder the sinewes of all their endeavours These should take themselves to taske as David doth here and labour to maintain their portion and the glory of a Christian profession For whatsoever is in God or comes from God is for their comfort Him selfe is the God of comfort his Spirit most knowne by that office Our blessed Saviour was so carefull that his Disciples should not be too much deiected that he forgat his own bitter passion to comfort them whom yet he knew would all forsake him Let not your hearts be troubled saith he And his owne soule was troubled to death that we should not be troubled whatsoever is written is written for this end every article of faith hath a speciall influence in comforting a beleeving soule They are not onely food but cordials Yea he put himselfe to his Oath that we might not onely have Consolation but strong Consolation The Sacraments seale unto us all the comforts wee have by the death of Christ the exercise of Religion as Prayer Hearing Reading c. is that our joy may be full the Communion of Saints is chiefly ordained to comfort the feeble minded and to strengthen the weake Gods government of his Church tends to this Why doth hee sweeten our pilgrimage and let us see so many comfortable dayes in the world but that we should serve him with cheerefull and good hearts As for crosses he doth but cast us downe to raise us up and empty us that hee may fill us and melt us that we may bee vessels of glory loving us as well in the furnace as when we are out and standing by us all the while We are troubled but not distressed perplexed but not in despaire persecuted but not forsaken If wee consider from what fatherly love afflictions come how they are not only moderated but sweetned and sanctified in the issue to us how can it but minister matter of comfort in the greatest seeming discōforts How then can we let the reines of our affections loose to sorow without being injurious to God and his providence as if wee would teach him how to govern his Church What unthankfulnesse is it to forget our consolation and to looke only upon matter of grievance to thinke so much upon two or three crosses as to forget a hundred blessings To suck poyson out of that from which we should suck honey What folly is it to straighten and darken our owne spirits And indispose our selves for doing or taking good A limbe out of ioynt can doe nothing without deformity and paine deiection takes off the wheeles of the soule Of all other Satan hath most advantage of discontented persons as most agreeable to his disposition being the most discontented creature under heaven He hammers all his darke plots in their braines The discontentment of the Israelires in the wildernesse provoked God to sweare that they should never enter into his rest There is another spirit in my servant Caleb saith God the spirit of Gods people is an incourageing spirit Wisdome teaches them if they feele any grievances to conceale them from others that are weaker least they b●… disheartned God threatens it as a curse to give a trembling heart and sorrow of minde whereas on the contrary joy is as oyle to the soule it makes duties come off cheerefully and sweetly from our selves gratiously to others and acceptably to God A Prince cannot indure it in his subiects nor a Father in his children to be lowring at their presence Such usually have stollen waters to delight themselves in How many are there that upon the disgrace that followes Religion are frighted from it But what are discouragements to the incouragements Religion brings with it which are such as the very Angels themselves admire at Religion indeede brings crosses with it but then it brings comforts above those crosses What a dishonour is it to Religion to conceive that God will not maintaine and honour his followers as if his service were not the best service what a shame is it for an heire of heaven to be cast downe for every pety losse and crosse To bee afraid of a man whose breath is in his nostrils in not standing to a good cause when we are sure God will stand by us assisting and comforting us whose presence is able to make the greatest torments sweete My discourse tends not to take men off from all griefe and mourning Light for the righteous is sowen in sorrow Our state of absence from the Lord and living here in a vail of teares our daily infirmities and our sympathy with others requires it and where most grace is there is most sensibleness as in Christ. But we must distinguish between griefe and that fullennesse and deiection of spirit which is with a repining and taking off from duty when Joshua was overmuch cast
time prisoner under Charles the fifth was demanded what upheld him all that time Who answered that hee felt the divine comforts of the Martyrs there be divine comforts which are felt under the Crosse and not at other times Besides personall troubles there are many much dejected with the present state of the Church seeing the blood of so many Saints to be shed and the enemies oft to prevaile but God hath stratagems as Joshua at Ay he seemes sometimes to retire that he may come upon his enemies with the greater advantage the end of all these troubles will no doubt be the ruine of the Antichristian faction and we shall see the Church in her more perfect beauty when the enmies shall be in that place which is fittest for them the lowest that is the footstoole of Christ the Church as it is highest in the favour of God so it shall