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A15144 The vvay to the celestiall paradise Declaring how a sinner may be saued, and come to life euerlasting. Contained in three bookes.The first second third sheweth that a sinner may be saued, & come to life euerlasting. By faith, apprehending Christ for his iustification, & applying to himselfe the promises of the Gospell made in Iesus Christ. Repentance, hauing his sins washed away in the bloud of the lambe Iesus Christ. Prayer, calling vpon God in the name of Iesus Christ. By Robert Whittell, minister of the Gospell. Whittle, Robert, d. 1638. 1620 (1620) STC 25441; ESTC S120396 338,769 458

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sinne but sinne being brought forth is very foule and vglie to looke vpon a mishapen thing a filthie leper there 's nothing in the world so foule to looke vpon as this childe of wickednesse Consider it in some particulars murther is a bloody sinne the murtherer's hands are full of blood Fornication adulterie are filthy sinns called t Eph 5. 3. v●cleannes Drunkennes is a very beast like swinish sinne what a filthy sight is it to see a man made in the Image of God vomiting like a dogge tumbling in the dirt and wallowing in the mire like a swine we finde in the law that there were diuerse washings and purifiings to wash and cleanse the offenders signifiing thereby that sinne is a most filthie thing and that the soule stained with sinne hath neede of much washing Secondly our sinnes are great and that in a twofold 2 Great respect first comparing one sinne with another secondly in their owne nature for they are committed against God who is great in power and infinite Thirdly our sinnes are many they exceede in multitude 3 Manie they are innumerable Insomuch that Dauid saith u Psal 19. 12. who can vnderstand his errours and againe x Psal 40. 12. they are mothen the haires of my head Manasseh in his praier counting the number of his sinnes findes them so greatly to exceede that he saith They are aboue the number of the sands of the sea Hereby it may appeare what manner of knowledge of sinne is required of euery penitent sinner The Second thing concerning the knowledge of sin How a sinner may come to the knowledge of his sinnes Namely by the law is how a sinner may come to the knowledge of his sins S. Paul sheweth that the knowledge of sinne is by the Law y Rom. 3. 20. By the law is the knowledge of sinne The law of God euen the Morall law written in the two tables of ston● is the meanes to finde out our sinnes the law of God wi●l let vs see our originall sinne by making vs see and know our corruption of nature our euill inclinations and euill dispositions against the law of God Of which S. Paul speakes thus z Rom. 7. 7. I had not knowne sinne but by the law for I had not knowne lust except the law had said thou shalt not couet The law also will let vs see and know our actuall transgressions whether they be committed by thought word or deede against any commandement by the law of God we may see and know our euill thoughts against God and against our neighbour our lustfull thoughts our couetous thoughts our carnall and worldly thoughts our blasphemous words and slanderous speeches and all our sinfull and wicked deedes Yea what euill we haue committed or what good we haue omitted For this cause the Law of God is compared to a looking-glasse for as a man beholding his face in a glasse may see and perceiue the spots and blemishes that are therein so a sinner looking into the law of God and diligently perusing the Commaundements may find out and euidently perceiue the spots and blemishe● of his soule Thus a sinner commeth to the knowledge of his sinnes Now whereas there is necessarily required such a particular Vse 1 knowledge of sinne and that the knowledge of To know our selues sinne comes by the law the consideration hereof is first profitable for instruction to teach vs to know our selues This hath beene alwayes held a good precept amongst wise men know thy selfe It s good and profitable for euery 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 one to know himselfe to search and try his own heart and by diligent inquirie to find out his owne particular sinnes to know his owne weakenesse and wickednesse his sinnes and his miserie Dauids exhorta●ion is a Psal 4 4. commune with your owne heart vpon your bed Enter into your closet yea into the secret chamber of your owne heart there beginne to thinke with your selues there speake vnto your selues there conferre and reason about the spirituall state not of others but of your owne selues And for the better knowledge of our selues we are to How to know our selues consider and search diligently both what we were by Creation and also what we are by corruption through the fall of Adam By Creation man was in a happie and blessed state created in the b Gen. 1. 27. image of God expounded by S. Paul to be c Ephe. 4. 24. righteousnesse and true holinesse But since the fall of Adam man is brought into a farre worse state by reason of sinne so that if a man could d Si bene inspexeris teipsum inuenies materiam contemnend● teipsum Stell d● contemp●● Mundi well looke into himselfe he might finde matter enough to humble yea to contemne himselfe in regard of any goodnesse or worthinesse that is in himselfe and that whether we regard the bodie or the soule of man In regard of the body what is man but earth a vessell of corruption dust and ashes wormes-meat yea a sinfull polluted bodie And for the soule now in the corrupt state infected and polluted with sinne till we be renewed by the Spirit of God till God come vnto vs to cleanse and purifie and sanctifie vs with his renewing grace what are we but as the Scripture calleth vs e Rom. 5. Ver. 6. 8. 10. vngodly sinners enemies of God f Ephe. 2. 13. dead in trespasses and sinnes children of wrath and g Ephe. 5. 6. children of disobedience Yea by nature and of our selues without Christ we are h R●u 3. 17. wretched and miserable and poore and blind and naked Besides all this in danger of the i Gal. 3. 10. malediction and curse of God in danger of hell and condemnation and that which augmenteth our miserie and wretched state is that we are the cause of our owne miserie and are no way able to helpe our selues out of our miserie either to purge our selues from our sinnes or to free our selues from the danger o● condemnation and eternall death so that a sinner comming to this humble acknowledgement of himselfe in regard of his owne spirituall state and considering seriously what he hath beene what he is may crie out and say with St Paul k Rom 7. 24. O wretched man that I am who shall deliuer me This knowledge of a mans selfe to know his owne sinnes and his miserie to know how wretched and miserable The knowledg of our selues necessarie he is by reason of sinne is ve●ie necessarie for First vnlesse a man know himsel●e to be sinfull and 1 For our Humiliation wretched and miserable he will neuer be brought to true l Zanch. de Natur Dei l. 3. c. 3. humiliation but will thinke too well of himselfe trust too much in his owne righteousnesse and boast too much of his owne goodnesse and say with the proud Pharisie
