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A19474 A hand of fellovvship, to helpe keepe out sinne and Antichrist In certaine sermons preached vpon seuerall occasions: by Robert Abbot ... Abbot, Robert, 1588?-1662? 1623 (1623) STC 59; ESTC S100379 198,722 312

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iudgements should sit at hand to giue aduice our affections should attend vpon them to maintaine and defend all honest resolutions and actions against all commers and lastly our desires should worke naturall instincts to practise them and the whole man should doe accordingly Or thus God hath placed the powers of the soule in excellent order for the gouernment of man Our mindes in a throne aboue to gouerne all the motions dispositions passions and affections of the heart our hearts are set in the midst to receiue information from the mindes to direct themselues and our desires and valorously to flie vpon them by feare loue ioy anger and the like if they shal● rebell our desires are set lowest to be corrected by the heart and gouerned by the head Now that God may haue an account how this worke within vs goeth forward and we may be furthered in our course to happinesse God hath appointed our consciences to keepe Assizes to try whether we haue beene faithfull yea or no. The second ground of our Assize is in respect of our selues that we may be the better prepared for the great Assize of the day of Iudgement whensoeuer it shall come Yee know that we beleeue that such a day shall come and that Christ shall keepe it in that nature which he assumed and wherein he suffered As therefore all our musterings before particular Captaines should not be for shew or fee but the better to fit vs to carry our selues in a martiall manner before our King or Generall if need require so these particular Assizes are but for the better fitting of vs for our great account before and vnto God And therefore when Dauid had arraigned himselfe at home he goeth to God and saith Try and examine me whether there be any way of wickednesse yea or no. Vse What shall I say now I will intreat you so farre to tender the glory of God and the good of your soules as diligently to attend to the businesse within Our soules doe so liue in our senses and wee are so inured to earthly things Facti sumus fugitivi a cordibus nostris that wee are made runnagates from our owne hearts But if euer we would haue a glorious triall before our God let vs see how our cause will stand or fall before the barre of our owne hearts I know that in the case of good we may be deceiued by the voice of conscience For the law of nature which should direct vs being in a great part dashed out and ignorance of the word being wilfully fauoured there are many fearefull euils which we doe not apprehend as euils as for example to sinne in thought is nothing for thoughts are free to sinne in word is but a word and what is that so we sinne not against our neighbour it is no matter though we make bold with God to sinne with the times to doe as others doe to walke in the waies of our fathers is good religion yea and besides such is the darknesse of our cogitations that in the midst of diligence that which we know is not the tenth tenth part of what we are ignorant of How therefore can it be other but that our owne hearts should deceiue vs in good yet in the case of euill we may assure our selues that it doth not make vs worse than we are in and of our selues Though in affliction o●●on●cience o● pan●●● o● the new birth ●t may make our estates worse th●n they are we being more sen●●ble of our ●st●tes from within than of that from without As therefore it is not safe for vs to rest in the voice of conscience when it makes vs good for Paul knew nothing by himselfe yet was he not thereby iustified so we must be carefull to heare what conscience saith when it layeth sinne to our charges that so Gods Assize there may goe on to Gods glory and our good What will it auaile vs to be crowned with a May-flower garland of the praises of this world if we walke not in the presence of our owne hearts Quest It may be you will say If God hath granted out a warrant for the keeping of this Assize why then is it not feelingly kept in euery man Answ I answer that wee may finde foure causes of this The first is ignorance For as the eye worketh not in a darke place where it cannot by a fitted conueiance receiue variety of obiects so the conscience worketh not where there is not the light of knowledge from the word of God to direct it by The second is hardnesse of heart for as a man that is dead or hath a deaded or astonished bodie for the present cannot feele any order or disorder any whip lash or gash so a seared crusted and senselesse conscience is not sensible of the cursed garboiles in the soule nor capable of any orderly proceeding against them The third is spirituall madnesse for as mad men cannot keepe any faire quarter with themselues much lesse can it be expected that he should wisely execute any deputation from others so spiritually mad men who are out of their wits with selfe-loue and loue of this world who runne vpon the pikes of hell-dangers who will not be perswaded by the praiers and teares of their best friends are neither fit nor able to receiue order from God for so high and so excellent imployment The last is pride For as in a countrey where there is no disorder if it were possible in these cursed daies of sinne for such an one to be there is no Assize because no need so when we are Pharisies in iustifying our selues priding our hearts in our ciuill righteousnesse and therefore setting our passions on worke vpon whomsoeuer shall discouer their hellish nakednesse there is no inward Assize because as they thinke there is no need Quest It may be you will say seeing these things doe hinder it how may I further the keeping of it Answ I answer As in generall we must striue to root out ignorance to rent our hearts to come vnto our selues as the prodigall and to be nothing yea hell in our owne eies so in particular I would commend three meanes to this end especially The first is our praiers to God to write the records of his truth in our mindes and hearts An Assize cannot be kept without law nor this without the law of God But if once we can get the law written in our mindes and in our hearts so as it doth not onely gild our vnderstandings but goare our hearts and leaue a new impression of holinesse to the Lord then we shall see a full Court presently and such wounding inditements for sinnes past with such crying out for the Psalme of mercy that we shall haue no rest till we haue rowled our selues vpon God in Christ and haue found our selues in some measure sealed with the spirit of promise against the day of redemption The second meanes is our not disturbing the Court but suffering
soules let vs watch and these things shall not moue vs. For first we depend not vpon any priuate man or spirit for that doctrine which we allow but vpon the publike Spirit of Iesus Christ speaking in the Scriptures We embrace not the Scriptures for mans sake as the Papists doe so farre as the Pope approueth but man and his opinions for the Scriptures sake and so farre as we finde them agreeable to them so farre we consent vnto them Secondly we may not thinke it strange that Luther and other gracious reformers should be railed at by his and their enemies who felt his priuie and powerfull blowes to the shaking of the Popish Monarchie It is ordinarie to faithfull Teachers to be subiect to the disgracings of their aduersaries both in respect of their persons and doctrines Tertullus said of Paul Acts 24.5 Ierem. 18.18 Se● for thi● also these places Iohn 8 48. Iohn 10.20 Acts. 6.11 Act 10.20 21. Certainly we haue found this man a pestilent fellow a moouer of sedition Ieremiahs enemies say of him Come and let vs imagine some mischiefe against him come and let vs smite him with the tongue Why vpon what ground will they deale thus with Ieremie Surely they doe not say because the Pope for whom we work cannot erre and the Church whereof wee are members cannot want the spirit to guide it yet they speake something like it when they say For the Law shal not perish from the Priest nor Counsell from the wise nor the Word from the Prophet So that we may not thinke it a new thing that learned and resolute Luther should when he is with God be thus trampled vpon by men Thirdly it is very likely yea in its kinde certaine that a As certaine as those things whi●h come vnto vs by humane relation Luther was a reuerend and holy man For though his professed enemies such as Coclaeus Parsons and the rest of the Iesuites are doe declaime against him yet in his daies he had the testimonie both of God and man Of God in that miraculous successe which he had in his preaching for the spreading of the truth against the power and policy of the Emperour and Pope and what euer other enemies he had which were neither few nor of small place and respect in the world Dr. White his Way Ca●sa Regia Couent Li●hf Episc cap. 3. sect 16. pag. 119. Of man in the testimonie of Erasmus which is often laid on the trencher of our aduersaries and cannot be wiped off Notwithstanding which testimonie we doe freely acknowledge both that his many oppositions and multiplicitie of troubles made him more pettish and rash in words than hee should haue beene as also that hee had two other faults as Erasmus is said wittily to passe his iudgement concerning him to the Duke of Saxonie to wit That he medled with the Popes Crowne and with the Monkes bellies Fourthly put case that Luther and the rest of those godly Reformers were wicked shall we not haue the same libertie which the Church of Rome hath When we obiect the horrible and outragious wickednesses of many Popes who were for the time Heads of their Church vnder Christ to conuey spirituall life into the whole bodie they doe answer in effect that we need not take so much paines as to cast it in their teeth for they doe of their owne accords acknowledge it and are not ashamed to make the most brutish and cursed villanies of the Popes Bellarm. in his Preface to his Bookes De Pontif a proofe of the excellencie of that Chaire and of the prouidence of God ouer it If then they proue the holinesse of their Religion from the vnholinesse of their Popes why should they proue the impietie of our Religion from the impietie of Luther if it were true Fiftly as for Luthers learning from the Deuill I answer two things distinctly First put case that Luther had said that the Deuill did preach vnto him the true doctrine of the Sacrament Is it any newes that the Deuill should preach the truth to disgrace it Doth nor Iesus Christ for this cause hinder the Deuil from saying that he knew him Marke 1.34 because he needed not his testimonie though he was readie enough to giue it which could doe him no good And did not the woman who had the diuining Deuill say of Paul and Silas Acts 16.17 That they were the seruants of the most high God shewing the way of saluation In which the truth was spoke and yet saith the Text it grieued Paul because by this meanes it might seeme that the Deuill and the Spirit of God taught one doctrine So that we may conclude that the Deuill will preach the truth for his owne aduantage But secondly the truth is that this is but the slander of an enemie For all of vs that haue beene vrged with it as we cannot thinke Luther such a foole as to bewray his owne secrets