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A42920 The holy arbor, containing a body of divinity, or, The sum and substance of Christian religion collected from many orthodox laborers in the Lords vineyard, for the benefit and delight of such as thirst after righteousness / ... by John Godolphin ... vvherein also are fully resolved the questions of whatsoever points of moment have been, or are, now controverted in divinity : together with a large and full alphabetical table of such matters as are therein contained ... Godolphin, John, 1617-1678. 1651 (1651) Wing G943; ESTC R9148 471,915 454

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Holy Ghost and so both also confirm and establish Faith 3. God instituteth both God offereth both 4. God accomplisheth both by the Ministers of his Church by whom he speaketh with us in his word and giveth those Signs in his Sacraments The Sacraments of the old and new Testament differ thus 1. In Rites whereof change and alteration was made at Christs coming that thereby might be signified the ceasing of the Ceremonies of the Law and the beginning or succeeding of the Gospel 2. In multitude and number under the Law were more in number and more laborious now are fewer and more easie Rites 3. In signification those signified Christ to come these Christ that was come 4. In binding and obliging men the Old bound onely Abrahams posterity ours binde the whole Church of all Nations and Countreys 5. In continuance the Old were to continue but until the coming of the Messias the New to the end of the world 6. In clearness they were more obscure and dark because they signified things to be manifested but these more clear and plain because they signifie things already manifested How the Sacracraments of the old new Testament agree 1. In the Author God alone can ordain Sacraments 2. In the things signified or in substance for by the Sacraments of both Testaments the same things are offered signified and promised unto us even Remission of sins the gift of the Holy Ghost and that by Christ alone who is yesterday to day and the same for ever The Sacraments work and confirm faith in us but not without us as the Holy Ghost doth For 1. The Holy Ghost worketh and confirmeth faith in us as the efficient cause thereof the Word and Sacraments as instrumental causes 2. The Holy Ghost wheresoever he dwelleth is effectual in working the Sacraments are not so The ends of the Sacraments are 1. To be Signs and Seals of the Covenant 2. The distinguishing of the true Church from all Sects whatsoever 3. The profession testification of our thankfulness duty towards God 4. The propagation and maintenance of the Doctrine for they may not be without the use of the Word and explication thereof 5. An occasion thereby given to the yonger sort to enquire what these things mean and so an occasion also of explicating and preaching the benefits of Christ unto them Exod. 13.14 6. That they may be the bonds of mutual dilection and love 1 Cor. 12.13 The right use of the Sacraments 1. When the Rites ordained of God are rightly and truly observed and not corrupted 2. When those persons use those Rites for whom God ordained them that is the houshold of Christ onely such Christians who by profession of faith and true repentance are the citizens of the Church Mat. 3.6 3. When the Rites and Sacraments are used to that end for which they were instituted Sacramental union consisteth in two things 1. In a similitude and proportion of the Signs with the thing signified 2. In the joynt-exhibiting or receiving of the thing and in the lawful and right use The Sacramental union consisteth not in a presence of the Sign and the thing signified in one and the same place much less in any transmutation or transubstantiation but it is when the faithful and they onely do in the lawful and right use receive the Signs of the Ministers and the things signified of Christ and when we so receive both that is the Sign and the thing signified the same is called Sacramental union whereby appeareth that this conjunction of things with their Signs or Sacramental union is not corporal or local Here Actions speak and representing Signs Language the Contents of the upper lines Words visible Th' one inducts us into Grace Th' other doth establish both run one race To man s Salvation both proclaim the Power And Goodness of our blessed Saviour That he which measures Heaven with a span Should yet descend to Covenant with Man And be so far beyond expression good As both to cleanse and feed us with his Blood §. 2. Baptism BAptism is a Sacrament instituted by Christ in the New Testament whereby we are washed with water In the Name of the Father of the Son and of the Holy Ghost to signifie that we are received into favor for the Blood of Christ shed for us and also to binde us that hereafter we endeavor in our actions and deeds truly to testifie newness of life Baptism is necessary in part and respectively so as it is a mark of the true Church as it is a Seal of the Covenant and as it serveth to enter and admit Infants into the visible Church but it is not absolutely or simply necessary so as the party that dyes without it remains in the state of damnation and cannot be saved for the Seal of the Covenant differeth from the Covenant it self to which this Seal is but annexed and depending upon Indeed the Covenant of Grace and our being in Christ is absolutely necessary but the bare want of Baptism when it cannot be had or privation of it in this case is pardonable and doth not condemn the party unbaptized The thief upon the Cross was saved though he were never Baptized Luke 23. Infants born of believing Parents are holy before Baptism and Baptism is a Seal of that holiness 1 Cor. 7.14 The children of believing Parents are holy Rom. 11.16 therefore the children of the faithful are not to be denyed this Baptism because God hath promised in the person of Abraham that he will be the God of the faithful and of their seed as also for other reasons set down in the Scripture For seeing Infants belong as well unto the Covenant and Church of God Gen. 17.7 as they who are of full age and seeing also unto them is promised Remission of sins by the blood of Christ Mat. 19.14 and the Holy Ghost the worker of Faith Luke 1.14 15. as well as unto those of full growth they are by Baptism to be ingrafted into the Church of God and to be discerned from the children of Infidels Acts 10.47 as in the Old Testament was done by Circumcision in whose place Baptism succeeded in the New Col. 2.11 12 13. And though Infants have not indeed an actual faith yet they have an inclination to believe which the Holy Ghost as is fittest for their capacity and condition worketh in them So that we must judge of the Infants of the faithful according to charity who have interest in the outward Covenant until by infidelity when they come to years of discretion they shall cut off themselves grounding our selves upon the Promise of God made to Abraham Gen. 17.7 yea the resolution of Beza in his Tenth Epistle is That the children of Excommunicated persons may be Baptized And though to be Baptized actual faith be required in those of understanding yet in Infants born in the Church is required an inclination onely to this actual faith which they have after their maner potentially though
3. That we might be advertised of the fulfilling of the Prophesie Gen. 49.10 The Scepter shall not depart from Judah c. 4. For that his innocency might appear he was not to be privily taken away by the Jews nor to be drawn to death by tumult or disorderly In the sufferings Death Passion of Christ these things are specially to be considered 1. The History it self of Christs Passion agreeing with Gods Sacred Oracles and Prophesies 2. The cause of his Sufferings 3. The fruit or effects of Christs Passion 4. His example that we are also to enter into eternal life and heavenly glory by death as did Christ 5. The due Meditation in the whole The History of Christs passion runs thus 1. They apprehend him as they would a Varlet that had done some outrage coming unto him with swords and staves in the night time 2. They carry him first to one High Priest then to another then to Pilate then to Herod and back again to Pilate amongst whom he is mocked laughed at scornfully intreated and buffeted questioned withal spitted on and crowned with Thorns 3. They compel him to carry his heavy Cross till he nigh fainted under the burthen being without all pity and compassion towards him 4. Though they could not charge him justly with any fault at all worthy the least punishment insomuch as Pilate that Heathen Judge would have acquitted him yet they cryed out Crucifie him Crucifie him and had rather one Barabbas a Traytor and a Murtherer should be released then he 5. They hung him up between two Thieves the most harmless and innocent man in the world is numbred amongst the wicked and evil doers 6. Not content to pierce his hands and feet with nails by fastning him to the Cross but like hard-hearted wretches they gave him vinegar mingled with gall to drink in his great heat and thirst and upbraided him with scoffs when he was on departure 7. Not astonished at the wonderful darkness The renting of the Temples vail The opening of Graves The coming forth of the Dead their malice expired not with him but even after he was dead they pierced him with a spear even to the heart Joh. 19.34 In the cause of Christs Death and Passion consider these four 1. The object moving that is Mans Misery and the Devils Tyranny 2. The efficient cause 1. Impellent Internal being the love of God towards his creatures 2. The Obedient which was the very Son of God obedient to his Father 3. The Instrumental as the Devil the Scribes Pharisees and the rest 3. The Formal cause being the Passion it self historized by the Evangelists 4. The Final cause 1. That God might be glorified for his Justice and Mercy 2. That Salvation might be purchased for Man who was lost by reason of sin 3. That Christ might destroy the works of the Devil 1 Joh. 3. The fruit or effect of Christs Death is twofold 1. General Christ by his Passion conquered The Devil whom he hath bound Hell which he hath spoiled Death which he overcame The World which he despised The Punishment which he hath suffered Heaven which he hath opened 2. Special 1. Obedience is performed to God 2. The Devil is vanquished 3. Man is freed from sin and justified 4. An Equalification of Jew and Gentile 5. Death is disannulled The Meditation of our Saviors Passion consists chiefly in these six particulars viz. 1. How great was the Wrath of God for sin which could not be appeased but by the death of his onely begotten Son 2. How infinite was the Mercy of God the Father who would rather his Son should undergo the most ignominious death then that Man his creature should perish 3. How unconceiveable was the Love of the Son of God who for Mans sake took upon himself the wrath of his Father 4. We must apply the Merit of Christs Passion to our selves by faith his Obedience being made our Righteousness whereby through faith we appear to God not as sinners but justified 5. What the Lot of the Righteous is in this world who must suffer with him that they may be glorified with him Rom. 6. 6. That our future life may be formed into a better mould Rom. 6. being dead unto sin by the power and efficacy of his death The Reasons why Christ suffered so ignominious a death 1. That we might know the curse due for our sins to have layen upon him and so should be stirred up to the greater thankfulness considering how detestable a thing sin is that it should call for so ignominious a death 2. That it might be an exasperating of the punishment and so we so much the more confirmed in a true faith 3. That the Truth might answer to the Types and Figures and so we might know that they are all fulfilled in Christ The causes of Christs Burial viz. 1. That we might know that he was dead indeed 2. That the last part of his Humiliation whereby he did debase himself for our sakes might be accomplished 3. A certain Type was thereby to be fulfilled it was foretold by the Type of Jonas 4. He would be Buried that we might not be afraid of the grave but might know that our Head Christ Jesus had laid open the way unto us by Death and the Grave to celestial Glory 5. That we might know how we are indeed delivered from death for in his Death a testimony and record whereof is his Burial consisteth our Salvation 6. That it might be manifest That he was able indeed to rise again and that his Resurrection was not imaginary but the real and true Resurrection of a reviving corps 7. That we being Spiritually dead that is to sin might rest from sin The duties required of us to set forth our Faith in Christ crucified are these viz. 1. Godly sorrow in bewailing our sins the onely cause of these great sufferings of our dear Savior 2. The mortification of our fleshly members and sinful concupiscences and that for three special causes 1. By continuing in sin we make our selves accessary's of Christs death 2. Because all such as unto whom Christs death is effectual to do away their sins are conformable unto him in his Death and Burial 3. Because no man following the trade of sin can be Christs Disciple 3. Patience and joy in suffering any thing for Christs sake and the Gospel and that chiefly for two causes 1. By suffering we are made like unto him Mat. 10.25 2. Because in suffering for his Truth he doth grace us forasmuch as he doth take us for his Martyrs and Witnesses 4. To remain unterrified with the pangs and approaching of death unto us because Christ in dying overcame death and took away the sting thereof 5. For this infinite love of Christ toward us to love him most earnestly again and all his members the Faithful for his sake That Christ descended into Hell all found Christians acknowledge but in the interpretation of this Article there is not that
4. That he is Just To leave my wicked ways and to restrain my self from sin 5. That he is merciful To turn unto him by Repentance 6. That he is Omnipresent To carry my self as in his Presence 7. That he is Omniscient To keep my heart upright before him continually 8. That he is Infinite To stand in awe reverence and fear of him The Vices repugnant unto the knowledge of God viz. 1. Atheism which is the Acknowledgement of no God 2. Ignorance or not knowing the true God and his Will 3. Errors conceived or false Imaginations and Opinions of him 4. Prophaneness which is a Regardlesness of God and of his special Service 5. Magick Sorcery or Witchcraft in such as desire the help of it as well as in those who use it 6. Superstition Soothsaying Observation of Dreams Divinations Signs and Predictions or Foretellingof Wizards 7. All trust or confidence reposed in the Creature 8. Idolatry whether Inward when another is worshipped then that one true God or when the Worship of God is given unto Creatures by Praying unto them Trusting in them or Setting the heart upon them which kinde doth properly belong unto this First Commandment or Outward when though the true God is worshipped yet after another maner then God himself hath prescribed 9. The contempt of God which is to know those things of God which are true but not to be moved thereby to love him Were all the Wisdom of the East in one Compris'd Couldst thou discourse with Solomon From th'Isop to the Cedar or of ought In Heav'n Earth Hell Couldst thou foresee a Thought And so prevent it or by strength of Brain When 't is thought Argument it back again Hadst thou all Arts and Sciences refin'd Couldst joyn East to West or divide the Winde Wer 't thou for Wisdom the Worlds Nource or School And knew'st not God thou wer 't a damned Fool. §. 2. Of Faith or Trust in God THe second Duty required in this Commandment is To Trust in the onely true God and in him alone to put all trust and confidence Psal 20.8 This is Faith by which whosoever is united unto Christ the same is Elected Called Justified Sanctified and shall be Glorified Joh. 3.36 5.24 By this Faith is not meant an Historical Faith as to know and think all those things to be true which are manifested from above either by Voyce or by Visions or by any other maner of Revelation and are taught in the Books of the Prophets and Apostles and thus to be perswaded of them for the asseveration and Testimony of God himself firmly assenting to the truth of those things contained in the Scripture for the Authority of God that spoke them which Faith is good in it self but made ill yea sin by them that cannot apply it Thus Simon Magus is said to have believed Acts 13. By this Faith is not meant a Temporary Faith as to assent unto the heavenly Doctrine which is delivered by the Prophets and Apostles to profess it and to rejoyce in the knowledge thereof and to glory therein for a time yet not for any feeling of Gods grace towards them but for other causes whatsoever and therefore without any true Conversion and final perseverance in the Profession of that Doctrine for this kinde of Faith is led as in a string with the commodities of this world and with them doth live and dye By this Faith is not meant the Faith of working Miracles which is a special gift of working Miracles that is a certain perswasion springing from an especial Revelation and Promise of God whereby a man firmly resolveth That some extraordinary or miraculous Work and contrary to Nature shall come to pass by Gods Power which he hath foretold and would have to be done in the Name of God and Jesus Christ 1 Cor. 13.2 which Faith so flourishing in the Primitive Church ceaseth in those days for that the Doctrine is now sufficiently confirmed so sufficiently indeed as he that will not now believe without a Miracle may stand for a Wonder himself But by this Faith is meant Justifying Faith wrought in the hearts of the Elect by the operation of Gods Spirit grounded on Gods Promises whereby we do undoubtedly believe that God hath freely forgiven us all our sins applying Christ Jesus in particular to be our Savior and Redeemer From this Faith Gods people can never finally and totally fall away howsoever it may be sometimes shaken obscured and eclipsed so as it may not so manifestly appear at one time as at another and this Faith is incident onely to the Elect Acts 13.48 For it is a principal Grace of God whereby man is ingrafted unto Christ and thereby become one with Christ and Christ one with him Eph. 3.17 By this Faith in Christ we are partakers of the Merit of the Death and Resurrection of Christ so as it is Satisfaction for us and Forgiveness of all our sins a special grace or habit infused into the Soul by the Holy Ghost whereby we are enabled to believe not onely that the Messias is offered unto us but also to take and receive him as a Lord and Savior Thus Justifying Faith cometh not neither proceedeth or ariseth out of the instinct of Nature neither out of sense or experience neither out of Demonstrations or Reasons borrowed from Philosophy but it cometh and dependeth of a peculiar and supernatural Revelation or Divine Testimony it proceedeth from the Holy Ghost who kindleth it in our hearts by the Preaching of the Gospel Eph. 2.8 and confirmeth it by the use of the Sacraments Mat. 28.19 20. Now we are not said to be made Righteous through Faith onely or that we please God through the worthiness of meer Faith but because onely the Satisfaction Righteousness and Holiness of Christ is our Righteousness before God 1 Cor. 1.30 and we cannot take hold of it or apply it to our selves any other way then by Faith 1 Joh. 5.10 Yet Faith without Righteousness is Presumption as Righteousness without Truth is Hypocrisie And thus Faith is as it were an Addition of a New Light to Reason without which Reason is purblinde and begins to breed in the heart when the party begins to be touched in Conscience for his sins and hungers withal and thirsts after Christ and his Righteousness the first act of the understanding being to assent to the Truth contained in the Promises wherein Christ is offered and then the act of the Will to consent unto them that is to embrace them But before a man will be willing to take Christ the heart must be changed by God for none will take Christ upon Christs conditions till they be throughly humbled and have their hearts broken that know what the wrath of God is and have their Consciences awakened to see sin till they have been stung with a sense of their sins till they be heavy and have felt the weight of Satans yoke till then they will not come under the yoke
