Selected quad for the lemma: cause_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
cause_n good_a lord_n sin_n 3,005 5 4.4939 4 true
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A74688 Vox Dei & hominis. God's call from heaven ecchoed [sic] by mans answer from earth. Or a survey of effectual calling. In the [brace] explication of its nature. Distribution of it into its parts. Illustration of it by its properties. Confirmation of it by reasons. Application of it by uses. Being the substance of several sermons delivered to the people of Heveningham, in Suffolk. / By J. Votier, minister of the gospel.; Vox Dei et hominis Votier, J. (James), b. 1622. 1658 (1658) Wing V709; Thomason E1756_1; ESTC R209691 204,151 359

There are 8 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

you of sin and the danger of a natural condition it was mine own condition once and whether I have yet fully passed it I have much cause to fear I find my heart so carnal sold under sin Others of you may have some early glimmerings of the spirit dawning upon your souls The Lord cause the sun of righteousness to rise upon you with healing under his wings and bring your bloomings and buddings to ripeness and maturity Some others may have a through work of grace upon their hearts the Lord make such thankful for it is an inestimable mercy and keep their feet that they fall not Various are your conditions in regard of temporals and spirituals various are your relations to and acquaintance with me whatsoever the one or the other be let nothing be a bar to keep you from accepting the counsel of the holy Ghost which is sent in love let it therefore be so taken I would not these things should be a witness against you or me another day The Lord therefore for his Christ's sake so sanctifie these truths to us and us by these truths that we may all attain to grace and increase thereof to the comfort of our own souls to the praise and glory of God by Christ So prays Your dayly Orator at the throne of grace J. V. The Epistle to the READER Christian Reader THou mayst wonder to see me add to the pile and heap of books Not glory nor gain unless of God of souls though my heart be very evil and have the seeds of all sin in it are the wheels on which I move in this labour Not affectation but affection to my heavenly Father to my earthly Friends put me on to this Some years since in my publike preaching I went through the chief heads in Divinity and when I came to this of Effectual Calling I insisted the longer upon it because it was very practical and of great concernment I found it then making some impression I hope it may do so now if but one soul be thereby turned in to the Lord it is worth my pains though a thousand times more I was desirous to communicate it to my friends to whom I dedicated for their good if the Lord be pleased to bless it It had been a weary task to have transcribed many copies I was resolved therefore to take the shortest cut It is a complaint that the Press is oppressed and not without cause yet much Printing I think is no more to be indicted then much Preaching if so be the matter be sound and savoury That feminine toleration that Midwives so many spurious births into the world and that licentious liberty whereby any one and any thing may preach and be preached are well worthy of censure and sharp animadversions it is hard to say which more Much reading is a weariness to the flesh and so may much hearing yet if either be rendred under God a means of conviction and conversion to the spirit it is no matter Daniel got knowledge of things of concernment by books Dan. 9. 2. I see the Lord owneth and blesseth reading as well as hearing printing as well as preaching though of all means of grace I take preaching to be the King Mine own soul through the mercy of God for ever blessed be his name hath received some good if it be not presumption to say so that way as well as by the preaching of the word and though this be drawn up by a weak worthless creature yet God I see sometimes makes use of and blesseth a wooden as well as a golden instrument And though hereby I expose my self who am weak to the acute judgement of parted and learned men yet I weigh it not if but one soul may be gained and brought in to God by this service as I hope there shall and the Lord raiseth mine heart to some comfortable expectation thereof What a rejoycing would it be to me if my poor labours might tend to the enlargement of my soveraigns Kingdom Reader I shall no further apologize for or give an account of this undertaking though more might be said I desire thine earnest prayers that while I give these counsels and cautions to others my self may not be a cast-away as thou hast mine If thou be a sinner the Lord conform thee to his will if a Saint the Lord confirm thee in his ways The Lord be with thy spirit and his who is Thine as he hopes for thy souls good J. V. Imprimatur Edmund Calamy A SURVEY OF EFFECTUAL CALLING THE FIRST PART CHAP. I 8. Rom. 30. vers the begin Moreover whom he did Predestinate them he also called IN the first part of this Chapter Paul endeavours to comfort the Roman Saints against the Remainders of sin yet with this proviso and caution that they remain not in sin In this Second Part which begins at the seventeenth Verse he Sect. 1 prescribes an antidote to fortify their Spirits against adversity which is made up of many ingredients the last whereof though not the least is in the 28. vers viz. that God like a skilful Chymist will extract good out of evil and by his wise