that vine and is knowne to be in Christ to haue faith in Christ by the fruits of a godly life If any man be in Christ hauing true iustifying faith he is also sanctified by the spirit of God he is renued inwardly in his minde and reformed outwardly in his life and conuersation He is a chang'd man he is not the same man that he was before for his heart is now purified by faith and his conscience is purged from dead workes to serue the liuing God if any man be in Christ and haue Christ dwelling in his heart by faith he hath a new heart a new mind a new will new affections new desires new purposes and new resolutions he hath new eyes new eares a new tongue new hands and new feete all is new not in regard of the ſ Nulla substantia n●ua c●nditur qualitas duntaxat immutatur Bez. substance either of soule or bodie but of the qualitie and condition thereof for the faculties and powers of the soule as also the parts and members of the bodie remaine the same but in the new creation the euill qualities and dispositions the euill conditions of the inner and outward man are changed The vnderstanding that before was darke through ignorance is now inlightned with sauing knowledge the will which before was froward peruerse and stubborne is now framed to the will of God and the affections which were rebellious disordered and disobedient in the new creation are brought into order and framed to holy obedience The eye that hath offended by wandring lusting and coueting is now made a modest chast sober and contented eye The tongue that hath either offended God by blasphemie swearing cursing or any way taking the name of God in vaine or grieued a mans neighbour by railing words reuiling and reproachfull speeches by lying slandering backbiting false accusing detracting from the credit and estimation of others is now in the new creation made to be a tongue honourring God praysing and blessing God a tongue abhorring lies and speaking the truth vnto his neighbour a tongue speaking well to others and of others and of a fierie inflamed contentious tongue it is now a coole quiet and peaceable tongue The hands also that haue offended by fighting hurting wounding killing by violence crueltie oppression extortion robbing and by being vnmercifully shut against the poore in the new creation and change of life are made peaceable forbearing innocent and harmlesse yea mercifull liberall and open to the poore and needy And the feet which were swift to shed bloud and walked in the waies of wickednesse are now refrained from euery euill way The consideration of this that reformation of life is a signe of true faith hath a two-fold vse It serues First for instruction to teach vs as many as haue Vse 1 true iustifying faith indeede and in truth to giue restimony To giue testimony of our faith by a godly life The necessity thereof of our faith by a godly life and holy conuersation This is necessary for euery one that hath the true faith and makes a profession of the Gospell of Christ for a man by his godly life and holy conuersation doth three things which are excellent in a Christian For heereby First he glorifies God g Matth. 5. 16. Let your light so shine before 1 Glorifying God men saith our Sauiour that they may see your good workes and glorifie your father which is in heaueuen And againe he saith h Ioh. 15. 8. Heerein is my father glorified that yee beare much fruit By which our Sauiour giueth vs to vnderstand that when Christians so liue that they are seene and knowne to bring forth the fruit of good workes when then so liue as that they are good examples to others when that they so lead their liues as that by their godly conuersation honest behauiour and vnblameable life they shine before men heereby they glorifie God they honour God and cause men to blesse God for the good things which they see in them Secondly he adornes the Gospell of Christ and is an 2 Adorning the Gospell of Christ ornament to his profession for this cause the Apostle beseecheth the Ephesians to i Ephes 4. 1. walke worthy of the vocation wherewith they were called And exhorting the Philippians to a godly conuersation he saith k Phil. 1. 27. Let your conuersation be as it becommeth the Gospell of Christ 3 Stopping the mouthes of those which speake euill of the way of the Lord. Thirdly he stops the mouthes of those which are ready to open their mouthes and speake euill of them that feare God when they shall see and perceiue plainely that they which professe the Gospell of Christ in sincerity doe labour to walke conscionably before God and towards men when they shall see that they liue l Phil. 2. 15. blamelesse and harmelesse the sonne● of God without rebuke In a word when a Christian through sanctification of the Spirit is carefull to liue in obedience to the Commandements of God labouring and endeauouring with Zacharie and Elizabeth to m Luk. 1. 6. walke in all the Commandements of the Lord blamelesse this godly conuersation and vnbl●meable life is able to stop the mouthes of prophane and wicked people as S. Peter also saith n 1 Pet. 2. 12. Hauing your conuersation honest among the Gentiles that whereas they speake against you as euill doers they may by your good workes which they shall behold glorifie God in the day of visitation And againe exhorting them to walke conscionably he saith o 1 Pet. 3. 16. Hauing a good conscience that whereas they speake euill of you as of euill doers they may be ashamed that falsly accuse your good conuersation in Christ Secondly this serues to reprooue those who vainely Vse 2 perswade themselues that they are in Christ are members Against those that say they haue faith and are not reformed in life of Christ haue faith in Christ and yet are not reformed in their liues But the truth is if any man be in Christ he is a new creature he is a new man hee hath put off the olde man which is corrupt and hath put on the new man which after God is created in righteousnesse and true holinesse In the new creation there is alteration and change in the minde in the will and affections in the eyes eares tongue hands c then looke vpon thy selfe ô man search thy selfe within and view thy selfe without is thy minde the same that it hath beene formerly doth it still mind earthly things is thy heart as much set vpon the world as euer it was are thy affections as disordered and thy passions as vnruly as in former-time and doe thy olde corruptions remaine in their full strength is there no change nor alteration in the inner man and the eye the same that it hath been as Iustfull as wanton and wandring as coueting as before is the tongue the same that
and cruell dealing he is greatly dis-liked of his fellow seruants and iudged by his Lord to be a wicked seruant and worthie to be deliuered to the tormentors till he should pay all his owne debt This of forbearing wrongs Secondly a Christian is to shew his patience in forgiuing 2 In forgiuing wrongs and iniuries wherein he is to consider First the wrong doer Secondly the wrong done First for the wrong doer a Christian ought alwayes 1 The partie that hath done wrong to be so patient as to forgiue the partie that hath done him wrong so our Sauiour teacheth vs by precept i Luk. 6. 37. forgiue and you shall be forgiuen And by example for he himselfe prayed for his enemies k Luk. 23. 34. father forgiue them Yea we are bound not onely to forgiue our enemies but freely to forgiue them euen from the heart For sayth our Sauiour l Mat. 1● 35. so likewise shall my heauenly father doo also vnto you if ye from your hearts for giue not euery one his brother their trespasses Secondly for the wrong done we are to obserue these 2 Concerning the wrong done rules First if the wrong be of the least sort of wrongs and iniuries then it is a mans wisedome and discretion to passe by it as Solamon counselleth m Pro. 19. 11. the discretion of a 1 To passe by small offences man deferreth his anger and it is his glorie to passe ouer a transgression Secondly if the wrong and iniurie be somewhat greater 2 In greater wrongs to clear our own innocencie and then to put vp the wrong drawing with it some little offence to a mans bodie goods or good name but be not of the highest degree of wrongs a man in such a case ought first to labour to cleere his owne innocencie and when he hath as much as he can cleared himselfe then he is to sit downe with the wrong and patiently to put it vp an example hereof we haue in our Sauiour Christ the Iewes said vnto Christ n Ioh. 8. 48. 