4. Justifying this is the true faith and this saves Historical Faith being an Assent of heart to the Truth of Gods Word is twofold 1. Infused which is wrought in us by the illightning Spirit of God and staying it self upon his Authority immediately relying thereon 2. Acquired which is produced by the light of Reason Discourse and created Testimony This is that which may be found in Devils Again Faith is twofold viz. 1. Legal when we believe the Promises or more specially the Threatnings of the Law which we are bound to believe 2. Evangelical when we believe the Promise of the Gospel applying it to our selves For the right understanding of Faith what it is these things are chiefly requisite to be known and seriously to be considered viz. 1. The principal Efficient Cause thereof which is the Holy Ghost Eph. 2.8 2. The Instrumental Cause that is the Preaching of the Word and use of the Sacraments 3. The Formal Cause that is a certain Knowledge and a sure and full Considence in Christ 4. The Object of it that is whole Christ and his Benefits promised in the Word 5. The Subject wherein it remaineth of Place where it is which is the Understanding the Minde and Will 6. The Maner how it Justifies viz. As an Instrument 7. The Actions of it which are these principally viz. To Reconcile or Justifie To Pacifie the heart To Purifie or Sanctifie 8. The Final Cause thereof which is 1. The Glory of God 2. Our Salvation Saving Faith comprehendeth these three things viz. 1. Knowledge or the right conceiving of the necessary Doctrines of true Religion especially of those which concern Christ our Redeemer 2. Assent when a man knowing this Doctrine doth further approve of the same as wholesom Doctrine and the Truth of God directing us aright unto Salvation 3. Application when we conceive in our hearts a true perswasion of Gods Mercy towards us particularly in the free pardon of all our sins and for the Salvation of our Souls Or thus In Justifying Faith these six things are necessarily required viz. 1. A true understanding of Gods Word so far as is necessary to Salvation Rom. 10.14 2. An Inward Assent and Consent unto the Word Joh. 17.17 Rom. 7.16 Isa 1.19 3. A Profession of the Word and true Religion not for any sinister respect Rom. 10.9 10. 4. An Approbation Joy Delight Love and affecting of this Word 5. A true and sound Application of Christ to our own particular selves Heb. 10.22 6. A continual Declaration of our Faith by the continual practice of good works Jam. 2.26 The order which God useth in working Faith viz. 1. He worketh on the understanding enlightning it by his Word as in all Fundamental necessary Points of Christian Religion so in these two especially 1. In the Misery of a natural man which the Law discovereth 2. In the Remedy thereof which the Gospel revealeth 2. He worketh on the Will and thereon also two especial Works viz. 1. In regard of mans Misery as to be pricked in heart grieved in soul for sin and wounded in conscience 2. In regard of the Remedy to desire above all things in the world one drop of the infinite Mercy of God and to give all to have Christ How the Holy Ghost worketh Faith viz. 1. By enlightning the minde that it may understand the Word 2. By moving the Will that it may assent unto the Word once understood 3. By putting an efficacy in the Law for though the Law be fit to humble a man yet is it no worker of Sanctification 4. By shewing the excellency and riches of Christ 5. By assuring us that these things are ours As in Faith there must be 1. The Understanding to apprehend Christ 2. The Will to accept and lay hold on him So therein are these things required 1. To know the Promises of Righteosness and Life Eternal by Christ 2. To apply the Promise with the thing promised which is Christ unto our selves How to apply Christ truly to our selves 1. Lay a Foundation of this Action that is in the Word and in the Ministery of the Word 2. Practice upon this Foundation that is to give our selves to the exercise of Faith and Repentance which stands in Meditation of the Word and Prayer for Pardon when this is done God gives the sense and encrease of his Grace When we resolve to Take Christ God gives us power and ability thereto but the rejecting of Christ is the greatest sin and none shall be so much laid to our charge at the Day of Judgement Let these Considerations move us to Take Christ 1. The Danger in not taking him 2. The Benefit in taking him 3. The Certainty of having him The things which must concur in the Will to receive take Christ viz. 1. There must not be Error Personae this excludes ignorant men that take not Christ indeed but in their own fancy 2. There must be the right Form of taking him as a renouncing of all things else This must be observed Christ must be taken onely and alone 3. There must be a compleat Will concurring to this Action which excludes all wishers and woulders 4. There must be a deliberate Will which excludes those that onely in a good mood would take Christ 5. The Will must be true and free excluding servile Fear in perillous Necessities or at times of Death c. It is the Righteousness of Faith by which alone men can be saved now in the time of the Gospel which Position may be opened by the Answers made to these six Questions viz. 1. How this Righteousness of God saves Ans As Adams Unrighteousness condemns 2. How it is offered to us Ans By free gift as the Father gives his Land 3. To whom it is offered Ans To all that will accept it 4. Vpon what Qualifications Ans None as proexistent 5. How it is made ours Ans By Faith applying it to our selves 6. What is required of us when we have it Ans 1. To love Christ 2. To Repent 3. To part with all for him 4. To suffer for him 5. To do for him The reasons why the Righteousness of God is ours by Gift viz. 1. That no man might boast in himself but he that rejoyceth may rejoyce in the Lord. 2. That men may learn to depend upon God for it who will have no man challenge it as due for it is a meer Grace Rom. 4.16 3. That it might be sure to all the Seed even to Gentile as well as to Jew There is a double consideration to be had of Faith viz. 1. As it works As a Quality and so it hath nothing to do with Justification 2. As it Receives As an Instrument So it justifies and that not by altering the nature of sin that is by making sin to be no sin but by taking away the efficacy of sin that it doth not condemn us Daniels Lyons were Lyons still though God at that time took their fierceness from them
Satan doth labor with to weaken shake cut down the Faith of Gods children viz. 1. By suggesting to the childe of God a consideration of the flourishing state of the wicked how imperiously and prosperously they domineer and revel it in the world whilest himself lies trampled on by their Insolencies Oppressions and Prophane Censures But this the childe of God may repulse by considering and understanding with David the end of these men how suddenly they are destroyed perish and come to a fearful end 2. He curiously observes all seasons and advantages therefore if he findes us cast down with some sad and heavy accident he presently afresh represents unto the view of our Consciences the many and great sins of our unregeneration in their foulest shape to cause new unnecessary doubtings distrusts and fears to loosen the hold of our Faith But this the childe of God must repel by reflecting on his All-sufficient Savior 3. When the heart of a godly man is sweetly refreshing it self with an Assurance of his future happiness and eternal enjoyment of endless joys in Heaven Satan labors to cast into his minde even some thoughts of impossibility of the performance of the Promises of Salvation and of the attainment of that excellent weight of glory But this the childe of God must resolutely repel by the power of Prayer knowing that God who hath promised is Omnipotent and able to perform Faithful and true and will perform 4. If Satan by the violence of some temptation be able to hale us again into some gross sin to which we were principally obnoxious before our Calling then from thence he draws and enforces upon us discomfortable and Faith-killing Conclusions and presently infers upon such relapses that we have deceived our own Souls that our Holiness is but Hypocrisie our Faith but Temporary and our Conversion but Counterfeit But this the childe of God must overcome by speedy renewed sound Repentance The two main pillars which support our Faith in the recovery of Grace 1. One without us which is the Author of Grace even God in whom the same Cause which first moved him to bestow the Graces of his Spirit on a man still remaineth to move him to renew his Spirit and that is even his own free mercy and goodness 2. The other within us that is the Seed of Grace which is not corruptible but incorruptible 1 Pet. 1.23 called The seed of God 1 Joh. 3.9 which is the holy Sanctifying Spirit of God and compared by Christ to a Springing well whence flow Rivers of water of Life Joh. 7.38 39. whereby Supply and Repair of Grace if it fail by reason of infirmities may be made renewed and recovered through Repentance How Faith and Hope differ 1. Faith embraces the present benefits of God and his Will towards us Hope embraces the effects and fruits which are to come of this present and perpetual Will of God 2. Faith is that which maketh those things to be which are hoped for and which sheweth those things which are not seen but Hope that is seen is not Hope for how can a man hope for that which he seeth Wherein Faith Hope agree viz. 1. In the Author and Worker of them both which is Gods Holy Spirit For as Faith is a fruit of the Spirit Gal. 5.22 so we abound in Hope through the power of the Holy Ghost Rom. 15.13 2. In the common matter for both of them are saving and sanctifying Graces As we are saved by Faith Eph. 2.8 so also by Hope Rom. 8.24 And as by Faith the heart is purified Acts 15.9 so he that hath Hope purgeth himself 1 Joh. 3.3 3. In the Ground of them both being grounded on the Promises of God 4. In the Properties of Assurance and Patience Heb. 6.11 10.22 5. In Continuance which is onely till they have brought us to the possession of the Inheritance promised 1 Cor. 13.13 in which respect Love which continueth even in Heaven is preferred before them both 6. In many excellent Effects as A clear and quiet Conscience An utter denyal of a mans self A casting himself wholly on Gods grace A patient bearing of Crosses and perseverance unto the end The childe of God may not doubt of his Salvation for these Reasons 1. Because it favoreth the Opinion of the Papists against the Truth 2. The doubting of Salvation wracks the Conscience by a servile and slavish fear 3. Because it doth quench the motions of the Spirit and all goodness 4. It taketh away our Patience in Troubles and willingness to undergo them 5. He that doubteth hereof bewrays his ignorance of Gods Word and his unbelief A man may ought to be certain of his Salvation from these Arguments 1. From the Example of Job Job 19.95 2. From the words of Paul 2 Cor. 5.1 Rom. 8.14 3. It was Pauls own perswasion of himself Rom. 8.38 4. The Spirit is the Earnest of our Inheritance Eph. 1.14 5. He that believeth shall be saved Mark 26.16 Joh. 3.16 We may be assured that we are the children of God by these five infallible Signs 1. By the Testimony of Gods Spirit 2. By a stedfast Faith in Gods Promises 3. By a daily dying unto sin 4. By a profitable keeping of Gods VVord 5. By a careful observation of all Gods Commandments We may be assured that we have the Spirit of God dwelling in us if we finde and feel in our selves 1. A more love and desire to good things then to evil and a loathing and hatred of all sin because it is sin 2. The fruits of the Spirit as Love Joy Peace Long-suffering Goodness Gentleness Faithfulness Meekness Temperance Sobriety Chastity Holiness Uprightness and such like Two ways to encrease Assurance viz. 1. By the Promises the sure Word on which Faith is built 2. By the fruits of Sanctification in our selves Now when we finde these languishing we should go to the first and the other will be encreased by it We offend about this Assurance three ways viz. 1. By doubting of our Salvation as the Papists teach others to do 2. By Infidelity not being throughly perswaded of the goodness of God nor believing his Promises 3. By grounding our Hope upon our own unworthiness sins infirmities and so not upon God Six Considerations to help Faith in comforting the soul viz. 1. God justifies the ungodly 2. Christ is made Righteousness to us 3. The Pardon is general 4. God takes delight in shewing Mercy 5. His Mercy is Infinite 6. Christ came to pardon the greatest sins Certain Instances of Faith guiding a man in difficult cases 1. In confessing of Christ as in many of the chief Rulers Joh. 12.12 2. In praise with men as in Paul 3. In case of Profit as it should have been in Saul touching the fat Cattel and in Balaam Judas Gehazi Achan c. 4. In case of Safety and Danger as in Saul and the Philistims and in Joram Jer. 42. 43. 5. In great Fears as in Stephen
VVorking Grace whereby we are delivered from the Dominion of Sin and are renewed in Minde VVill and Affections having received power to obey God 4. Co-working Grace whereby God conferreth and perfecteth the Grace of Renewing being received And without this Grace following the first is unprofitable 5. Persevering Grace whereby after that we have received the Grace of Renovation we do also receive a will to persevere and continue constantly in that good which we can do even by this gift of Perseverance The Object of Conversion is 1. Sin or Disobedience from whence we are converted 2. Righteousness or New-Obedience whereunto we are converted The subject or matter of conversion viz. 1. In the Minde and Understanding a right judgement concerning God his VVill and VVorks 2. In the VVill an earnest and ready desire purposing to obey God in all his Commandments 3. A good and reformed Affection Mans Conversion consists of these two parts viz. 1. In mortifying the Old Man that is to be truly and heartily sorry that thou hast offended God by thy sins and daily more and more to hate and eschew them 2. By quickning the New Man that is to live to God through Christ and an earnest and ready desire to order thy life according to Gods will and to do all good works The Causes of Conversion viz. 1. The Principal Efficient Cause of Conversion is the Holy Ghost 2. The Instrumental Causes or Means are first the Law then the Gospel the next Instrumental Cause is Faith 3. The Furthering Causes are the Cross and Chastisements as also Punishments Benefits Acts of Providence and Examples of others 4. The Formal Cause is the Conversion it self and the Properties thereof 5. The chief Final Cause is Gods Glory the next and subordinate end is our own good and the Conversion of others When thou art converted confirm thy Brethren How the true Conversion of the godly differs from the false Repentance of the wicked 1. In their Grief the wicked are grieved onely for the punishment ensuing not for that they offend and displease God the godly are specially grieved that God is offended 2. In the Cause the wicked repent by reason of a despair and distrust so that they more and more offend God but the godly repent by reason of Faith and a confidence they have of the Grace of God and Reconciliation in the Mediator 3. In the Effect for in the wicked New-Obedience doth not follow Repentance which always accompanieth the Repentance of the godly so that the Repentance of the wicked is no true no sound no saving Repentance The former part of Conversion is called Mortification and that for these Reasons viz. 1. Because as dead men cannot shew forth the actions of one that is living so our Nature the Corruption thereof being abolished doth no more in such sort shew forth or exercise her evil actions For Mortification is by the grace and operation of the Spirit a decay and perishing of the deeds of the flesh which are evil Actions and carnal Affections 2. Because Mortification is not wrought without grief and lamenting and for this cause Mortification is called a Crucifying consisting in the subduing by a holy Discipline our inordinate lusts which rebel against God and in a patient bearing of the Cross of Christ The latter part of Conversion is called Quickning viz. 1. Because as a living man doth the actions of one that is living so Quickning is a kindling of new Faculties and Qualities in us 2. In respect of that joy which the converted have in God which indeed is such as words are not able to express nor any heart conceive but his who hath it Quickning comprehendeth those things which are contrary to Mortification 1. A Knowledge of Gods Mercy and the applying thereof in Christ 2. A Joyfulness thence arising for that God is pleased and New-Obedience is begun 3. An ardent or earnest endeavor or purpose to sin no more arising from Thankfulness and because we rejoyce that we have God appeased or pacified towards us a desire also of Righteousness and of retaining Gods love and favor being now converted from sin which next comes to be spoken of XI SIN in its proper nature is an Anomy that is a want of Conformity to the Law of God The nature of sin lies not in the action but in the maner of doing the action and sin properly is nothing formally subsisting or existing for then God should be the Author of it but it is an Ataxy or Absence of goodness in the thing that subsisteth whereupon it is truly said in Schools In peccato nihil positivum whatsoever a man doth whereof he is not certainly perswaded in judgement and conscience out of Gods Word that it may be done is sin Original Sin is the Corruption of the whole man and chiefly of the Soul of man and is not onely an absence of goodness but also a real presence of an evil property and disposition and this infection of Nature doth remain yea in them that are Regenerated For the Principle of Flesh that is in holy men may sometimes prevail mightily upon them yea so as to make them do as evil actions as the worst of men for this is a true Rule A man that excelleth in Grace may sometimes excel in ill-doing but he allows not himself therein nor is it properly he that does it but sin that dwelleth in him as the good that evil men do it cannot be said that they do it Gods Spirit may be there to help them to do much but the Spirit dwelleth not there so a man may do good and not be good On the other side things though commanded yet in the unregenerate become sins it is sin when a wicked man giveth Alms because it proceeds not from Faith and Love yet the Moral actions of the unregenerate are not to be omitted by us because in them they are sin but we must avoid the sin and perform the action avoid not the works of Hypocrites but the hypocrisie of their works Thus is sin the Corruption of a Nature created good of God but not any Creature made of God in man for it is onely an accidental Quality or natural Property of man corrupted but no substantial Property nor of the nature of man simply as he was first created Solomon hath drawn the picture of Sin to the life in the Description of an Harlot the Fawns Flatters Pleases Delights but in the end Destroys it speaks to us in Joabs language to Amasa 2 Sam. 20.10 and his kisses are as mortal or in Jaels language to Sisera Judg. 4.18 5.26 27. but the Butter in the lordly Dish will not balsum the wound it gives All sin is like the painted Harlot or the beautiful forbidden Fruit he that sucks the Honey-comb of sin sucks the Poison of Asps it is a golden Hook baited with all the Glory of the World All sin is foul filthy unclean infectious contagious and loathsom in the sight of
proceed not from Faith Yet shall the common actions of our Calling be reckoned Good Works if they come from Faith and Love if they be done as to the Lord and so he will accept them and for this cause the good purposes in many are naught because they have not Faith for their ground Good Works are the Fruit of Sanctification they go not before Justification but they follow after a man is justified For first by Grace we are justified and being justified we perform Good Works for man cannot do any work that is good and godly being not yet Regenerate but when he is prevented by the Grace of Christ and the Inspiration of his Spirit by the Holy Ghost then he may do good Works and the best Works before the Grace of Christ and the Inspiration of his Spirit are not pleasing to God forasmuch as they spring not of Faith yea before Justification they have the Nature of Sin Now here we must know that good Works are in a kinde necessary to Salvation yet not as Causes thereof either efficient or helping any way but onely as an evidence whereby we may know that we are in the way to Salvation For Faith is necessary and good Works are the Tokens and Fruits of Faith and so are necessary also In a Good Work 1. The End thereof must be the glory of God which chiefly consists in Fear Obedience Thankfulness 2. The Action it self in its own Nature must be just and warrantable 3. The Circumstances honest and seasonable proportioned to the justness of the Work it self 4. The Means direct and lawful and approveable in the sight of God 5. The Fountain the Heart sincere and sanctified In the doing of every good Work acceptable to God these Rules are to be observed viz. 1. The person of the Doer must be acceptable to God by a justifying Faith 2. The Word of God must be thy warrant for the doing of the Work 3. The Actions end must be Gods glory 4. The Work must be done in Faith because in wel-doing a man must testifie his Fidelity to God we must be sure perswaded out of Gods Word that the things we do are approved of God for whatsoever is not of Faith is Sin 5. Love is necessary in every good Work we go about for Faith worketh by Love 6. Service to man is required in our good Works for the end of mans Life is in his Calling to serve man and by that to serve God Col. 3.24 7. Our good Works must be done within the compass of Callings 8. Patience is necessary in every good Work that we faint not in wel-doing In every good Work there must beatwofold Faith viz. 1. Justifying Faith whereby the person doing the Work must be reconciled to God and stand before God a true Member of Christ without which it is impossible to please God Heb. 11.6 and therefore is chiefly necessary 2. General Faith whereby a man believes that the Work he doth is pleasing unto God Whatsoever is not of Faith is sin Rom. 14.23 Whereunto are required both the Word of God commanding the Work and prescribing the maner of doing it and also a promise of Blessing upon the doing of it As things may be said to be good in a double respect 1. Good in themselves alone as Almsdeeds done by a wicked man 2. Good in themselves and the Doer as the Prayers of any true Believers So there are two sorts of good Works viz. 1. Those which God in his Word hath directly commanded as parts of his Worship such as are Prayer Thanksgiving receiving the Sacraments hearing the Word c. 2. Actions indifferent sanctified by the Word and Prayer and done to Gods glory being performed after the maner and to the end God hath commanded them The Ends of a good Work are manifold viz. 1. The honor and glory of God the Work being done in Humility whereby a man esteemeth himself to be but a voluntary and reasonable Instrument of God therein and also done in simplicity or singleness of Heart whereby a man in doing a good Work intendeth simply and directly to honor and please God without all by-respects to his own praise or the pleasing of men 2. The testification of our Thankfulness to God who hath redeemed us by Christ 3. To edifie our Brethren thereby and that they also may glorifie God 4. To exercise and increase our Faith and Repentance 5. To escape the destruction of the wicked and to obtain the reward of the Righteous 6. To be answerable to our Calling in doing the duties thereof 7. To pay the Debt which we owe unto God for we are his Debtors as we are his Creatures his Servants his Children and his Redeemed by Christ God accepts of good works in us divers ways 1. In that he pardons the faults thereof 2. In that he approves his own good Work in us 3. In that he doth give unto us the Doers of them a Crown of Righteousness Provided 1. That before the Work go Reconciliation of the Person to God in Christ 2. That in doing the Work the right Matter and Maner be observed 3. That after the Work is done we beg pardon for the defects thereof There be three Opinions touching the Necessity of good Works viz. 1. Of the Papists who hold them necessary as causes of our Salvation and Justification This is most false and a preposterous Opinion 2. Of some Protestants who hold them necessary though not as principal causes yet as conservant causes of our Salvation but the truth is they are no causes of Salvation neither Efficient Principal nor Conservant nor yet Material Formal or Final 3. That good Works are necessary not as causes of Salvation or Justification but as inseparable consequents of saving Faith in Christ whereby we are justified and saved or as a way is necessary to the going to a place And this Opinion is the truth for Works any way made causes of Salvation or Justification do nullifie Grace The Motives which cause wicked men sometimes to do Works fair in shew and outwardly good and to abstain from evil Actions viz. 1. Because some naturally be not given to the vices which they leave 2. Others because they be restrained by a slavish fear of Gods Justice or else for that they dream to deserve something at the hands of God 3. Others for fear of Laws or lest they should hinder thereby their prosperity 4. Because their Lusts do sometimes strive as the winds so as that which is the stronger prevaileth over the rest and bridleth them from breaking into action No man can do a work properly meritorious as the bold Papists affirm and that for these Reasons viz. 1. Because the doer of a Work that may be meritorious must do it by himself and not by another for the praise is his by whom he doth it and not his own but man in himself hath not power to will that which is good much less to do it least of