and openly to professe that the Deuill was his master to the so great disaduantage of his cause So vpon diligent search we can finde but this to be the vpshot of what he saith in this kinde namely that he hauing learned the true doctrine of the Sacrament in the Schoole of Christ the Deuill vrged it strongly against his former practise of Massing to draw him to despaire because he had so often dishonoured God Lastly concerning our refusall as they please to tearme it of disputation with them First we see their pride in boasting of their learning among their blinded disciples as if it were so great that our side were afraid to looke ●h●m in the faces Secondly we cannot thinke ou● cause to be ●he worse because we do not dispute with them for the garland Who knoweth not that a quicke wit a nimble tongue a confident spirit and a bold face will goe beyond a good cause at such a time Doe we not see that a wrangler will haue the last word what euer his cause be and I am sure it had beene better with Eue if she had neuer disputed the case with the deuill and it would bee better with all of vs if in arguments against the truth wee could attaine to Pauls Logicke Rom. 3.4 5 6. to hold the conclusion whatsoeuer the premises are Thirdly the world hath beene well acquainted with Popish disputations and vpon what aduantages they haue beene vndertaken Iohn Hus and Ierome of Prage and Luther can witnesse against whom there was more power than arguments and wee cannot forget how holy Bradford co●plained that they would dispute with him Fox his Ma●tyrol Abst● by M●s●● to wit that hee should dispute against the things which they had alreadie determined whereby it appeared that they sought not the truth but his destruction and their owne glory yea and wee see still that where the Popish power reacheth whatsoeuer be the propositions the conclusion is the Inquisition and the mercy of those holy Fathers by fire
ministeriall head ouer all the world both for order and iurisdiction ouer all Bishops all Christians to set out the rule of faith lawes dispensations ouer all the world to trample vpon kings and to decree them to butchery or honour as they serue for the good of the Catholike cause Now how this and the like stuffe can bee inferred from the words of Christ to Peter to vphold their monarchicall head I would intreat you to call your best Logicke to an account and to doe your best to iudge Secondly because the Pope pleades more for himselfe than he doth for him from whom he pretends to receiue deputation He is like an vnfaithfull friend who being sent to speake a good word speakes one for his friend and two for himselfe For what is it that doth imbroyle the whole Christian world more than the Popes monarchie All kingdomes must be at his dispose that so such Princes as he can traine vp in dull ignorance may through ambition be prouoked to be his white sonnes that they may attaine to great honours and other mens inheritances vnder him All must be Hereticks that are not within his Pale The word of God must depend vpon his allowance Scripture must be no Scripture except he looke fauourably vpon it and giue it what sense pleaseth him Kings must be no Kings if it pleaseth him to excommunicate them and we must be no ministers because our calues are cow-calues as that blessed Martyr Woodman answered the Bishop of Chichester who wanted the Popes Bull to consecrate or confirme him in his Bishopricke with many other prettie toyes Thirdly because all the notes of the great Antichrist that are in Scripture doe agree to him to wit the Pope as is maintained to his face by our dread Soueraigne and the reuerend Father Bishop Downame in his treatise of Antichrist and in his Diatriba of the same subiect It is true indeed they would make vs beleeue that his chayre is made of Irish wood to which no copwebs of falshood can cleaue nor any venomous creature come neere without death and that his Church is like that which the mariners built in Illiria to Saint Iohn de Maluatia whose very morter was tempered with malmsey a sweet and precious Church but all the water in Tyber will not wash off that imputation except he doe penance for his ambition and opposition and become such a Bishop as the primitiue godly Fathers were Fourthly because it cannot be shewed that Christ hath appointed the Pope to be his Vicar hee often speaketh of the Holy Ghost as when he saith Ioh. 14.26 The Holy Ghost whom the Father will send in my Name he shall teach you all things and againe When he is come which is the Spirit of truth Ioh. 16.13 hee will lead you into all truth but he neuer speaketh of the Pope If he doe let him shew it if he doe not let him consider how hatefull it is for a man to put himselfe into such high commissions without warrant from God and how iustly wee may lay this in his dish No man taketh this honour but he that is called of God as Aaron was Thus I hope you perceiue that we cannot be assured that that is the true Church whereof the Pope is the head Vse Oh therefore my beloued countrey-men leane not to him and to his politicke apostasie lift vp your heads and behold by faith the bowing pillars of his proud monarchy All his diuine vnction cannot foresee nor all his keyes and swords helpe himselfe from that miserie which the Kings of the earth who are and shall fall from him shall bring vpon him As therefore Moselanus a Iew when hee had killed a fowle whose flight the hoast of Alexander expected to prognosticate good or euill successe by said vnto them What a foule shame is it for so many worthy men to seeke knowledge of her that knew not what should happen to her selfe So say I What a shame is it for so many wise men to seeke wisdome and direction from him who is not wise enough for himselfe but rageth now like the deuill because his time is but short and yet cannot see it Surely as he that died of the bite of a weasell lamented because it was not a Lion so will such at the last lament that they haue fallen by that weake one though neuer so great in the eyes of his flatterers whose very throne shall fall as a milstone into the sea to wit with great violence noyse horrour and trouble to the world But now you will say Put case that we account Iesus Christ our head yet if we are not of his body we are not of that Church whereof he is the head It is true therefore that you may know your selues to be of the body I must goe two steps further Richar. Transire in Christum et coalescere cum Christo Membra secundum praescientiam et s●cundum praesentem iusticiam First I must shew you how God doth fit vs to be made one with our head and to be members of his body We are falsly charged to require inward qualifications of holinesse in euery member of the Church for there are members in Gods Book before calling as well as such as are called and of such as are called there are members by profession which do admit of a cutting off yet if we would assure our hearts that we are so in the Church as wee are also of it Membra 1. Numero 2. Merito et electione ut corruptè à scholasticis pro opere et electione we must be inwardly coapted and fitted to be made one with him Now for this fitting of vs for our head it must be by three actions of our good and mercifull God First God must cut vs from the wilde oliue that is he must separate vs from corrupted Adam as we are borne after his cursed image To this end God giueth vs by the law a sight of some one sinne which hath haply made deepest gashes in our consciences together with the punishment due vnto it At which sight we suspecting what all our sins may deserue if God shall muster them together through compunction of heart we are brought to a detestation of our former estate and so to a casting off of our transgressions that we may not die Secondly God must pare vs to put vs into the true oliue Christ by humiliation when we see how fearefully wee lie liable to Gods iustice we despairing of all helpe and comfort elsewhere doe humbly lay our selues downe at Gods feet to bee disposed to shame sorrow feare confession prayer and application of spirituall reasons to our carnall hearts to mortifie and dead our corruptions according to Gods Word Thirdly God must ingraft vs into Christ How is this When by the power of the Word and Spirit he doth worke faith in our hearts by which wee comparing the bottomlesse pit of our sinful estate with the height length bredth
and I pray God they may see it from true mortification and reformation of heart For doe but consider that either they doe not know or will not know the right enemie wherewith they should fight to this end that is the cursed Flesh which is in our bosomes For when the Scripture speaketh of the lusts of the flesh which we must mortifie they doe sometimes vnderstand our bodies and therefore for the suppressing of it Vnderstand me not as if I did condemne Fasting and other laudable bodily exercises but onely as shewing by these principall weapons what principall aduersarie they fight against to wit the bodie Ephes 5.28 29. they doe presse vpon bodily exercises as Fastings whippings Haire-cloth bare-foot visitings of Temples Shrines and the like whereas the bodie and the spirit may well goe hand in hand as the Apostle saith No man euer yet hated his owne flesh but nourisheth and cherisheth it euen as the Lord the Church to wit so farre forth as it may be done without making Nature either proud or wanton Sometimes againe they doe vnderstand the brutish and inferiour facultie of the soule whereby it affecteth and desireth profits pleasures as meats drinkes cloathing and procreation But euen this also in it selfe cannot be said to be our enemie which being well manned is of so good and necessarie vse in the life of man that without it there would neither be preseruation of particulars nor kindes Nature would neither preserue it selfe nor the succession thereof in its like In both these they misse the marke and shoot at a friend in stead of an enemie In which respect a man may goe to the height of their taught deuotion and yet be as arrant hypocrites as euer were But as for our Church the whole bent of it tends to perfect our sanctification in the feare of God 2 Cor. 7.1 It makes the flesh to be the corruption of our whole nature both in our bodies and soules The corruption of our mindes by enmitie and ignorance of our consciences by stupiditie and furie of our cogitations by vanitie of our wils by rebellion of our desires by disorder the like So that we teach and presse that the minde must goe to the pot as we say as well as the appetite yea the wisdome of it whereby we exalt our owne righteousnesse and set vp our holinesse and other worth as cursed idols as well as the brutish folly that is in our carnall desires We doe not flatter the minde with an aptnesse to spirituall wisdome or the will with an aptnesse to will good if it be excited by the Spirit that so we may dishonour Gods worke of grace and make our selues something when we are nothing but as we doe giue the greatest glory of good as it is wrought in and by vs to the minde sanctified for which cause the whole worke of our conuersion as it is well obserued is called the changing of the minde 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Matth. 