disposing cause advantage to grow upon the stalk of affliction which is proved in the two next Verses because nothing can break that Golden Chain wherein foreknowledge Predestination Vocation c. are Cohaerence linked together so that the words which I have pitched upon fall out to be the middle linke of this Chain which reacheth from Eternity to Eternity viz. from fore-knowledge and Predestination to Glory For the opening of the words Predestination Explication is a fore-ordaining or appointing even from Eternity in reference to the reasonable Sect. 2 Creature and is sometimes taken largely so as the twins of Election and reprobation lye in the Womb of it and sometimes strictly and synecdochically that it and Election are identified and so is it here used Them hath he called We know what it is to call to or upon another to do this or that so God calls them to Sanctity obedience conformity to his will yet so it is to be understood that he opens their ear to hear and inclines their heart to submit to this call He hath called The Preterperfect tense used for the Future Bez. in loc tense after the manner of the Hebrews and to denote a continued Act But I should rather think he so speaks in reference to those that are called already and so in them Personating all others that are the Children of Predestination or else to shew that those that are Predestinated shall as certainly be called as if they were already called for it is the manner of Scripture Sic narrare futura tanquam praeterita Haym to call the things that are not as if they were In the words are two parts Divis 1. The Subject 2. The Predicate Or 1. The Appointment to the end 2. The first step of the means to the end Viz. 1.
and lie in the womb of effectual calling so that thou mayst hear the voice of the Lord saying to thee as Isaac to Esau concerning Jacob I have blessed thee and thou Gen 27. 33. shalt be blessed From this mount Nebo from this top of Pisgah mayst thou view all the good land round about without conversion no man or woman can be blessed for the promises which are the seeds of blessings are made to grace Knowing that ye are thereunto called that ye should inherit a blessing No inheritance 1 Pet. 3. 9. without this evidence If the forgivenesse of thy sins the favour of God to thy soul be not a blessing what is now the work of grace upon the heart is the stair the ascent to this throne of happinesse Thou canst not get up into the tree of life and shake soul-satisfying fruit into thy bosome without this ladder Thou canst not attain to saving weal without this sanctifying work Thou canst never get to the top of glory without the staff of grace viruled with the righteousnesse of Jesus Christ Thou canst not be a loved Son unlesse thou be a living Saint many fondly presume and think to commence and take the degree of glory per saltum neglecting grace but it is the path the way thereto such as meet not with God in their heart shall never meet with God in heaven Thou that hast grace hast that threed which will undoubtedly lead thee into the bowre of blisse This compasse will not fail thee but bring thee to the port where thou needest fear neither billow nor blast Thy patent is signed and past whereby heaps and numberlesse sums of felicity are freely given thee out of the Exchequer of grace This gale will bring thee to the Isle of peace upon Beatus vir qui per poenitentiam ad meliora conversus est this silver stream thou shalt with safety slide into the bosome of the quiet Key This is the way the road to all the Scripture calls beatitude The fee simple of true blessednesse is given to the godly pious truly penitent soul 6. The spring of action You are now in S. 9 such a condition that you can act and do something for God Now thou art indued with a spirit that is quick and active like the highest element that finds no rest but in travel nor contentment but in the painful labours of worthy actions To do for the Creator is as great dignity almost as the creature can attain to to be instrumental to his glory to be subservient to his praise is a great preferment To be agent for God to be factor for heaven is a choice flower in a Saints garden a chief diamond in his diademe Now thou hast a talent to trade for God with such a principle whereby thou canst act some suitable part in his service The Apostle beseecheth the Ephesians that they would walk Ephes 4. 1. worthy of the vocation wherewith they were called Those that have life can do the works of living men and women for their living God When we are sick then we think what we would do for God if we were well Thou that hast grace art spiritually well and hast ability from God to work the works of God The wicked can neither think speak nor do for God when thou canst do all these things through that grace that God hath bestowed upon thee It is true nobility and the only Summa apud Deum nobilitas est clarum esse virtutibus advancement of a man or a woman to be fruitful in good works and duties towards God Thou hast cause to account it thy glory and thy crown of rejoycing that thou hast an heart or hand to move towards or do ought for God Those that are in their sins are dead and can do nothing Thou that art a Saint art alive and canst do something Thou canst be a means to promote the glory to predicate the greatness of the Lord. To be able to pray read hear speak believe oppose sin stand up in the behalf of grace is more by far then to be endowed with talents and abilities for temporal and secular undertakings One action done for God from grace is of more worth then all the atchievements of the most eminent without grace When David and his people offered freely to the building of the Temple he was much affected and taken with it acknowledging that he and they were unworthy to be dignified with ability of doing thus for God 1 Chron. 