Will Eph. 1.9 3. The End which is Gods Glory Eph. 3.10 4. The Efficacy which is Gods Power Rom. 1.16 Touching the Scriptures we are principally to consider these 4 things 1. Who is the Author of them that is as hath been shewed God himself Gal. 1.11 12. 2. Who are the instrumental Causes they are as hath been likewise shewed the Prophets and Apostles 2 Pet. 1.21 3. To whom they belong even to all sorts and degrees of men and women Psal 111.2 119.9 4. What is the property thereof viz. All-sufficiency without any patching of mens Decrees or Inventions to teach the true knowledge of God 2 Pet. 1.16 1 Cor. 1.17 〈◊〉 the Scripture is the Word of God and 〈◊〉 Doctrine of infallible Truth and certainty may be firmly proved from these unanswerable Arguments drawn from Scriptur●it self 1. From the Causes thereof wherein consider 1. That the first and principal is the Author thereof even God himself to him do the Scriptures refer themselves and also shew how God is their Author Now nothing is falsly ascribed to God but God in time will bring the same to nought and therefore if the Scripture had not been Gods Word it would long ago have vanished 2. The cause Conservant for the Devil by wicked men and Hereticks hath labored to take away Gods Word from mens hearts and hands but yet it is still preserved in the Church which argues that it is kept by a greater power then is in all men and all Angels that is by the power of God 3. The causes Instrumental they were holy men of God Prophets and Apostles who for vertue und piety exceeded other Writers far beyond all comparison and if they had been meer Polititians their writings would have shewed it for the Penmen of holy Scripture have herein faithfully registred their own faults which no politick person would have done 2. From the Matter therof which stands 1. In doctrine which is The Law set forth in most excellent purity nothing being therein against it or common Equity The Law is perfect Reason the Gospel above Reason yet not contrary to Reason The Gospel wherein is set down Doctrine altogether above mans Reason touching Christs Incarnation and mans Redemption by his death and although these things be above Nature yet we finde them true wholesom and good in experience of conscience which also proveth that they are the Word of God Men may devise strange things above Nature but they can never be wholesom to the conscience 2. In stile the phrase is plain and familiar and yet in any one speech there is more majesty then in all the writings of men 3. From the End thereof for it sets up Gods Worship and mans Salvation and yet gives nothing to Men or Angels but all to the glory of God but for the writings of men they do either directly or by insinuation ascribe something to the writers thereof 4. From the Effects thereof For 1. Though it is against our corrupt Nature crossing and condemning the same yet it winneth men to the love thereof and to obedience thereto which could not be unless it were the Truth of God for we abhor and detest the words of men that be against our Nature 2. It serves notably to comfort a man in all distresses whatsoever even in the pangs of death when no word of any man can do him the least good but onely his word that is the Lord of our soul and the God of our life 5. From the two properties of Scripture 1. Antiquity Among humane writings we have none of certainty in things they record that go so high as the Creation but the Scripture sets down things done from the beginning 2. Mutual Consent for though the Books of Scripture were written by divers men in sundry Ages and Times yet all agree within themselves there is no contradiction in Scripture but the writings of men have not this consent no not in the same Author whom commonly we shall finde contradicting himself 6. From the signs and true miracles thereof as the parting of the Sea the staying of the Sun and Moon and many others yea the Incarnation of the Son of God the Miracle of miracles 7. From the Contraries Contrary to the word of God is the will of the Devil and mans corrupt Nature the Devil hates Scripture and mans corrupt Nature repines thereat when it is checked and controlled thereby Now that which is contrary to these two must needs be holy and true and that is the word of God 8. From Testimonies whereof there be 2 kindes 1. Of holy Martyrs who in all ages have sealed the truth thereof preferring the word of God before their own lives whence it is truly said Sanguis Martyrum semen Ecclesiae And though Hereticks have dyed for falshood yet there is great difference in their ends the true Martyrs have unspeakable joy in the Spirit in their torments but Hereticks have no such joy but a natural sensless blockishness whereby they undergo these torments 2. Of Gods Spirit which is the principal testimony for when men begin to learn and obey the word of God then the Spirit of God settles their Conscience in the perswasion of the truth of Scripture which is infallibility it self The Testimony of the Holy Ghost touching Gods Word is obtained and discerned from the Testimony of man by doing these two things 1. By resigning our selves to become truly obedient to the Doctrine taught John 7.17 2. By praying unto God for his Spirit to certifie our Consciences that the Doctrine revealed is the very Doctrine of God Mat. 7.7 8. Luke 11.13 Jam. 1.7 The Majesty of the Scriptures consisteth chiefly in these three excellencies 1. In the Majesty of the Spirit of God which shineth in them 2. In the Consent of all the parts among themselves 3. In the Fulfilling all the Prophesies delivered long before yet accomplished precisely each of them in their proper place The Authority of the Scripture doth not as the Papists affirm depend on the Church for these Reasons 1. The reproach of God by making the Testimony of mans voyce greater then the voyce of God 2. Our Comfort for Faith is grounded on approved witness therefore not on man 3. The truth of God is plainly exposed to the mocks and scoffs of the wicked if we affirm that our Religion is from God onely because our selves say so 4. Because the Authority of the Church depends on the Scripture 5. The Scripture it self is in many places against this opinion John 5. 1 Cor. 2. 1 John 5. The Popish twofold Scripture 1. Inward Scripture or a consent of Doctrine written by the Holy Ghost in the hearts of all Catholicks and this say they is right Scripture Unparalleld Blasphemy 2. Outward Scripture which is written in Paper or Parchment which hath no certain sense as they falsly affirm but as the present Church determines thereof but this is a devilish Doctrine abolishing the true Word of God
two sorts 1. The sins of the hearers which principally are Hardness of heart Worldly cares 2. Ordinary and usual defects of natural gifts as want of capacity memory and the like They that submit themselves to hear Gods Word are sundry ways bound to perform obedience 1. By the Law of Creation as they are Gods Creatures 2. By the Law of Redemption as they are Christs servants bought by his precious Blood ransomed from death to life 3. In regard of their Adoption as they are or at least hold themselves to be his children in Christ 4. In regard of his merciful providence whereof we have daily experience The Word of God heard must be obeyed for these Reasons 1. To encline our hearts to walk in his ways that we have learned is an infallible sign that we truly fear God Gen. 22.13 2. Obedience is always joyned with Recompence God rewarding it to the full who is a most rich Pay-master no man shall serve him for nought Psal 19.11 3. If we hearken unto him he will hearken unto us if we be not backward to serve him he will not be behinde hand to serve us Isa 58.9 4. They are to be obeyed that have no absolute Authority but are themselves under the Authority of others much more ought the Lord himself to be obeyed who is above all and all under him Thus from the less to the greater did the Centurion reason Matth. 8.8 9. 5. The Rechabites obeyed Jonadab their father and received a blessing for their obedience Jer. 35.8 13 14. shall we make less account of God if we have given reverence to the fathers of our flesh shall we not much rather be in subjection to the Father of Spirits and live Heb. 12.9 6. There is a special relation between God and his people the Subject oweth obedience to his Prince the Servant to his Master the Childe to his Father God is all in all he is our King we his Subjects he is our Master we his Servants he is our Father we his Children Mal. 1.6 Reasons to enforce us to be careful how we hear viz. 1. Because it is the word of God himself and not of any mortal man 1 Thess 2.13 2. Because not one jot or tittle of this word shall go unfulfilled Mat. 5.18 3. It becometh the savor of life unto life or of death unto deeper condemnation 2 Cor. 2.16 4. The word is the ordinary means of our Salvation which God doth use to save those that be his Rom. 1.16 5. Because it is four to one whether we hear as we ought For 1. Some hear but understand not 2. Some hear and understand but affect it not 3. Others hear understand and affect the word yet practice not 4. And of many hearers but few good Luke 8. Mat. 13. 6. Because without profitable hearing when we may and ought we are damned Heb. 2.1 2 3. 12.25 7. Without this we neither love God nor know him without both which we cannot be saved Joh. 14.23 1 Joh. 4.6 8. Because this word preached leaveth us without excuse at the day of Judgement Joh. 15.22 9. If we hear as we ought God accepts of us and preferreth us above all other people Exod. 19.5 10. Without careful and profitable hearing we can never attain to saving Faith whereby we are saved Rom. 10. Take heed how you hear was often in the mouth of our Savior and must be always in the ears of such as will hear well This caution doth the wise-man give Eccl. 5.1 Take heed unto thy feet when thou entrest into the house of the Lord and be readier to hear then to offer the sacrifice of fools that we may therefore come prepared to the hearing of the word it is necessary that we be humbled for our sins that we purge our hearts of sinful affections pray for a right disposition and meditate upon the excellency of the word and our own need thereof for we are naturally blinde the word is a light sent from Heaven to enlighten us in our darkness we are assaulted by many potent enemies the word is a sword to defend us we are in poverty and want of Spiritual Graces it is a precious treasure to enrich us if we decay in holiness it is food to nourish us we are become filthy and polluted by reason of our sins it is a sweet savor to perfume us salt to season us it is the power of God unto Salvation Who scorn this Pearl so preciously divine Have lost the name of Men Christ calls them Swine Mat. 7.6 Some bolt their ears and will not hear God's Call Others will hear but practice nought at all The one incur the guilt of Self-exclusion Th' other listen to their own Confusion Wouldst thou be sav'd lost man Lo here 's that Word That kills or cures a Balsam or a Sword 'T is as thou dost apply 't Believe it saith And live it is the instrument of Faith CHAP. II. §. 1. Sacraments SAcraments are sacred Signs and Seals set before our eyes and ordained of God for this cause That he may declare and seal by them the Promise of his Gospel unto us which is That he giveth freely Remission of sins and life everlasting not onely to all in general but to every one in particular that believeth for that onely Sacrifice of Christ which he accomplished upon the Cross I say They are sacred Signs and Seals object to our eyes ordained and instituted of God that by them he might the more declare and seal the promise of his Gospel unto us Now a Sign and a Seal differ one from another as a general thing from a thing more special for every Seal is a Sign but not every Sign a Seal A Seal certifieth and confirmeth a thing a Sign onely sheweth Sacraments therefore serve in the same stead that Pledges do for both they signifie that there is something promised unto us and withal they assure and confirm the same unto us in regard whereof it is added that they are Seals So the nature of the Sacraments is That the Signs be understood corporally that the things signified must be taken Spiritually and that the visible things be not the signified things but onely Signs and Pledges of them Believers under the Gospel have onely two Sacraments or Signs of the Covenant that is Baptism succeeding Circumcision and the Supper of the Lord prefigured by the Paschal Lamb and both these preach Faith that to our outward senses which the Gospel doth to our understandings being Sacramental Rites ordained of God in the Church to be adjoyned to the Preaching of the word that the Promises of God made therein may be confirmed in us more and more For Christ committed the Office of administring the Sacraments to them alone to whom the Preaching of the word is committed without the which the Sacraments ought not to be administred for they be Seals of it and the end both of the Word and Sacraments is to lead our
Faith unto the Sacrifice of Christ finished on the Cross as to the onely ground of our Salvation the Holy Ghost teaching us as much by the one and assuring us it by the other For as by Baptism God doth witness that we be received of him into Covenant through the communion of Christ and his gifts So by the Supper he assureth us that we be held and kept in until we be received into the heavenly life yet hath not God tyed his Grace to the Sacraments so that the want of Baptism doth not condemn but the contempt of it And this Covenant between God and man is a mutual Promise and Agreement made by our Mediator confirmed by solemn Tokens which are these Sacraments whereby God bindeth himself to remit their sins unto them that believe and to give unto them everlasting life for and by his Son our Mediator and men binde themselves to receive this so great a benefit with true Faith and to yield true obedience unto God The matter signed and signified in both Sacraments is Jesus Christ the Covenant of God and the Righteousness of Faith according to the Promise of the Gospel the Signs being as was said appointed of God to be as his Seals to confirm and assure us That he will give us according to his Promise the things which are signified and assured unto us by them The Rites and Ceremonies which are not commanded or are not instituted to this end as to be Signs and Tokens of the Promise of Grace are not Signs and Tokens of the Church for a Sign can confirm nothing but by his Consent and Promise from whom the thing promised and signified is expected and looked for no Creature therefore can institute any Signs or Pledges of Gods will And if in a Sacrament any other then the right outward Sign be used or though the right outward Sign be used yet if it be changed into the inward grace it ceaseth to be a Sacrament The right use therefore of the Sacraments is then when as the faithful keep those Rites which God hath commanded to those ends for which the Sacraments were instituted by God The institution consisteth in the Rites Persons and Ends the violating whereof breedeth an abuse Sacraments are as it were visible words in the institution whereof three things are to be observed 1. The Signs and Sacramental Rites 2. The Spiritual and invisible things signified by the Signs 3. The Analogy or Agreement of the Signs with the thing signified Three conditions required in true Sacraments 1. That they be ordained of God 2. That there be a Commandment of God for us to use them 3. That there be also a Promise by the which it is assured that we shall be partakers of the things that are represented by them Or thus God alone hath Authority to institute and ordain a Sacrament which institution containeth two things 1. The appointing and commanding of the Rites and Ceremonies 2. The Promise of Grace annexed to this Rite whereby God promiseth that he will give the thing signified unto such as lawfully and rightly use the Sign that is with Faith and Repentance Again the conditions required in a Sacrament of the New Testament properly so called are these 1. It must have for the original cause Christ instituting 2. For the matter and form a visible Sign or Element and an audible form of words 3. For the end and benefit of it it is a Seal of saving Graces 4. For the extent of it it must be common and necessary to all Christians of what degree soever at one time or another In Sacraments the Signs differ from the things signified 1. In substance for the Signs are Corporeal Visible Earthly the things signified are Heavenly Invisible Spiritual 2. In the maner of receiving the Signs are received by parts of the Body and therefore also of unbelievers the things signified are received by Faith onely and the Spirit and therefore of the faithful onely 3. In the end or use the things signified are given for the possessing of life eternal they are indeed some part of the beginning thereof The Signs are received for the Sealing and Confirming of our faith concerning the things themselves 4. The things signified are necessary and necessarily received of all the Members of the true Church The Signs are received onely of them who are able to receive them To the difference of Sacraments from other sacred things appertain these two properties 1. That they are ordained and instituted of God 2. That they are instituted to this end that God may by them seal and assure unto us his Promise The Sacraments do differ from the Word in these particulars viz. 1. In substance nature as thus 1. Words signifie according to the appointment of men whom it pleased that things should be so expressed and signified Signs signifie according to a similitude which they have with the things signified 2. Words we hear and reade Signs we perceive by feeling seeing and tasting 3. Words signifie onely Symboles and Signs confirm also 2. In the Persons for the word of the Promise and Commandment is proposed without any difference to all To the unregenerate that they may either begin to believe and be regenerate or may be left without excuse to the regenerate that they may the more believe and be confirmed The Sacraments are given onely to the members of the Church The Word is preached to all at once the Sacraments are given to every member severally 3. In their Use for the word is the instrument of the Holy Ghost whereby he beginneth and confirmeth our Faith therefore the Sacraments must follow the word The Sacraments are the instruments of the Holy Ghost whereby he beginneth not but onely confirmeth our Faith and therefore the word is to go before them 4. In their Necessity the word is necessary and sufficient unto Salvation in them who are of an understanding age for Faith cometh by hearing but the Sacraments are not precisely and absolutely necessary unto all for not the want but the contempt of them condemneth 5. In the Maner of working the Sacraments by gesture the Word by speech declareth unto us the will of God 6. The Word may be without the Sacraments as both in private and publike expounding of the Scripture and that effectually also as was apparent in Cornelius Acts 10. but the Sacraments cannot be so without the Word 7. The Word is that which is confirmed by Signs annexed unto it the Sacraments are those Signs whereby it is confirmed 8. The Word is to be preached unto those onely who are of understanding but the Sacrament of Baptism may be given unto Infants so was the Sacrament of Circumcision in whose room Baptism succeeded but the uncharitable Anabaptist will not strike sail to this Truth The Sacraments and the Word agree in these particulars viz. 1. Both exhibite the same things unto us the same benefits the same grace the same Christ 2. Both are from the