3.2 so in sinning we make it the arch-rebell in yeelding it selfe so freely to thinke of wickednes so fully to discourse of the profit pleasure and honour of it so friendly to parly with euery suggestion which offereth it selfe to our corrupt hearts that it is euen basely bribed and blinded to giue way to the consent of our wills to the greedinesse of our desires to the swift mouing of our affections and to the eagernesse of our actions to doe those things which are wicked in the sight of God and man Oh how doth this make vs to denie our selues and flie vnto him that is made wisdome 1 Cor. 1.30 righteousnesse sanctification and redemption to vs while the Popish Church liuing in a seeming holinesse in some of her choise members doth yet vnholily rest vpon her owne wisdome though it be to the tolerating of Stewes to the filling of Rome it selfe with the cries of Sodome But say they what are their vnholy Stewes more than our vnholy Vsury For if Stewes be collerated amongst them to preuent a greater mischiefe so is Vsury amongst vs. But stay a while As Leontines pointing to his gray haires said to the Antiochians Hac niue liquefacta multum erit luti When this snow is thawed there will be much dirt so when this blister is pricked may we say there will appeare much vlcerous matter For the clearing therefore of our Church in this point of Vsury that the Stewes of Rome may the more stinke in the nostrils of good men consider two Questions First whether England doe permit Vsury as the Church of Rome doth the Stewes Secondly whether if wee did it might stand in equall ballance with a Stewes To the first I answer two things First that England doth not permit Vsury but restraine the abominable griping that was brought in by the Iewes For if you looke into the Law you shall finde it called a Statute against Vsury yea it calleth Vsury a vice and sinne and saith it is detestable as you may see in t●e Statutes at large where the Prefaces are yea I haue heard as I take it men skilfull in the Law say that if it can be proued by bond that a man doe but take ten sh●llings in the hundred for Vsury hee forfaits the whole summe Therefore the Vsurers are so craftie as to make their Creditours vpon the lending of an hundred pound to become debtors to them for an hundred and ten or eight or seuen or the like by bond and not to binde them to giue ten pounds for the meere vse of an hundred Secondly England dealeth not with Vsury as Rome doth with the Stewes for shee doth blanch and excuse it and therefore sometime they say that it is but a permission of a lesse euill to auoid a greater as Sodomy Buggery and the like when yet vnder this cloake Ely might without blame haue suffered the sins of his sonnes in the porches of the Tabernacle to preuent more hainous sinnes and further degrees of Sodomy Sometimes againe they tell vs that they doe not permit them without meanes to reclaime them both by punishments and preachings as if it could excuse them to permit houses of sinning that they may exercise their censures they are mad men that build houses for theeues and burne them downe when they haue done Sometimes againe they will tell vs that the rents and pensions so gotten are imployed to maintaine penitent harlots as if God delighted in the price of a harlot or it were lawfull for vs to doe euill that good might come thereof Thus would the Church of Rome like a harlot put a beautifull complexion vpon an vgly face yea from such like and other filthinesse euen in their holy Fathers the Popes See Bellar. in his preface to his bookes De Pontif. Rom. they can draw an argument of glory and renowne to Peters chaire as being a signe of Gods speciall hand that it hath endured so long But as for vs we are readie to condemne
whose corne and wine and oyle increase We shall stand againe before the God of our consciences for though he seeme to frowne and send afflictions and crosses and diseases and death Esai 38.3 yet as Hezekiahs Iurie gaue way to that comfortable prayer O Lord remember I beseech thee how I haue walked before thee with an vpright heart so will ours giue way to our comfortable grasping of God and his promise that we perish not in trouble Thus wee haue viewed these reasoning thoughts as a witnesse propounding the truth A Iudge within vs. and as a Iurie applying it to the parties to be tried we come now vnto it as a Iudge concluding Conclusion without all which three there can be no perfect reasoning Whence I offer this point to consider that Wee haue also in our selues vnder God our Iudges For hence is it that we are said to haue reasonings because as a Iudge wee both open the law that the witnesse may propound fit truths and as a Iudge we determine accordingly in the conclusion As it is with Princes and Kings who are the high Iudges of their kingdomes they haue Iudges vnder them by deputation to whom they commit their iudgements of God and allot their seuerall circuits so though God be the high Iudge of heauen and earth ouer the hearts and consciences of all men yet doth hee depute these inferiour Iudges in the circuit of euery mans brest to passe the conclusion and sentence of God Hence is it that Saint Iohn doth couple God and conscience in the selfe-same action of a Iudge 1 Iohn 3.20 If our hearts condemne vs God is greater then our hearts and knoweth all things To condemne wee know is an action of a Iudge and how good cause wee haue to account our consciences our Iudges will appeare if wee consider these three points First That sentence which is giuen by conscience is confirmed by God wee see that so soone as Adam had sinned though no man pursued him no Angell reproued him and the Lord was not yet come hee found himselfe condemned by the inward Iudge and when God came he ratified the same sentence But wee cannot thinke that God would confirme the sentence of a rebell who hath set himselfe in Gods throne to iudge without God Secondly Such is the maiestie and authoritie of conscience that it stands against all the world Looke as a good Iudge though all the world doe pleade against the truth yet he is for it and will not reuoke his iudgement so is it with conscience Therefore doth the Apostle set the sentence of conscience against the calumnies of all men saying 1 C●●●● 4 I passe very little to be iudged by you or of mans iudgement no I iudge not my selfe for I know nothing by my selfe and so forth as if hee should say Yee are very forward in censuring mee both in respect of my gifts and faithfulnesse in my place I weigh your censures little though I will not be the preacher of my owne praise yet I tell you I know nothing by my selfe Thus conscience of his faithfulnesse did beare him out against the slanders of false Apostles Thirdly where conscience terrifieth no creature can comfort the pleasures of Paradise auailed not Adam when he was driuen to hide his head in a bush the pleasures of Canaan did Dauid little pleasure when he was driuen to cry out My sinne is euer before me All the delights of Babylon could not raise vp Belshazzars heart when the hand wrote Gods sentence against him on the wall and in his conscience If the Iudge condemne who shall absolue Excellent is that similitude which an ancient makes to this purpose A man condemned to die trieth his three friends to procure his pardon one saith I haue no grace with the King and therefore I can promise thee no such kindnesse yet this will I doe I will buy thee meat and drinke garments and musicke thou shalt want nothing that may giue thee content while thou art here All this is good and yet it contents not because the poore man wanteth a pardon The second answereth I know not how to get to the King but this I will doe I will bewaile thy miserable hap weepe for thy losse and attend thee to the court gates All this is good kindnesse and yet it contents not because the poore condemned man would haue a pardon The third saith Rest vpon my kindnesse I am one of the Kings fauourites and he will deny me nothing I will goe to the court and before the day of execution I will surely bring thy pardon sealed This is he this is the friend that will make the poore man out-face all his trouble because he answereth to the point indeed Behold the case is ours we are poor condemned wretches who must to hel without our pardon our three friends are the world wife children and kindred and a good conscience The world will prouide all necessaries for our bodies but not a pardon this is not purchased with a corruptible price of siluer and gold Wife and children will lament our losse and goe sighing and sobbing to the graue with vs but they leaue vs to our owne shifts for a pardon But a good conscience will make vs outstand all dangers it will procure our peace and our pardon As the world cannot helpe where conscience hurteth so the world cannot hurt where conscience helpeth Vse Thus wee haue considered this iudging power of conscience Oh that wee had hearts to doe our office to conscience and to presse our consciences to doe their offices to and for vs neither can bee done without our care yet we must doe both We must doe our office to conscience three waies First by praying to God for it Ye know that we must pray for them that are in authoritie ouer vs and shall conscience be neglected God forbid When there was no King in Israel ye know what disorders happened surely lesse or fewer doe not happen where conscience is not in full power Miserable is the condition of the inhabitants of Brasile Sine fide Sine lege Sine rege who are said to bee without religion without law without a King and they are no lesse wretched who are without this religious Iudge and gouernour conscience Therefore let vs pray for it that God would giue it that God would keepe it and keepe it tender that so wee may liue a quiet and comfortable life vnder it Secondly wee must doe our dutie to conscience by giuing it good words Yee know the Word of God Thou shalt not curse the ruler of thy people Oh that we could alwaies remember it in the case of conscience hee that buies with conscience sells with conscience rules with conscience obeies with conscience is commended euen of men that haue no conscience yet if conscience rule in any in the seruing of God and make them tremble at Gods precepts promises or threatnings and the like hee is but