49. Say we not well that thou art a Samaritane and hast a Deuill Iesus answered I haue not a Deuill but I honour my father and ye doe dishonour me Here the Iewes speake disgracefully and disdainfully of Christ thou art a Samaritane and they raile on him thou hast a Deuill now Christ our Sauiour being thus wronged by the wicked tongues of the people how doth he behaue himselfe towards them Doth he raile on them as they did on him No. Doth he seeke any meanes to be auenged on them for the ●●ong done No. But what did he The first word of disgrace thou art a Samaritane as being of the least sort of wrongs he passed ouer said nothing of it but to the other thou hast a Deuill he answered for himselfe I haue not a Deuill that which you speake against me is vntrue I haue not a Deuill for I honour my father and you doe dishonour me He cleareth himselfe of the false accusation and putteth vp the wrong committing himselfe to God that iudgeth righteously This is the behauiour of a Christian concerning lesser wrongs and iniuries Thirdly for wrongs and iniuries of the greatest sort 3 Concerning the greatest wrongs and iniuries a man may lawfully vse the benefit of law so that it be done ma lawfull manner and highest nature such wrongs as doe neerly concerne a mans person touch his life concerne his estate and greatly tend to the vtter defaming of him a Christian is not bound ●ightly to passe ouer such wrongs but may lawfully defend and seeke to right himselfe by lawfull meanes as before a Magistrate so that he proceede in a lawful manner in his course of law obseruing those rules formerly prescribed That the Magistrate is the ordinance of God and therefore may lawfully be sought vnto S. Paul proues both by word and practise for he sayth of the Magistrate that o Rom. 13. 2. 4. he is the Minister of God to thee for good and he is the Minister of God a reuenger to execute wrath vpon him that doth euill And Paul himselfe when the Iewes laid manie and grieuous complaints against him which they could not proue p Act. 25. 10. 11 appealed to the iudgement seat of Rome there to be iudged before Caesar Thus I haue shewed that we are patiently to suffer wrongs and iniuries and how our patience is to shew it selfe when wrongs and iniuries are offered vs and that in all the degrees of wrongs Which serues to reproue diuerse sorts of people First those who will forbeare verie little or no wrong Vse at all neither in word nor deed that wil put vp no wrong 1 Against priuate reuenge nor suffer any iniurie but are readie to reuenge euery wrong to render euill for euill like for like one euill word for another and one euill deede for another Contrarie to the rule of the Apostle q 1. Thes 5 15. see that none render euill for euill to any man This reuenging of a mans owne cause rendering euill for euill is brutish and beast-like for so doe beasts gore one another and so doe dogges grinne one at another barke at and bite one another Reasons to disswade from reuenge But thou that wilst needs be auenged on thy aduersarie consider with thy selfe O man what thou doest For first by reuenging thine owne quarrell thou doest 1 Reuenge more enrageth the aduersarie more enrage thine enemie more stirre him vp to anger and wrath and bitternesse against thee Secondly in reuenging thine owne cause thou vsurpest He that reuengeth his owne cause vsurpeth Gods office Gods authoritie thou takest vpon thy selfe Gods office for it is Gods office to right all wrongs he is the righteous Iudge as sayth the Apostle r Rom. 12. 19. Dearly beloued auenge not your selues but rather giue place vnto wrath for it is written vengeance is mine I will repay saith the Lord. Thirdly A man that auengeth himselfe on his enemie is like vnto the dogge that runs after the stone that 3 Be auenged rather on thine owne sinnes is cast at him barkes and bites at the stone and regardeth not the hand that cast the stone the cause of strife and dissension is from the Diuell the Diuell casts some stone of dissention to cause a man to be offended and for a mans owne sinnes God of times raiseth vp some aduersarie against a man to vexe and trouble him that he may humble him Doe not thou then with the dog malitiously set thy selfe against thine enemie seeking to be auenged on him but let thine eies looke to the hand that cast the stone humble thy selfe before God for thine owne sinnes which haue deserued that the stone should be cast at thee and in any case auenge not thy selfe but commit thy selfe and thy cause to God that iudgeth righteously Secondly this doctrine of patience in suffering 2 A gainst
to the p Gen. 19. 1. c. two Angels which came to Sodome at euen in the likenesse of two men And Iob was a man giuen to hospitalitie for he saith that he did q Iob 31. 17. not eat his morsell himselfe alone but the fatherlesse did eat thereof Now vpon diligent inquirie what shouldbet he cause The cause of the decay of Hospitalitie in our Land that hospitality is much decaied in our land I can finde no other cause but Sinne and the iudgement of God vpon men and their houses for Sinne. If this be too generall 1 In generall Sinne. an answere I come to particulars and affirme that first one cause of the decay of auncient hospitalitie is contentious suing at law from whence it commeth 2 In particular to passe that both he that sue●h and he that is sued he that troubleth and he that is troubled is made more 1 Contentious suing a law vnable to maintaine hospitalitie It were good that such would be warned by that saying of the Apostle r Gal. 5. 15. If yee bite and deuoure one another take heed ye be not consumed one of another Secondly another cause is excesse in eating drinking 2 Excesle in cating and drinking gluttonie and drunkennesse whereby many are brought to such a poore state and beggerly condition that they are not able to keepe hospitalitie Of this Solamon saith ſ Pro. 23. 20. 21. Be not amongst Wine-bibbers amongst riotous eaters of flesh for the drunkard and the glutton shall come to pouertie The third cause is Whoredome Iob saith of Whoredome and Adulterie t Ioh. 31. 12. it is a fire that consumeth to destruction 3 Whoredome and will root out all a mans encrease The voluptuous riotous prodigall mispends so much in reuelling banquetting drinking and whoring that all that he can rake and scrape from his poore ract-tenants is not sufficient to maintaine himselfe much lesse to keepe hospitalitie The fourth is Pride in apparell when men weare apparell 4 Pride in apparell past decencie and goe farre aboue their degree This Pride is a deuourer They carry so much wealth vpon their owne backes that the poore are robd and pincht both of backe and bellie The fift is violence and oppression when men enter 5 Oppression vniustly into the possessions and inheritance of other men this puls downe the iudgement of God vpon their owne heads u Isa 5. 8. 9. Woe vnto them sayth the Prophet Esay that ioyne house to house that lay field to field till there be no place that they may be placed alone in the midst of the earth in mine eares saith the Lord of hosts of a truth many houses shall be desolate euen great and faire without inhabitant All faire and stately houses are not so happie as to enioy the end of their building habitation much lesse hospitalitie The sixt is Sacriledge worldly and vnconscionable 6 Sacriledge minded men thinke if they can with-hold and keepe any thing backe from Church-men those sheaues and those tithes will helpe well towards the maintenance of their house-keeping and make them more able to keepe hospitalitie but it s quite contrarie for the tithes and sheaues vniustly with-held and vnconscionably taken from the Church are so laid vp in the barnes and garners of those that spoile the Church that they secretly though the iust iudgement of God eat into and consume the rest of their wealth and substance Like as x Iosh 6 19. And Chap. 7. 21 24. 25. Achans wedge of gold which he tooke being consecrated vnto the Lord was the cause of the destruction of all that he had And although many Lay-men haue great yearly-profites comming in by vniust gathered tithes yet see the iudgement of God vpon them they are thereby neuer a whit the richer but rather in poorer state then their auncestours who kept as great or greater hospitalitie then they doe and yet robd no Churches So that their deuouring of consecrated things doth no whit helpe their hospitality and it hinders Church-men from keeping that hospitalitie which otherwise they might and ought Against this Sacriledge the Lord himselfe complaines by the Prophet Malachie y Mal. 3 8. 