be highest in it selfe The mountaine of the Lord shall bee exalted above all mountaines In the worst condition the Church hath two faces One towards heaven and Christ which is alwaies constant and glorious Another toward the world which is in appearance contemptible and changeable But God will in the end give her beauty for ashes and glory double to her shame and she shall in the end prevaile in the meane time the power of the enemies is in Gods hand The Church of God conquers when it is conquered even as our Head Christ did who overcame by patience as well as by power Christs victory was upon the Crosse. The Spirit of a Christian conquers when his person is conquered The way is in stead of discouragement to search al the promises made to the Church in these latter times and to turne them into prayers and presse God earnestly for the performance of them Then we shall soone find God both cursing his enemies and blessing his people out of Zion by the faithfull prayers that ascend up from thence In all the promises we should have speciall recourse to God in them In all storms there is Sea roome enough in the infinite goodness of God for faith to be carried with full saile And it must be remembred that in all places where God is mentioned we are to understand God in the promised Messiah typified out so many waies unto us And to put the more vigor into such places in the reading of them we in this latter age of the Church must thinke of God shining upon us in the face of Christ and our Father in him If they had so much confidence in so little light it is a shame for us not to be confident in good things when so strong a light shines round about us when we professe we beleeve a crowne of righteousnesse is laid up for all those that love his appearing Presenting these things to the soul by faith setteth the soule in such a pitch of resolution that no discouragements are able to seise upon it We faint not saith S. Paul wherefore doth he not faint because these light and short afflictions procure an exceeding weight of glory Luther when he saw Melancthon a godly learned man too much dejected for the state of the Church in those times fals a chiding of him as David doth here his own soule I strongly hate those miserable cares saith he whereby thou writest thou art even spent It is not the greatnesse of the cause but the greatnesse of the incredulity If the cause be false let us revoke it If true why doe wee make God in his rich promises a lyar Strive against thy selfe the greatest enemie why doe we feare the conquered world that have the conquerour himselfe on our side Now to speake something concerning the publishing of this Treatise I began to preach on the Text about twelue yeares since in the City and afterwards finished the same at Grayes-Inne After which some having gotten imperfect notes endeavoured to publish them without my privity Therefore to doe my selfe right I thought fit to reduce them to this forme There is a pious and studious gentleman of Grayes-Inne that hath of late published observations upon the whole psalme and another upon this very verse very well and many others by Treatises of faith and such like have furthered the spirituall peace of Christians much It were to be wished that we would all joyne to doe that which the Apostle gloried in to be helpers of the joy of Gods people By reason of my absence while the worke was in printing some sentences were mistaken Some will be ready to deprave the labours of other men but so good may be done let such ill disposed persons be what they are and what they will be unlesse God turne their hearts and so I commend thee and this poore Treatise to Gods blessing GRAYES INNE July 1. 1635. R. SIBBES THE CONTENTS OF THIS BOOKE in the severall Chapters 1 GEnerall Observations upon the Text. pag. 5 2 Of discouragements from without 12 3 Of discouragements from within 21 4 Of casting downe our selves And specially by sorrow Evills thereof 41 5 Remedies of casting downe To cite the●… soule and press it to give an account 51 6 Other observations of the same nature 63 7 Difference betweene good men and others in conflicts with sinne 83 8 Of unfitting dejection and when it is excessive And what is the right temper of the soule herein 92 9 Of the soules disquiets Gods dealings and power to containe our selves in order 108 10 Meanes not to bee over-charged with forr●… 1●… 11 Signes of victory over our selves and of a subdued spirit 142 12 Of originall righteousnesse naturall corruption Satans joyning with it and our duty thereupon 153 13 Of imagination sinne of it and remedies for it 176 14 Of help by others of true comforters and their graces Method Ill successe 222 15 Of flying to God in disquiets of soule Eight observations out of the text 242 16 Of trust in God grounds of it specially his providence 263 17 Of Graces to bee exercised in respect of divine providence 278 18 Other gr●…nds of trusting in God namely the promises And twelve directions about the same 295 19 Faith to be prized and other things under valued at least not to be trusted to as the chiefe 317 20 Of the method of trusting in God and the try all of that trust 330 21 Of quieting the spirit in troubles for sinne And objections answered 348 22 Of sorow for sin and hatred of sin when right and sufficient Helps thereto 370 23 Other spirituall causes of the souls trouble discovered and removed and objections answered 386 24 Of outward troubles disquieting the spirit and comforts in them 393 25 Of the defects of gifts disquieting the soule As also the afflictions of the Church 405 26 Of divine reasons in a beleever of his minding to praise God more then to be delivered 414 27 In our worst condition we have cause to praise God Still ample cause in these dayes