Word is no sufficient note of a true Church for the Israelites had circumcision and yet the Lord saith they were not his people Hos 1.9 Again they overturn the inward power of Baptism by denying Justification by Faith alone in Jesus Christ And as for the bastard-Rites and Ceremonies invented and patched by men to Baptism as hallowing of the Water Tapers Exorcisms Chrism Salt Crosses Spittle and such like they are not of the true Church but a corruption of the Sacrament And as these men attribute too much to this Sacrament holding that it gives Grace ex opere operato so on the other side there are other giddy heads who number Baptism among things indifferent and so to be used or refused at our discretion Lastly seeing the administration of the Sacraments is a part of Ecclesiastical Discipline or rather Doctrine indeed they that are not called thereto and especially women may not in any case usurp the power and authority to Baptize Christs Herauld sent by Proclamation To enter our Initiation Sprinkled the Water and the sacred Blood Made the faithful though sinful appear good This is Bethesda 's Pool or Siloam's stream Whereof the frothy Anabaptists dream The right use to Infants daign'd may not be Though some of Abrahams Posserity Thus Christ himself they proudly Countermand Whose word when all the world 's dissolv'd shall stand §. 3. The Lords Supper THe Lords Supper is a Sacrament instituted and appointed of Christ unto the faithful for a memorial of him whereby Christ doth certainly promise and seal unto the faithful That his Body was offered and broken on the Cross and his Blood shed for them as truly as they see his Bread broken and Cup distributed to them and that he doth as certainly with his Body crucified and his Blood shed feed and nourish the Souls of the faithful unto everlasting life as certainly as their bodies are fed with the bread and the cup of the Lord is received from the hand of the Minister which are offered to them as certain Seals of the body and blood of Christ and binde them to mutual dilection and love The Evangelists shew it was instituted of Christ the same night he was betrayed after that he had supped and had eaten the Easter-Lamb according to the Law yet is it so called not so much because it was the night wherein Christ was betrayed as to shew that it is indeed a Spiritual Supper given of God unto the faithful It is indeed the Sacrament of our Redemption by Christs death insomuch as to such as worthily and with faith receive the same the bread which is broken is a partaking of the body of Christ and likewise the cup of blessing is a partaking of his blood Such therefore as declare themselves in confession and life to be Infidels and ungodly are not to be admitted to this Supper lest thereby the Covenant of God be prophaned and the wrath of God stirred up against the whole Assembly 1 Cor. 11.20 Wherefore the Church by the commandment of Christ and his Apostles using the Keys of the Kingdom of Heaven ought to drive them from this Supper till they shall repent and change their life and conversation The Signs of the Lords Supper are twofold 1. Representing Signs as Bread Wine the breaking and pouring out 2. Applying Signs which do appropriate the same as the giving and receiving of bread and wine the first serves to renew our knowledge the other to confirm it As the Signs in the Lords Supper are 1. Bread broken and eaten 2. Wine distributed and taken So the things signified are 1. Christs body broken and blood shed 2. Our Union with Christ by faith The breaking and communicating of Christs body is signed by the breaking and receiving of the bread for two causes 1. Because Christ commandeth those Rites unto which we ought to give no less credit then if Christ himself did speak unto us 2. Because he annexeth a Promise That they who observe those Rites with a true faith must be assured and certain that they have communion with Christ The similitude or proportion of the Signs with the thing signified viz. 1. As the bread and wine nourish our body to temporal life so the body and blood of Christ nourish our souls unto life Spiritual and Eternal 2. As the bread and wine are received by the mouth so the body and blood are received by faith 3. As the wine is severed from the bread to signifie the violence of Christs death so his blood was sundred from his body signified also by the breaking of the bread and as the bread is eaten being broken so the body of Christ is received being sacrificed 4. As in corporal food is required an appetite unto it so in this Spiritual food is required faith 5. As of many corns is made one loaf so are we being many made one body The maner whereby Christs body blood doth nourish us is 1. The respect of his merit for us Christs body is given and his blood shed for us and for the body and blood of Christ we have eternal life given unto us 2. When we receive that merit that is when we believe with a true faith that for it we shall have eternal life 3. When the same Spirit uniteth us by faith unto Christ and worketh the like in us which is in Christ for except we be grafted into Christ we do not please God The remembrance we are to have of Christ in receiving the Lords Supper consists 1. In the memory of Christs benefits 2. In faith whereby we apply Christ and his merit to our selves 3. In thankfulness or publike confession of his benefits The Sacramental Rites of the Lords Supper are twofold 1. Respecting the Minister which are twofold 1. To take the bread and wine to break the one and to pour out the other that is that Christ suffered for our Redemption 2. To give the bread broken and to deliver the wine poured out that is that God doth offer and give Christ unto us together with all his benefits 2. Respecting him that cometh to the Lords Table it is required that he receive eat and drink the bread and wine given unto him that is that in the Supper we do truly receive Christ eat his body and drink his blood by the which we are nourished into the hope of eternal life if we do not cast him from us through unbelief The properties belonging to a fit guest at the Lords Table 1. He must be bidden Luke 14.8 2. He must be humble Luke 14.9 3. He must have knowledge of the person to whose Table he comes 4. He must bring a Spiritual appetite to eat 5. He must put on Christ his wedding garment Rom. 13.14 6. He must be ravished within himself concerning the use of these mysteries 7. He must be sober in using them 8. Chearful in receiving them 9. Loving to his fellow-guests 10. Thankful to the Master of the feast To the right use
come hereunto as unto mystical meat not as to carnal 3. We must feed on Christ by faith as verily as we eat the visible Signs with our bodily mouthes 4. There must be an Annunciation of the death of Christ that is a shewing forth of the Lords death 1 Cor. 11.26 This duty of shewing forth the Lords death is twofold 1. Partly inward consisting in the inward application and godly meditation of 1. The wrath justice of God against sin 2. The greatness of sin which nothing could do away but Christs death 3. The mercy and love of Christ in dying for us 2. Partly outward in outward celebration and publike declaration Rom. 10.10 After we have received the Lords Supper we must labor 1. To feel in our selves the hatred death of sin and the entrance of grace 2. To perform that in our life following which we promised in our preparation 3. To meditate where we have and what we have done which seals a blessing or a curse 4. To think every day of the mercy of Christ and daily to render thanks and praise for it which thanksgiving must not be onely in words but in every action of our life Psalms proper for thanksgiving are the 8 23 66 103. 5. To express our charity by Alms-giving to the Poor 6. To use all care and caution not to fall into our old sins lest the latter end be worse then the beginning and that not onely for the present but ever after we renew our faith and repentance Praise and thanksgiving is required as necessary and as a special duty to God when we have tasted of his bounty and loving kindeness and especially for Spiritual blessings 1. Because it is the will and pleasure of God who is so good unto us as to require it of us who can give him nothing else and this reason the Apostle gives 1 Thess 5.17 18. 2. Because of all Sacrifices this of praise and thanksgiving is the chief and principal as well in respect of the enduring and continuance of it as in respect of the use and end of it It was in Paradice before the Fall it was before the Flood it was before the Law under the Law under the Gospel and shall continue for ever It is performed of Men and Angels in heaven and earth it shall never end no not when other exercises of our Religion shall cease Rev. 5.13 11.17 3. Because it is not onely the end of the other works of Religion but also the end of the works of God It is the end of our Election Eph. 1.5 6. of our Creation Prov. 16.4 of our Redemption Luke 1.68 74 75. Eph. 1.3 7. of our Justification 1 Cor. 1.31 It is the end of our Sanctification of our Salvation and of our Glorification to give all praise all power all honor and glory to him that sitteth upon the Throne and to the Lamb for evermore 4. The worthiness and excellency of this exercise is manifestly proved by the unwillingness and untowardness of our corrupt Nature to perform it we are ready enough to pray for the gift not so ready to praise the giver fervent in asking cold in thanksgiving The impediments to be removed and the means to be used that we may rightly discern the Lords body in receiving it are these viz. 1. Carnal and natural weakness in the minde The Remedies whereof 1. Endeavor to get out of our natural state of life 2. Earnest endeavor for the Spirit of God 3. Frequent and fervent Prayer 2. Ignorance the Remedies whereof are 1. A serious consideration of Gods Judgements against it 2 Thess 1.8 2. To search the Scriptures to be conversant therein 3. To have recourse to godly Ministers 3. Hardness of heart the Remedies whereof are 1. To avoid the occasions as custom in sin carnal security contempt of the word and the like 2. To let the word have admittance to us to enter and take place in us 3. We must pray unto Almighty God to soften our hearts 4. We must take heed of the slights of Satan and of the deceitfulness of sin betimes 4. An unregenerate Will the Remedies whereof are 1. To deny renounce our selves with all we have 2. To call often upon God with fervency to guide us by his Spirit as we may be able to resist our lusts 5. We must shake off the custom of sinning the sin of unbelief and impenitency carnal wisdom presumption of our own knowledge pride and vain-glory forgetfulness of God and his word and such like If therefore we would come worthily to the Supper of the Lord 1. We must as hath been said try our selves by the Law of God whereby cometh the knowledge of sin Rom. 3.20 7.7 2. We must labor to understand and believe the common corruption of all mankinde standing partly in Original sin and partly in the fruits thereof Rom. 3.9 3. We must feel the curse of everlasting death due to us Gal. 3.10 4. We must learn what Covenant God hath made with us touching Grace and Mercy that we may be raised up to comfort in the Son of God our Redeemer 5. We must fervently desire to be made partakers of the Lords Supper and feel how much we stand in need of it 6. We must consider the correspondent proportion between the Signs and the thing signified Unworthiness in receiving the Lords Supper is twofold viz. 1. Of an evil Conscience as when a man lives in any sin against his conscience Take heed of this for it is proper to the Reprobate 2. Of infirmity as when a man truly repents and believes and makes conscience of every good duty but yet sees and feels wants in them all and in regard whereof himself unfit for the Supper but this may not justly hinder from coming to this Sacrament So that there are two sorts of men who receive unworthily viz. 1. Those that are not yet in Christ 2. Those that are within the Covenant but yet come remissly and negligently The wicked receive in the Lords Supper 1. The bare Signs onely as bread and wine 2. Those Signs to their condemnation or they eat their own condemnation that is through incredulity and abusing of the Sacrament to be abalienated and repelled from Christ and all his benefits and so to draw upon themselves temporal and everlasting punishments except they repent The wicked in the use of the Sacrament receive nothing beside their own condemnation but the bare Signs onely and that for these Reasons 1. Because the benefits of Christ are received onely in the right use of the Sacrament 2. Unto whom nothing is promised in the word to him the Sacraments seal nothing 3. Spiritual things are received by faith which the wicked have not 4. To be wicked and to receive the Sacrament truly and intirely implieth a contradiction The causes for which the wicked are said to eat unto themselves damnation viz. 1. Because they prophane the Signs and consequently the thing signified by
five things are necessarily to be looked into 1. The affection of him that prayeth viz. he must be sensible of his wants and sins 2. The causes of Invocation whereof Gods Command is the chiefest 3. Who is to be prayed unto viz. God onely not Saints nor Angels 4. In and through whose name and mediation we are to pray that is in the name and mediation of Christ onely 5. What we are to pray for viz. Blessings Temporal Spiritual Eternal To the affection of him that prayeth is required 1. That he divest himself of all vain thoughts of his own worth 2. That by a stedfast faith his soul be inflamed as it were all afire to pray 3. That he be truly sensible of his own wants 4. That he prostrate himself before the Lord in true penitence 5. That his prayer be serious and persevering The causes of Invocation are 1. The Command of God who hath required this service from us 2. The Promise of God for the hearing of the prayers of such as cry unto him 3. The sense of our own misery and wants with the distress of the whole Church 4. Our victory over temptations 5. That our heart by the use of prayer may be inflamed after the true worship of God 6. The example of Christ and all the Saints whose greatest care was to call upon God God onely is the true object of prayer and is alone to be prayed unto for these Reasons 1. He onely knoweth Jer. 17.10 whether our desires come from the heart or onely from the teeth outward and so knoweth whether it be true prayer or no. 2. He onely is every where present Jer. 23.23 in all places to hear the suits of all persons 3. He onely is Almighty Jer. 32.27 able to grant what suit soever we shall ask God onely not Angel Saint nor any other Creature is to be prayed unto and that for these Reasons viz. 1. We must pray to none but to whom we say Our Father Mat. 6.9 2. In whom alone we must believe to him alone must we pray Rom. 10.14 3. To whom alone and onely we can ascribe Omnipresence Omnipotency Omnisciency and the like to him alone must we pray 1 Tim. 2.8 4. It is the Commandment of God himself that we should serve and worship him alone Mat. 4.10 5. No creature can be helpful to any other further then God suffereth and enableth it 6. It is no sufficient ground to move us to call upon a creature because it may be helpful for then any unreasonable creatures might be prayed unto which is a most unreasonable thing for any reasonable man to do 7. Difference must be made between Civil and Divine religious prayer which is made to God alone with assurance of faith and perswasion of Divine Attributes in him together with religious Adoration which is proper to the Divine Majesty Rev. 19.10 and to be performed to no creature neither Angel Rev. 22.9 nor Man Acts 10.26 But Civil prayer is that which is made onely in civil respects requesting that of man which we are perswaded he is able to help us in This is not properly Prayer Christ must be prayed unto in a double respect 1. As God the giver of all good things together with the Father and the Holy Ghost 2. As a Mediator and Intercessor that in and through him we may be heard that he would pray the Father for us and that he would prefer unto him all our sighs and petitions For he is a Priest for ever Psal 110. The things to be asked in Prayer are 1. Spiritual which we are to pray for without any exception or condition 2. Temporal with this condition If it be Gods will and pleasure so also in things Spiritual less necessary to Salvation as Hope Joy in the feeling of Gods mercy in distress c. Though corporal and other things not simply necessary to Salvation are not simply to be prayed for yet conditionally for these Reasons 1. That the desire of corporal things may be an exercise of our faith and confirm our trust and confidence of obtaining things Spiritual and available to Salvation 2. That we may consider and confess the providence of God that nothing befals us by chance or fortune The Reasons why God would have us obtain by Prayer what he hath determined to give 1. That we may be kept in some fear reverence of him 2. That he may the more declare his love by hearing our complaints 3. That we may be the better acquainted with his excellent majesty 4. That we may give him the acknowledgement of all good things God useth to grant our Prayers two ways 1. By giving the very thing it self we ask 2. By giving something answerable thereto when not the thing it self God never grants some mens requests for these Reasons viz. 1. Because they make their prayers but not according to his will either failing in the time as did the foolish virgins Mat. 25.11 12. or in the thing they ask as did the sons of Zebedee Mat. 20.22 2. Because they doubt and waver in prayer for such shall receive nothing of the Lord Jam. 1.6 7. 3. Because they ask it for wrong ends as not so much to promote Gods honor thereby as to consume it on their own lusts Jam. 4.5 So God sometimes defers his answer for these Reasons 1. When we ask amiss which may be done though the heart be right as out of mistake or out of want of judgement though it may be the intention be good 2. When we are not fitted for mercies yet God then tenders us in the case we are in 3. To make us pray the more fervently and to make us prize his blessings the higher 4. When it crosseth some other secret passage of Gods providence 5. To keep us in humility and prevent Spiritual pride thus Paul was denyed the removing of the buffeting of Satan Though God knows our wants before we pray yet ought we to pray for we pray not to inform the Lord of our wants but for other causes as 1. To stir up our hearts to seek unto Gods presence and favor 2. To exercise our faith in the meditation of Gods Promises 3. To ease our woful hearts by pouring them out unto the Lord. 4. To testifie our obedience unto Gods Commandments and our trust in his Providence for the receiving every good thing we desire Our reverence in prayer must shew it self 1. In the holy disposition of the heart and affections toward the Lord when the minde is not carried away with by thoughts but applieth it self wholly and onely to the present service it hath in hand 2. In the comely gesture of the body beseeming so holy an action done to so high a Majesty 3. In the humble and reverent uttering of our requests having before-hand well considered the things we are to utter before God It is necessary that the Spirit should pray and so we pray in the Spirit for these Reasons 1. In regard of