9. Will a man robbe God Yet ye haue robbed me But yee say wherein haue we robbed thee In tithes and offerings Ye are cursed with a curse He saith not barely ye are cursed but ye are cursed with a curse He doubleth the curse to shew the certaintie and greatnesse of the curse Whosoeuer robs God of his tithes and offerings drawes a curse vpon himselfe when he binds vp the sheafe vniustly taken he binds in the curse and when he layes it vp in his barne he layes vp the curse with it and the cursed sheafe eats in and spreads it selfe into the rest of the sheaues and corne and substance like the plague of Leprosie infecting all the rest These are the true causes of the decay and present want of Hospitalitie Now if there be no Hospitalitie then mercie and compassion is not shewed to the poore and needie to the strangers to the fatherlesse and widdowes and if mercy and charitie be not shewed at least in some sort and in some measure more or lesse as euery mans abilitie will extend I demand then Where is Faith Is that true Faith that hath no workes Can that Faith saue Nay For z Iam. 2. 17. Faith as St Iames sayth if it hath not workes is dead being alone And * Ver. 26. as the body without the spirit is dead so faith without workes is dead also CHAP. XXII Of confession of Christ before men and of the profession of the Gospell THe fourth and last outward signe of true sauing Faith is the Confession of Christ before men 4 Confession of Christ before men with constancy and boldnesse standing to our faith and profession for the loue of Christ S. Paul makes this a signe of his faith saying to the Corinthians * Ex his discimus confessionis matrem esse fidem Calu. We hauing the same spirit of faith according as it is written I beleeued and therefore haue I spoken we also beleeue and therefore speake a 2. Cor. 4. 13. From hence we learne that faith is the mother of confession Faith breedes confession according to that saying of S. Paul to the Romanes b Rom. 10. 10. With the heart man beleeueth vnto righteousnesse and with the mouth confession is made vnto saluation And this Confession of Christ is two-fold Two-fold The one in time of peace 1 In time of peace Two-fold The other in time of persecution The Confession of Christ in time of peace is two-fold The first is not to be ashamed of the profession of the 1 Not to be ashamed of the profession of the Gospell For Gospell but to make an open confession and manifest profession thereof And this is necessary For First God requireth
it * 1. P●t 3. 15. Be ready alwayes saith S. Peter to giue an answer to euery man that asketh you a reason of the hope that is in you wee haue examples heereof S. 1 God requireth it Paul was not ashamed of the preaching of the Gospell for to the Romanes he saith c Rom. 1. 16. I am not ashamed of the Gospell of Christ The Romane-beleeuers in S. Pauls time were not ashamed of the profession of the Gospell for of them hee saith d Rom. 1. 8. Your faith is spoken of thorowout the wh●le world And the beleeuers among the Thessalonians were not ashamed of the profession of their faith for of them also S. Paul saith e 1. Thes 1. 8. In euery place your faith to God ward is spred abroad Secondly to confesse Christ before men hath a promise 2 A promise to them that confesse Christ and to deny Christ hath a threatning annexed vnto it f Mat. 10. 32. 33 Whosoeuer saith our Sauiour shall confesse mee before men him will I confesse also before my father which is in heauen But whosoeuer shall deny me before men him will I also deny before my father which is in heauen For thus will Christ the righteous Iudge say vnto his Father at the day of the Resurrection These ô Father on my right hand are they which haue confessed mee before men they were not ashamed of mee I acknowledge them for mine g Mat. 25 34. Come yee blessed of my F●ther inherit the Kingdome prepared for you from the foundation of the world But as for these on my left hand ô Father these are they that denied me before men they were ashamed of mee they would not stand vnto their faith and profession I acknowledge them not h Mat. 25. 12. I know you not i Ver. 41. Depart from me yee cursed into euerlasting fire prepared for the Deuill and his Angels This is the first kinde of confessing Christ before men in the time of peace The second is to bee constant in our profession to 2 To be constant in our profession and to stand vnto the truth stand vnto the truth which wee professe not to shrinke backe not to be wauering minded but to hold fast the truth to speake for it and defend it S. Paul giues vs this worthy exhortation k 1 Cor. 16. 13. Watch ye stand fast in the Faith quit you like men be strong Thus are we to make confession of Christ before men in the time of peace The consideration whereof serues to reproue Vse First those who faint and are discouraged eyther to 1 Against those that are fearfull to professe the Gospel by reason of some disgrace-full speeches vniustly cast vpon them that professe the Gospell enter vpon or to hold on the profession of godlinesse by reason of the disgracefull speeches which some ill minded men doe cast vpon the professours of religion there are diuers who hearing the Gospell preached conceiue a good liking of it and hearing moreouer and vnderstanding that the professours of religion are carefull to worship God publikely and priuately that they are carefull to sanctifie the Sabboth to frequent the house of God to heare Sermon● c. Furthermore perceiuing that the best and most sincere professours doe endeuour to liue a godly a righteous and a sober life and as much as in them lies labour to liue blamelesse they cannot but acknowledge that all this is good and worthy their imitation and gladly they would imitate them and be like vnto them but that they feare they should be mocked pointed at and branded with the name of Precisian Puritane Sectarist c. Such fearfull and faint-hearted Christians are herein like to l Io● 3. 1. 2. Nicodemus who came to Iesus by night And like to m Ioh. 19. 38. Ioseph of Arimathea who was a Disciple of Iesus but secretly for feare of the Iewes But consider I beseech you all ye that are thus fearefull to make an open profession of Christ what though the world hate you and speake euill of you and persecute you is it not a religious cause is it not for the name of Christ and will you be ashamed of Christ Nay you ought not to faint nor be discouraged in the profession of godlinesse nor yet to be afraid to confesse Christ before men though you suffer for the name of Christ for this is the portion of the righteous in this life to be afflicted persecuted and troubled and concerning this I say with S. Peter n 1. Pet. 4. 16. If any man suffer as a Christian let him not be ashamed but let him glorifie God on this behalfe A seruant that attends vpon a great man of place is not ashamed to weare his cognisance and to be knowne to belong vnto him but esteemes it his credite and accounts it his honour to be knowne and noted that he is seruant to such a worthie Gentleman or that he belongs to such an honorable person so euery Christian ought much more to reioyce and glory in this that he is the seruant of Iesus Christ Now that which makes a Christian knowne to bee the seruant of Iesus Christ is not to be ashamed of the Gospell of Christ it is his constant confession of Christ and the open manifest profession of his Faith and Religion before men ioyning thereunto a godly life hauing his conuersation as it becommeth the Gospell of Christ And a Christian ought to be so farre from being ashamed of the profession of the Gospell that he ought to glorie therein and count it his greatest honour that he is seruant to so great a Lord as the Lord Iesus 2 Against those who are still doubtfull and not setled in iudgement for the truth of Religion Secondly this reproues those who are doubtfull inconstant and wauering in matters of religion not setled in iudgement for the truth of religion being neyther good Protestants nor right Papists holding something of both and holding constantly to neither To such I may say as Elijah the Prophet said to the seduced Israelites in the dayes of King Ahab o 1 Kin. 18. 21. How long halt yee betweene two opinions If the Lord be God follow him but if Baal then follow him How long halt ye betweene two religions of Protestants and Papist● If the Lord be God follow him and worship him in spirit and truth as hee hath commaunded but if Baal be God if to worship Saints and to bow downe before Images be the true worship of God then follow them For if a man haue faith its necessarie that he also confesse the truth of his faith with his mouth and professe the same in his life Thirdly seeing that a Christian is to giue testimonie of his faith by outward profession then what faith hath 3 Against luke-warme professours the luke-warme Christian which is neither hote nor cold Some are so indifferent for matters of religion