downwards nor a streame in its running to the Sea because it 〈◊〉 naturall Hence it is that the old man 〈◊〉 never tyred in the works of the flesh 〈◊〉 never drawne dry When men cannot act sinne yet they will love sinne and act it over againe by pleasing though●… of it and by sinfull speculation suck out the delight of sinne and are grieved not for their sinne but because they want strength and opportunity to commit it If sinne would not leave them they would never leave sinne This corruption of our nature is not wrought in us by reason and perswasions for then it might be satisfied with reasons but it is in us by way of a naturall inclination as iron is caried to the Loadstone And till our natures be altered no reason will long prevaile but our sinful disposition as a streame stopt for a little while will breake out with greater violence 3. Being naturall it needs no help as the earth needs no tillage to bring forth weeds Whē our corrupt nature is carried contrary to that which is good it is caried of it selfe As when Sathan lyes or murthers it comes from his owne cursed nature and though Sathan joyneth with our corrupt nature yet the pronenesse to sinne and the consent unto it is of our selves §. 3. But how shall we know that Satan joynes with our nature in those actions unto which nature it selfe is pro●… Then Satan addes his helpe when 〈◊〉 nature is carried more eagerly then ordinary to sinne as when a streame runnes violently wee may know t●… there is not onely the tide but the winde that carrieth it So in sudden and violent rebellious it is Satan that pusheth on nature 〈◊〉 to it selfe of God A stone falls downward by its owne weight but if it 〈◊〉 very swiftly wee know it is thro●… downe by an outward mover Though there were no Devill yet our corrupt nature would act Satans part against 〈◊〉 selfe it would have a supply of wickednesse as a Serpent hath poyson from it selfe it hath a spring to feed 〈◊〉 But that man whilest he lives here 〈◊〉 not altogether excluded from hope 〈◊〉 happinesse and hath a nature not 〈◊〉 large and capable of sinne as Sat●… whereupon hee is not so obstinate 〈◊〉 hating God and working mischiefe as hee c. Otherwise there is for kinde the same cursed disposition and malice of nature against true goodnes in man which is in the devils and damned spirits themselves It is no mitigation of sinne to plead it is naturall for naturall diseases as leprosies that are derived from Parents are most dangerous and least curable Neither is this any excuse for because as it is naturall so it is voluntary not onely in Adam in whose loines wee were and therefore sinned but likewise in regard of our selves who are so farre from stopping the course of sin either in our selves or others that wee feed and strengthen it or at least give more way to it and provide lesse against it then wee should untill wee come under the government of grace and by that meanes we justifie Adams sinne and that corrupt estate that followeth upon it and shew that if we had beene in Adams condition our selves wee would have made that ill choice which hee made And though this corruption of our nature be necessary to us yet it is no violent necessity from an outward cause but a necessity that we willingly pull upon our selves and therefore ought the more to humble us for the more necessarily we sin the more voluntarily and the more voluntarily the more necessarily the will putting it selfe voluntarilie into these fetters of sinne Necessity is no plea when the will is the immediate cause of any action Mens hearts tell them they might rule their desires if they would For tell a man of any dish which hee liketh that there is poyson in it and he will not meddle with it So tell him that death is in that sinne which hee is about to commit and he will abstaine if hee beleeve it be so if hee beleeve it not it is his voluntary unbeleefe and atheisme If the will would use that soveraigntie it should and could at the first wee should bee altogether freed from this necessity Men are not damned because they cannot do better but because they will do no better If there were no will there would be no hell For men willingly submit to the rule and law of sin they plead for it and like it so well as they hate nothing so much as that which any way withstandeth those lawlesse lawes Those that thinke it their happinesse to doe what they will that they might bee free crosse their owne desires for this is the way to make them most perfect slaves When our will is the next immediate cause of sinne and our consciences beare witnesse to us that it is so then conscience is ready to take Gods part in accusing our selves Our consciences tell us to our faces that we might doe more then wee doe to hinder sinne and that when wee sinne it is not through weaknesse but out of the wickednesse of our nature Our Consciences tell us that wee sinne not onely willingly but often with delight so farre forth as wee are not subdued by grace or awed by something above us and that wee esteeme any restraint to bee our misery And where by grace the will is strengthened so that it yeelds not a full consent yet a gracious soule is