we obeying the will of God do what he commandeth us 4. Give us c. that is all things which pertain to our sustentation in this life 5. Forgive us c. that is our sins and infirmities and here note That our forgiving others is not the cause but the consequence or effect of Gods forgiving us and the sign of our remission 6. Lead us not into Temptation that is 1. That God would not suffer us to be invaded or set upon by the wicked suggestions of Satan 2. Nor be drowned in the pleasures of sin 3. Nor by consent fall into the snares of Temptation But deliver us from evil that is generally all things hurtful to our selves the Church or State 3. The Conclusion For thine is the Kingdom c. which is added as a Reason of all the Petitions to strengthen our faith and therefore we adde a note of confidence and say Amen which particle is not as a part of the Prayer but as a note of our desire wherewith we wish we may be heard and of our faith whereby we believe we shall be heard The Lord used this kinde of Proeme because he will be called upon with due honor which consisteth 1. In the true knowledge of God 2. In true confidence in him 3. In obedience to him which compriseth 1. True love 2. True fear 3. Hope 4. Humiliation 5. Patience Again of the six Petitions in the Lords Prayer 1. The three former concern Gods glory 1. Hallowed be thy Name that is that the Name of God may be glorified in his Titles words and works 2. Thy Kingdom come that is that the number of true Believers may be daily encreased that Gods Kingdom of Grace being enlarged his Kingdom of Glory may be hastned 3. Thy will be done that is that all the people of God may upon earth as readily obey Gods will as the Angels and Saints in heaven 2. The three latter concern our selves 1. Give us c. that is all temporal things necessary for this life 2. Forgive us c. that is that God would freely forgive us all our sins as we do from our hearts forgive the offences of men against us 3. Lead us not c. that is that the Lord would not suffer us to be carried away by the Temptations of the World the Flesh or the Devil The excellency of the Lords prayer stands in these things 1. In the pithy shortness of it for in few words it comprehendeth endless matter 2. In the perfection of it for it containeth in it whatsoever is to be asked in prayer in which respect it is properly called the Abridgement of the whole Gospel 3. In the order thereof which is most exquisite 4. In the acceptation it hath with God the Father for it containeth the words of Christ his Son in whom the Father is well pleased The excellency of this Prayer sheweth 1. That if any set form of prayer may be used then this may being indited by the Mediator of the Church therefore let such as deny the use of it better consider hereof when as for the space of One thousand five hundred years after Christ there were never any that disallowed it 2. That the practice of such who conclude their prayers with this is commendable for hereby as by a most perfect and excellent prayer the wants and imperfections of our prayers are supplyed 3. That such who gather from the perfection and excellency of this prayer that it alone is to be used are deceived for Christs intent was rather to commend this prayer unto us for matter and maner then for the words 4. That though it be a most perfect prayer yet is it onely general but every true Believer needs particular prayers whereby in special form and maner his particular state and condition may be sent up unto the Lord yet so as they be always suitable unto this form here prescribed Two extremes are here to be taken heed of 1. Too much confidence in the words of this Prayer often repeated as some Popes of Rome have granted great Pardons to seven Pater-nosters and as many Ave-Maries said over every day or on some days and in some places which is gross and superstitious 2. Too much detracting from this Prayer by accounting it no better or not so worthy as a mans own conceived prayer which is derogatory and arrogant Our Saviour Christ having forbidden his Disciples all carnal and superstitious kinde of praying prescribed them this holy form Matth. 6.9 c. The use whereof is a form of Direction learning thereby what to ask what first and chiefly with what affections and assurance for if we were left unto our selves we should greatly erre in praying asking oft-times those things that are not good for us and against the will of God out of a fleshly minde therefore hath the Lord reduced all things which we may ask into these few short Petitions and out of any carnal presumption to transgress these bounds is not to offer a pleasing Sacrifice but as it were with strange fire to provoke him as did Nadab and Abihu Lev. 10. Some in a superstitious notion Suppose this Patern of Devotion Stands chiefly in the words and can expell Poyson and Counter-charm the Powers of Hell Blinde Idolist unless th' heart language shall The words the words are ineffectual Since thou hast giv'n us Lord compactly choyce Words and matter both give us too thy voyce Thy Spirits voyce in ours that so we may With Faith Love Zeal as thou hast taught us Pray §. 3. Our Father CHrist Jesus onely is the Son of God by Nature for which cause he is called the onely begotten Son of the Father Joh. 1.18 And we are Sons onely by Adoption and Grace and therefore when we call God Father we must not think any thing singularly of our selves as if he were our Father specially but the common Father of us all that believe And we say Our Father not My Father because we ought to pray for all the children of God as well as for our selves And here observe That here and always the Name of Father as also the Name of God when it is opposed to the Creatures is taken essentially not personally but when it is put with another person of the Godhead it is taken personally Our Father that is O Lord God thou art the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ and in him our most merciful Father by Adoption and Grace yet here again observe That we do not here pray to the Father onely but to the whole Trinity yet as the first Person is the eternal Fountain of the Deity we pray to the Father by the Son through the Holy Ghost nor may it seem strange that Christ who as he is Man is our Brother and is not ashamed to call us his Brethren Heb. 2.11 is called our Father for as he is God he is our Father and therefore called The Father of Eternity Isa 9.6 Christ by this word Our
we presently fall a committing the contrary Vice Hope is a sure and certain expectation of Everlasting Life Hope freely to be given for Christs sake and of a mitigation or asswagement of present evils and of a deverance from the same evils of this life and an expectation and looking for all Blessings necessary unto Salvation according to the Counsel and Will of God which Hope springeth from Faith for it is an expectation of such good things to come as God hath promised and Faith believed In expectation especially consisteth the very nature of Hope Rom. 8.24 If we hope we wait The proper object of Hope consisteth in good things herein it differeth from Fear These good things are not past nor present but to come neither are nor have been seen for Hope which is seen is no hope Rom. 8.23 They are such good things as God hath promised for true Hope is termed The Hope of the Gospel Col. 1.23 And such as Faith believeth for Faith is the ground of things hoped for Heb. 11.1 And By Faith we wait Gal. 5.5 Faith is the Mother Hope the Daughter Faith brings forth Hope and Hope nourisheth Faith for except a man hopes and waits for that which he believes his Faith will soon decay and according to the quality and quantity of Faith is the quality and quantity of Hope Thus Hope distinguisheth the Faith of Christians from the Faith of Devils and Reprobates and from Temporary Faith A man hath never Faith to believe but he hath Hope which makes him expect what he believes yet true Hope may be mingled with Fear for if there be nothing but Hope it is a sign that Hope is not good This lively Hope makes us labor for the accomplishment of what we believe it keeps our heads above the waves of Adversity without which of all men a Christian is most miserable 1 Cor. 15.19 it being simply and absolutely necessary to Salvation for where no Hope is there is no Faith And as it is true That no man can hope except he first believe the Promises so it is as true That Faith is necessarily upheld and nourished by Hope Faith is Hopes Foundation Hope Faiths Nourishment Faith believes the Promises Hope waits for the fulfilling of them Faith believeth and is perswaded of life Eternal Hope looketh when it shall be revealed for this cause Paul saith We are saved by Hope Rom. 8.24 The Love of God is a holy Disposition of the heart arising from Faith Love whereby we cleave to the Lord with a purpose of heart to serve him and to please him in all things which Love is so Necessary to Salvation as he that hath it not is in a cursed and damnable condition he is not in Christ if he do not love for there is a tye between all these Faith Repentance Love therefore they are used promiscuously And indeed if we Love not God we rob him for he bought us to be his that is to love him otherwise we rob God of our selves Now the way to Love God is To pray earnestly to acknowledge the power of the Holy Ghost to go to him and say Lord of my self I am not able to do it This acknowledgement of the power of the Holy Ghost is the way to prevail for unless the Holy Ghost kindle this fire of Love in us from Heaven we shall no more have it then cold water is able to heat it self Though the Preachers speak with the tongues of Angels yet shall we not be brought to love the Lord till he shew himself to us till he opens the cloud and shews us the Light of his countenance It was Moses his Prayer Shew me thy Glory that is thy Excellency which is exceeding glorious Moses asked not this to no purpose to satisfie his fancy for then the Lord would not have heard him but that by the better knowing the Lord he might love him the more for a principal means to the love of God is the knowledge of God and indeed therefore we love him not because we know him not This is the reason the Angels and the Saints love him most because they know him most and why in heaven when we shall be present with him shall we love him so abundantly but because we shall then know him face to face The Fear of God Fear is To acknowledge the infinite Anger of God towards sin his great Power to punish sin his Wisdom and Justice and that Right and Dominion which he hath over all Creatures which Fear is a great part of the Worship of God and one infallible Sign of the true Religion for that Religion is true wherein God is truly worshipped and that is but one and in it onely men shall be saved Which true Christian Religion is a Spiritual Band whereby men in a certain holy Reconciliation are made one with God and are kept in his Love and Fear that at length they may be made partakers of his heavenly Glory and of blessed Life And though all grant that to be the true Religion which hath been delivered by God himself yet which may be that Religion delivered from above will never be agreed on amongst men till our Lord Jesus returning to Judgement decide the Controversie Now we must not understand this Fear to be a servile Fear arising from a knowledge and an accusing of sin and from a feeling of Gods Judgement and Anger against sin and is a shunning and hatred of God and Punishment not of sin and is so much the greater how much the more certain expectation there is of everlasting Damnation and how much the greater despair there is of the Grace and Mercy of God But the Fear required in this Commandment is a Filial Fear such as Sons bear towards their Parents who are sorry for the anger and displeasure of their Father and yet notwithstanding are always perswaded of the love and minde of their Father towards them So that the Fear of God in the Regenerate in this life is an acknowledging of sin and the wrath of God and an earnest grief for the sins committed for the offending of God and for those calamities which by reason of sin both we and others sustain with an earnest desire of avoiding those evils by reason of the knowledge of that Mercy which is shewed unto us through Christ Mat. 10.28 Thus God alone is the proper object of Fear for what fear is due to man is due to him onely in and for the Lord whose Image he beareth more eminently by vertue of some Authority or Dignity pertaining to him which is to be feared And the extent of this Filial Fear of God is so large as without it other holy Duties cannot be well performed yea the whole Worship of God is often comprised under it Thus Mat. 4.10 Christ expresseth the Text Deut. 6.13 And thus Mat. 15.9 Christ expresseth the Text Isa 29.13 The Vices contrary to the Vertues in general contained in this Commandment
yet be a sound true and saving Faith it is not the difference of degrees and measure that takes away the nature of it For Faith in regard of the extent of it admits degrees not because the Habit is encreased but because the Revelations and Objects are more and therefore those poor Christians that are yet ignorant may have a true habit and as true a Grace in the heart And though a man be more conversant in the Scripture knows more then they hath more Revelations and in that sense though he hath a greater Faith then the other yet the other hath a like precious Faith with him in regard of that Grace Nor do Infirmities break the Covenant betwixt God and those that have once taken Christ and have true Faith though in the least degree Now in Taking Christ the stronger the Will is by how much stronger Assent the Minde and Understanding gives to those Truths which concern Justification delivered in the Scripture And we must labor to believe hard things like Abraham or easie things propounded with slender Arguments like Nathaniel for if we believe in difficult cases God will make us with facility to believe them another time We must labor for the extent of Faith for the multitude of Revelations to be filled full of Faith as Barnabas is said to be and this is by studying the Word much for therein will God reveal this This Faith is the Mother of all Sanctifying Graces for by it we are ingrafted into Christ and so live the life of Faith the life of God the fruits of Faith are almost infinite for all the several and distinct branches of Piety and Charity if they be rightly performed are fruits of Faith And where there is a true Faith there is a secret perswasion wrought in the heart whereby God assures us that he is ours and we are his for we may know and be assured that Christ dyed for us and Redeemed us in particular if we can finde in our selves that we have true Faith in Christ and true Repentance for all sins And we may be assured of our Vocation if through the Mystery of the Word seconded and made powerful by Gods Spirit we are quite altered and changed from our former evil lives and have attained unto Faith and Repentance And we may be further assured That we are Redeemed and are the children of God if we finde that we have the Spirit of God dwelling in us which if we want we are none of Gods which if we have it will appear by the fruits of the Spirit in us for as Exercise begets Health and we are made fit by Health for Exercise or as Acts beget Habits and Habits are means to exercise those Acts so Assurance grounded upon the Promise enableth enlargeth and encreaseth Sanctification and Sanctification encreaseth Assurance but first see Faith and then the other as fruits of it Now Faith is wrought in us thus The Spirit comes and shews Christ to us and not onely the profit we have by him but the beauty and excellency of him it shews us what Grace is and makes us love it and then shews us Mercy Out of this we come to long after Christ and to say I would I had him Now to this work he addes a second Christ comes and tells a man I will have thee he comes and shews himself discovers himself and speaks plainly to him I am willing to marry thee Now the longing Soul hearing those glad tidings embraces the motion and the work is done We may know whether this Faith be wrought in us by reflecting upon our own hearts and considering what actions have passed through it for the works of Faith are manifest And we must use Faith in comforting our selves for whatsoever Christ hath by Nature we have it by Grace when we have Faith if he be a Son we are Sons if he be an Heir we are Heirs c. yea Faith makes a man regardless of all earthly things Those that have Faith are able to use it of themselves but many have it that do not use it and though God doth work in us all the work of Faith as it is received yet know He doth not work in us onely but by us he makes us Instruments yea we shall be called to an account for the Talent of Faith if we have it and use it not and if we use it not we shall have little enough o● it for the using of it is that which strengthneth Faith and makes it effectual Now that we are saved by Faith appears from these places of Scripture Joh. 3.16 Rom. 1.16 3.28 Eph. 2.8 Mark 16.16 Rev. 21.8 2 Thess 2.11 12. Gal. 3.7 9. Luke 7.50 Yet know That a man is not saved by Faith simply as it is Faith for it doth not in its own nature merit Salvation but it is said to save us in respect of its Object which is Christ not as it is a gift quality or property but as it is an Instrument to apprehend and apply this Object so that we are saved by Faith as an Instrument not for Faith as a Cause So Faith alone is said to justifie us but that Faith which is alone without other Graces doth not justifie us neither were ever any justified by Faith without Works For Faith is not onely a Perswasion that our sins are forgiven but also a thorough Repenting that our sins may be forgiven not onely a Perswasion that the Promises are true but a Holiness of living that we may have a share in those Promises not onely a Perswasion that the Scripture is true but an Obedience to Gods Will revealed therein not onely a Perswasion that Christ dyed for my sins but also such an uprightness of walking as that I crucifie him not again by my Lusts for Faith doth not onely work a good meaning in us but it doth work power in us to do good and to mortifie our affections for where Christ dwells indeed he gives power against sin and that by his Spirit and where the Understanding is fully convinced the Will and Affections follow Faith and the Desire of satisfying Lusts cannot stand together and he that trusts not God for Earthly things cannot trust him for matters of Salvation for if we have Faith in the main we will have it in particular cases We are said to Believe three maner of ways viz. 1. We believe one God that is we believe that there is a God 2. We believe God that is that God is true touching his Promises These two ways Infidels yea the Devils believe and tremble 3. We believe in God that is according to those Promises to put our whole trust and hope in God In the Doctrine of the Church mention is made of four sorts of Faith 1. Historical when men believe the Bibles History This saves not James 2.19 2. Temporary when men believe onely for a time neither doth this save 3. Miraculous proceeding from special Revelation which is now out of use
and Paul 6. In Pleasures as in Moses when he left Pharaohs Court 7. In case of Provision for Posterity 8. In matters of daily imployment The Titles given to true Faith viz. 1. It is called the Faith of the Elect Tit. 1.1 for none but the Elect have it and all the Elect have it at one time or another when once they have it they never utterly and totally lose it 2. It is called Saving Faith because it bringeth us to Salvation Eph. 2.8 3. It is called Justifying Faith because it is that means or Instrument which Gods Spirit worketh in us whereby we apply unto our selves Jesus Christ in and by whom we are justified Rom. 3.28 4. It is called Sanctifying Faith because by it God purifieth our hearts Acts 15.9 How far the sense of Faith may be lost in men 1. It may be so covered over and smothered as it may not be discerned they may for a time have no Assurance of it 2. All the joy and comfort of it wherewith they were formerly upheld may be clean taken away and they even faint for want of it 3. No fruits thereof may appear they may be as Trees in winter little conscience of any duty dull in hearing Gods Word cold in Prayer nothing remaining but a formal Profession if that 4. Their Consciences may prove a very Rack a grievous Torture and Torment unto them 5. They may think it is like to be recovered with a wet finger with a light sigh or a groan but they may call cry and roar again and again before they be heard 6. And when they recover it it may be they shall never attain to that measure which once they had or if to that measure of the thing it self yet not of the joy and comfort of it They may carry the grief of this their Fall to their graves The difference between Faith and Presumption viz. 1. Faith driveth a man out of himself and casts himself wholly on Christ Presumption makes him boast of himself and makes him self-conceited 2. Faith resteth on a sure ground even Gods Word Presumption relieth onely on a mans surmise and meer conjecture 3. Faith is joyned with the use of the means Presumption not onely carelesly neglecteth but arrogantly contemneth all means 4. Faith is wrought by degrees as first by Knowledge then by Grief after by desire Presumption is a sudden apprehension of the minde 5. Faith makes a man work out his Salvation with a holy jealousie yea with fear and trembling Presumption is over-bold 6. Faith makes a man depart from all iniquity and keep a clear Conscience Presumption is accompanied with much pollution 7. Faith is most sure in time of Tryal then the strength of it is most manifested Presumption maketh greatest flourish when there is least danger 8. Faith continueth unto the end and never quite falleth away Presumption is subject to decay totally and finally Motives to labor for and to grow in Faith 1. Without it whatsoever we do is sin Rom. 14.23 2. We cannot please God in any one action without Faith Heb. 11.6 3. We cannot hear Gods Word with profit except we have Faith Heb. 11.6 4. We cannot Pray without this Faith Jam. 1.6 5. We cannot Receive the Benefit of the Lords Supper without it 6. We cannot be saved without it Mark 16.16 7. We must grow in Faith because we need more strength daily and daily meet with greater Assaults 8. We shall hereby grow in joy and gain the favor and love of God the more 9. We shall the more prevail in Prayer 10. By growing in Faith we shal bring the more glory to God The means of getting Faith are twofold 1. Outward which are either such as both work and strengthen Faith as the Word of God or onely such as strengthen it as the Sacraments 2. Inward or rather the Cause which is the Sanctifying Spirit of God who softneth quickneth openeth our hearts making them to bring forth the blessed fruit of faith 2 Cor. 4.13 1 Cor. 2.4 5. The way to obtain and encrease Faith viz. 1. To be vigilant Hearers and to continue Hearers of Gods Word Rom. 10.17 2. To labor for a good Conscience and to keep it when we have it 1 Tim. 1.19 3. Godly effectual and fervent Prayer to God for it Luke 17.5 4. The worthy receiving of the Sacrament of the Lords Supper which though it doth not confer Faith ex opere operato yet it confirms and strengthens it 1 Cor. 11.25 26. 5. That to our uttermost power we use and well imploy that ability whatsoever it be that we have by nature or by special gift 6. That we resist not any motion of Gods Spirit like the rebellious Jews nor put off from us the Promises of the Gospel as if they belonged not to us and think our selves unworthy of eternal life The true desire of the heart after Christ which worketh Faith may be known 1. By the Cause which is the Gospel and nothing but it can do it because by it alone is Christ revealed and offered 2. By the Order which followeth upon grief for sin and despair of succor in our selves or others 3. By the Quality for it is an hearty and true desire an inward desire of the Soul and also a vehement and earnest desire greater then the desire of any other thing can be 4. By the Fruits as a conscionable care in using and fervent Prayer for blessing the means of Faith 5. By the Continuance of it which raiseth up and preserveth an appetite after Christ even after we have tasted him The Fruits Effects Signs of Effectual Faith 1. It purifies the heart and sanctifies the person therefore Faith and Repentance are put together a purged and sanctified heart renewed in Soul and Body Acts 15.9 2. The Spirit of Prayer 3. Peace in the heart that which passeth all understanding Peace of Conscience or Joy resting on God Rom. 5.1 4. To hold out in cleaving to Christ Constancy and perseverance in Christ unto the end Jude 20.21 5. The Concomitants of it which are Love Hope Joy Humility 6. The justifying of us before God 7. Our whole Conversion which followeth Faith and beginneth at the same time with Faith 8. The fruits of Conversion and Repentance even good works 9. Increase of Spiritual and Corporal gifts 10. Justification Regeneration and all the benefits purchased by the blood of Christ 11. It is an effect of Election none have it but the Elect Acts 13.48 Tit. 1.1 12. The continual working of it for true Faith is never idle Gal. 5.6 13. Hearing of the Word with joy and practising it Joh. 10.27 14. A striving against Doubt Distrust Despair of Gods Mercy if we have not attained a full perswasion And this is acceptable to God Isa 42.3 The principal effects of Faith whereby it may be best proved may be drawn to these two Heads 1. A quiet Conscience whence proceedeth 1. A holy Security of minde having peace with God