ignorance was ineuitable as also because they practised according to that Christian knowledge which then was attainable and sinned not wilfully as we doe against that glorious light which God doth now offer in the ministerie of his most holy word Thirdly considering that our fore-fathers acts are no sufficient warrant for vs wee notwithstanding our reuerence vnto them dare not sweare to their sayings and admit of a blinde imitation of their actions without triall but with a holy anger against that cursed apostasie which misled our deare predecessors and brought them to some acts of superstition we bring them to the touchstone of Gods word and wherein he will haue vs leaue them we follow God and humbly thanke him for that reuelation wherein he will giue vs leaue to goe with them we cheerefully follow them blessing the same God who made them such faithfull guides Thus I feare I haue beene too long in striuing to root out the conceits of noueltie and vnnaturalnesse in those truths which our writings will present vnto you But hauing so good proofe of both your loues vnto me I doubt not but either of you and both of you will spare so much time as may afford diligent reading and obseruation of what is written As for the Writer yee may haue a more complementall not a more heartie well-willer As for the subiect of my writing as Terentius a noble Captaine in daies of old when he saw his petition which he put vp for the Christians to be torne in peeces by the Emperor gathered vp the tottered shreds and said I seeke neither houses nor lands gold nor gaine but a Church So haue I wholly aimed at Conscience and a Church the Church of God amongst vs. What shall I now say To you Sir as Occham said to the Emperour in another case and kinde when he was vexed with the Popes ambition Tu me defende gladio ego te defendam verbo Defend me with your sword and I will defend and second you by the Word the Spirits sword To you Madame as Paul to the Hebrewes Pray for vs Hebr. 13.18 for we are assured that we haue a good conscience in all things willing to liue honestly To you both liue to your selues liue to yours liue to the Church of God amongst vs. So shall hee with more cheare put vp your suits to God who alreadie is much and desires to be more bound vnto your Worships and shall rest Your faithfull Shepherd to vse in any thing within the compasse of his office ROBERT ABBOT TO THOSE CHRISTIAN Readers of whose reading I am well assured euen to my deare and louing Parishioners of Cranebrooke in Kent THE GOD of peace that brought againe from the dead our Lord Iesus Heb. 13.20 21. the great Shepherd of the sheepe through the bloud of the euerlasting Couenant make you all perfect in all good workes to doe his will working in you that which is pleasant in his sight through Iesus Christ our Lord. Though I cannot say with Paul to the Galathians I beare you record that if it had beene possible Gal. 4.15 yee would haue plucked out your owne eyes and haue giuen them me Yet out of a taste of the singular loue and respect which yee haue had vnto me for my workes sake 1 Thess 5.13 I can with good conscience greet you as the same Apostle doth the Philippians My brethren beloued and lon●ed for my ioy Phil 4.1 and my crowne and doe beseech you to continue in the Lord yee beloued Yee see that in publishing these Sermons I doe offer my selfe vnto publike censures In so good a cause I only desire to be found faithful 1 Cor. 4.2 3. and then I care little to be iudged by mans iudgement I know that some of the things which I write of are commonly knowne 2 Pet. 1.12 13 14 15. yet I will not be vnmindfull to put you in remembrance of what yee haue knowledge and of that truth wherein yee are alreadie established And though I cannot say that the time is at hand that I must lay downe this my Tabernacle yet I thinke it meet so long as am in it to stirre you vp yea and to endeuour that you may haue in remembrance the secret of the Gospell euen after my departure 1 Tim. 3.16 For I haue not followed deceiueable fables but the mysterie of godlinesse which may helpe you with or hold you out a right hand of fellowship to keepe out sinne and Antichrist I haue no dominion ouer your faith 2 Cor. 1.24 yet am I vnder God a helper of your ioy Gal. 3.7 In which respect yee haue runne well and yee doe well in that in my weake but by Gods fauour willing Ministery yee haue and doe take heed vnto the most sure word of the Prophets 2 Pet. 1.19 as vnto a light that shineth in a darke place Iames 1.21 and as to that good word of God which is able to saue your soules 2 Thess 1.11 12 And I desire to pray alwaies for you that our God may make you worthy of his calling and fulfill all the good pleasure of his goodnesse and the worke of faith with power That the name of our Lord Iesus Christ may be glorified in you and you in him according to the grace of our God 1 Thess 2.19 20 For what is my hope or ioy or crowne of reioycing Are not euen ye in the presence of our Lord Iesus at his comming Yea yee are my glory and ioy And therefore because one desire of mine is to keepe out sinne I will pray againe for you Ephes 3.14 Vers 16. and bow my knees vnto the Father of our Lord Iesus Christ That he would grant you according to the riches of his glory that yee may be strengthned by his Spirit in the inner man Vers 17. That Christ may dwell in your hearts by faith Oh how vnwillingly should I say of you with the Apostle Gal. 4.11 1 Cor. 6.15.19 I am in feare of you lest I haue bestowed on you labour in vaine Know yee not that your bodies are the temples of the holy Ghost in you and the members of Christ Phil. 2.1 2. If therefore there be any consolation in Christ if any comfort of loue if any fellowship of the Spirit if any compassion and mercie fulfill my ioy In thinking vpon and doing whatsoeuer things are true Philip. 4.8 whatsoeuer things are honest whatsoeuer things are iust whatsoeuer things are pure whatsoeuer things pertaine to loue whatsoeuer things are of good report or if there be any other vertue I know that in times past yee were foolish Titus 3.3 disobedient deceiued seruing the lusts and diuers pleasures liuing in maliciousnesse and enuy hatefull and hating one another But it is sufficient yea too too much for you 1 Pet. 4.3 that ye haue spent the time past of your liues after the lusts of the Gentiles walking in wantonnesse lusts drunkennesse in gluttony drinkings and in abominable securitie Now therefore dearely beloued 1
Pet. 2.11 12. abstaine from fleshly lusts which fight against the soule and haue your conuersations honest amongst the wicked both that they who speake euill of you as of euill doers may glorifie God in the day of their visitations and also that you may assure your selues that you are in Christ by being new creatures 2 Cor. 5.17 2 Thess 2.7 Dearely beloued Antichrist also and his mystery of iniquitie hath alreadie wrought euen from the Apostles times and is so farre growne past his height that his raging time is come because his time is but short Therefore Beware of dogs Phil. 3.2 beware of euill workers For there are false teachers which priuily 2 Pet. 2.1 Marke 8.15 with many false glosses bring in damnable heresies But take heed and beware of the leauen of the Pharisies Matth. 7.16 By their fruits ye shall know them 1 Tim. 4.1.3 They forbid mariage and meats by the doctrine of deuils and serue not the Lord Iesus Rom. 16.18 but their owne bellies and with faire speech and flattering deceiue the hearts of the simple They despise gouernment 2 Pet. 2.10 and feare not to speake euill of them that are in dignitie They haue hearts exercised with couetousnesse Vers 14. Vers 16. eyes full of adultery tongues that speake swelling words and boast of high matters They are brute beasts lead with sensualitie Vers 12. and made to be taken at the last and destroyed 2 Pet. 3.17 18. But beware lest yee be plucked away with the errour of the wicked and fall from your owne stedfastnesse but grow in grace and in the knowledge of our Lord Iesus Christ Finally brethren 2 Cor. 13.11 fare yee well be of one minde and liue in peace Gal. 5.15 If ye bite and deuoure one another take heed lest ye be deuoured one of another All which that it may the better be effected Gal. 4.19 my little children of whom I haue trauelled in birth Heb. 13.17 for whose growth I shal trauell I beseech you obey me still who haue the ouersight of you in the Lord and submit your selues for I desire to watch for your soules as one that must giue accounts that I may doe it with ioy and not with griefe for that will be vnprofitable for you Now because my hearts desire is Rom. 10.1 that you may be saued and that to this end I may still pray for you and shew you the good way therefore I humbly pray the very God of peace to sanctifie you throughout 1 Sam. 12.23 1 Thess 5.23 and that your whole spirits and soules and bodies may be kept blamelesse vnto the comming of our Lord Iesus Christ So prayeth he who desireth that his ministerie amongst you may be a sauour of life vnto life euen your euer-louing Shepherd and Watch-man ROBERT ABBOT Faults escaped PAge 20. line 10. reade brethren for brother p. 22. l. 30. r. in the mids of for about p. 39. l. 22. r. yee for yea p. 40. l. 7. r. him for whom p. 44. l. 14. adde to seruice in an and l. 15. adde to vnknowne tongue p. 56. l 22. r. in them for them in p. 62. l. 1. r. mouings for meanings p. 71. l. 15. r. parly for partie p. 84. l 9. r. fiue for fine p. 113. marg r. Gal. 2. for Apoc. p. 118. l. 21 r. and for in l 22. r. thy for the and wherein for whereof p. 129. l. 26. betweene ●he second and the third word put in liue in sinne p. 136. l. 1. for I am r. am J p. 184. l. 12. betweene the eight and the ninth words put in powers of TO HIS REVEREND and right Worshipful brethren the Preachers of the glorious Gospell within the Deanery of Charing in Kent ROBERT ABBOTT their fellow-Souldier for the maintenance of the Gospell wisheth faithfulnesse and constancie to the end Right Worshipfull Reuerend and beloued WHom our gracious God hath vnited in one common seruice I neither can in affection nor could in Epistle at this time seuer especially considering that what I shall say to one is fitly appliable to you all My request only is that what I speak freely to one may with a louing and yeelding acceptance bee entertained of all as the messenger of an honest heart desirous to stirre vp the grace of God which is in you and to prouoke your willing mindes I remember what is sayd of the sacke of Beniamin by the way when the sacke was opened Sacco soluto reluxit argentum the money appeared which though I cannot apply to what I haue sayd in my Sermon or shall say at this time yet this I will say that no packet shall be opened wherein you shall discouer more loue and intention of spirit to do your soules good Mans good thoughts were not giuen him for himselfe only but for communication For if they had as the G●d of Nature would not haue taught the tongue to speake them so the God of Art would not haue taught the pen to write them This is the cause that what meditations God hath briefly put into my heart to warme my selfe those haue and shall I more largely blowe and kindle to heate you all in that ministeriall course in which God hath set you I presuppose these two propositions to be Gods truth First that the Churches speciall seruants are of Gods sending And secondly that it is necessary that the people to whom wee preach should be perswaded of it Is not Ierusalem which is aboue the Mother of vs all VVhence then should wee expect all her seruitours not left free to her selfe but from our fathers appointment Yet what though we are called by God will it euer be so comfortable vnto vs if the people to whom we are sent do not know it We would willingly that they should heare what we speake in Christs stead not as the word of man but as it is indeed the word of God which yet they can neuer do except they are perswaded that wee are sent of God It is therefore worth our marking to see how the Apostle labours the perswasion of this point For himselfe hee doth still vrge his mission That the Gospell which he preached was not after men but that hee was called by God And for all others hee calleth them Souldiers as hauing receiued their presse from God and Ministers that all the world may know that God keepeth the royalty of his Office in his owne hand and makes vs his Seruants yea Cryers to lend our good will and voyce to his matters to bee published No doubt the holy Ghost foresaw the necessity of this perswasion not only that the ministery might haue the greater attention and respect giuen vnto it but that Lydeas heart might be opened Felix might tremble the Iewes might be pricked in their very hearts and made to crye out Men and brethren what shall wee doe to be saued Yea and the secrets of hearers hearts might be made manifest and they may fall downe on their faces and