the writers inkehorne by his side is appointed to b Ezech 9 4. goe through the midst of Ierusalem and set a marke vpon the foreheads of the men that sigh that cry for all the abhominations that were done in the midst thereof Giuing vs to vnderstand that there were some in the city which sighed and mourned for the abhominations that were done in the citie For the second what we are to mourne and weepe 2 For what for That which we are specially to weepe for is sinne In generall we are to mourne for all our sinnes great small knowne and vnknowne secret and manifest In particular for some one sinne by which we haue offended or doe still more grieuously offend God The Israelites hauing offended God by asking a King when the Lord God was their King and being reprooued for it by Samuel they sorrowed and lamented and said to Samuel c 1 Sam. 12 19. Pray for thy seruants vnto the Lord thy God that we die not For we haue added vnto all our sinnes this ●uill to aske vs a King So Dauid with great feeling of his sinnes and with great sorrow and mourning confesseth his sinne● to the Lord and craueth mercy d Psal 51. 1. haue mercy vpon me O God c. Yet is most sorrowfull for his heinous bloody sinne points that out in particular and praies against it e ver 14. deliuer me from blood-guiltinesse ô God The third thing herein is the time when we ought chiefely to mourne for our sinnes It is not vsuall with 3 The time whē men to mourne for their sinnes till the hand of God be vpon them a●●l●ct●ng them visiting and scourging them for their sinnes But the chiefest time of mourning for sinne is when we haue sinned that thereby we may preuent the iudgement of God iudging our selues that we be not iudged of the Lord. For as the Apostle saith f 1 Cor. 11. 31. M●roris tempus non tunc est cum aliquid p●●imur aduersi sed cum malè operamur Chrys de prouident l. 3. If we would iudge our selues we should not be iudged g The tim● of sorrowing and mourning for sinne is not as a Father saith when we are vnder the crosse and suffer aduersity but when we doe euill then it behooues vs to mourne for the euill that we haue done As when a man hath committed adultery murther or any other grieuous crime for which 4 The measure of mourning for sinne and therein these rules are to be obserued his soule is in danger to be depriued of the kingdome of heauen then is it a fit time for him to mourne and sorrow for his sinne that he may be reconciled to God winne the fauour of God againe When affliction is vpon vs for our sinnes necessity constraineth vs to weepe and mourne because the affliction calls our sinne to remembrance 1 Sorrow for sinne must be greater then for any wo●●dly want or losse For. but it had bene much better for vs to haue wept and mourned for the euill of sinne before the euill of punishment fell vpon vs for sinne The fourth thing herein to be considered is the measure of our outward mourning and weeping for sinne 1 Sinne is the cause of all euill Concerning which these rules must be obserued First that our sorrow for sinne be greater then for any wordly want or temporall losse for First Sinne is the cause of all euill that befalleth vs in 2 A man may be saued without riches but not without repentance the course of our life Secondly a man that hath want of wordly things or sustaineth losse in temporall things may notwithstanding be saued come to life euerlasting but sinne not repented of is able to cast soule and body into hell Thirdly wordly wealth may be procured and temporall 3 The soule once lost cannot be recouered losses may be recouered againe but the soule being once lost cannot be recouered The losse of the soule is irrecouerable and therefore farre greater cause haue we to mourne and weepe for our sinnes then for any wordly want or temporall losse whatsoeuer Secondly greater sinnes must haue greater sorrow 2 For great sinns we must haue great sorrow more mourning and more weeping Dauid was sorrie for his lesser sinnes but was exceedingly sorrowfull for his great transgressions h 1 Sam. 24. 5. Dauids heart smote him because he had cut off Sauls skirt but for his adultery and bloodshed he afflicted himselfe sore he i 2 Sam. 12. 16. psal 51. fasted and mourned he lay vpon the earth and made great lamentation Thirdly mourning weeping for sinne must haue 3 There must be a moderation in mourning for sinne it moderation that it exceed not As S. Paul speakes in the behalfe of that incestuous Corinthian whom he had excommunicated but vpon his repentance had forgiuen saying k 2 Cor 2. 7. Sufficient to such a man is this punishment which was inflicted of many So that contrariwise ye ought rather to forgiue him and comfort him lest perhaps such a one should be swallowed vp with ouermuch sorrow After this manner a sinner expresseth his godly sorrow outwardly by mourning lamenting and weeping for his sinnes There remaine the motiues which may perswade vs 2 Motiues to mourning and weeping for sinne to this Godly sorrow which is outward in mourning weeping for sinne and they are foure First God requireth it So saith the Prophet Esaias l Isa 22. 12 In that day did the Lord God of hosts call to weeping and to 1 God requireth it mourning and to baldnesse and to girding with sackloth The prophet Ioel also saith m Ioel 2. 12. Therefore now saith the Lord turne ye euen vnto me with all your heart and with weeping and with mourning S. Iames saith n Iam. 4. 9. be afflicted and mourne and weepe Let your laughter be turned to mourning and your ioy to beauinesse Secondly penitent sinners haue wept and mourned 2 Penitent sin ners haue wept mourned ●or their sin●es for their sinnes Dauid saith o Psal 6 6. I am weary of my groaning all the night make I my bed to swime I water my couch with my teares That penitent woman mentioned by S. Luke held by diuerse to be Mary Magdalen wept so abundantly for her sinnes that those two little fountaines her eies yeilded her water sufficient to p ●uk 7. 38. wash her Sauiours f●ete when Peter remembred himselfe how he had sinned in denying his master Christ he went out and q Luk. 22. 62. Wept ●●tterly Yea Christ Iesus the head of the Saints though he himselfe had no sinnes to lament and weepe for yet he oftentimes wept Comming to Ierusalem r Luk. 19 41. he wept ouer it At the raising of Lazarus ſ Ioh 11. 35. Iesus wept At his passion he wept sore for the Apostle saith that
yeeld to Moses to let Israel goe and serue the Lord so that their stocke● and heards might be staied but Moses answereth Pharaoh thus c Ex●d 10 25. 26. Thou must giue vs also sacrifice and burnt offerings that we may sacrifice vnto the Lord our God our cattell also shall go with vs there shal not an hoofe be left behind The craftie policie of the King of Egypt was that the Israelites leauing their heards and flocks behind them might haue occa●ion to returne to Egypt againe but Moses to take away all occasion of returning anie more to Aegypt tels Pharaoh that they will not leaue so much as an hoofe behinde them Such ought our resolution to be in our repentance and turning to God so truly and throughly to forsake sinne as not to leaue any sinne in the heart not so much as an hoofe not so much as any earthly affection any worldly desire or carnall lust to beare sway in the heart least these be occasions to draw vs to the world to serue sin and Sathan againe And although it be true I confesse that we cannot so wholy cast out sinne and so throughly cleanse the heart of euery euill affection and vnlawfull lust that no sinne should be and remaine in vs for d Pro. 20. 9. Who can say I haue made my heart cleane yet we ought so to repent so to turne vnto God and so to forsake our sinnes that none of our sinnes should euer returne againe to haue rule dominion in vs that we should obey sinne in the lusts thereof but we must forsake all and euery sinne Secondly we must forsake sinne with all the occasions thereof and with all the prouocations entisements and 2 That we forsake the occasions of euill with the prouocations thereunto allurements thereunto Thus S. Paul exhorteth e 1. Thes 5. 