the pardon of our sins for no Tears of ours can give Satisfaction beside Judas the Reprobate had it but it is required as that without which we will not come to Christ Now the taking of Christ is nothing else but what we call Faith and Faith is nothing else but when these two things concur That God the Father will give his Son and freely offers Righteousness and we receive this Righteousness taking Christ for our Husband our King and our Lord. And when we are truly entred into the state of this Humiliation we shall not fail of that Humility required in this Commandment for we shall then acknowledge all those good things which are in us and done by us not to come from any worthiness or ability of our own but from the free goodness of God we shall then by the acknowledging of Gods Divine Majesty and our infirmity and unworthiness subject and submit our selves unto God to give the glory of all good things which are in us to him alone We shall then truly fear God We shall then acknowledge and bewail our own defects and vices we shall not then covet any higher place or condition we shall not then trust in our own gifts but in the help and assistance of God we shall then hold our selves contented with our own Vocation and Calling we shall not then despise others in comparison of our selves neither let or hinder them in the discharging of their duty but acknowledge that others also are and may be made profitable Instruments of Gods glory and therefore give place and honor to them we shall not then attribute to our selves things above our force and power we shall not then affect any one excellency above others neither shall we then murmure against God if we fail of our hope or if we be despised but in all things ascribe the praise of Wisdom and Justice unto God Let no man therefore presume above that which is written For who hath separated thee or what hast thou that thou hast not received 1 Cor. 4.6 God resisteth the proud but giveth grace to the humble 1 Pet. 5.5 Whosoever shall humble himself as this little childe the same is the greatest in the kingdom of Heaven Mat. 18.4 And this is that Humility required in this Commandment and him in whom it is the Lord will exalt in due time 1 Pet. 5.5 The Vices repagnant to Humility viz. 1. Pride and Arrogancy which is to ascribe our gifts not unto God but to our own ability and therefore to stand in admiration of our selves and gifts not to acknowledge our wants or bewail our defects to be ever aspiring to some higher place or calling to attribute to our selves those things which we have not to overlook our poor Brethren to be guilty indeed of all those Vices from which the humble man was even now said to be free 2. A feigned Modesty or Humility which is a double Pride and it is to hunt after the praise and commendation of Humility by denying of those things outwardly which yet a man doth in his minde attribute unto himself either truly or falsely and by refusing of that honor which he desireth above the peace of a good Conscience and covertly laboreth to compass Going to take a Survey of my Sins I heard a voyce which sadly said Who brings Help to my wounded Soul And having cry'd At least a heart-full of Tears Faith apply'd A precious Soveraign Salve but said It came from far cost dear and therefore praid He would esteem it highly Then me thought He somewhat else in dust and ashes sought What it should be I ask'd Hope who stood by And Love reply'd it was Humility §. 4. Of Patience PAtience is the knowledge and acknowledging of Gods Majesty Wisdom Justice Power and Goodness resolving through a confidence in Gods Promises and so in hope of Gods assistance and deliverance to obey God in suffering those evils and afflictions which he sendeth on us and willeth us to suffer and herein not to murmure against God or do any thing against his Commandments but by this knowledge and full perswasion of Gods good will and pleasure herein To comfort our selves in our distress and to Pray in Faith and Wait in Hope for his deliverance Humility and Patience belong unto this first Commandment not onely because they are parts of that internal obedience which God requireth immediately to be performed unto him but also because they follow and accompany the true Knowledge Confidence Love and Fear of God as necessary effects of the same For in cases of Distress of Persecution and Affliction we must not live by feeling but by Faith for Afflictions are Pledges and Tokens of our Adoption if we make the right use of them Heb. 12.7 And when God defers deliverance he doth it upon great and weighty causes and considerations best known unto himself for in his Wisdom he hath set down certain and unchangeable Times for the accomplishment and issue of all things that are And indeed there is a necessity of having this godly vertue of Patience for we need many afflictions because the corruptions of the heart are of diverse sorts and we need long afflictions because sin is very natural yet there may be good in that evil we suffer and in the worst dangers there is somewhat that makes the godly trust in God that keeps them up from sinking A sound Spirit will bear any Affliction and therein is a Christian happy for God loves us tenderly in Affliction whence the difference between the Saints and others in the same Afflictions is That though the same Afflictions befal both yet God hath respect to his in it not to the others Jer. 24. The wicked though prospering yet stand in slippery places the godly though afflicted are built on the Rock Christ To prosper in sin is the miserablest condition in the world for when the wicked are not interrupted in their course God hath a purpose to destroy them as Hophni and Phineas Prosperity hurts evil men yea and as much as Affliction doth good to the godly Evil men may prosper and good men be crossed many times not prospering in their business and that in those things which they do according to Gods Will as in the success of Pauls Ministery at Macedonia and the Disciples jeopardy on the water though they were there on Christs command Thus the Lord dealeth promiscuously with good and bad in outward things that we may not know where to have him in his ways and actions which are past finding out therefore we must not judge by Gods outward proceeding till he hath finished the work nor murmure at his Providence or prove impatient under the smart of any Affliction whatsoever For the Afflictions of the godly are not punishments and satisfaction for their sins but onely fatherly chastisements and the Cross whereby they are brought to Humility To the wicked they are indeed a punishment which is either Destruction or Torment inflicted by
the order of Justice on the person guilty of sin And this is proper unto the Reprobate because it is inflicted on them to this end That Gods Justice may be satisfied for the Law bindeth all men either to Obedience or to Punishment Now the wicked despairing of the Mercy of God murmure at his Justice and are even mad with impatience when his inflicting Scourge is on them but the godly kiss his Rod and in patience possess their Souls resting on the Promises of God This is that which sets them at liberty in the dungeon makes them run the paths of Gods Commandments even when Irons manacle them makes them go chearfully to the Faggot and embrace the Flame makes them smile at the frowns of their Persecutors and in an holy patience makes them as it were anticipate Death by dying to all impatience that when it comes indeed they may be said rather to be changed then dye And indeed this one Consideration How that those that persecute the Saints here would undoubtedly persecute Christ himself were he now upon Earth is sufficient of it self to support the Spirits of any that now are or may be under Persecution beside the consideration that God will as undoubtedly deliver his to his glory and their advantage as he permits Persecution to befal them We have need of Patience for these two Reasons 1. Because there are so many Mockers and Scoffers at our Profession Luke 21.17 2. Because the Object of our Hope is of things invisible Rom. 8.25 The Signs or Properties of Patience 1. A heart resolved to abide whatsoever is laid upon us whether it be for sin or for tryal 2. When we suffering and suffering much do yet never cease to love the Lord who striketh us 3. Humility and humbling our selves under his blows and strokes laid upon us 4. Chearfulness and Joy in Suffering when we are so far from murmuring under it that we rejoyce in it Patience must have her perfect work James 1.4 which work is said to be perfect in these three respects viz. 1. In respect of the Condition it must be true hearty and sound not feigned and counterfeit Luke 21.19 2. In respect of the Extent it must reach to all maner of Crosses heavy and light inward and outward at home and abroad whether they come from the Devil or any of his wicked Instruments or from God himself and his own hand of what kinde quality quantity soever they be 2 Cor. 6.4 3. In respect of the Continuance it must endure unto the end not onely unto the end of that Affliction which lieth upon us but also to the end of our life so as we must both patiently bear the present and also prepare our selves for future Crosses Mat. 10.22 Necessary it is that Patience have this perfect work in us and that for these Reasons viz. 1. The Crosses whereunto we are subject are not troubles in shew and appearance onely but such as pierce both Body and Soul Therefore counterfeit Patience will stand us in no stead 2. The Number of Tryals whereunto we may be brought is uncertain one calamity upon another as Waves may fall upon us therefore the extent of our Patience need be very great 3. It is Uncertain how long we shall be subject to Tryals because the continuance of our life is uncertain therefore there is a Necessity in it that our Patience continue unto the end for while we are in this world the field of the Lords Battel the Enemy will assault us The good which God aymeth at and effecteth by those Troubles he inflicteth on his children which should incite us to Patience 1. The Preventing of some great Mischief and Evil 2 Cor. 12.7 2. The Purging out of some festering poysonsom sin 2 Chron. 33.12 3. The Upholding and keeping us safe and stedfast in the right way Heb. 12.10 11. 4. The Proof and Tryal of such Gifts and Graces as he hath bestowed on us 1 Pet. 4.12 The Saints must possess their Souls in Patience from the consideration of those Ends which God hath in afflicting them As 1. His own Glory Joh. 9.3 2 Cor. 12.9 2. The Edification of others Eph. 3.1 3. Their own good 1. By preventing 2 Cor. 12.7 or curing some dangerous disease Psal 119.67 2. To manifest the Grace of God bestowed on them Job 1.12 3. To draw them nearer to God Hos 5.15 4. To make them long the more for heaven 2 Cor. 5.2 5. To lead them by this Correction as it were by the hand to Repentance 6. To try and exercise their Faith Invocation of Gods Name Patience c. 7. To breed in them a loathing of worldly and a love of heavenly things 8. To shake off their over-much carefulness for outward things 9. To suppress and amend the viciousness ingrafted in their Nature 10. To save them from being condemned with the world So likewise doth God suffer his Church to be under the Cross and afflicted for these special Reasons 1. The more to manifest his Pity Power Providence and Truth in keeping promise 2. That the Members thereof by their Afflictions may be acquainted with their own wants and infirmities which they would not much regard were they freed from the Cross 3. That by Affliction they may be kept from many grievous sins into which they might otherwise fall 4. That others seeing the Correction of the Church for sin may learn thereby to hate and avoid sin 5. To wean them the better from the world Much prosperity makes us resemble the fool spoken of Luke 12.19 6. To make Heaven the more longed for while we are on earth and the more acceptable when we come to possess it like Victory after a tedious and dangerous Combat 7. That the Church may glorifie God in a constant and couragious maintenance of the Truth unto death for even in persecution is Gods Truth preserved against the Reason of mans Wisdom The Reasons of the worlds Hatred to Gods Church may be these 1. The Church of God in the Ministery of the Gospel seeks the ruine of the Devils Kingdom who is the Prince of the World the Devil therefore rageth and inflames the hearts of his Instruments with malice against Gods Church that they may quite destroy it if it were possible 2. Gods Church is a peculiar people severed from the world in their Profession Doctrine and Conversation and therefore the world hates them Joh. 15.16 and this the world will do to the end thereof The Cross is the Affliction of the godly but not properly a punishment and is of four sorts viz. 1. The Chastisements for the remnants of sin in them and oftentimes for peculiar sins committed by them that they may see their uncleanness and repent 2. The Proofs and Tryals of their Faith Hope Invocation Fear of God and Patience 3. Martyrdoms which are Testifications concerning their Doctrine delivered others 4. The Cross is their Ransome even the obedience of Christ alone The causes of the Affliction of
the wicked 1. The Impellent Cause is sin because it is an evil merit and deserveth evil 2. The Principal Efficient Cause is the Justice of God inflicting punishment for sin 3. The Instrumental Causes are divers Angels and Men both good and bad and all other Creatures 4. The Final Cause is That the Justice of God may be satisfied The Causes of the Cross of the godly viz. 1. The Acknowledging and purging out of sin 1 Cor. 11.32 Psa 119.71 2. The Hatred of the Devil and wicked men Joh. 15.19 1 Pet. 5.8 3. The Tryal and Exercise of Godliness Eccl. 34.10 4. Particular Defects and Failings in the Saints as in David and others 5. The Confirmation of the Truth by their Martyrdom Joh. 21.18 6. Their glorious Delivery that is the Manifestation of the immeasurable Wisdom Power Mercy and Justice of God in their wonderful deliverance 1 Sam. 2.6 7. The making of a Conformity between the Members and Christ their Head both in Affliction and Glory 2 Tim. 2.12 8. A Testimony and Confirmation of the Judgement and Life to come because Gods Justice and Truth requireth that in the end it go well with the good and ill with the bad but this cometh not to pass in this life In all Chastisements how sharp soever God is alway to be acknowledged just in laying them upon us 1. Because his Punishments though many times very grievous yet are alway less then our deserts and offences Psal 103.10 2. Because our sins are the procuring Causes of all the Evils we suffer Mic. 7.9 3. Because in all his Corrections and Judgements he remembreth Mercy Hab. 3.2 The Comforts and Consolations which are to be opposed to Afflictions to invite us to Patience viz. 1. Remission of Sins and Reconciliation unto God in Christ Rom. 5.1 8.3 2. The Necessity of Obeying God and the love which we owe him Job 2.10 Psal 3.9 3. The worthiness of Vertue that is of Obedience towards God the true Vertue Mat. 10.37 16.25 4. A good Conscience the godly being assured of Remission of sins purpose to obey God being confident of pardon in Christ resolve to suffer any thing 5. The Final Causes thereof as Gods glory Psal 119.75 Our Salvation 1 Cor. 11.32 The Salvation of others Acts 5. 6. The comparing together of Ends and Events it is better to suffer now then hereafter 7. The Hope of Recompence for the Reward is great in Heaven Mat. 5.12 8. The Example of Christ for the Servant is not above his Master Joh. 15.20 and of his Saints who have suffered before us 9. The Certain presence and assistance of God in all cases and chances of this life 1 Cor. 10.13 Psal 19.15 10. The final and full Delivery whereof are three degrees contrary to those of punishment 1. In this life when we have the beginning of eternal life 2. In our Bodily Death when the Soul is carried into Abrahams bosom 3. After the Resurrection when we shall be perfectly blessed both in Body and Soul The way to comfort our selves in trouble 1. It is our duty to acknowledge Gods Mercy to be great who might lay a heavier burthen on us 2. We must with boldness come by Prayer unto the Throne of Grace that we may put him in minde of his Mercies 3. We must thereby be drawn unto Repentance acknowledge our sins to have deserved far greater Judgements then yet we suffer and turn unto God with all our hearts 4. We must praise the goodness of God in sparing us and not pouring out the full Vials of his wrath upon us 5. We must remember That we think not our selves hardly dealt with taking heed that we murmure not nor complain against God 6. We must be patient and not discouraged under the Cross As the hand of Gods particular Providence is in all our Afflictions these three ways 1. He decreeth and fore-appointeth them 2. He effecteth them 3. He ordereth and disposeth them So his presence with us in Affliction hath these three ends or effects viz. 1. To work our deliverance from the Cross so far forth as it shall be for our good 2. To temper and moderate our Afflictions 3. To give us strength and power to bear his Affliction The fruit of Affliction viz. 1. Consideration they make men to see and consider their sins 2. Humiliation they serve to humble men in their Souls before God 3. They serve to work Amendment of life 4. Abnegation they cause men to deny themselves and relie wholly on the Mercy of God 5. Invocation they make us cry heartily and fervently unto God 6. Patience Affliction brings forth Patience Patience Experience 7. Obedience whereof we have an Example even of Christ himself Heb. 5.8 Prosperity worketh in us effects contrary to those of Affliction 1. It maketh us proud and insolent 2. It stirreth us up to serve our own wicked lusts fed by it 3. It hardneth us against the affection of Mercy 4. It maketh us cold negligent and distracted in prayer 5. It provoketh us to impatience wrath and self-confidence 6. It besots us with the love of the world and our selves alienating our thoughts from the heavenly life For what causes God humbleth his servants by Affliction 1. That all glory and praise may be given to him alone 2. That we may put away the vain confidence which naturally is in us and cleave to him alone 3. That we may be the better fitted for Mercy the better prepared to receive his gifts 4. That we may humble our selves pray repent pity others renounce the world and desire life Eternal Why the Lord sometimes defers deliverance from Affliction 1. To humble us throughly and to bring us to an utter denyal of our selves 2. That we may acknowledge from whence our Deliverance comes 3. To make us distrust the World and draw our thoughts to the life to come 4. To prevent greater evils and dangers wherein we might run God is said to deliver us two ways 1. By preservation and keeping us that we shall not come into danger 2. By freeing us from the trouble into which we are faln And this is 1. By taking the misery from us 2. By takingus from the misery Directions to arm us with Patience and to keep us from despising Gods corrections 1. In all Afflictions look as David did 2 Sam. 16.10 unto him that smiteth and know that they come not by chance but by Gods wise-disposing Providence and that purposely to breed in us true remorse 2. Consider that the Lord can adde Cross to Cross till he pull down our proud stomacks break our stiff necks and bring us to utter confusion yea that his Wrath is as his Greatness Infinite 3. Take notice of the Judgements which other men by despising the Lords corrections bring upon themselves 4. Make use of the least Cross and begin speedily to humble thy self if thy heart begin to be touched suffer it not to be presently hardned again but more and more humble