29. 13 14. 7. A sign of affection To be delivered from the Law of sin is a demonstration of the S. 10 love of God To be made willing to good is a manifestation of God's good will The souls love to God is but an effect of God's love to the soul We love him because he first Prior Deus dilexit nos ●●●us tantum gratis tantillos tales loved us 1 John 4. 19. Now those that are effectually called do love God for the Apostle joyns them together Those that love God and that are the called according to his purpose Rom. 8. 28. If the Lord's heart had not been towards thee he would never have drawn thy heart towards himself Where the Lord hath been pleased to hang out this sign of grace and a change thou mayst assure thy self there is store of love in his bosome toward thee The work of spiritual life in thee is the fruit of God's working love to thee Had not the Lord loved thee he would never have done thus for thee what cause of comfort then is there to thee who hast the love of God transcribed upon thy heart gracious dispositions flow from God's gracious affections and those to whom the Lord giveth saving and sanctifying grace are his Benjamins his darlings Those that can make out that they are in a living condition may conclude God's loving inclination If the Lord have changed thy nature and renewed thy heart thou mayst look upon it as a love-token with this posey or inscription I love thee freely In these clear waters of grace thou mayst see the smiling serene face of heaven In this book thou mayst read whole Chapters of God's good will And is it not a comforting cordial to know that one is in God's books in his favour Be glad and rejoyce for the Lord loveth thee one dram of God's special love is such a pearl that the whole world is not able to weigh against The Angel in his salutation to Mary Luke 1. 28 30. saith Haile thou that art highly favoured the Lord is with thee So may it be said to thee If Christ and grace be conceived and formed in thy soul it is a sign thou hast found favour with the Lord. 8. A singular condition There is no estate S. 11 like to an estate of grace There are degrees of honour in the world but this above them all and the divine Heraldry will give it the first place The Apostle
between man and man so between God and man yet how doth the world slight and scoff at them vilifie and revile them contemn and condemn them but as they said to Pilate so I to thee altering the John 29. 12. words If thou do these things thou art not thy souls friend 7. By afflicting their persons This is the S. 8 last providence that I am to speak to the Lord breaks down the body and by that means builds up the soul by launcings he let out the putrefactions by the pruning knife of Nocumenta documenta affliction doth the Lord cut away the overspreading and sarmenting boughs of lust and corruption trials are teaching harms are healing blows are made blessings corrasives turn cordials maledictions benedictions the Lord many times laies on his rod that he may not let out his wrath he puts some into the furnace of affliction and there melts and works out their tin and lead and drosse By this shall the iniquity of Jacob be purged and Isa 87. 9. this is all the fruit to take away his sin Many can say with David It is good for me that I Psal 199. 71. have been afflicted that I might learn thy statutes And with him that said If I had not been undone I had been undone If I had Periissem nisi periissem not lost my sins I had lost my life If I had not lost my goods I had lost my God If my body had not been mar'd my soul had never been made If I had not lost a child I had never found a father If I had not been friendlesse I had always been faithlesse an ounce of adversity is sometimes worth a pound of prosperity a little of sorrow may sometimes go further than a great deal of joy Manasses was more beholding to captivity than his 2 Sam. 33. 11 12 13. crown to the thorns than his throne to his chains of iron than his chains of gold his fetters than his scepter his prison than his pallace he was too high to be a Saint till God unkinged him too stiff to stoop till God threw him out of his regal chair and forced him to fall upon his knees his losse more worth than his gain little did he think that his parting with all should be a means to bring him to a part in Christ and grace the crooked key of troubles and miseries many times opens the door and lets a soul into the chamber of presence the tossing waves lift up the ark of the soul neerer heaven such kind of agues are many times wholesome when affliction shews it teeth and grins poor creatures are perplexed but be patient for the fruit may be very precious the fear sometimes through the blessing and wisedom of God is more than the harm Afflictions are the shepherds dog not to worry in pieces but to work to Gods part not to tear but to turn The Lord is forced as I may say sometimes to deal with sinners as Absalom did with Joab he sent for him once and again by his servants but he 2 Sam. 14. 29 30. came not at last he fires his field of barley and then he comes without further sending The Lord hath some of his elect ones whom he seeth walking in by-paths and crooked ways the Lord giveth a commission to his servants the Ministers and saith go invite and call you soul to come to me and say Return Return O Shulamite but the soul stirs not the Lord sends and calls again yet with the deaf adder he hearkneth not to the voice of the inchanter well saith the Lord if you will Psal 58. 