mother of whoredomes hath this name written in her forehead A Mysterie 2. Thess 2.7 Apoc. 17.5 This apostacie of Rome held communion with the true Church still Hodiè effusum est venenum in ecclesiam and when prosperitie like poyson was powred out vpon the Church she tooke aduantage vpon the deadnesse of mens hearts to make her owne gaine and while men were either diuerted by other occasions or rocked asleepe in the cradles of ease profit pleasure honour or blinded with the outward splendor and glorie of her whorish and hypocriticall attire to sowe tares in stead of good wheat which yet was neuer so closely carried but that some faithfull men still obserued her and opposed her in euerie age as hath beene shewed by diuers Du Plessis his Mysterium iniquitatis White his Way who still lye vnsatisfied though her policie and tyrannie still did crush them to her power Oh therefore seeke not truth at Rome where you haue so good causes to doubt that the true head is not yea know of old that truth hath sought for succour in Cloysters and could finde none seeke it therefore at home where the true head Christ is calling vs from our dead sleepe of sinne Pauli Ferrij Schol. ortho Spec. pag. 102. giuing vnto vs the habit of faith for our sanctification the act of faith to receiue Iesus Christ for our iustification the spirit of adoption to seale vs vnto the day of our redemption Ob. Be not scarred with this bugbeare that we confesse that a Papist so liuing and so dying may be saued and therefore the truth is good enough amongst them Sol. For you must vnderstand it of those that are in the Antichristian state not of it and chained with ineuitable ignorance hauing the key of more distinct knowledge kept from them by tyrannie and policie and doe forsake their popish grounds as it is said that the Bishop of Chichester that then was would haue had Gardner to doe when hee did comfort him vpon his death-bed with Gods promises and with free iustification in the bloud of Christ Fox Martyrol To whom Gardner did answer What my Lord will you open that gap now then farewell altogether To me and such other you may speake it but open this window to the people then farewell altogether Thus likewise Bellarmine after his large discourse of that confidence which we may draw from our workes layeth downe this proposition as his last sanctuarie Propter incersitud●nem prop●iae iusti●iae peri●u●um man●s glor●● tutissi●i● est siduci●m totam in sola Dei misc●i cordia et ben●gnitate reponere that By reason of the incertaintie of our owne righteousnesse and the danger of vaineglorie it is most safe to put our whole trust and confidence in the mercie and bountie of God alone Now if Papists shall doe in truth and sinceritie of heart as these say renouncing the trappings of the whore of Rome though they die in the Popish Church they being chained in the fetters of Rome they may giue a good ground for the iudgement of charitie to worke vpon concerning their saluation with GOD. Neither be ye moued with this which they so often bellow out against vs That our truth was not knowne before Luther for though for many of our negatiues whereby we doe deny their false nouelties there was no vse of them though the Spirit of God foreseeing the mysterie of Antichrist left sufficient ground for them in the Scriptures yet we willingly disclaime all that cannot draw a longer pedigree than Poperie Thou art of yesterday saith the Pharisie to Christ Before Abraham was I am saith Christ to the Pharisies So may our truth say in respect of Luther It appeared more plentifully in his time not otherwise than a cleere morning after a darke and drowsie night no otherwise than faire weather after a tedious storme no otherwise than health after a lingring sicknesse And if it seemed to be new wee may thanke the Church of Rome for it which so preuailed with our improuident fathers through glorious titles and outward splendor and the mysterie of abhominations in the golden cup that their mother truth being iustled out of doores for a time was not at the last when she came againe scarce acknowledged of her owne children Let vs be wiser and acknowledge her though shee come naked and in rags remembring that true but fearefull saying 2. Thess 2.10 11 12. Because they receiue not the loue of the truth that they might be saued therefore God shall send them strong delusions that they should beleeue lies that all they might be damned which beleeued not the truth Thus haue I shewed you how you may know your selues to be of the true Church amongst vs Motiues that so your desires may pant after it As Dauid added two motiues to prouoke himselfe to hunger after the house of the Lord so shall I adde the same to further vs to desire to be and to be still of the true Church amongst vs. The first is the beautie of our Church 1 The beautie of our Church which doth stand in the beautie of that Religion which it doth professe I know that the Papists doe what they can to disgrace it and to make it appeare ougly in the sight of men Ps 45.13 yet though the Kings daughter be all glorious within and her best ornaments without are but needle-worke full of stitches and prickes though the whore do excell in her garish attire the modest and honest woman in which respect it cannot grieue vs that they obiect against vs as the heathens of old did against the lesse ancient Christians the want of glorie in our outward seruice and worship yet I say there are diuers things which make our religion beautifull aboue that which doth so much stand vpon outward feature and proportion First our religion cannot bee disgraced without lying She is a beautifull woman who standeth so for currant except to them who will say White is blacke or that shee painteth and borroweth complexion of Art or the like when it is nothing so so is it with our religion Yee know how often they charge vs and our religion with noueltie when yet we doe relye vpon the first truth to wit the Scriptures So likewise they doe make their blinded disciples beleeue that we hold God to be the author of sinne likewise that it is enough to haue onely faith that the Church failed many hundred yeeres till Luther and Caluine that all is very easie in Scriptures that God forceth vs against our wills without any respect of our consents that we allow no fasting but morall temperance and fasting from sin that we esteeme nothing of Christian workes towards saluation but condemne them as vncleane sinfull hypocriticall that God imputeth the righteousnesse of Christ to iustification though we be not iust as if the righteousnesse of Christ applied by faith did not cure as well as couer
vnderstanding and so madly running thorow thicke and thinne thou art no fit witnesse But if Christ haue shined in thy soule by a new light and haue made thee come vnto thy selfe with the Prodigall and haue the vnderstanding of a man in thee then come to Gods Court I hope thine owne heart will not suffer thee to deceiue thy selfe by falshood 5 Fama Fiftly as in a witnesse is required good fame or credit for infamous persons are repelled and excepted against from witnessing especially in criminall causes so if thou be infamous for sluggishnesse like those who vse their bodies to the bone but seldome vse their consciences in any thing or for suffering thy power to be suppressed or thy office to be neglected then thou art more fit to be a slaue than a free-man to be sworne But if thou be of credit for speaking the truth amongst millions of lies and for thy daily imployment in thy office as in the sight and presence of God then thou hast Gods good leaue to speake and without question thy testimony will be admitted Sixtly as in a witnesse together with the former 6 E● Fortuna is required a certaine estate and condition of life because poore men who are of base conditions may more easily be corrupted so if thou suffer thy selfe to be needie and hungrie after the things of the world and lose the honour of that selfe-sufficiencie whereby thou doest resemble God a purse-promise will easily spoile such a witnesse But if thou be kinne to the woman who hath the Moone at her feet and canst say with Iaacob I haue all things Apoc. 12. then thou wilt refuse gold and gaine to be a true witnesse at Gods Barre Lastly as in a witnesse religion is required 7 Fid●● in testibus ●sta requires for an Infidell is not admitted against a Beleeuer so if thou beest not knit vnto God as the deputie of the faithfull Witnesse in heauen cursed is thy witnesse in this diuine Court But if God and thou doe walke together as two that are agreed and if thou doe so proceed according to the rule of Gods word as thou doest not condemne thy selfe in that which thou doest then speake on prosper with this thy glory which God hath giuen thee to be a witnesse in this Court and this thy power shall teach thee terrible things Striue O Conscience that thou maist haue all these qualifications This is the way so to doe thy office here that thou maist not be blamed hereafter Yea this is the way so to preserue thy selfe that thou shalt preserue thy owner I remember that Pythagoras was wont to giue this precept to his Schollers Not to taste of those things which had blacke tailes so let me say to the conscience of euery one here present take heed of the blacke taile of a drowsie conscience It may speake pleasing things for a time it not being qualified as before but at the last as a babbler said to a wise man of old O Philosopher I am troublesome vnto thee with my speech so sha●l conscience trouble our patiences and as we would account him miserable who hath a witnesse of his thoughts words and actions against the law of man much more will our consciences make vs miserable in witnessing our thoughts words and actions against the law of God Assumption Thus we haue heard these reasoning thoughts as a witnesse propounding the truth next we shall heare them as a Iurie applying the truth to the parties to be tried A Iurie within vs. And this it doth as an Assumption whence we note that In our selues there is a Iurie which will bring in a verdict concerning vs either of guilty or not guilty To open this I will shew you two points First that Conscience like a Iurie brings in the verdict of guilty vpon sinners And this is discouered vnto vs two waies First by word and secondly by worke By word thus Adonibezek said Iudg. 1.7 Seuenty Kings hauing the thumbs of their hands and feet cut off gathered bread vnder my table as I haue done so God hath rewarded me Iosephs brethren said We haue verily sinned against our brother Gen. 42.21 in that we saw the anguish of his soule when he besought vs and we would not heare him therefore is this trouble come vpon vs. Kain said Whosoeuer findeth me shall slay me Whence proceed these words but from the verdict of guilty which their co●sciences had brought in 2. Sam. 24.7 Iob 13.26 By worke thus Looke to Dauid and his heart smote him looke vnto Iob who possessed the sinnes of his youth Dan. 5.6 to Belshazzar whose counten●nce was changed his thoughts were troubled his ioynts were loosed and his knees smote one against another Act. 2.37 to the Iewes who were pricked at their hearts Act. 24.25 and to Foelix who trembled Whence proceed all these but from the power of Consciences verdict seeing they are euident signes that they were sicke of that worme which neuer dieth Mar. 9.46 