out Hypocrites have no sound hearts and therefore they must needs at length be made manifest 2. Because a lyar will one time or other miserably forget himself and every Hypocrite is a lyar because he speaks one thing with his mouth and entertains another in his heart therefore doth the Apostle joyn them together They speak lyes in hypocrisie 1 Tim. 4.2 Moral Honesty being of near relation to Hypocrisie observe the difference betwixt the Righteousness of faith and the Righteousness thereof 1. The Fountain or Original of the Righteousness of Faith is the sanctifying Spirit but the cause of the Righteousness of Moral Honesty may be goodness of Constitution and Ingeniousness 2. The Righteousness of Civil Honesty in outward actions may make a colourable pretence of Piety but hath many secret relations to by-respects but that of Faith hath in all actions for the main scope and principal end onely the glory of God 3. That of Faith doth labor religiously and conscionably in that particular Calling wherein Gods Providence hath placed a man and in all the parts and special Duties of Godliness and Obedience but Civil Honesty wanders in the generalities of Religion 4. That of Faith doth strive with most earnest contention of Spirit for Spiritual comfort and a good Conscience before God but Civil Honesty is fully satisfied with Credit and Plausibleness among men 5. Civil Honesty makes no great conscience of small sins but the other makes resistance to all known sins 6. Civil Honesty doth not use to make opposition against the sins of the time but the other doth stand out for the honor of God unto the death The degrees of saving Faith which are peculiar to the children of God distinguish the Regenerate man from the state of the formal Hypocrite 1. A feeling and special approbation of the Word of Life and Promises of Salvation that with it he holds himself an heir of Heaven without it a childe of endless Perdition 2. A most fervent thirsting for the enjoyment of them enforced with groans unutterable and a gasping for it as the dry and thirsty ground for the refreshing drops of rain 3. An effectual Apprehension of them with a fast and everlasting hold 4. A particular Application of them closely and particularly to his own Soul 5. A full Perswasion of them being fully and truly perswaded by Gods good Spirit out of a consideration of his universal change that they are his own for ever 6. A Delight and Joy thence rising sound and unconquerable he lies down in peace that passeth all understanding he is filled with joy that no man can take from him he delights in the Grace apprehended as in a treasure far more dear then the glory of infinite Worlds yea or Life it self And from the power and working of this inward grace spring out Actions outward both in his general Calling of Christianity and his particular Vocation which by the Mercies of God are Faithful Constant Uniform Impartial Resolute Universal and Comfortable The Degrees of that Temporary Faith which the Formal Hypocrite may have viz. 1. He may be endewed with understanding and knowledge in the Word of God 2. He may be perswaded that it is divinely inspired and that it is most true 3. He may see clearly by the Law of God the grievous intolerableness of his sins and the heavy Judgements due unto them 4. He may be amazed and terrified with fearful horror and remorse of Conscience for his sins 5. He may give assent unto the Covenant of Grace in Christ as most certain and sure and may conceive That Christs Merits are of an invaluable price and a most precious Restorative to a languishing Soul 6. He may be perswaded in a generality and confused maner that the Lord will make good his Covenant of Grace unto the Members of his Church 7. He may be troubled in minde with grudgings and distractions with reluctation and scruples before the Commission of sin Like Pilate before his Judgement on Christ and Herod before his beheading of John Baptist 8. After a sin committed beside the outward forms of Humiliation by the power of this Temporary Faith he may be inwardly touched and affected with some kinde and degree of Repentance and Sorrow which may sometimes prevent temporal Judgements as in Achab and with a slumbering and superficial quiet secure the Conscience for a time The causes whereby Hypocrisie is many times by the world unjustly laid unto the charge of the children of God 1. Suspiciousness an Argument ever of worthlesness and impotency for insufficiency is most suspitious That suspition by which a man doth cast the worth actions and affections 〈…〉 in his own mould and thinks every man obno●●●●● to all the infirmities he findes in himself 2. Disability and blindeness in the natural man of discerning and acknowledging the operations of grace For no man can see the actions of grace in another without the experience of the power of godliness upon his own Soul We may know whether we have sincerity or not by these signs 1. If we approve our selves to God in all things not to man 1 Thess 2.4 and seek to have the Testimony of a good Conscience 2. If we are ready to yield simple and absolute obedience to Gods Word though our reason be often ready to cross the same even to all Gods Commands Psal 119.6 3. If we Repent of all sin and not retain any one but hate sin unfainedly in our selves and others 4. If we truly humble our selves in the sight of God casting our selves down in his presence confessing our own vileness and unworthiness to appear before him Mic. 6.8 5. If we be confident in good Causes and couragious especially in time of peril Prov. 10.9 6. If we be constant and persevere unto the end in well-doing and be resolved never to give over a continued course of Piety till we have finished the course of our Life the pilgrimage of our Misery The infallible Marks whereby to discern the hollowest hearted hypocrite 1. His chiefest care is to seek the pomp and glory of the World to be highly esteemed of others and never regarding the glory of God or what he esteems of him 1 Sam. 15.30 2. Hypocrites are sharp-sighted and have Eagles eyes to observe the behavior and look into the lives of other men but are as blinde in regarding as backward in reforming their own Luke 18.11 Matth. 7.3 4 5. We ought to begin with our selves and end with others 3. They are more curious in the observation of the ancient Traditions of men of the Customs of their Fore-fathers and of Devices of their own then of the holy Statutes and Commandments of Almighty God like the Pharisees Mat. 15. who charge not Christs Disciples with breaking the Laws of God but with transgressing the Ordinances of men which themselves made as Necessary to the Worship of God 4. They are precise in Trisles and loose in Weighty Affairs they binde and lay such
pleasures sake Matth. 12.36 4. Other under a colour of Love called Officious Lyes when one thinketh by them to do his Neighbor good 5. Dissimulation when one faineth that which is not or disguising when one hideth that which is to the end the contrary may not appear or seem to be Truth in speech is twofold viz. 1. Of the thing spoken when a mans speech is framed to the thing as it is indeed or as near as possible may be 2. Of the minde wherein it is conceived when one swears as he thinketh or is in Conscience perswaded of the thing The breach in speaking untruth is either 1. In lying which is against a mans knowledge judgement or 2. In speaking untruly which is upon error and rashly Men sin in lying 1. Publikely when being called to witness a Truth or matter they speak not the known Truth also when men go to Law for a light cause or no cause at all and so are the cause of Perjury when the Lawyer pleadeth an evil Cause and when the Judge maketh not diligent enquiry into the matter ere he give Sentence 2. Privately By prejudicing the good-name of their Brethren in reviling backbiting slandering c. By flattering when a man hideth the hatred of his heart with feigned words By false Witness we sin against 1. God whose Commandment is broken 2. The Judge who is deceived 3. The Hearers who are brought to have an uncharitable opinion of our Neighbor without cause 4. The Commonwealth which is disquieted 5. Our Neighbor who is hurt by being defamed 6. Our selves by corrupting our own Souls with a pestilent Lye The common distinction of Lyes viz. 1. An Officious Lye which is the telling of an untruth meerly to save a mans life or his Neighbors or their goods their freedom or peace without intending any hurt unto another And this kinde of Lye hath found some favorers but the least evil must not be done that good may come of it 2. A Pernicious Lye which is the telling of an untruth to deceive and to hurt our Neighbor for some base gain or out of malice or the like This is an essential property of the Devil 3. A Jesting or Sporting Lye which is the telling of things not true for the recreation of the hearers This is also a sinful vanity in all such as use it Rules to be observed that we may do our duty aright towards the maintaining of the credit and good name of our Neighbor viz. 1. We must have a good opinion in Charity of our Neighbor and a desire of his credit especially when he is well reported of 2. We must speak of what is good in our Neighbor to his praise and commendation 3. We must conceal and hide the infirmities of our Neighbor sparing to speak of them to his disgrace 4. If any thing be done by our Neighbor that may have a tolerable construction we must so construe it and not in the worst sense 5. To stop our ears against all slanderous Tales and Reports against our Neighbors credit and when he hath done ought amiss to grieve for it and endeavor to repair his credit by seeking to bring him to Repentance In this Commandment is forbidden 1. Unjust and false Accusations or suborning False Witnesses such shall perish Prov. 6.19 21. to accuse or witness against one falsly 1 Kings 21.13 2. To accept slight Witness against a man and proceed thereon to Sentence of Condemnation or to belye the Truth by giving false Judgement for Bribes or Affection 3. Envy Disdain of others desire of a mans own glory 1 Tim. 6.4 1 Pet. 2.1 4. Evil Suspitions 1 Tim. 6.4 1 Sam. 17.28 Acts 28.4 Here are condemned hard Censures and sinister Judgements against our Neighbor Mat. 7.1 2. Acts 2.13 14 15. 1 Sam. 1.13 5. A relation of the bare words onely and not the sense and meaning of our Neighbor Mat. 26.59 61. 6. A Lye whereby every falshood with purpose to deceive is signified whether in words or in deeds or concealing the Truth or any other way whatsoever be it for never so great a good to our Neighbor Lying is said to be the speaking of any thing contrary to Truth against knowledge with an intent or purpose to deceive because if unwillingly an untruth be told it is no Lye and if a Truth be told the person telling thinking it false it is a Lye in him for it is not that which a man speaketh but the maner how he speaketh that makes it a Lye Psal 12.2 Lying is expresly forbidden Levit. 19.12 Psal 5.6 101.7 Ephes 4.21 This Sin makes a man like the Devil himself Joh. 8.44 7. To pronounce unjust Sentence in Judgement to rest in one Witness to accuse another wrongfully to betray a mans Cause by delusion 1 Kings 21.12 13. Deut. 17.6 8. Openly to raise forged tales and reports of our Neighbor or privily to devise the same Rom. 1.20 Levit. 19.16 1 Tim. 5.13 to spread abroad flying tales or to feign and adde any thing unto them Prov. 26.20 21. 2 Cor. 12.20 To receive or believe those tales which we hear of others Exod. 23.1 1 Sam. 24.10 Slandering and backbiting Thou shalt not walk about with tales saith the Lord Lev. 19.16 9. To accuse our Neighbor for that which is certain and true through hatred and with an intent to hurt him 1 Sam. 22.9 10. Psal 52.1 2 3 4. 10. To open or declare our Neighbors secrets to any man especially if he did it of infirmity Mat. 18.15 Prov. 11.13 11. All babling talk and bitter words Eph. 5.3 Joh. 19.34 12. Flattery whereby we praise our Neighbor above that we know in him Prov. 27.6 Acts 12.22 This is a grievous sin in the Ministers of the Word 1 Thess 25. Jer. 6.13 14. Rom. 16.18 Dissembling against Truth with fawning insinuations for by-respects as by extolling him for Liberal who is vainly Prodigal or him for Frugal who is miserably Covetous Such will be cursed Prov. 14.24 13. Foolish and over-confident boasting Prov. 27.1 2. To be possessed with vain-glory and self-love which is the fountain of all Disgrace-doing unto our Neighbor 1 Tim. 6.4 14. To have ears open to false Rumors Thou shalt not receive a false tale faith the Lord Exod. 23.2 15. To be long-tongued more ready to blaze abroad the infirmities of others then to amend our own 16. In the heart to judge ill of our Neighbor without apparent cause or for some infirmities to pass Judgement against any man This is a most common vice though thereby we usurp Gods Office Rom. 14.4 and bring the Judgement of God upon our selves Mat. 7.1 17. False Records Ezra 4.19 18. Deriding and mocking the godly as the children did Elisha 19. To conceive a thought of prejudice wrongfully against his Neighbor 20. To envy the prosperity of our Neighbor 21. To seek onely our own good Report 22. To be suspicious 1 Cor. 13.5 23. To take mens sayings and doings alway in the
Oath which he swore to your fathers Deut. 7.7 8. And in Mat. 7.23 Christ saith of some I never knew you yet speaking of others he saith I know my sheep Joh. 10.14 And again I know whom I have chosen Joh. 13.18 and Paul saith The Lord knoweth who are his From which places we may safely gather That the Lord puts a difference betwixt man and man Angel and Angel acknowledging some to be his own and denying the same of others If God himself had not avouched this in his Word no man might have taught it but being here plainly propounded it is with all reverence to be acknowledged and received whereof no other Reason can be given but Gods good pleasure alone Mat. 11.25 26. For Jacob hath he loved and Esau hath he hated neither did this difference come from their works either good or evil for this difference God put between them before either of them had done good or evil but it is wholly ascribed to the Will of God who will have mercy on whom he will have mercy and whom he will he hardeneth Rom. 9. Neither must this seem strange unto us for we permit unto men to use their own discretion in their own Affairs and can we think it unreasonable in the Creator to use his touching his Creature Thus our whole Salvation is of Gods Free-grace which in Christ is the Fountain from whence it floweth yea it is the Beginning Continuance and Ending of our Salvation So that as for any foreseen Faith and Good-works they are not causes of our Election but fruits and effects thereof for what Faith or Good-works could be foreseen in the Sons of Wrath born dead in Sins God chose us not because he knew we would believe hereafter but to the end we should believe that is that he might bestow upon us Faith and so save us in his Son Eph. 1.4 Tit. 1.1 Acts 13.48 and Faith is the gift of God to us and the work of God in us Joh. 6.29 44. And if Faith foreseen were the cause of Election then Infidelity foreseen were the cause of Reprobation which is false because then all Mankinde should be reprobated and rejected forasmuch as the whole Mass of Mankinde sinned and God could foresee nothing in it as of it self but Incredulity and Unbelief Neither is our Election of Merit which is a work undue to which we are not bound making the Reward and Recompence that was not due to be due but all we can do is due unto God for our Spiritual life is called a Debt unto him both in respect of Creation Redemption and Glorification therefore neither is our Salvation of Merit but of Gods own Free-grace Neither is our Election of any Free-will in us to good for there is not any cooperation as the bold Papists affirm of mans Free-will with Gods Free-grace in the first act of our Conversion but God does all and we nothing in good things save as Instruments for God worketh both the will and the deed he preventeth us with his Grace prepareth us by his Word enclineth us by his Spirit and worketh both the beginning and ending of our Salvation For Election Vocation Faith Adoption Justification Sanctification and Eternal Glorification are never separated in the Salvation of any man but like inseparable Companions go hand in hand Now the Elect regenerated and once come unto the Church of the Saints may sometimes fall from it but they can never forsake it wholly because they never so fall as to become the Enemies of God and the Church nor finally because they persist not in this Apostacy but at length return to Repentance Thus was it with David and Peter Lastly the Notes of Election are Vocation Justification Sanctification and all they who are elected unto Salvation if they come unto the years of discretion are called outwardly by Gods Word and inwardly by his Spirit Of this Election Christ Jesus is the Foundation 1 Thess 5.9 The Decree thereof is that Book of Life wherein are written the Names of the Elect Rev. 20.12 2 Tim. 2.19 And the execution of this Decree is an Action by which God even as he purposed with himself worketh all those things effectually which he decreed for the Salvation of the Elect For they whom God elected to this end that they should inherit Eternal Life were also elected to those subordinate means whereby as by steps they might attain this end and without which it were impossible to obtain it Rom. 8.29 30. Election is twofold 1. Eternal whereby God out of the Lump and Mass of Mankinde hath before all Worlds chosen out some to life Eternal 2. Temporal 1. To some certain Office Joh. 6.70 chosen to the Apostleship All such are not Redeemed by Christ 2. Out of the World into the Church Joh. 15.19 Such are Redeemed by Christ Of Eternal Election 1. The Efficient Cause is the everlasting Purpose of God Rom. 9.11 2. The Material Cause is the Blood of Christ 1 Tim. 1.18 19 20. 3. The Final Cause or End why both God the Father hath loved and Christ for his Elect hath suffered is the Glory of God and Salvation of man Eph. 1.5 6. Rom. 8.29 The chief effects of Election are 1. Justification by Faith in this life and Glorification in the life to come 2. A Conformity to the Image of Christ in suffering here and enjoying glory hereafter Indeed the Effect of our Election is the whole Work of our Salvation and all the Degrees of our Redemption viz. 1. The Creation and Gathering of the Church 2. The sending and giving of Christ the Mediator and his Sacrifice 3. The effectual Calling of Men to his Knowledge 4. Faith Justification Regeneration and Good-works 5. Raising unto Glory Glorification and Eternal Life The means whereby to come to the Assurance of our Election as it is set down in the 2 Pet. 1. viz. 1. Faith to put our sole trust and confidence in God onely 2. Vertue an upright doing of the Works of the Moral Law 3. Knowledge whereby to carry our selves warily before men 4. Temperance in natural Appetite in Meat Drink Apparel c. 5. Patience a moderation of sorrow in enduring Affliction 6. Godliness whereby we Worship God in the Duties of the First Table 7. Brotherly Kindeness to embrace Gods Church and the Members thereof 8. Love whereby we are well-affected to all men even to our Enemies The three principal grounds of Assurance of Salvation in the First of John 1. He that hath communion of fellowship with God in Christ may be undoubtedly assured of his Salvation 1 Joh 5.11 2. He that is the Adopted Son of God shall be saved 1 Joh. 3.2 3. They that are assured of the love of God to them in particular may also be certainly assured of their Salvation 1 Joh. 4.9 From the Doctrine of Election follow two weighty Points to be known and believed viz. 1. That the Promise of Remission of Sins and Everlasting Life in the Messias is
conscionable dealing in all our actions amongst men Reasons that may enforce us to labor for this Sanctification viz. 1. It is the Will of God that we should be holy all impurity being contrary to his Will 1 Thess 4.3 2. It is the end of our Vocation and Calling not to live in filthy lusts and uncleanness 1 Thess 4.7 3. It is the end of our Election Eph. 1.4 we are not elected to live as we list 4. Because hereby we like obedient Children resemble our heavenly Father who is Holiness it self 1 Pet. 1.15 16. 5. Without this Holiness we have no part in the New-Birth Rev. 20.6 6. Without this Holiness we shall never see the Lord Heb. 12.14 VIII A Doption ariseth from our Union with Christ and is that whereby they which are justified are accounted of God as his own children it is annexed to Justification and thereby all such as are predestinate to be Adopted receive power to be actually accounted the Sons of God by Christ Eph. 1.5 from whose Obedience whereby he stood in subjection to the Law this Adoption springs Hence it is that we are freed from under the Law and have given unto us even the Adoption of Sons And this alone is that whereby we stand before the Tribunal Seat of God which also we are to oppose to the Judgement of God to Hell Death and Condemnation In this Grace of Adoption there be two Actions of God the one is Acceptation whereby God accepts men for his children the other is Regeneration whereby men are born of God when the Image of God is restored in them in Righteousness and true Holiness The outward means of Adoption is Baptism not Baptism alone but Baptism joyned with Faith for the Scripture speaking of Baptism comprehends both the outward and the inward Baptism which is the inward Baptism of the Spirit Mat. 3.11 1 Pet. 3.21 Now this Adoption gives us Assurance of Salvation for he that is the Adopted Son of God shall undoubtedly be saved Rom. 3.2 Moses had an higher esteem of this Grace of Adoption when he chose rather to be the Childe of God then the Heir of an Earthly Prince Heb. 11.25 So did David who though a King yet regardless of his Royalty setteth it at nought in regard of the Blessing of Adoption who otherwise could never have said That the Lord not the Kingdom of Israel was his Portion Psal 16. And so also must we have an high esteem thereof if we hope to have Heaven thereby Two Testimonies of our Adoption whereby we may know that we are Adopted viz. 1. The Spirit of God dwelling in us and testifying to our Spirit that we are the children of God 2. Our Spirit that is our Conscience sanctified and renewed by the Holy Ghost Six Notes of our Adoption out of the six Petitions of the Lords-Prayer viz. 1. An earnest and hearty desire in all things to further the glory of God 2. A care and readiness to resign our selves in subjection to God to be ruled by his Word and Spirit in thought word and deed 3. A sincere endeavor to do his Will in all things making conscience of every evil 4. Upright walking in a mans lawful Calling yet still by Faith relying on Gods Providence 5. Every day to humble a mans self before God for his offences seeking his favor in Christ 6. A continual Combat between the Flesh and the Spirit for otherwise Corruption would prevail over the whole man The Benefit the Children of God have by Adoption viz. 1. The Elect childe of God is hereby made a Brother of Christ 2. He is a King and the Kingdom of Heaven is his Inheritance 3. He is Lord over all the Creatures except the Angels 4. The holy Angels minister unto him for his good they guard him and watch about him 5. All things yea grievous afflictions and sin it self turn to his good though in its own nature it be never so hurtful 6. Being thus Adopted he may look for comfort at Gods hand answerable to the measure of his afflictions as God hath promised 7. God will provide all things necessary for the Souls and Bodies of his Adopted ones Mat. 6.26 So that they who drown themselves in worldly cares distrusting the Providence of God live like fatherless children 8. In that we are children we have liberty to come into the presence of God and to pray unto him Eph. 3.12 9. Nothing shall hurt them that are the children of God Psal 91.13 10. God will bear with the infirmities and frailties of them that be his children if there be in them a care to please him with a purpose of not sinning Mal. 3.17 Let not any man hence sin ' cause Grace doth abound Duties from Adoption viz. 1. If ye be the children of God then walk worthy your Profession and Calling for if we live according to the lusts of our flesh as the men of the world do whatsoever we profess we are in truth the children of the Devil Joh. 8.44 1 Joh. 3. 2. We must use every day to bring our selves into the presence of God and we must do all things as in his sight and presence presenting our selves unto him as Instruments of his Glory in doing of his Will This is the honor the childe of God owes unto him Mal. 1.6 3. Our care must be according to the measure of Grace to resemble Christ in all good Vertues and holy Conversation for he is our eldest Brother and therefore we should be like unto him 1 Joh. 3.2 3. 4. We must have a desire and love to the Word of God that we may grow thereby in Knowledge Grace c. This is the food whereby God feeds his children 1 Pet. 2.2 5. When we are under the Rod of Correction for God corrects all his children we must resign our selves to the will and good pleasure of God This is childe-like obedience and herewith God is well pleased IX REgeneration is a renewing and repairing of the decayed estates of our Souls or an Act of the Holy Ghost in Gods Elect whereby they are entred into a constant and faithful exercise of a godly life No general Preventing Grace in us which we have in our own power to use or refuse but the special Grace of the Spirit onely worketh in us Conversion the want whereof causeth in us our continuance in sin for it is God alone who worketh in us both to will and to do yet there is not one Effect ascribed to the Holy Ghost another to mans Will but the same to both unto the Holy Ghost the Principal Cause unto Mans Will as a Secondary and Instrumental Cause Like that vertue proceeding from that Art in the Artificers minde which guides the Instrument to frame this or that the which without it could not be done which invisible passage or secret influence we see not otherwise then in the Effect or like the vertue that directs the Arrow just to such a Mark so far and