22. abstaine from all appearance of euill For this cause we ought to be carefull to shunne euill companie as a great occasion of euill For f 1. Cor. 5. 6. a little leauen as saith the Apostle leaueneth the whole lumpe And he that toucheth pitch shall be defiled So ought we to shake off idlenesse the roote of all euill yea to auoid places of superstition prophanenesse and disorder and whatsoeuer else may be an occasion to draw vs vnto sinne Hence it is that g Gen. 12. 1. Abraham must goe out of Chaldea h Gen. 19. 12. Lot out of Sodome and the Iewes depart out of Babylon i Isa 48. 20. Goe ye forth of Babylon flee ye from the Chaldeans Babylon is confusion and k Exi a Babylone fugiens a Caldae●● hoc est ●●si intrasti in confusionem vitiorum exi c. Amb. in Psal 1. Goe ye forth of Babylon is as a Father expounds it this Though thou hast entred into the confusion of vices yet come fo●th thou oughtest not to haue entred into sinne but through the law of the flesh compelling thee and leading thee captiue vnder the law of sinne thou art brought into the seruitude and slauerie of sinne Come forth of this Babylon deliuer thy selfe from the bondage of sinne Because Babylon is a place of Idolatrie and Caldea of vaine superstitions Goe ye forth of Babylon flee ye from the Chaldeans depart from euill and flee the occasions of euill Thirdly we must forsake sinne with the adheren●● 3 That we forsake sinne with the adherents euen those things which sinne hath drawne vnto it and which cleaue vnto it as if any one through a couetous minde and greedie desire of enriching himselfe hath vsed oppression extortion deceit robberie briberie vsurie or any manner of vniust and vnrighteous dealing and by such vnlawfull meanes be growne rich In conuerting and turning vnto God its necessarie that such a sinner doe not onely forsake his sinne and cease to be iniurious any more but likewise that he forsake and depart from those things which he hath vniustly and wrongfully gotten by giuing satisfaction and making restitution for wrong done to others And that this ought to be done the Scripture is plaine In the great fast in Niniueh the Kings proclamation was that euery one should l Jon. 3. 8. Fast and put on sackloth and crie mightily vnto God and that euery one should turre from his euill way and from the violence that was in their hands Now the violence that was in their hands co●pared with that in the prophet m Nah. 3. 1. Nahum was robing and spoiling of the poore making a prey of the poore and not suffering the prey which they had vniustly gotten to depart out of their hands Samuel in a generall assemblie of the people of Israel speakes thus vnto them n 1 Sam 12. 3. Behold here I am witnesse against me before the Lord and before his annointed whose oxe haue I taken or whose asse haue I taken or whom haue I defrauded whom haue I oppressed or of whose hand haue I receiued any bribe to blind mine eies therwith and I will restore it you Heereby offering to make restitution if any man could prooue that he had taken any thing from him wrongfully So Zacheus stands forth and makes a proclamation o Luk 19. 2. If I haue taken any thing from any man by false occusation I restore him foure fold As if he had said if any man can come forth and accuse me iustly that I haue done him wrong I will giue him satisfaction or if any man can iustly charge me that I haue taken any thing from him wrongfully I will restore it vnto him with aduantage The Iewes in the time of Nehemiah were found greatly to oppresse their poore brethren for the poore people in their great necessity had morgaged their lands their vineyards houses to the richer sort for money to buy them corne at the last their lands being morgaged and the mony receiued thereupon spent they fell into great distresse and complained of their miserie p Nehem. 5. 1. 2. c. Nehemiah hearing of it cals an assemblie of the people and rebuketh the nobles and the rules for dealing so hardly with the poore and exhorteth them to haue pittie on their poore brethren and to restore to their brethren their lands their vineyards their oliueyards and their houses c. and so they did for they said q ver 12. We will restore them and will require nothing of them so will we do as thou sayest And this of the things necessarily required in the forsaking of sinne 2 Motiuesto to perswade to the forsaking of sinne For the second the motiues which may perswade a sinn●r to forsake his sinnes are three First the Scripture exhorteth vs very much to this dutie the Prophet Dauid exhorteth to r Psal 34. 14. depart from euill 1 The Scripture the Prophet Esay to cease from euill ſ Jsa 1. 16. Wash you make you cleane put away the euill of your doings from before mine eies cease
Repentance presuming on Gods mercie PResuming on Gods mercy is the second impediment 2 Presuming on Gods mercy Where consider two things that hindreth many from Repentance The wicked man that liueth in sin leadeth an vngodly life because he feeles no iudgement of God fall vpon him for his sinnes presumes to sinne still and pleads for himselfe God's mercifull Christ dyed for sinners c. It is true God is mercifull He is a ●xod 34. 6. 7. the Lord God mercifull and gracious long-suffering and aboundant in goodnesse and truth keeping mercy for thousands forgiuing 1 God is onely mercifull to penitent sinners iniquity transgression and sinne But vnderstand First that God is mercifull onely to penitent sinners to such as b Isay 1. 16. 17. 18. cease to doe euill and learne to doe well to such as c Isay 55. 7. forsake their euill way and returne vnto the Lord to such as d Ezek. 8. 21. turne from all the sinnes which they haue committed and doe that which is lawfull and right And although it be true that God hath mercy and plenty of mercy for sinners though neuer so wicked and vngodly if they truely and vnfainedly repent them of their sinnes yet the mercy of God is not extended to impenitent sinners to such as are obdurate and hardned in their sins not to such as are growne obstinate rebellious and disobedient against the Lord. Impenitent Kaine hard-hearted Pharao and despairing Iudas these find no mercy these dye in their sinnes without mercy onely penitent sinners find mercy Dauid Peter Marie Magdalene and such sinners as haue truely repented of their sinnes haue obtained mercy Secondly God is mercifull indeed but as he is mercifull 2 As God is mercifull so hee is also iust so is he also iust as he is mercifull he is very ready to pardon iniquity and to forgiue sinne but as he is iust he will punish sinners and will in no case spare them that presumptuously goe on in their sinnes As Moses tells the presumptuous sinner e Deu. 29. 19. 20 And it come to passe when he heareth the words of this curse that hee blesse himselfe in his heart saying I shall haue peace though I walke in the imaginations of my heart to adde drunkennesse to thirst the Lord will not spare him but then the anger of the Lord and his iealousie shall smoake against that man and all the curses that are written in this Booke shall lye vpon him and the Lord shall blot out his name from vnder heauen This serues to reproue those who by no admonition Vse or counsell will be brought to repentance and amendment Against those that presume on Gods Mercy of life but still liue in sinne doe wickedly goe on in sinne from day to day and say God's mercifull but doest thou not heare O man that God is mercifull only to repenting sinners And vnderstandest thou not that as God is mercifull so he is also iust A mercifull Father but also a iust God How then darest thou be so venturous so bold yea so presumptuous to do wicked●● 〈…〉 in thy euill course of life yet to ble●se thy 〈◊〉 in the euil● 〈◊〉 flatter ●●y selfe in thy sinnes 〈…〉 well Go●● mercifull because 〈…〉 wil● 〈◊〉 the●efore doe wickedly and 〈…〉 Nay ●●ther because God is mercifull 〈…〉 of our sinnes that we may 〈…〉 ●nd since mercy with the Lord. He that ●●●th 〈◊〉 mercifull and yet still sinne●h against God shall one day finde that God is a God of ●ustice and will not suffer the sinner to goe vnpunished Wh●●●fore the 〈◊〉 Sonne of Sir●ch giueth the presumptuous sinner 〈◊〉 admonition f 〈…〉 Say not his mercy is great hee will be 〈◊〉 for the multitude of my sinnes for mercie and wrath 〈◊〉 from him and his indignation resteth vpon sinners CHAP. XIIII Of the third impediment of Repentance Custome in sinning CVstome in sinning is the third impediment of 3 Custome in sinning Repentance A sinner hauing once gotten a habite and custome of sinning is loath to leaue and very hardly perswaded to forsake his sinne a Cons●●t●do est altera natura Custome is another nature Through long continuance in sinne sinne groweth to bee a vsuall thing with a sinner As it is vsuall and naturall with him to eate and drinke and sleepe so is it vsuall and euen naturall with him to sinne Custome preuailes with him The Lord greatly reprooues the Iewes for this their custome in sinning comparing them to the Ethiopian and Leopard b Jerem. 