4 5. not come I will fetch you if fair means will not do foul means must Then he hisseth for the flie and the bee of affliction and calls forth armies of trouble and gives them commission to sieze upon and to lay siege to such a man or woman and saith ply them with your cannon shot till you make them yield give up the keys and strike their sail he sends sicknesse to their bodies a consumption to their estate death to their friends shame to their reputation a fire to their house and the like and bids them prey and spoil till they see and acknowledge the hand of the Lord lifted up till they hear Mic. 6. 9. the voice of the rod and who hath appointed it the Lord many times gives strong physick Deus medicus tribulatio medicamentum before the peccant humour will away and winnoweth them much to throw out the chaff thus he bringeth the buds of grace out of the seeds of affliction and ushereth in the Lady grace with salt preambles many times a sorrowful evening may have a joyful morning There may be crying out in the evening for the pangs of affliction and crying out in the morning for the pains of conversion The evening red with the fiery trial the morning gray with grief for sin may produce a fair day of holinesse cloudy and dolorous evenings may have cleer and deliverance-mornings the Lord sometimes bends a soul till he makes it meet again and breaks it till he makes it melt that he may bow them to his gracious will and not burst them by his grievous wrath rather then the Lord will lose a soul that belongs to him he will lash them till he force them into his bosome Thus I have discovered unto you the providences of God whereby he provides for his peoples good Though there may be others yet I think these are the chief may we not now say as David Many O Lord our God are thy wonderful works which thou hast done and thy thoughts which are to us ward Psal 40. 5. Have not his people cause to utter the memory of his great goodnesse and to sing of his righteousnesse Psal 145. 7. Oh oh that we would praise the Lord for his goodnesse and for his wonderful works towards our souls Psal 107. 8. That the Lord should thus variously unexpectedly in all these ways seek the conversion and changing of lost souls may justly cause us to say All the paths of the Lord are mercy and truth Psal 25. 10. and with the same Psalmist in another place Thou crownest my years with thy goodnesse and thy paths drop fatnesse into our souls Psal 65. 11. I conclude these things admiring with Paul Rom. 11. 33. O the depth of the riches both of the wisedom and knowledge of God and doxologizing with him 1 Tim. 1. 17. Now unto the King eternal immortal invisible the only wise God be honour and glory for ever and ever Amen 2. By his Word Now we come to the next S. 9 means which the Lord maketh use of for the conversion and calling home of Saints to himself and that is the Word of God That is Jam. 1. 18. Rom. 10. 17 Nemini blanditur veritas the instrument of regeneration It is a word of truth and therefore fit for this work It dealeth impartially
the head of enlivening the heart It is as the Sun in the Hemisphere of the soul without which a man or woman is in the land of darknesse such is the vertue and value thereof that Luther said one leaf of the Bible was worth the whole world it is the honour of a Nation the happinesse of a people to have it it is a blessing that proceeds from signal love and distinguishing favour He sheweth his word unto Jacob his statutes and his judgements unto Israel He hath not dealt so with any Nation and as for his judgements they have not known them Psal 147. 19 20. The Bible is the Book of Books the Scripture is the King of writings which made Charles the great to crown it with his own Crown it is of such worth that it is a shame for a Christian not to be well read in the writings seen in the sayings versed in the verses Catechized in the chapters and perfect in the pages of that Book One asked a Schoolmaster whether he had Homer's Iliads and for his negative answer took him a box on the ear and went his way Do not they then deserve to be ratled with reproof condemned by censures that are weary of the word that slight the Scriptures that trample the Testaments under their feet I am loth to leave it upon record that this age hath produced such Caterpillars It is a sin I think not to be mentioned without mourning such consider not that where there is no vision the people must needs perish Prov. 29. 18. O let not the esteeme of Gods word die and wither in our hearts It is a golden treasure though it be but in earthen Vessels it is most dainty fare though not sauced with the enticing words of mans wisedom what though it be not written so as to please sinful fancy let it suffice it is so written as to procure saving Faith It is eminent for beauty transcendent for splendour to those that have their eyes opened A word fitly spoken is like Apples of Coecus no● judicat de coloribus gold in Pictures of silver Prov. 25. 11. All the words of God are fitly spoken and as they said truely Never man spake like this man John 7. 