excellency of Gods Gifts 7. If our Works should merit Christ should not be a perfect Savior nor Heaven purchased for us by his Blood onely which now to affirm is To Crucifie him worse then the Jews did Good Works cannot justifie us for these Reasons viz. 1. Because our best works yea the works of the Saints are not perfectly good and pure and that for these Reasons viz. 1. We do many things we should not and omit many things we should do 2. We mingle evil with the good we should do or we do good but we do it ill The thing done may be good but not the maner of doing it 3. The Saints which do good works do many things which are sins in themselves and so deserve to be outed of Gods favor Deut. 27.26 4. Because there is not that degree of Goodness in these good works that proceed from the Saints which ought to be or as God requireth 2. Though they were perfect yet are they due and debt so that we cannot satisfie by them 3. They are Temporary and bear not proportion with Eternal Blessings 4. They are Effects of Justification therefore no Cause thereof 5. They are excluded that we might not have whereof to glory 6. If they were part of our Justification our Consciences should be destitute of stable and certain Comfort 7. Christ should have dyed in vain and have risen in vain not to our Justification if we could have been justified by Works That justifying Faith which is required in every good work hath a double use in the causing thereof 1. It gives the beginning to a good work renewing the Minde Will and Affections of the worker whence the work proceedeth as pure water from a cleansed Fountain 2. It covereth the wants that be in good works for the best work done by man in this life is imperfect but hereby both the person of the worker is accepted and the imperfection of his work covered in the sight of God All these are excluded from being good works viz. 1. Which are sins in themselves and repugnant to Gods Law and his VVill revealed in his most sacred VVord 2. VVhich are not repugnant to the Law neither in themselves good or evil but which may yet by an accident be made good or evil 3. VVhich are good in themselves and commanded by God but yet are made sins by an accident in that they are unlawfully done or not as they ought to be How the works of the Regenerate and Unregenerate differ viz. 1. The works of the Unregenerate proceed not from Faith as those of the Regenerate do 2. The works of the Unregenerate are not joyned with an inward Obedience and therefore are done dissemblingly and are meer Hypocrisie but it is far otherwise with the Regenerate 3. As the works of the Unregenerate proceed not from the right cause so are they not referred to the chief end which is Gods Glory but in both these the works of the Regenerate are rightly and truly qualified Though the works of the most Regenerate yea his best works are good onely in part not perfectly because he is not wholly Spirit and no Flesh yet God approves of them And therefore we must again consider Good VVorks two ways viz. 1. In themselves as they are compared with the Law and the rigor thereof and so they are sins because they answer not to that perfection which the Law requireth for there be two degrees of Sin viz. 1. Rebellions which are Actions flatly against the Law 2. Defects when a man doth those things the Law commandeth but faileth in the maner of doing and so mans best works are sins 2. As they are done by a person Regenerate and reconciled to God in Christ and so God accepts of them for in Christ the wants of them are covered The Benefit of putting and keeping on the Holy Spiritual Brest-plate of Righteousness which is Good VVorks viz. 1. It keepeth us from being mortally wounded for so long as we retain a true purpose and faithful endeavor answerable thereto we shall never give our selves over to commit sin and iniquity 2. It bringeth great Assurance of our Effectual Calling and Spiritual Union with Christ yea even of our Election and Salvation Eph. 1.4 1 Joh. 2.29 3. It procureth us a good name in Gods Church while we live 2 Cor. 8.18 and a blessed Memory after we are dead Prov. 10.7 4. It confirmeth the Truth of Religion and so it may be a means to win such as are without 1 Pet. 3.1 to strengthen those that stand 1 Thess 1.6 7. and to stir up all to an holy emulation 2 Cor. 9.2 5. It doth highly honor God and occasion others to glorifie him Mat. 5.16 That we may be moved to the doing of Good Works and to live righteously observe here the blessed fruit and issue thereof as it is declared in Scripture viz. 1. Generally that the Lord loveth Righteousness Psal 11.7 that verily there is a Reward for the Righteous Psal 58.11 that Blessings are on the head of the Righteous c. Prov. 10.6 2. Particularly for the Righteous person himself viz. 1. In this Life the eyes of the Lord are upon the Righteous Psal 34.15 God will grant their desire Prov. 10.24 he delivereth them out of all trouble Psal 34.19 they shall never be forsaken Psal 37.25 they shall flourish like a Palm-tree Psal 92.12 c. 2. At their Death when they have hope Prov. 14.32 and are taken from the evil to come Isa 57.1 3. After Death their Memorial shall be blessed Prov. 10.7 in everlasting remembrance Psal 112.6 4. At the Resurrection they shall go into Life Eternal Mat. 25.46 They shall shine as the Sun in the Kingdom of their Father Matth. 11.43 5. For their Posterity The Generation of the Righteous shall be blessed Psal 112.2 Their seed shall not beg their bread c. Psa 37.25 XIII REpentance is a constant turning from all sin unto God or an inward sorrowing and continually mourning for sin joyned with Faith and Humiliation and both inward and outward amendment It is an aversion or turning from all a mans sins and a reversion or turning again unto God with all our Hearts Or Repentance is an unfained sorrow for and hatred of sin with an earnest Love of Righteousness by the which we are continually stirred up to abhor our Vices and are moved to do good Works not for fear of punishment or hope of reward but for that love we bear towards God that with a joyful heart we are moved to his Obedience and with grief go astray from his Commandments A Godly sorrow whereby a man is grieved for his sins because they are sins is the beginning of Repentance and indeed for substance it is Repentance it self So a desire to repent and believe in a touched Heart and Conscience is Faith and Repentance it self though not in Nature yet in Gods acceptation for in them that have Grace God accepteth the will for the
Cor. 5.11 12. 3. The party Delinquent must be convicted of some grievous crime Tit. 3.10 4. It stretcheth to him that cannot be otherwise brought to Repentance 5. He is driven from the visible and outward Communion of the Saints 6. The end or use of it is to make him ashamed that hath offended From the first part of the description of Excommunication we learn 1. That such as are themselves out of the Church and no true parts thereof have nothing to do herewith 2. How great the honor and dignity of the Ministery is to binde and loose offenders to open and shut Heaven to remit and retain Sins so that it belongeth not to private persons 3. That those Churches are deceived that cast from them this Ordinance of Christ From the second part of the description of Excommunication we learn 1. What person is to be Excommunicated even such an one as was called our Brother and registred in the number of the children of the Church and not such as are without 2. To Discern the gross folly and corrupt dealing of the Church of Rome which hath nothing to do herewith being not the true but a false Church 3. Such as are without the Church may not hence be encouraged to continue in Sin because they are without Church-Censures but let them hasten to come within the Church lest their condemnation be to come From the third part of the description of Excommunication we learn 1. That a man is not to be Excommunicated and put out of the Church for every trifle or for every Sin but for Scandals and Offences against the First or Second Table and such as are most notorious 2. That it is not to be used as the first but as the last Remedy so that there is required Patience and much Lenity waiting whether he will by private Admonitions and Exhortations private Reproofs and Rebukes be amended or not 3. That whilest Sin is secret and unknown no man can be Excommunicated but then onely when it is made publike and manifest unto all and it is then made publike when the Church is acquainted with it From the fourth part of the description of Excommunication we learn 1. That such as have offended and truly repent of their sins giving evident Testimony of their unfained Conversion ought to be spared and not censured to be comforted not terrified to be retained in the Church not rejected and cast out of the Church 2. That Impenitency is a most grievous Sin and next to Infidelity the greatest for as Faith is the Mother of Repentance so the unbelieving heart the cause of Impenitency 3. To make a difference between Sin and Sin between Sinner and Sinner some fight against their Sins as against their Enemies others cherish Sins in themselves and are resolved to continue in them From the fifth part of the description of Excommunication we learn 1. To avoid the conversation of such as are cast out of the Church so far as possibly we can 2. That to be familiar with such encourageth them to continue in their dangerous estate 3. That it is the duty of the Church to purge it self of such Offenders as a Body of corrupt gross and superfluous Humors From the sixth and last part of the description of Excommunication we learn 1. Not to condemn the Censure or open our mouthes against this Ordinance of God so soveraign so profitable so necessary forasmuch as the Church casteth them out for a season that it may receive them again for ever 2. Not to condemn such persons as are Excommunicated though we cannot admit of them as Christian Brethren yet they are natural Brethren and may belong to Gods Eternal Election The incestuous Corinthian was Excommunicated yet repented and laid hold of the Promises 3. That whatsoever power is given to the Pastors of the Church is given to Edification and not to Destruction 2 Cor. 10.8 This Ordinance is good for all that abuse it not The Use we are to make of this Sentence of Excommunication when it is denounced against others viz. 1. We must mourn for them as for the loss of a Member though themselves do not yea and pray for them most earnestly 2. We must beware and look to our selves that we come not into that estate lest their condition be ours 3. We must take heed that we do not harden them in their sins but seek by all lawful means to reclaim and recover them that they with us may joyn in lauding and magnifying the Name of the Lord. To whom be Glory for ever This Sentence flows but from the Church alone Deriv'd from Christ Denounced against none But Members of the Church when as they be Duly Convicted of Delinquency It 's Power extends not unto such who may Be Conquer'd to Repent some other way If not it may pronounce Exclusion From the Saints visible Communion Vntil the Church receive clear Evidence Of godly Sorrow and true Penitence FINIS AN Alphabetical Table Of all the Choycest FLOWERS Contained in this HOLY ARBOR The Number notes the Page the letters a. b. c. the parts of each Page A ADAM his state of Innocence 317 c. 318 a. his Fall 352 b.c. Adoption what 333 a. Doctrine thereof ibid. to 334 Signs thereof 333 b c. Benefits thereof 334 a. Duties required thence ibid. b. Adoration twofold 216 b. the Vertues therein required ibid. c. Adultery the several kindes and degrees thereof 285 286 the heinousness of the Sin ibid. c. 287 a. Remedies against it 110 c. 111 a. 288. Affliction Why God afflicts his people 198 a. 199 a. 200 c. Comforts opposed to Affliction ibid. c. The fruit of Affliction ibid. b. the Saints advantage thereby 201 b. Amen what it signifies 168 c. Anabaptists confuted 45 b. Angels their Nature and the maner of their Creation 317 b. wherein they are to be imitated by us 97 b. Anger holy Anger and its properties 281 Sinful Anger how to be avoided 279 b. 289 a. how it differs from hatred ibid. c. Anointing of Christ what it signifies 128 b. Antichrist proved to be the Pope 234 c. 235 a. Apparel Rules touching it 375 b c. the right use thereof 376 a. Apocryphal Books not penn'd by the Prophets 6 c. or the Spirit of God ibid. Ascension Christs Ascension into Heaven 140 a. 142 c. what most considerable therein 141 c. why Christ ascended 142 a. the Benefits thereof ibid. b. Assurance the grounds thereof 316 b. the necessity and the Signs thereof 189 c. 190 a. how it may be encreased ibid. B BAptism what 41 a. why instituted 46 c. 47 a b. how far Necessary 41 a. 45 c. the Doctrine of Baptism 41 to 47. Salvation possible without it 42 c. what the words in Baptism signifie 42 c. what it is to be Baptized into Christs death 43 b. the right Vse of Baptism 44 c. The Errors touching Baptism 45 a. the Papists Error touching it 46. the difference betwixt Baptism and Circumcision ibid. how they agree
46 b. Bible the Canonical Books thereof not perishable 6 a. Blood of Christ how it saves from sin 321 a b. Body the Metaphor thereof used in Scripture what it implieth 151 a. Bondage from the which Christ hath freed us is fourfold 322 a. Bread daily Bread what is meant thereby 98b Burial of Christ the Causes thereof 37 c. C CAlling twofold 150 c. Censure the evil of it and how many ways it may be committed 305 a. Censures of the Church threefold 379 c. Ceremonies Judaical oblige not Christians 16 a. Chastity twofold 289 b. Rules to preserve it ibid. c. 290 b. Children their Duties to Parents 263 c. Christ his Natures and Properties described 127 b c. the degrees of his Humiliation 127 a. also of his Exaltation ibid. Why called the First-born ibid. why called our Head ibid. 128 a. why called our Lord 127 Messias Christ or Anointed ibid. b. why called the Word 129 a. the Lamb from the c. 322 c. the Head of the Church 151 b. how said to be Present with us 157 b c. to what ends Anointed 128 b. his Royal Prophetick and Priestly Offices 128 129 his Theanthropeity and the use thereof 131 c. Church what it is to believe in the Holy Catholick Church 149 c. why called Catholick 150 a. The Church twofold Visible and Invisible ibid. b. 152 c. its Priviledges 151 c. Marks to know the true Church by 152 a. her Titles of Honor ibid. why called Holy ibid. b. her Properties ibid. why God permits it to be persecuted ibid. c. 153 a. 198 b. why the World hates it ibid. c. How the Church before Christs coming differs from the Church since his coming 154 a. how it differs from Common-weals ibid. b. her Office and Authority touching the Scripture ibid. how the Church may be said to erre ibid. c. what she may not do ibid. The Duties of Faith in the Holy Catholick Church 155 a. Circumcision why Abolished 46 c. why Christ was Circumcised ibid. b. Communion of Saints what 155 c. 156 c. Doctrine thereof 155 to 156. How we are said to have communion with God 157 c. the Signs of true Communion with God 158 a. 159 a. the Duty of the Saints by vertue of this Communion ibid. c. Conception of Christ by the Holy Ghost what 132 c. what it signifies 133 c. why he was conceived ibid. what it is to believe in Christ conceived 134 b c. Confession the Properties thereof 79 b. Christian Confession twofold 246 b. Caveats touching private Confession 225 c. Consubstantiation Reasons against it 57 b. Conversion what 337 Doctrine thereof ibid. to 343. Conversion twofold 341 c. how wrought 342 a b. The Object Subject Parts and Causes of Conversion ibid. b c. how is differs from false Repentance 343 a. Covenant betwixt God and Man twofold 330 a. Covetous how said to be Idolaters 309 a. Covetousness what 306 c. the Evils thereof 309 b. Remedies against it ibid. a. 110 b. Creation described 124 c. 125 a. 316 why God created the World 125 the Doctrine of the Creation ibid. b c. 316 to 319 the use of that Doctrine 119 b. Creatures four kindes thereof in the world 318 b. a twofold goodness in the Creature ibid. a. Creed why vulgarly called Apostolique 117 c. and why so framed ibid. Cross fourfold 198 c. a Cordial against fainting under it 200 a. 201 b. Cruelty the Properties thereof 278 b. Curse for Sin fourfold 19 c. D DEath of Christ why so ignominious 137 c. the Benefits thereby ibid. a. Debt a threefold Debt in Sin 105 a. Decalogue how divided 170 c. the Doctrine thereof 169 to 310 Rules how to expound it 171 c. 172 a b. Deity proved 119 c. 120 a. Deliverance how many ways God works it for his people 113 a. why God sometimes defers it 200 c. Descention of Christ into Hell what 135 c. the diversity of Opinions touching it 138 b c. Despair what 222 c c. Doctrine thereof ibid. to 226 threefold 225 a. Causes thereof ibid. b. Remedies against it 111 b. 225 c. 226 a b. Discipline what Ecclesiastical Discipline is 376 b. the nature of it how and by whom to be administred ibid. why and by whom Instituted 378 a. the Method thereof ibid. the Necessities thereof ibid. c. the Difference betwixt Church-Discipline and State-Government ibid. Distress of Minde the kindes thereof 224 b c. Doctrine how true Doctrine differs from other 153 c. Drunkenness Remedies against it 111 a. Duties the kindes thereof 271 a b. E EArth a twofold Right to it 272 c. Eating to the Lord what and how 374 b. Election what 313 Doctrine thereof ibid. to 316 kindes thereof 315 b. Effects thereof ibid. c. the way to obtain Assurance thereof 316 a. Envy twofold 281 c. why to be avoided ibid. Remedies against it ibid. Essence Divine what 2 b c. 3 b. how the Essence of God differs from the Essence of the Creature 4 a. Why the Difference of Essence and Person in the Trinity is necessary to be known ibid. b. Examination before Receiving the Lords Supper 49 c. to 53 b. Examiners three sorts of Examiners 53 a. Excommunication what 376 c. its parts 381 c. the Original thereof 377 a. how to be used ibid. b. of no force against the Childe of God ibid. c. Three Judgements in Excommunication 378 b. Observations thereon 379 b. Duties to be performed by and to the Excommunicate 380 a b. The fearful condition of Excommunicated persons ibid. c. the end and use of Excomunication 381 a b. with the use to be made thereof 382,383 Eyes Rules for the governing of them to avoid Adultery 289 a. F FAith what 174 b. Doctrine thereof 379 to 194 What the most Mysterious point of Faith 1 a. how many ways we may be said to Believe 183 b. Faith fourfold ibid. Historical Faith what ibid. c. Justifying Faith wherein it consists 184 a b. its Properties 186 c. Gods order in working Faith 184 c. how many ways Faith works 187 a b. how it admits Degrees 186 a. 238 c. 239 a. Effectual Faith what 187 wherein the effectualness of it consists 188 a. the Fruits Effects and Signs of Effectual Faith 192 b c. the Causes of uneffectual Faith 188 a. Faithless Works threefold 187 c. Tryal of Faith 50 b c. 51 c. Duties of Faith in Christ Crucified 138 a. how Faith and Hope differ 189 a. wherein they agree ibid. c. how Faith differs from Presumption 191 a. how Faith differs from Moral Honesty 238 b. the Degrees of Temporary Faith 239 b. Satans Engines to destroy Faith 188 c. Titles in Scripture given to Faith 190 c. how far the sense of Faith may be lost ibid. Motives to grow in Faith 191 b. Means to attain it ibid. c. The use of Faith in Prosperity 193 c. Faithful why called Saints 157 a. Fast what a Religious Fast is 369 a. 370 c. 371 a b. the several kindes thereof ibid. c. 372 a. Rules touching the same