Which power is giuen vnto conscience First in respect of conscience it selfe that it might iudicially proceed against a sinner and without a Iurie there is no Assize Secondly in respect of the wicked that they might haue soure sawce to their sweet sinnes and a heauy heart in the midst of laughter Is it reason that the wicked should carry away all the iollitie Thirdly in respect of the godly that they may be kept from sinne checked in sinne prepared for the feelings of comfort exercised in the knowledge of their owne weaknesse and be wrought more preciously to account of the comforts of the great perswader The second point to be shewed you is that conscience like a Iurie bringeth the verdict of not guilty vpon him that doth well Gen. 28. What was it that made Iaacob sleepe so sweetly when his head lay hardest in Bethel but this acquitting Iurie This made a feast in Iaacobs bosome Pro. 15.15 and whereas the guilty being rouzed and left to themselues haue a trembling heart and feare at the shaking of a leafe Deut. 28.65 Iaacob was as bold as a Lion Pro. 28.1 This made Paul so often appeale vnto his conscience Before the Iewes Act. 23.1 I haue in all good conscience serued God vnto this day Before Foelix Act. 24.16 I haue plotted to haue a cleare conscience towards God and man To the Romanes I say the truth in Christ I lie not Rom. 9.1 my conscience bearing me witnesse in the Holy Ghost To the Corinthians 2 Cor. 1.12 My reioycing is the testimonie of my conscience Heb. 13.18 To the Hebrewes We trust we haue a good conscience To make this yet more plaine doe but marke Paul his phrase of speech Dauids confidence and Gods childrens comfort Pauls phrase is this Phil. 4.7 The peace of God which passeth all vnderstanding What peace is this A peace in health wealth
a by word among the multitude But blessed conscience incourage thy friends and discourage them that flout at thee with that true but fearefull saying Esa 66.5 Heare the Word of the Lord all ye that tremble at his Word your brethren that hated you and cast you out for my Names sake said Let the Lord be glorified but hee shall appeare to your ioy and they shall be ashamed Lastly we must doe our dutie to conscience by paying tribute to it and yeelding to it honourable meanes of maintenance Giue tribute to whom tribute belongeth shall wee haue a gouernour and will wee starue him for want of maintenance God forbid Decke therefore the table of thy conscience richly with the Word of God let thy conscience vse it as in the sight and presence of God attend with all the parts and powers of thy bodie and soule in state vpon this honourable gouernour and if thou canst not giue it entertainment answerable to its place weepe to God for more grace that as one said to Saint Augustines weeping mother Non potest perire tantarum lachrymarum filius A sonne for whom so many teares are shed cannot perish So thy conscience for which thou doest weepe to God may not be corrupted or want necessary meanes of maintenance Secondly Conscience as a Iudge must doe its office to and for vs both in our selues and to God for looke as a Iudge doth a double dutie a dutie of iustice in the country and a dutie of account in the Court so likewise hath the conscience a double dutie to performe In the Court within we must expect a fourefold action of a Iudge frō it The first is Remurmuration As a Iudge doth or should fret and grudge at euery euill cause that comes before him and cannot abide that any Gallio should either plead the excuse or defence of it so conscience must worke an inward repining when any of the aduocates of sinne doth blanch the least wickednesse The least sinne is hellish in its sight the greatest is ten times damnable The second is Instigation Looke as a Iudge doth or should prouoke to euery good occasion for the repressing of vice and encouragement of vertue so conscience must goad vs vp and stirre vs forward to take euery good opportunitie to doe good vnto our bodies and soules to the honour of God The Iewes who were as the swift Dromodaries were not more eager to commit wickednesse than conscience must be to doe that which is good in Gods sight The third is Condemnation Euen as a Iudge doth condemne the guilty and pronounce definitiue sentence against him whatsoeuer he be whether friend or foe rich or poore because he heareth causes speake and not persons so dealeth conscience yea euen against the owner of it if he doe offend Therefore the Apostle speaketh of those who are selfe-condemned Or looke as if a souldier demeane himselfe not well in battell the Iudge Martiall may cause his Escocheon to be pierced Euen so conscience must pierce the heart of the offender by a full pronouncing of the iudgements of its God The fourth is Absolution As a Iudge doth absolue the guiltlesse and when his innocencie doth once appeare doth make no delayes or demurres or the like to keepe him from the comfort of his cause so when conscience findeth innocencie it crieth out Well done good and faithfull seruant enter into thy Masters ioy Know thine office conscience And as thou wilt answer it to him from whom thou hast thy most immediate deputation see thou deale righteous-Iudge-like in all these particulars Secondly there is a dutie of account that the conscience oweth vnto God also Euen as a Iudge doth giue an account vnto his Soueraigne of the state of his countrey liues of his people and iustice of his inferiour Magistrates and the like so must our consciences giue an account to God what state our soules are in and how our wills and affections doe rule and obey within vs. See therefore O conscience that thou doe it faithfully Goe to the Court of heauen after euery daies Assize tell God how it stands with thee in the case of life and death Helpe O King I haue found rebellion in thy kingdome without thy pardon all will perish with thy pardon without thy wisdome to plant religion to order thy subiects and to preuent future mutinies all will come to naught Thus deale faithfully with thy soule And as good Iudges will not trust particular Iustices with the gouernment of the Countrey lest they should make their owne gaines and aime at their owne priuate ends more than at the publike good but will diligently search into their proceedings that so their account may be the more current so the good conscience will not commit the gouernment of the soule to the will and affections but will euery day search into their courses that so they may giue the more through and honest account vnto our God and King Thus hauing viewed the power of practicall conscience in these reasoning thoughts which are in vs 2 The abuse of the power of Conscience we come to the abuse of this power in iudging euilly and partially euen against conuiction Whence we may note That it is no newes that there is disorder and corruption in the iudgements of our owne hearts and consciences Yee know that Paul found out this wickednesse of old To withhold the truth in vnrighteousnesse Rom. 1.18 euen so is it still The prisoner to be tried within vs is Truth the case to be tried is whether Truth should be set at libertie to be a guide to our actions yea or no Truth pleades for her selfe as the cause of poore Christians in this place but the Iurie of will and affections heareth not they are corrupted with carnall wisdome pleasure profit or the like and therefore in commeth the fore-man Will and saith I will doe as I haue done and I will be perswaded as I haue beene perswaded and so Reason like a corrupt Iudge giueth the sentence that Truth must into prison and rebellion and wickednesse flourish If now you will aske me what are the reasons of this corruption in our inward iudgings I answer that I shall giue you foure reasons of it First the want of the loue of God If we loued God we would loue his honour if wee loued his honour wee would carrie an equall and vpright course in passing sentence yea though it were to the crushing of that which is most deare vnto vs. Deut. 33.9 Thus Leui is said to say to his father and mother I haue not seene thee neither knew he his owne brethren nor his children when hee was to execute the iudgements of God Secondly want of vnion in our selues An armie put to rowt cannot keepe order so neither can a man that is diuided in himselfe As it is in the cursed Alehouse businesse it thriues the better for a proud separation that is found amongst those that should helpe
it to wit when what one Iustice sets vp another pulleth downe and what one pulleth downe another setteth vp so is it with these cursed disorders within from that iarre betwixt Reason Will Affections and Desires that is found in vs. Thirdly selfe-loue For as in the Common-wealth many persons of vile conditions are maintained or some profit which is reaped from them and many houses of notorious disorder are vpheld as if they were the very life-bloud of societies wherein we liue for the greatnesse of that rent which they may bring vnto vs so is there much disorder in our inward iudiciall proceedings because wee loue our selues too well All our Logicke is too little to conclude for our selues and all our reason imployed to bring sackes to our owne mills for the time by profits pleasures honours and the like and for after times let come what can come we care not Fourthly skilfulnesse in subtill euasions for as it is in the Common-wealth because almost no bond lease conueyance or will is so sure but a cunning head can finde a hole to make worke for vncharitable persons and because no cause is so good but an innocent man who is confident in his cause and carelesse in the meanes to cleare it may by subtiltie be ouerthrowne therefore there are many disorders in Courts of outward Iustice so because there are infinite subtilties to daube ouer the conscience for a time there are many disorders in the inward court of our hearts Religion did neuer thriue worse than when the Schoole-men had perplexed euery part with varietie of questions and multitudes of quaeres whereby Religion was drawne from the heart to the head and the kinde worke of conscience neuer went on lesse to our comfort than since we healed the hurt of it with sweet words and stopped vp the mouth of it with politicke euasions Vse These and all other causes of this fault of corrupt reasonings in our selues must be rooted out what though we can please our selues for a time in the want of the loue of God discord in our selues selfe-loue and cunning trickes which are the cause of it yet one day neither all these any of these nor any others shall order our consciences from roaring the truth in our eares In the Pro●ince of Cottie in Scotland We reade of a stone in Scotland about thirteene foot in height which if we may beleeue it wil so dampe the roaring of a Cannon that if it be shot off on the one side the report cannot be heard on the other But we shall finde no such defence from the cries of conscience when before the iudgement seat of God the secrets of our vnderstandings memories wills affection Rom. 2.16 and bodies yea all secrets shall be iudged by Iesus Christ according to the Gospell Oh therfore ye that are witnesses to propound the truth looke vnto conscience speake the whole truth and nothing but the truth for conscience sake Let not malice ill will priuate gaine make you to offend conscience for a world Yee that are the Iurie to apply this tru●h according to law take heed that yee incline not to the looke to the word to the profit to the