humbled even for the sudden risings of corruption that prevent deliberation As here David though he withstood the risings of his heart yet hee was troubled that hee had so vile a heart that would rise up against God and therefore takes it downe Who is there that hath not cause to be humbled not only for his corruption but that hee do●… not resist it with that strength nor labour to prevent it with that diligence which his heart tells him he might Wee cannot have too deepe apprehensions of this breeding sinne the ●…ther and nurse of all abominations for the more we consider the height the depth the breadth and length of it the more shall wee bee humbled in our selves and magnifie the height the depth the breadth and the length of Gods mercy in CHRIST The favourers of nature are alwayes the enemies of grace This which some think and speake so weakly and faintly of is a worse enemy to us then the devill himselfe a more neere a more restlesse a more traiterous enemy for by intelligence with it the Devill doth us all the hurt he doth and by it maintaines ●…orts in us against goodnesse This is that which either by discouragement or contrariety hinders us from good or else by deadnesse tediousnesse distractions or corrupt aimes hinders us in doing good this putteth us on to evill and abuseth what is good i●… us or from us to cover or colour sinne and furnishes us with reasons either
the love of God in the crosse as well as out of it hee may bee cast out of his happy condition in the world but never out of Gods favour If Gods children have cause to praise God in their worst condition what diffe●…ce is there betwixt their best estate and their worst Howsoever Gods children have con●…uall occasion to praise God yet ●…ere be some more especiall seasons of praising God then others there bee dayes of Gods owne making of purpose to ●…joyce in wherein we may say This is the day which the Lord hath made let us rejoyce therein And this I thinke is ●…iefly intended here David comforts ●…imselfe with this that however it was ●…w with him yet God would deale so ●…iously with him hereafter that he ●…uld have cause to blesse his name Though in evill times we have cause 〈◊〉 praise God yet so wee are and such 〈◊〉 our spirits for the most part that ●…ction straitens our hearts There●…re the Apostle thought it the fittest ●…y in affliction to pray Is any afflicted 〈◊〉 him pray saith Iames Is any joyfull let 〈◊〉 sing Psalmes shewing that the day ●…ejoycing is the fittest day of prai●… God Every worke of a Christian is beautifull in its owne time the graces of Christianity have their severall offices at severall seasons in trouble prayer is in its season in the evill day call upon me saith God In better times praises should appeare and shew themselves When God manifests his goodnesse to his hee gives them grace with it to manifest their thankfulnesse to him Praising of God is then most comely though never out of season when God seemes to call for it by renewing the sense of his mercies i●… some fresh favour towards us If a bird will sing in Winter much more in the Spring If the heart be prepared in the Winter time of adversity to praise God how ready will it bee when it i●… warmed with the glorious sunshine of his favour Our life is nothing but as it were a webbe woven with interminglings 〈◊〉 wants and favours crosses and blessings standings and failings combate and victory therefore there should be a perpetuall intercourse of praying and pr●… sing in our hearts There is alwayes ground of communion with God in ●…e of these kindes till wee come to ●…at condition wherein all wants shall be supplied where indeed is only matter of praise Yet praising God in this ●…fe hath this prerogative that here we praise him in the middest of his enemies In heaven all will bee in consort with us God esteemes it an honour in the middest of devils and wicked men whose life is nothing but a dishonour a●… him to have those that will make his ●…e as it is in it selfe so great in the ●…ld David comforts himselfe in this that he should praise God which shewes he had inured himselfe well before to this holy exercise in which hee found ●…ch comfort that he could not but joy in the fore-thoughts of that time wher●… he should have fresh occasion of his ●…mer acquaintance with GOD. Thoughts of this nature enter not into ●…eart that is strange to God It is a speciall Art in time of misery 〈◊〉 thinke of matter of joy if not for the ●…sent yet for the time to come for joy disposeth to praise and praise again stirres up joy these mutually breed one another even as the seed brings forth the tree and the tree brings forth the seed It is wisdome therefore to set faith on worke to take as much comfort as wee can from future promises that wee may have comfort and strength for the present before we have the full possession of them It is the nature of faith to antidate blessings by making them that are to be performed hereafter as present now because wee have them in the promise If God had not allowed us to take many things in trust for the time to come both for his glory and our good hee would never have left such rich promises to us For faith doth not only give glory to God for the present in a present beleeving of his truth and relying upon him but as it lookes forward it sees an everlasting ground of praising God and is stirred up to praise him now for that future matter of praise which it is sure to have hereafter The very