46. So may we both truely and justly say in this ease Never any spake as God speaks in his word that must needs be excellent which teacheth of God traineth the soul tutoreth the affections that must needs shine with a peculiar lustre which the spirit as superiour Agent makes use of as an inferiour instrument to condemn vanity convince of folly to confound sin and to convert the soul 14. The necessity of hearing Then carnal S. 14 people must hear the word since it is a means of calling and conversion It is a pernicious principle that teacheth that wicked men may not do bona good things because they cannot do them bene well It is true God loves adverbes better than verbes the manner of doing rather than the matter yet the matter rather than nothing at all and though it be bad not to do that we do well yet it is worse to leave our duty wholly undone It is but doleful doctrine to exclude people from the means of grace because they have not grace The wicked are condemned in Scripture for not calling upon and worshipping Psa 14. 4. Jer. 10. 25. Verbum Dei praedicandum est ut audiens credat Rom. 10. 17. the Lord If the word be the means of life then the dead in sin must wait upon it If the Ministers be Christs ushers then those that would learn must come and sit at their feet Faith cometh by hearing then they must come to hear that they may have faith Peter preached to wicked ones to the crucifiers of Christ Acts. 2. 22 23. c. if it were lawful for him to hold out the word it was lawful for them to hear it If lawful for him to preach to them then lawful for them to be present Let them then hear the word and hear it with fear and trembling however let them hear it Though they come to work yet God may new mould them though they come for custom yet God may convert them Though their intentions be sinful yet Gods execution may be sanctifying some ordinances are for all others onlie for some The Sacraments are Gods visible the Scriptures his audible word Though the wicked are to be debarred the one yet not to be deprived of the other Though they may not be Communicants at the table yet let them have communion with the Pulpit though they be shut out of the chancel yet let them not be shut out of the Church Though the presence chamber be kept with lock and key yet let the Court gate be set wide open Though they may not handle the body of the Lord yet let them hear the word of the Lord. CHAP. III. II. Vse for Terrour THis doctrine in the next place speaks woe S. 1 and condemnation with a loud voice to those that are not effectually called it dischargeth a volley of shot thundreth an whole peal of ordnance in the faces of those that are unchanged like pictures that are made to look everie way as it smileth upon the godly as you shall hear afterwards so it frowneth looketh 1 Kings 22. 8. louringlie upon the ungodly And as Ahab said of Micaiah touchilie so may we say of this doctrine trulie in reference to wicked men that it doth not prophesie good concerning them but evil Doth the Lord effectuallie call whom hee did predestinate then you who yet are not called have cause to wax pale and to be filled with tremblings of spirit It is like the hand writing upon the wall and may loose your joints and cause your knees to smite one against the other and that upon these accounts and the consideration of these ensuing particulars 1. Such cannot yet conclude that they S. 2 are predestinate they have no ground nor foundation whereupon such conclusions may stay themselves where the deluge of sin rests still upon the spirit and ways of a man or woman thoughts of predestination can find no rest for the sole of their feet but must either return and die in the rest of fond imagination or else flutter up and down till for want of being feathered by grace they fall and perish in the inundation of unrighteousnesse Such deserve to be hist at in the Schools of the Saints who make a flourish with such conclusions and are not able to produce the premises The Scripture giveth no warrant thus to conclude for Peter joyneth election and sanctification together where he saith Elect according to the foreknowledge of God the Father through sanctification of the spirit unto obedience c. 1 Pet. 1. 2. or to sanctification rather What Bez. in loc though you have civilitie and outward conformity is that firm ground fitting for thee to anchor upon with determinations of thine election
one is a new creature goeth beyond it by many degrees That is good in the positive and comparative but this in the superlative degree The Lord open your eyes that you may see the glory and beauty thereof A most blessed condition it must needs be that hath so many choice consequences a most excellent endowment that brings so great enjoyments no mean quality that hath so many immunities It is a great King that is attended by such a noble train a Royal Queen that is waited upon by so many maids of honour A whole Paradise of temporal felicity falleth short of a part in spiritual sanctity 10. The industry of youth If the Lord do S. 10 usually call in younger years then young people had need be very industrious to get grace They had need bestir themselves to make hay while their Sun shineth while they are naturally strong they had need labour to be spiritually strong in the Lord while the In juvenili aetate vigent corporis senjus visus acutior auditus Promptior qui in hac aetate se domant Deo se sociant praemium Joannis expectant blood runs fresh in their veines they had need plie the work of salvation and apply the word of sanctification let them strive for grace early and they are like to have grace in earnest If they do not sedulously improve their time they will hardly savingly approve the truth They should strive against sin oppose obstacles be conquering corruption defying the devil tooth and nail with might and main now or never now if ever as we use to say It is good policy to labour while one is young that they may get a stock against they be old If young men be sluggards and loath to put their hand to the plow it is just with God that they should beg in harvest and have nothing Prov. 20. 