pleasure of any man whatsoeuer what or who can doe you good when your consciences are wounded when yee are called to an account for the breach of the peace of your consciences Then surely as Seneca when he came to his Farme and saw the house which he had builded decayed a tree which he had planted rotten a Boy which hee had brought vp with gray haires Quocunque ocul●● conuerto● deo documentance aetatis said whithersoeuer I looke I behold the monitors of my age so yee shall see on euery side the remembrancers of your woe Your honours the Iudges watch ouer the peace of your consciences in your conclusions Ye may often reade and thinke of that Iudge whom your Fortescue mentioneth Saepius ipse mihi fass●es est qu●d nunquam in 〈◊〉 i● animum cius de hoc sacto ●p●purga●et who hauing condemned a Gentlewoman to death for the murther of her husband vpon the bare accusation of her man which was afterwards found false Often confessed vnto him that hee should neuer during his life be able to purge or cleare his conscience of that fact And to conclude that conscience may be the better furthered in all others we that are men of God men of conscience looke we to conscience Haue we another way to heauen than we teach others that we should teach them to keepe a good conscience and neglect it our selues In the feare of God please we our consciences and not our passions or the lusts of your youth and as Seneca willed Lucilius to doe all things as if graue Cato were present so let vs doe all things as if our consciences looked vpon vs yea as Hierome whether he did eat or drinke or walke and so forth he thought he heard that fearefull voice Arise ye dead and come to iudgement so let vs heare the voice of conscience We presse our people to walke in the presence of their consciences at the least once a day but for vs as at the bankes of Euboia the sea doth ebbe and flow seuen times a day so let vs doe it seuen times a day also Oh how would this as the Prophet speaketh make vs Priests after Gods owne heart How would it kill pride passion contention selfe-loue couetousnesse and the like which make vs many times lesse profitable to Gods people yea and to account them which haue many graces the scum of our assemblies Is not this to be iudges of euill reasonings Well let all of vs thinke how this power of conscience abused will pay vs home at the last Call to minde the example of Iames Abbes the Martyr Fox Acts and Monuments who being drawne by craftie reasonings to fall from the Gospell was pitiously vexed in conscience and could haue no rest till he went and told the B●shop that it repented him that euer he had consented to their wicked perswasions Remember Thomas Whittle who being constrained through imprisonment to yeeld to the Bishop of London afterwards felt such a hel in his conscience that he could scarcely refrain from destroying himselfe and could be at no rest till he was vnder the crosse againe Forget not also that which we reade of Archbishop Cranmer who writing for feare of death contrarie to truth was more troubled in conscience for it than for all that euer he did and therefore because his hand writ contrary to his heart he would burne that first The like wee reade also of William Sparrow who after submission to Popish Idolatrie went with a troubled soule and could not be quiet till hee had preached against it and professed that if euery haire of his head were a man he would burne them all rather than goe from the truth againe Let vs alwaies haue fresh in our memories these and the like examples
be in Christ we are new creatures as I haue cleared what then must be our care but only to proue our selues to be new creatures that so we may assure our hearts that we are in him How we may proue our selues to be new creatures Yea but now you will say vnto mee How may I proue my selfe to be a new creature I answer Wee may doe it two waies First if we be cut off from the old stocke Secondly if we be grafted into the new 1 Wee must be cut off from the old stocke Ephes 2. The old stocke is Adam corrupted in whom we are by nature and in which condition wee are the children of wrath as much as the most cursed wretch in the world as he is borne and so dead in sinnes and trespasses Now from this stocke we must be cut off for as a sience must be cut off from one tree before it can be concorporated into another so we must be cut off from the wilde Oliue before wee can be planted into Christ If therefore wee can finde our selues to be cut off from the naturall root wherein we are by birth then we may secure our selues that wee are in a good way to be in Christ Perhaps you will say that heere is difficultie still for how shall I know that I am cut off from the old Adam I answer that through Gods blessing I shall giue you two manifest signes of it The first signe is taken from the cause of it 1 How we may know that wee are cut off from Adam Col 2.11 Dan. 2.45 which is God only As our circumcision is made without hands as Paul speaketh so must our cutting off be As our Sauiour Christ is that Stone which was cut out of the mountain without hands as Daniel speaketh so wee that are his members must be cut from the quarrie of Nature Of his owne will begat he vs by the word of truth saith Iames Iames 1.18 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Matth. 3.9 and we that are borne of God are borne not of blouds the highest prerogatiues that births can afford vnto vs cannot make vs more pretious with God nor of the will of the flesh all humane obseruation and outward righteousnesse attained vnto by the power and policie of man Phil. 3.6 7. can stead vs little with God nor the will of man heroicall gifts of wisdome valour noble spirits in which respect men of old haue beene called the sonnes of God which is translated The Sonnes of the Mightie cannot make vs any thing sooner deare to God but we are borne of God saith Iohn Psal 29.1 1 Cor. 1. Iohn 1.13 There are many men seeme to be cut off when they desist from the outragious sinnes of nature who yet are not in Christ because they are cut off with hands for the meanes to restraine them are some of these Sometimes their complexion pulleth them in cholericke Saul finding his opportunitie threw his jaueline at Dauid he would haue writ the malice of his heart in bloud but sanguine Dauid though hee had his opportunitie tooke but Sauls water-pot Speare and lap of his garment and that iustly with touch of Conscience also Though Dauid fell into murther in temptation thinking so to couer his sinne Sometimes Natures impotencie pulleth them in to some sinnes are required the courage of a Lion to some the craft of a Fox to some comelinesse to some strength to some the heat of youth to some the experience of age and the like In any of which when Nature is defectiue there is a restraint Sometimes they are pulled in by knowledge when a man is not giuen vp to a reprobate minde hee seeth dutie and comelinesse and is restrained from thence As some know their masters will and doe it not so there are others that do it not because they are ignorant whereas if they had knowledge but according to that light which Nature can afford it would be a bridle Sometimes they are pulled in by prosperitie He that hath enough will not steale and if he sometimes doe steale by oppression bribery vsury or the like so much the greater is his sinne by how much more violently God pulled him ba●ke by taking away the cause Sometimes they are restrained by aduersitie Hee that is poore cannot exercise the outward acts of pride he cannot ordinarily ambitiously climbe to honour hee cannot be actually couetous in keeping seeing he hath not what to keepe So that in these cases his pouertie is a bridle Sometimes they are held in by Education and imployment A Citizen will carry himselfe more grauely in habit complement and conuersation than a Courtier for his credit sake and who seeth not that imploiment doth hold backe from many sinnes Vellem si non of sem imperator Scipio could say when an Harlot was off●red vnto him I would haue her if I were not a Gouernour Sometimes they are restrained by the power of naturall conscience for though it bee much wounded and weakened in the offices of it yet euen naturall men cannot be rid of those blowes which it doth giue in secret In which respect they haue beene and are kept from many sinnes made knowne from the light of nature Sometimes againe they are restrained and pulled backe by policie because they might the better conceale and couer their aimes and intentions Thus was Iezabel restrained from the open murther of Naboth and of Haman it is said Hester 5.10 that though he was full of indignation yet he refrained himselfe All these bridles we may obserue to be in the hand of Nature to restraine Or thus These eight kniues are in Natures pocket to cut vs off from the old stocke But all this is but a seeming cutting off for it doth but cut off from the outward practise of sinne it weakneth not the root one iot The habits of sinne are no lesse powerfull the will no lesse willing the affections no lesse vehement and the desires no lesse violent Vnder all these Nature sinneth not either because Nature cannot or because Nature dare not and not because there is disabilitie either in the seeds and sp●wne of sinne or in a willingnesse to sinne if it either could or durst Durst I say because naturall conscience may plie a man with club-law and awe him from that which with all his heart he would be doing But now on the contrarie when our cutting off is wrought without hands and is such as Nature with all her bridles and kniues cannot reach vnto then we doe not only desist from the practise of sinne but we doe weaken the power of sinne wee doe not only not commit sinne b●cause we cannot or dare not but because we will not And though sometimes through the power of the flesh fighting against the spirit in our mindes wills affections and desires we are against our wills ouer-taken with sinne yet because sinne doth defile vs who are the temples of God and doth