hopes of future good made David praise God for the present If the happy condition wee looke for were present wee would embrace it with present praises Now faith is the evidence of things not s●…ene and gives a being to that which is not whereupon a true beleeving soule cannot but bee a praising soule For this end God reveales before hand what wee shall have that before hand we should praise him as if we possessed it For that is a great honour to his ●…uth when wee esteeme of what hee speakes as done and what he promiseth as already performed Had wee not a perpetuall confidence in the perpetuity of his love to us how is it possible we should praise him But we want those grounds for the time is come which David had hee had particular promises which we want Though we want Vrim and Thum●… and the Prophets to foretell us what the times to come shall be yet we have the Canon of Scripture enlarged ●…e live under a more glorious manifestation of Christ and under a more plentifull shedding of the Spirit wherby that want is abundantly supplyed we have generall promises for the time to come that God will never faile nor forsake us that he will be with us in fire and in water that he will give an issue to the temptation and that the issue of all things shall be for our good that we shall reape the quiet fruit of righteousnesse and no good thing will he withhold from them that tend a godly life c. If wee had a spirit of faith to apply these generalls we should see much of Gods goodnesse in particular Besides generall promises wee have some particular ones for the time to come of the confusion of Antichrist of the conversion of the Iewes and fulnesse of the Gentiles c. which though we perhaps shall never live to see yet we are members of that body which hereafter shall see the same which should stir up our hearts to praise God as if we did enjoy the present fulfilling of them our selves for faith can present them to the soule as if they were now present Some that have a more neere communion with God may have a particular faith of some particular deliverances whereupon they may ground particular prayer Luther praying for a sicke friend who was very comfortable and usefull to him had a particular answer for his recovery whereupon he was so confident that he sent word to his friend that hee should certainly recover Latimer prayed with great zeale for three things 1. That
in him If we will not trust in salvation what will we trust in and if salvation it self cannot save us what can out of salvation there is nothing but destruction which those that seeke it any where out of God are sure to meet with How pittifull then is their case who goe to a destroyer for salvation that seeke for help from hell Here also we see to whom to return praise in all our deliverances even to the God of our salvation The virgin Mary was stirred up to magnifie the Lord but why Her spirit rejoyced in God her Saviour Whosoever is the instrument of any good yet salvation is of the Lord whatsoever brings it hee sends it Hence in their holy feasts for any deliverance the cup they drank of was called the Cup of salvation and therefore David when he summons his thoughts what to render unto God hee resolves upon this to take the Cup of salvation But alwayes remember this that when we thinke of God as salvation wee must thinke of him as hee is in Christ to his For so every thing in God is saving even his most terrible attributes of justice and power out of Christ the sweetest things in God are terrible Salvation it selfe will not save out of Christ who is the onely way of salvation called the way the truth and the life David addeth He is the salvations of my countenance that is hee will first speake salvation to my soule and say I am thy salvation and when the heart is cheered which is as it were the S●… of this little world the beames of that joy will shine in the countenance True joy begins 〈◊〉 the center and so passeth to the circumference the outward man The countenance is as the glasse of the soul wherein you may see the naked face of the soule according as the severall affections thereof stand In the coutenance of an understanding creature you may see more then a bare countenance The spirit of one man may see the countenance of anothers inner man in his outward countenance which hath a speech of its owne and declares what the heart saith and how it is affected But how comes God to be the salvation of our countenance Answ. I answer God onely graciously ●…nes in the face of Jesus Christ which 〈◊〉 with the eye of faith beholding receive those beames of his grace and re●…ct them backe againe God shineth ●…on us first and we shine in that light ●…f his countenance upon us The joy of salvation especially of spirituall and ●…all salvation is the onely true joy all other salvations end at last in destruction and are no further comfortable then they issue from Gods saving love God will have the body partake with the soule as in matter of griefe so in matter of joy the lanthorne shines in the light of the Candle within Againe God brings forth the joy of the heart into the countenance for the further ●…eading and multiplying of joy to others Next unto the sight of the sweet countenance of God is the beholding of the cheerefull countenance of a Christian friend rejoycing from true grounds Whence it is that the joy of one becomes the joy of ma●… and the joy of many meet in one by which meanes as many lights together