4. for though they call upon God afterwards yet it may be he will not hear them Now must they follow their pattern Jesus Prov. 1. 28. Christ and work the works of God who hath sent them into the world the night cometh when no man can work So that we may say John 9. 4. with the Psalmist Both young men and maidens old men and children let them praise the name of the Lord Psal 148. 12 13. Let them give glory to God by taking true shame John 7. 19. to themselves As Joshua saith to Achan advance his worth by the amendment of their works and raise his honour by the ruine of their sinful humours To see young people running striving labouring in spiritual things till they sweat again Oh what a precious sight is this how doth the Lord smile upon such in love and clap them on the back with encouraging promises They that seek me early shall find me Prov. 8. 17. and to him that asketh it shall be given and to those that knock it shall be opened Math. 7. 7. And to him that overcometh will I give to eat of the tree of life which is in the midst of the Paradise of God Revel 2. 7. One accounted the King of Persia happy because while he was young he had attained to so great puissance They are really and eminently happy who attain to an estate of grace while they are young to be made new to have the strong holds of hell in the soul thrown down is a mercy that but few attain unto but to reach this under the conduct of the spirit in youth is an addition and augmentation of the mercy It is a sweet thing saith a precious man when God satisfieth young people with his mercy and that satisfaction abideth Master Burroughs Hos 2. 15. so as they rejoyce all the dayes of their life But carelesse youth is usually more active for sin than grace and that strength which they have from God by common bounty give to the devil in special service and sweat in gathering fading May flowers and adventure to the ditches brink to gather dasies to make a garland of vanity withall in the mean time neglecting to dig for Diamonds and Pearls to set in the Crown of Eternity Young people are for the most part loytering when they should be labouring playing when they should be praying singing when they should be sighing merry when they should be mourning youth must have its liberty they say and the greennesse of young years is with most a sufficient warrant of any exorbitancies whereas in many regards it is an aggravation of them But soul if thou improve Indigne transacta adolescentia odiosam efficit senectutem Fro●te capillata est post est occasio calva not thy young years thy golden age thy white houres thou maiest rue it to all eternity in the blacknesse of darknesse If you strive not now to enter in at the strait gate it is to be feard you will never do it in old age Time hath all forelocks no hinderlocks your time is hasting away and if once its back be turned there is no calling or returning it back again It is better to be Prometheus than Epimetheus after-wit is dearest but fore-wit is best 11. The miserie of sinful age If the Lord S. 11 usually call in souls betimes then to be old and yet in a natural condition is very sad Aged men and women have cause to be full of fear who are void of faith and to abound with sorrow who yet abide in their sins and to bemoan their woe who have not been moulded to Gods will To have a white silver head and a black iron heart is lamentable To age and grow old in the bed of sin is deplorable Long bed-ridden persons hardly get up again old sinners have continued in sin and though custom in sin may be removed yet with great difficulty They say there is no transplanting trees after seven years rooting it is too often true in this case Art thou drawing near to thy grave and yet didst never draw nigh to God Is thy glasse almost run and labouring with its latest sands Is thy time well-nigh spent and yet hast not run in the way of Gods commandements nor laboured for Heaven nor spent thy time in the best things Do thy years time and hours complain and say we have been spent in the service of the world and wickedness O doleful Prov. 16. 31. Canities tunc est venerabilis quando eagerit quae canitiem decent state to be lamented with tears of blood The hoary head I confesse is a crown of glory but then it must be found in the way of righteousness sin degrades them of their venerable dignity Such souls have cause to get alone into a corner and put their finger in their eye and lay their hand upon their heart and say what shall I do and what shall become of me Caesar wept to see Alexanders statue who had done so much and conquered the greatest part of the world and was but young when himself had done