13. 23. Can the Ethiopian change his skinne or the Leopard his spots then may ye also doe good that are accustomed to doe euill Letting vs thereby see the Custome in sinning and giuing vs to vnderstand what a great impediment and bind●●●nce custome in sinning is to repentance and 〈◊〉 of life Were it not an exceeding ●i●●●cult 〈…〉 for any one to take in hand to wa●● the 〈…〉 till it were white So i● it an excee●●●● 〈…〉 ●o alter and change 〈…〉 that h●●h accustomed ●●●selfe 〈…〉 to d●e euill 〈…〉 wi●l wa●● away the thicke 〈…〉 soule sa●e onely that pure and 〈…〉 the bloud of Iesus Christ which clea●●●t● vs ●rom all sinne What hinders the common s●earer from repenting 〈…〉 ●●earing what is the cause that he 〈…〉 ●●earing that euen in hi● ordinary communication 〈…〉 with him 〈…〉 as to speake but custome of s●earing what hinders the lyer tha● hee cannot leaue his lying but cust●●e and what makes the drunkard that he 〈◊〉 not lea●e his drunkennesse but custome drinking he hath so long continued in that course of life and so accustomed himselfe vnto its that now he cannot leaue it Whosoeuer then would truely repent him of his sins Vse let hi● take he●d of accustoming himselfe to any sinne Not ●● accust●●●●ur selu●● t● any sin●● and that hee doth not vse himselfe to any vicious and sinnefull course of life And to that end euery one of vs ought to be carefull to preuent sinne betime c 〈…〉 Stay the first beginnings of sinne Let not thy heart bee enti●ed to delight in euill thoughts suggested by Sathan or if thou pleasest thy selfe in those entising thoughts for a moment yet consent not vnto them Or if thou suffer thy heart to consent yet beware of the practise of sinne or if through the subtill suggestions of Sathan and the corruption of thine owne heart thou hast yeelded to commit iniquity and to doe the euill deed O repent betimes forsake thy euill way continue not in wickednesse lest by thy long continuance in sinne thou accustome thy selfe to doe euill and then it will bee hard for thee to leaue thy sinne hard for thee to do good which hast accustomed thy selfe to doe euill CHAP. XV. Of the fourth impediment of Repentance Hope of long life HOpe of long life is the fourth impediment of 4 Hope of long life Repentance This hope hinders many men
dye in impenitencie and hardnesse of heart Secondly this is profitable for instruction to all that know there is a hell and heare of the paines and torments Vse 2 To feare God of hell that they learne to feare God to stand in awe of him and not to sinne against him to this our Sauiour Christ exhorteth vs vpon the consideration of the paines and torments of hell saying Feare not them which c Mat. 10. 28. kill the body but are not able to kill the soule But rather feare him which is able to destroy both soule and body in hell Because there is a hell and because that God is able to cast the soules and bodies of all impenitent sinners into hell for this cause see that ye feare God stand in awe of God tremble before him and sinne not against him for as God is mercifull to penitent sinners and will pardon the iniquitie and transgressions of them that repent and turne from their sinnes and returne vnto God So also is he a God o● iustice and fierce wrath for as the Apostle saith d Heb. 12. 29. God is a consuming fi●r and he will cast both the bodies and soules of all impenitent sinners into hell-fire there to be tormented for euermore as it is also written e Reu. 21. 8. The fearefull and vnbeleeuing and the abhomminable and murderers and whore-mongers sorcerers and idolaters and all l●ers shall haue their part in the lake that burneth with fire and brimstone which is the second death O then sinfull man who soeuer thou art now betimes repent and returne vnto the Lord least death vnawares seize vpon thee and suddenly thou be cast downe into hell and there shalt finde thy case to be remedilesse and thy torment endlesse CHAP. XXIII Of the benefit of Repentance how it remooueth Iudgements temporall spirituall and eternall Which may perswade vs to Repentonce HItherto of the motiues to Repentance taken from the necessitie thereof The fourth and last motiue to Repentance 4 The benefit of Repentance I take from the benefit thereof Repentance brings much good to the penitent sinner he shall be blessed with manie blessings I reduce them to these two heads True Repentance Two-fold First remooueth iudgements Secondly procuteth blessings First Repentance remooueth iudgements and those 1 It remooueth iudgements Three fold three-fold Temporall Spirituall and Eternall Touching the first Repentance is a meanes to remooue 1 Temporall temporall iudgements either threatned against sinners or else deseruedly drawne vpon them for their sinnes The Lord sendeth Ieremie the Prophet to the people of Israell saying a Ier. 3. 12. Returne thou back-sliding Israel saith the Lord and I will not cause mine anger to fall vpon you for I am mercifull saith the Lord and I will not keepe anger for euer Isaiah the Prophet is sent to King Kezekiah with this message b Isa 38. 5. 6. Goe and say to Hezekiah Thus saith the Lord the God of Dauid thy Father I haue heard thy prayer I haue seene thy teares beholde I will adde vnto thy dayes fifteene yeeres and I will deliuer thee and this Cittie out of the hand of the King of Assyria and I will defend this Cittie Ionah the Prophet is sent to Niniueh to threaten them and their Cittie with destruction and ouerthrow except they did repent within the space of fortie dayes c Joh. 3. 4. Yet fortie dayes and Niniueh shall he ouerthrowne But vpon this threatning Niniueh did repent for the King and the whole Cittie put on sackcloth and fasted and cryed mightily vnto God and repented of their euill wayes and d Ver. 10. God saw their workes that they turned from their euill wayes And God repented of the euill that he had said hee would doe vnto them and he did it not When God saw the people repent of their sinnes he repented of the iudgement which he had threatned against them According to that saying of the Lord in Ieremie e Ier. 18. 7. 8. At what instant I shall speake concerning a nation and concerning a kingdome to plucke vp and to pull downe and to destroy it if that nation against whom I haue pronounced turne from their euill I will repent of the euill that I thought to doe vnto them Thus Repentance remooueth temporall iudgements Secondly Repentance remooueth spirituall iudgements 2 Spirituall as blindnesse of minde hardnesse of heart and horrour of conscience It remooues blindnesse of mind When God giueth the grace of illumination for before that a sinner beleeueth and repenteth he liues in blindnesse and darknesse but beleeuing and repenting he is inlightned with the knowledge of the truth and walkes no more in darkenesse but in light as the Apostle speakes f Ephe. 5. 8. ye were sometimes darknesse but now are ye light in the Lord. Repentance also remooueth hardnesse of heart when God giueth the sinner true contrition softning the hard heart For when God giueth grace to repent he giueth also a mollified and melting heart as it is said in Ezechiel g Ezek. 36. 25. 