make the greater light so many lightsome spirits make the greater light of spirit and so God receiveth the more praise which makes him so much to delight in the prosperity of his children Hence it is that in any deliverance of Gods people the righteous doe compasse them about to know what God hath done for their soules and keep a spirituall Feast with them in partaking of their joy And the godly have cause to joy in the deliverance of other Christians because they suffered in their afflictions and it may be in their sinnes the cause of them which made them somewhat ashamed Whence it is that Davids great desire was that those who feared God might not be ashamed because of him insinuating that those who feare Gods name are ashamed of the falls of Gods people Now when God delivers them this reproach is removed and those that had part in their sorow have part in their joy Againe God will have salvation so open that it shall appeare in the countenance of his people the more to daunt and vexe the enemies Cainish hypocrites hang downe their heads when God lifts up the countenance of their brethren when the countenance of Gods children cleares up then their enemies hearts and looks are cloudy Ierusalems joy is Babylons sorow It it with the Church her enemies as it is with a ballance the scales whereof when one is up the other is downe Whilst Gods people are under a cloud carnall people insult over them as if they were men deserted of God Wherupon they hang down their heads the rather because they think that by reason of their sins Christ his Religion will suffer with them Hence Davids care was that the miseries of Gods people should not be told in Gath. The chief reason why the enemies of the Church gnash their teeth at the sight of Gods gracious dealing is that they take the rising of the Church to bee a presage of their ruine A lesson which Hamans wife had learned This is a comfort to us in these times of Iacobs trouble and Zions sorrow The captivity of the Church shall returne as rivers in the South Therefore the Church may say Reioyce not over me O my enemy though I am fallen I shall rise againe Though Christs Spouse be now as black as the Pots yet shee shall be white as the Dove If there were not great dangers where were the glory of Gods great deliverance The Church at length will be as a Cup of trembling and as a burthensome stone The blood of the Saints cry their enemies violence cryes the prayers of the Church cry for deliverance and vengeance upon the enemies of the Church and as that importunate widow will at length prevaile Shall the importunity of one poore woman prevaile with an unrighteous Iudge and shall not the prayers of many that cry unto the righteous God take effect If there were Armies of Prayers as there are Armies of men wee should see the streame of things turned another way A few Moses●… the Mount would doe more good then many souldiers in the valley If wee would lift up our hearts and hands to God he would lift up our countenance But alas wee either pray not or crosse our owne prayers for want of love to the truth of God and his people It is wee that keepe Antichrist and his faction alive to plague the unthankfull world The strength he hath is not from his owne cause but from our want of zeale we hinder those Hal●…luiahs by private brabbles coldnesse and indifferency in Religion The Church begins at this time a little to lift up
her head again Now is the time to follow God with prayers that hee would perfect his owne worke and plead his owne cause that he would be revenged not onely of ours but his enemies that he would wholly free his Church from that miserable bondage These beginnings give our faith some ●…old to be encouraged to goe to God for the fulfilling of his gracious promise that the Church may rejoyce in the salvation of the Lord. God doth but look for some to seek unto him Christ doth but stay untill hee is awaked by our prayers But it is to be feared that God hath not yet perfected his worke in Zion The Church is not yet fully prepared for a full and glorious deliverance If God had once his ends in the humiliation of the Church for sinnes past with resolution of reformation for the time to come then this age perhaps might see the salvation of the Lord which the generations to come shall be witnesse of wee should see Zion in her perfect beauty The generations of those that came out of Egypt saw and enjoyed the pleasant land which their progenitors were shut out of who by reason of their murmuring and looking back to Egypt and forgetfulnesse of the wonders which God had done for and before them perished in the wildernesse There is little cause therefore of envying the present flourishing of the enemies of the Church and of joyning and colluding with them for it will prove the wisest resolution to resolve to fall and rise with the Church of Christ considering the enemies themselves shall say God hath done great things for them Kings shall lay their Crowns at Christs feet and bring all their glory to the Church And for every Christian this may be a comfort that though their light for a time may be eclipsed yet it shall break forth David at this time was accounted 〈◊〉 enemie of the State had a world of false imputations laid upon him which hee was very sensible of yet wee see here he knew at length God would bee the salvation of his countenance But some as Gideon may object if 〈◊〉 intend to be so gracious why is it thus with us The answer