so little who was of more yeers Aged sinner there are many at 30. years have done much for God through his grace are thriven and grown lusty in piety and have run hard that they are almost at Heavens gate when thou hast done nothing are like Pharaohs lean kine and didst never take two paces in the way of godliness who art 50 60. years of age it may be more and hast enjoyed as good nay it may be better means than they there are many of half thy years that grow rich with a little and thou growest poor with much That have more in their little finger than thou hast in thine whole body you have cause to lay it to heart that you have laid out your heart no more for God Hast thou stood all this while a tree in Gods Orchard and art thou outstripped by a young Plant Hast thou been all this while in Christs School ever 2 Tim. 3. 7. learning and not yet able to come to the knowledge of the truth Art thou still no further than a. b. c. Oh consider this thou that hast forgotten God so long least he tear thee in Psal 50. 22. pieces and there be none to deliver Yet I would not have thee to despair yet there may be some hope concerning thee if thou turn truly repent really pray perseveringly seek seriously and believe savingly Thou hadst need double thy diligence and redeem the time Thou must do two hours work in one Thou must ride all night as well as all day or Plus omnibus religione operam dare senibus convenit quos praesentis seculi florida aetas transacta desemit thou wilt hardly get to they journey's end Thou hadst need borrow time from thy sleep from thy meales from thy recreation and lay it out about thy soul because thou hast neglected thy salvation so long the smalnesse of your remaining time the decay of sence and reason habit in sin the wiles of the Devil render your change doubtful and difficult However give all diligence to make thy calling and Election sure Be importunate with the Lord and like Jacob take no nay The Sun is almost down yet if thou put on hard thou mayest reach thy Fathers house before day-light be quite done 12. The utility of observation Doth the S. 12 Lord convert and call into his bosome by his works and providences Then it is a very good and profitable thing for us to take notice of the providences of God providences well minded may be means of our souls mending Such as have their conceptions filled with them may come to have their conversation filed by them The works of the Lord being throughly pondered are means many times of being truly purified The Lord passeth by us in his dispensations and through our heedlesseness passeth over us in displeasure The Lords works and various dealings are as decoyes and snares to take us but if we step over them we are not like to be caught The Lord openeth these hangings and if we open not our eye to behold them they wil not affect our heart who is there that observeth the Psa 28. 5. works of the Lord or mindeth the operation of his hands in his actings towards them or theirs in their soul or body formerly or lately in greater or lesser affaires in light or dark prosperous or adverse emergencies much might be squeez'd and got out of them It was the commendation of one that he could make something of nothing and great matters of small so the providences of God which others make no account of if Husbanded and improved might amount to the salvation of the soul through God's blessing They are therefore to be recorded in our thoughts and registred in our understandings In the Arke was kept the pot of Manna which was a remarkeable and extraordinary providence of Heb. 9. 4. God towards the Israelites in that they were fed and preserved so long by it A Godly man of late hath set before us a very commendable pattern of this nature I mean Master Ambrose in whose middle things you have a Catalogue of providences c. The footsteps and goings of the Lord are to be marked and observed It is not amisse to keep a Book or List of them let mercy be remembred Beneficia Dei omnibus horis consideranda sunt misery regarded let trials be thought on let afflictions affect us let his providences of all sorts especially those of greatest stature live in our memories and not be buried in the grave of oblivion shall the Lord passe under our window in actings of various and divers kinds and shall not we look out to see what he doth when his hand is stretched out to strike or reached out to stroak shall we regard neither Contemplation of our maker is one great Homo ad contemplandum creatoris suum conditus est end of our making and to view not onely the wayes of the Lord in general towards others but also his goings in particular toward our selves It were but a practice of piety to have Chronicles of this nature as none of the words so none of the works of the Lord should be suffered to fall to the ground by us but we should take them up at the first bound we should shew our selves thrifty in this case and gather up the fragments that nothing be lost we are ready to murmure at God's dealings many times when there is great reason to marvail at them when we see the issue of them Providential actions are the ripening of the Lords previous intentions by providences do his purposes come to the birth and his promises receive accomplishment let them therefore be heedfully observed and carefully preserved 13. The dignity of the word Is the word S. 13 an Instrument in God's hand of changing mans heart then it is a most precious thing and to be much prized by us It is a word of duty to us and therefore must needs be a word of dignity in it self It is a working word through the spirits assistance and therefore a worthy word to our acceptance it is a means of sanctification and there is reason it should be the matter of our estimation it is an invaluable treasure and incomparable Jewel and therefore to be lodged in the heart and laid in the bosome which was the practice of pious David Thy word have I hid in mine heart Psal 119. 11. He had high thoughts and singular conceit of it with such a deep stream did his affection run towards it that himself could hardly sound the bottome thereof as appears by his pathetical expressions O how love I thy Law It is my meditation all the day Ps 119. Scripturae divinae jugiter mente voluantur 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 2 Tim. 3. 16. Si verbum Dei auferas solem è mundo sustulisti 97. The word is of exceeding great use and price it is an universal remedy it is a means of enlightning