26. I will sprinckle cleane water vpon you and ye shall be cleane from all your filthinesse and from all your Idoles will I cleanse you A new heart also will I giue you and a new spirit will I put within you and I will take away the stonie heart out of your flesh and I will giue you an heart of flesh Yea Repentance also remooueth horrour of conscience and the intollerable burden of sinne when God giueth to the penitent sinner peace of conscience and rest to the soule h Mat. 11. 28. Come vnto me saith our Sauiour all ye that labour and are heauie laden and I will giue you rest Now the conscience neuer hath true peace neither doth the soule euer enioy quiet rest til sinne be done away by Repentance Thirdly Repentance remooueth eternall iudgements 3 Eternall so that neither death nor hell nor condemnation can hurt them that doe truly beleeue in Christ and haue vnfainedly repented of their sinnes and doe now lead a new life So saith St Paul to the Romanes i Rom. 8. 1. There is therefore now no condemnation to them which are in Christ Iesus who walke not after the flesh but after the spirit And St Iohn saith k Reu. 20. 6 Blessed and holy is he that hath part in the first resurrection on such the second death hath no power Thus it is apparent that great benefit commeth by Repentance for it remooueth from the penitent sinner punishments temporall concerning the bodie and outward state it deliuereth from spirituall iudgements and it Vse freeth from eternall condemnation That may escape the iudgements of God we must repent of our sinnes The consideration of which benefit of Repentance in remoouing Iudgements temporall spirituall and eternall serues for instruction to teach and admonish euery one that would escape these iudgements that would haue temporall iudgements remooued from
materiall Churches are the 2 Against those which profane the house of God by any disorder places of Gods worship this reprooues those who prophane the house of God by any manner of disorder For this cause our Sauiour Christ was displeased to see the Temple of the Lord prophaned by those that sold Oxen and Sheepe and Doues and changers of money insomuch that he made a f Iohn 2. 15. scourge of small cords and droue them all out of the Temple And S. Marke saith that hee g Marke 11. 16. would not suffer that any man should carry any vessell thorough the Temple And yet this Temple was not the Sanctuary but onely the Court of the Temple which Christ would not haue to be prophaned Thirdly here they are reprooued who are backward 3 Against those who will not willingly contribute to the maintenance reparation of the Church and vnwilling to contribute to the necessarie maintenance and reparation of the materiall Church Dauid that holy man of God did purpose such was his zeale to build a house for the Lord for he reasoned thus h Sam. 7. 2. I dwell in a house of Cedar but the Arke of God dwelleth within curtaines This saying of Dauid is verified with many in many places of our Land though they cast not so farre as Dauid did neither haue hearts so zealously affected as Dauid had for many men build faire and goodly houses for themselues but build whatdoe I say build repaire not the houses of God which are built to their hands and many men are careful enough to beautifie and adorne their owne houses with great cost but care not in what case the house of God be They dwell in their i Hagg. 1. 4. sieled houses and suffer the house of God to lye wast Let such men search their owne hearts and they shall finde that they come far●e short of Dauids zeale to the house of God CHAP. XI Of the priuate place of praier where of domesticall or Houshold praier and also of Secret praier in the Chamber or in any secret place AS publique praier hath ordinarily a certaine set 2 The priuate place of prayer Twofold place the house of God so hath also priuate praier and the place for priuate praier is twofold The one domesticall in the house with the familie the other secret in the chamber or in any other secret place In the house First of domesticall or houshold praier In handling whereof I will Therein Two things First shew to whom this dutie chiefely belongeth Secondly vse reasons to perswade thereunto For the First The performance of houshold praier 1 To whom the performance thereof chiefely belongeth namely to the Master of the house together with the familie is a dutie chiefely and principally belonging to housholders to Parents and masters of families As vpon the Lords day Parents and masters of families are bound not only to come to the house of God themselues but likewise to bring with them their children and seruants to the publique worship of God so likewise in the house Parents and Masters of families are bound morning and euening and at all times of the day when they receiue their meate to pray to God and to praise God either themselues if they haue knowledge and abilitie to performe the same or else to see it performed by some other and that through their default praier and thanksgiuing be not omitted And that for these reasons And that First This is our daily seruice and spirituall sacrifice 1 In regard of order and to auoid confusion in the familie morning and euening to call vpon the name of the Lord to pray vnto him and to praise him in the morning before we beginne our worke at our meales when we receiue our meate and at night when we haue ended our busines before we say vs downe to sleepe now there ought to be an order for the obseruing of this seruice and worship of God and to whom in all the family should this care and dutie belong to see this seruice performed but to him who is the head of the house so then the care of the performance of this dutie lies principally vpon the master of the house in regard of order and to auoide confusion in the familie Secondly this dutie of worshipping God and doing 2 Parents and masters of houses are so charged and commanded him seruice priuately in the house is a dutie wherewith Parents and masters of families are charged Moses the the man of God exhorting the Children of Israel to obedience directeth his speech to the heades of the houses the masters of families saying These words which I command thee this day shall be in a Deut. 6. 6. 7. thine heart thou shalt teach them diligently vnto thy children and shalt talke of them when thou sittest in thine house and when thou walkest by the way and when thou liest downe and when thou risest vp So the obseruation of the Sabbath lieth chiefely vpon all heads of houses and masters of families they must not only sanctifie the Sabbath themselues but likewise see that their children and seruants doe sanctifie it for it s said Remember the Sabbath day to keepe it holy c. In it thou shalt not doe any worke thou nor thy sonne nor thy daughter thy man-seruant nor thy maid-seruant c. Now the Sabbath is sanctified not onely by reading the Scriptures hearing the word meditation c. But likewise by praying and praising God and that not only publiquely in the Church but also priuately at home where Parents and Masters of families haue the chiefe command Wherefore I conclude that the care of performing the dutie of praying b Exod. 20. 8. 9. 10. and praysing God in the familie belongs to the master of the familie 2 Reasons to perswade to Hous Now the reasons which may perswade all parents house-holders to the practise of this dutie are these First Examples of holy and good men Abraham receiueth 1 Good men haue vsed it this commendation from the Lord c Gen. 18. 19. I know him that he will commaund his children and his houshold after him and they shall keepe the way of the Lord. Abraham had care to instruct his children and seruants in the wayes of the Lord and to teach his houshold how to worship God When Abraham pitched his tent on the mountaine on the d Gen. 12. 8. East of Bethel there he builded an altar vnto the Lord and called vpon the Name of the Lord. That is as e Muscul in Gen. 12. some expound it he called together his house holde and there instructed them concerning the true worship of the true and onely God he prayed with them and offered sacrifice to the Lord. Ioshua hath this worthie saying to the children of Israel f Iosh 24. 15. choose you this day whom you will serue whether the gods which your fathers