is Salvation is Gods own worke humbling and casting downe is his strange worke whereby he comes to his owne worke For when hee intends to save he will seeme to destroy first and when hee will justifie he will condemne first whom hee will revive hee will kill first Grace and goodnesse countenanced by God have a native ●…red Majesty in them which maketh ●…e face to shine and borroweth not its lustre from without which God at length will have to appeare in its owne likenesse howsoever malice may cast a vaile thereon and disguise it for a time And though wickednesse as it is base borne and a child of darknesse may shelter it selfe under authority a while yet it shall hide it selfe and runne into corners The comfort of comforts is that at that great day the day of all dayes that day of the Revelation of the righteous Iudgement of God the rightous shall then shine as the Sunne in the firmament then Christ will come to be glorious in his Saints and will be the salvation of the countenance of all 〈◊〉 Then all the workes of darknesse shall be driven out of countenance and adjudged to the place from whence they came In the meane time let us with David support our selves with the hopes of these times CHAP. XXX Of God our God and of particular application MY God These words imply a speciall interest that the holy man had in God as his God being the ground of all which was said before both of the duty of trusting and of praising and of the salvation that hee expected from God He is my God therefore be not disqui●…d but trust him He is my God therefore hee will give mee matter to praise him and will be the salvation of my countenance God hath some speciall ones in the world to whom he doth as it were ●…e over himselfe and whose God he 〈◊〉 by vertue of a more speciall covenant whence we have these excellent expressions I will be your God and you shall be my people I will be your Father and you shall be my sonnes and daughters Since the fall wee having lost our communion with God the chiefe good our happinesse stands in recovering againe fellowship with him For this end wee were created and for this redeemed and for effecting of this the Word and Sacraments are sanctified to us yea and for this end God himselfe out of the bowels of his compassion vouchsafed to enter into a gracious covenant with us founded upon Jesus Christ and his satisfaction to divine justice so that by Faith wee become one with him and receive him as offered of his Father to be all in all to us Hence it is that CHRIST hath his name Immanuel God with us Not onely because hee is God and man too both natures meeting in one person but because being God in our nature he hath undertooke this office to bring God and us together The maine end of Christs comming and suffering was to reconcile and to gather together in one and as Peter expresseth it to bring man againe to God Immanuel is the bond of this happy agreement and appeares for ever in heaven to make it good As the comfort hereof is great so the foundation of it is sure and everlasting God will be our God so long as he is Christs God and because hee is Christs God Thus the Father of the faithfull and all other holy men before Christ apprehended God to be their God in the Messias to come Christ was the ground of their interest Hee was yesterday to them as well as to day to us Hence it is that God is called the portion of his people and they his jewels he their onely rock and strong Tower and they his peculiar ones Well may we wonder that the great God should stoope so low to enter into such a covenant of grace and peace founded upon such a Mediator with such utter enemies base creatures sinfull dust and ashes as we are This is the wonderment of Angels a torment of devils and glory of our nature and persons and will be matter of admiration and praising God unto us for all eternity As God offereth himselfe to be ours in Christ else durst we lay no claime to him so there must be in us an appropriating grace of faith to lay hold of this offer David saith here My God But by what spirit by a spirit of faith which looking to Gods offer maketh it his owne whatsoever it layes hold of God offereth himselfe in covenant and Faith catcheth hold thereon presently With a gracious offer of God there goeth a gracious touch of his spirit to the soule giving it sight and strength whereby being ayded by the same spirit it layeth
a grace wher●…y the soule resigneth up it self to God ●…n humble submission to his will because he is our God as David in extremity comforted himselfe in the Lord his God Patience breeds comfort because it brings experience with it of Gods ow●…ing of us to be His. The soul shod and ●…enced with this is prepared against all ●…bs and thornes in our way so as wee ●…e kept from taking offence All troubles we suffer doe but help patience to its perfect worke by subduing the unbroken sturdinesse of our spirits when wee feele by experience wee get but more blowes by standing out against God 4. The Spirit of God likewise is a spirit of meeknesse whereby though the ●…ul be sensible of evill yet it mode●…tes such distempers as would otherwise rob a man of himselfe and together with patience keepeth the soul in possession of it selfe It stayes murmurings and frettings against God or man It sets and keepes the soul in tune It is that which God as hee workes so hee much delights in and sets a price upon it as the chiefe ornament of the soul. The meek of the earth