in dressing What euer they be the defects are mine what euer it be the good is Gods and for your with other of Gods peoples goods Let God haue your praise to whom it is due let me haue your prayers who need and craue them that I may still continue Your faithfull Shepherd wishing and striuing for your eternall good ROBERT ABBOT THE NEW MANS New Life GALAT. 2.20 I am crucified with Christ neuerthelesse I liue yet not I but Christ liueth in me and the life which I now liue in the flesh I liue by the faith of the Sonne of God WE reade that the tombe wherewith the carkasse of proud Sennacherib was couered had this inscription Jntuens me aliquis discat ess● piu● Let him that lookes vpon me learne to be godly Much more may a spirituall eye see this ingrauen vpon this golden saying of the Apostle Let no man dare looke vpon me except he resolue to be godly For the Apostle presenteth vs himselfe and all the children of God in his person vnder such an one as is dead vnto the world and sinne and liueth not the life of nature but of grace and godlinesse Neither is it needlesse for vs to behold such draughts in these dayes we being not onely cast asleepe through our securitie but dead in sinnes and tresp●sses and buried vnder the clots of this world to the wofull miserie of our soules and the dishonour of our Maker How needfull therefore is it for vs to vse all meanes for a ioyfull resurrection and amongst the rest deeply to consider this speaking patterne of Paul in these words which in the naturall language of them doe make some such out-cry as this Lift vp your heads yee gates and be yee lift vp yee euerlasting doores that the King of glory may come in and dwell in your hearts by faith To which that we may haue the more hearing eares and from which that by the blessing of God wee may reape the more comfort let vs with humble hearts carry along with vs the context sense and seuerall obseruations setled by application vpon our soules Context As for the context and coherence with the words foregoing conceiue it thus The Apostle being to dispute against the Galatians Galat. 1.6 who had made a defection from the doctrine of the Gospell to iustification by works doth plainly set downe this proposition That we are not iustified by the works of the Law Galat. 2.16 but by the faith of Iesus Christ Which being proued by a reason drawne from the feeling iudgement and conscience of the best Iewes in these words we know as also as it is thought by this testimonie Psal 143.2 that by the works of the Law no flesh shall be iustified in Gods sight he fore-seeing that this doctrine of free iustification without our works might by false Apostles be charged with carnall libertie doth propound an obiection to that purpose Is Christ the minister of sinne and doth with a secret detestation answer it God forbid As if he should say Farre be it from the doctrine of the Gospell to giue libertie vnto sinne for as I will at no hand build againe iustification by workes which I haue destroyed because I can finde no comfort in the Law I being dead vnto it and it driuing mee to Christ so I doe know that Christ is not onely my price but my purger that Christ doth not onely say Thy sinnes are forgiuen thee but sinne no more lest a worse thing come vnto thee For I account my selfe crucified with Christ neuerthelesse I liue yet not I but Christ liueth in mee and the life which I now liue in the flesh I liue by the faith of the Sonne of God Thus I haue brought you vnto the Text. Sense In the consideration whereof I would next intreat you to stay a while vpon the meaning of the words lest the hard and difficult phrases thereof like Asahels body 2 Sam. 2.23 doe hinder the passing of the people by The hard phrases are fiue The first is when he saith I am crucified with Christ for how can this be true when hee was not conuerted to Christianitie before Christs ascension was past For the opening of this you must know that th●re is a double crucifying spoken of in the Scriptures The first is Actuall and so according to a double custome it may signifie two things for according to the custome of the Iewes it is to be stoned to death Alsted in Theol. Catech. and a●terwards with cords to be bound vnto a crosse and to be set vp as vpon a gibbet for a terrifying example to the like offendors but thus neither Paul nor Christ was crucified Ioh. 18.31 for it was nor lawfull for the Iewes at that time to put any man to death But according to the custome of the Gentiles it is to bee racked and fastned to a crosse with nailes driuen through the hands and feet of a liuing man and so to continue vnto death Thus Christ was crucified but not Paul or we The second is a virtuall crucifying and thus the children of God are said to bee crucified with Christ when they by vertue of that communion and fellowship which they haue with him in his sufferings and death as the members of him their head doe behaue themselues as those that are dead to their corruptions and finde no sauour in the courses of sinne and vanities of this world but spend all their liuelihood in denying vngodlinesse and worldly lusts and liuing vnto God And of this crucifying doth the Apostle speake in this place The second phrase or manner of speech is in these words I liue I liue not How can both these bee true I answer they may both be true in diuers respects I liue the life of grace and godlinesse I liue not the life of sinne and corrupted nature As if hee should say It is true indeed I haue the same naturall organs or instruments the same head tongue hands and feete but as there is great difference betweene a well-tuned Cymball and a loud Cymball so is there betweene all my parts when they doe receiue actiuitie from God and from nature As the gracious life is a death in respect of the glorious life which is the cause that that life which wee shall haue in glory is for excellencie sake called Life so the naturall life is no better than a death in respect of the life of grace The third phrase is in these words Christ liueth in me that is Christ is my life If you aske me how that can be I answer that it is by vertue of that communion and fellowship which we haue with him For as wee haue a naturall fellowship with him by his assuming and sanctifying our natures and becomming flesh of our flesh and bone of our bone and as we haue a sacramentall fellowship with him when in the Sacrament Christ is exhibited and giuen to the faithfull receiuer as he
life but as it doth vnite and knit vs vnto Iesus Christ Notwithstanding because without faith we cannot be knit vnto him who is our life therefore wee are said to liue by faith Which to conceiue you must know that there is a threefold life of man First that which doth consist of being life motion and sense and thus wee are said to liue a sensitiue life Secondly that which doth consist of being life motion sense and reason and thus wee liue a reasonable life Thirdly that which doth consist of being life motion sense reason and religion and so faith giueth vs our gracious liuelihood For therefore is the Church called The land of the liuing because it is the company of beleeuers Psal 142.5 and that word which is called the word of faith is therefore called the word of life Hence also Christ saith Iohn 6.47 that he that beleeueth hath life and Peter calleth Christians 1 Pet. 2.5 Liuing stones because by faith they grow vp into a holy building yea and they are said to be begotten to a liuing hope 1 Pet. 1.3 or a liuely hope that is a hope proceeding from faith our life and receiuing liuelihood from thence to issue out into the acts of life Neither need it seeme strange vnto vs that faith in Christ should be our life if we doe consider these three grounds First That by faith alone wee haue interest in our Sauiour Christ who is the onely way truth and life Iohn 14.6 For God hath set him forth to be a reconciliation through faith in his bloud Rom. 3.25 and wee are righteous before God by the faith of Iesus Christ If therefore we call that our liuing which is the instrumentall cause of our naturall liuing good much more faith which is the instrument of our spirituall good Secondly By faith alone we haue right to those meanes of saluation wherein we haue communion and fellowship with Christ in this world As first for the Word it will not profit if it be not mixed with faith in them that heare it Hebr. 4.2 that so they may take it home and apply it as a good plaister to their infected soules As to the Sacraments they doe not seale a blanke Rom. 4.11 but are signes and seales of the righteousnesse of faith and when we come vnto them wee draw neere vnto God which must be done with a true heart in assurance of faith Hebr. 10.22 yea we must be at peace with God for God doth not vse to bestow such sauoury blessings vpon his enemies but no peace without iustification by faith Rom. 5.5 As to prayer Iam. 1.6 we must aske in faith nothing wauering We therefore hauing right vnto these things only by faith it is not vnworthily said to be our life Thirdly faith giueth vnto vs a right title yea a cōfortable vse of all the things of this life In faith that is hauing my person in Christ and my warrant allowance from God in his word I eat my meat put on my clothes till my ground take profit of my cattle whatsoeuer is not of faith is sin that is whatsoeuer is done with a trembling Rom. 14.23 wandring gaine-saying conscience Dubitante Errante Repugnante cons●ient●a when we haue not both warrant in our hearts that our persons are reconciled vnto God in Iesus Christ that our actiō is agreeable or not repugnant vnto Gods wil is sinful Seeing therfore that our faith only giueth vs a comfortable right both to the principall and instrumentall causes of our spirituall naturall liuing good we may rightly conclude that the iust man doth liue by his faith Hab. Frō which doctrine we may learne two profitable lessons Vse 1 first concerning our selues and secondly concerning others Concerning our selues we learne that as the life of a man doth take possession of the whole man and quicken all the parts of him and by degrees driueth out all the death which there it findeth so faith possesseth quickneth driueth out death from the whole soule As when water is set ouer the fire that heat which doth come vnto it doth by degrees possesse warme driue out the cold of it or as when the sap doth in the spring arise out of the root of the tree into the bodie and branches it doth take away all the vnfruitfulnes of it by degrees doth make it bring forth bud leafe and fruit so faith dealeth with our soules For as the life of man is a power diffused through the whole man so faith being the life of the soule is a power diffused thorow the whole soule So that faith must be both in the minde and in the heart It must shew it selfe in the minde in three things First in the knowledge for there is something euen in the very inlightning of the vnderstanding which is of the nature of faith Therefore the Prophet saith Es 53.11 that the knowledge of thy righteous seruant that is CHRIST shall iustifie many which yet cannot be wrought without faith Secondly in the iudgement when we being inwardly conuinced doe clearely resolue that Christ is the way to bee happy and therefore the onely good tidings which our hearts can rest vpon This made the Apostle say Phil. 3.8 9. Doubtlesse I thinke that is this is my resolute iudgement that all things are losse and dung in respect of Christ Thirdly in our memories when the greatest care in vs is among other things to lay vp the words of our blessed Sauiour Luk. Psal 119. and to hide his promises in our hearts Againe faith must shew it selfe in the heart when the heart beleeueth Rom. 10.9 Act. 8.39 yea when wee beleeue with all our hearts and this it doth in three things also First in the appetite and desires when a man is so farre exercised in the spirituall seeking of Christ that he desires rather to part with all the world if he had it than not to haue some comfortable assurance of Gods loue in Iesus Christ And whosoeuer shall thus sell all to buy the pearle hath true faith for God heareth the desires of the poore Psal 10.17 yet he heareth not to our comfort our prayers except they be faithfull Matth. 5.6 And they are blessed that hunger and thirst after righteousnesse yet none are blessed with Abraham but they who are of the faith of Abraham Secondly in the affections when the soule is confident and resteth vpon the promises of God in Christ as the onely ground of happinesse For when there are no arguments drawne from a mans sense and feeling which may perswade him of Gods loue in Christ yet he doth confidently relie vpon it then is he said to liue by faith not by sight as Ioh who professed that though God killed him yet would he trust in him Iob. Thus also doth faith quicken other affections as ioy feare loue and the like directing