seek God and are hid in the day of his wrath whereas high spirits that compasse themselves with pride as with a chain thinking to set out themselves by that which is their shame are looked upon by God a farre off Meek persons will bow when others break they are raised when others are pluckt down and stand when others that mount upon the wings of vanity fall these prevaile by yeelding and are Lords of themselves and other things else more then other unquiet spirited men the blessings of heaven and earth attend on these 5. So likewise contentednesse with our estate is needfull for a waiting condition and this we have in Our God being able to give the soul full satisfaction For outward things God knowes ●…ow to dyet us If our condition be not 〈◊〉 our minde he will bring our minde 〈◊〉 our condition If the spirit bee too ●…gge for the condition it is never qui●… therefore God will levell both Those wants be well supplyed that are made up with contentednesse and with ●…hes of a higher kinde If the Lord●…e ●…e our Shepheard we can want nothing This lifteth the weary hands and feeble ●…ees even under chastisement wherein though the soule mourneth in the sence of Gods displeasure yet it rejoyceth in his Fatherly care 6. But patience and contentment are ●…o low a condition for the soul to rest 〈◊〉 therefore the spirit of God raiseth it vp to a spirituall enlargement of joy So much joy so much light and so much hight so much scattering of darknesse of ●…pirit We see in nature how a little light will prevaile over the thickest clouds of darknesse a little fire wastes a great ●…eale of drosse The knowledge of God to be our God brings such a light of joy into the soul as driveth out●… dark uncomfortable conceits this light makes lightsome If the light of knowledge alone makes bold much more the light of joy arising from our communion and interest in God How can wee enjoy God and not joy in him A soule truely cheerefull rejoyceth that God whom it loveth should think it worthy to endure any thing for him This joy often ariseth to a spirit of glory even in matter of outward abasement if the trouble accompanyed with disgrace continue the spirit of glory rests upon us and it will rest so long untill it make us more then Conquerours even then when we seeme conquered for not onely the cause but the spirit riseth higher the more the enemies labour to keepe it under as we see in Stephen With this joy goeth a spirit of courage and confidence What can daunt that soule which in the greatest troubles hath made the great God to be its owne Such a spirit dares bid defiance to all opposite power setting the soule above the world having a spirit larger and higher then the world and seeing all but God beneath it as being in heaven already in its head After Moses and Micah had seene God in his favour to them how little did they regard the angry countenances of those mighty Princes that were in their times the terrours of the world The courage of a Christian is not onely against sensible danger and of flesh and bloud but against principalities and powers of darknesse against the whole kingdome of Sathan the god of the world whom hee knowes shortly shall be trodden under his feet Sathan and his may for a time exercise us but they cannot hurt us True beleevers are so many Kings and Queens so many Conquerours over that which others are slaves to they can overcome themselves in revenge they can despise those things that the world admires and see an excellency in that which the world sets light by they can set upon spirituall duties which the world cannot tell how to goe about and endure that which others tremble to think of and that upon wise reasons and a sound foundation they can put off themselves and be content to be nothing so their God may appeare the greater and dare undertake and undergoe any thing for the glory of their God This courage of Christians among the Heathens was counted obstinacy but they knew not the power of the spirit of Christ in his which is ever strongest when they are weakest in themselves they knew not the privy armour of proofe that Christians had about their hearts and thereupon counted their courage to be obstinacy Some think the Martyrs were too prodigall of their bloud and that they might have beene better advised but such are unacquainted with the force of the love of God kindled in the heart of his childe which makes him set such a high price upon Christ and his truth that he counts not his life dear unto him He knowes hee is not his owne but hath given up himselfe to Christ and therefore all that is his yea if hee had more lives to give for Christ hee should have them He knowes he shall be no looser by it Hee knowes it is not a losse of his life but an exchange for a better We see the creatures that are under us will be couragious in the eye of their Masters that are of a superiour nature above them and shall not a Christian be couragious in the presence of his great Lord and Master who is present with him about him and in him undoubtedly hee that hath seene God once in the face of Christ dares look the grimmest creature in the face yea death it selfe under any shape The feare of all things flyes before such a soule Onely a Christian is not ashamed of his confidence Why should not a Christian be as bold for his God as others are for the base gods they make to themselves 7. Besides a spirit of courage for establishing the soule is required a spirit of constancie