which such Quis mortem temporalem metuat cui aeterna vita promittitur cannot do as we have shewed in the former head If spirituals be absent temporals will prove but miserable comforters Though now you hold up your heads and blank at nothing and you laugh at the shaking of the spears and account darts as stubble yet in your moneth Job 41. 29. when you come to be gravid and go bigge with the sorrow of languishing sicknesses and fear of approaching death you will change your tone and sing another song if you be not as bad or worse than the Devil for he hath such a sence of his condition that it makes him to tremble Thus you see what a dreadful condition all are in that are not effectually called no comfort present or future none in life or in death none in earthly and common none in Heavenly and spiritual good things They may well have their name changed Jer. 20. 3. and be called Magor-Missabib fear round about for there is just cause they should be a terrour to themselves CHAP. IV. III. Vse For reprehension IN the next place this Doctrine reads a Juniper S. 1 Lecture to such as look not after this work of effectual calling and sharply chideth those that have opposed and stood out against the cals of God have you lived in the bosome of the Church all this while and are not yet in the bosome of Christ are there so many witnesses of Gods calling and no evidence of your answer Hath God called to you to awake and are your eyes together still hath he called to you to arise and do you still rest upon the couch of iniquitie Hath the Lord stretched out his hands and thou not regarded Hast thou turned the deaf eare to his voice Hast thou snibbed the spirit muzzelled the mouth of truth bruised the buds of grace stopped the stirrings murdered the motions to holinesse thou deservest to be lashed with reproof till thine eye weep and thy sides bleed You have heard before now that whom the Lord predestinateth them he calleth and you are never sollicitous Omnes sumus in minimis cauti in maximis negligentes about it You have had no serious thoughts about it nay you have done what in you lieth to hinder this work in your selves and others You have not praied nor endeavoured for it the desire of your soul hath not gone out with earnest longings for this work nay shut not up the Book do not go your wayes but stand still till you have gone through this use bear your chiding patiently and let your eare hearken to the reproof of life Prov. 15. 31. that you may abide among the wise If you turn your back and stop your ear there is no hope for you nay hath not grace been a grievance pietie needlesse precisenesse the new birth a burden duty a disparagement in your conceit and estimation Have you spent all your dayes in Gospel places and under Gospel means and yet are unchanged still why do you resist the Holy Ghost Do you not know that in thus doing you forsake your own mercies sin against your soul Do you think you were born a Saint and need no regeneration alas you are mistaken for with David you were shapen in iniquity and in sin did your Mother conceive you You must be born Ps 51. 5. Nullus vitam in qua natus est bene finiet nisi renatus antequam finiatur again as well as born or you will never do well Or do you think it is enough to be a Christian in the general so are the Papists or that it is enough to be a Protestant so are many that live in known and open sins or that it is enough to be civil or outwardly religious so are many who yet deny the power Truely the foulnesse of your waies declares the 2 Tim. 2. 5. folly of your thoughts and your conversations will shew that there are such cogitations within what hast passed all this time in the world and yet never passed the streights of the new birth Have so many years gone over your head and the work of grace never come upon your heart Oh that you would be heartily ashamed of this Are you not at one time or other convinced that your condition is not good towards God and that you are not in an estate of grace Though you keep your head above water and cherish some raw hopes of your good plight and that you shall be saved arising either from love to your self as if that must needs be which you could wish or from presumption that the generalitie shall be saved and are in condition good enough or from ignorance taking that to be grace which is not and thinking that repentance may be had when you list and think you have most need of it at the last when death comes Yet upon more serious thoughts you have misgivings of spirit that all is not well which makes such thoughts unwelcome guests to you and for all your bravadoes yet you never yet durst adventure upon the work of examination or view your self by Scripture light for fear the issue and result should not correspond to your present hopes and thoughts Is it nothing to be in such a condition wherein thou hast no truth of grace as thou art who never wast converted and changed Is it nothing to have the Lord bring his action against thee for standing out against him and to threaten to execute the Law of retaliation upon thee and to pay thee in thine own coyn as he doth when he saith Because I have called and ye refused I have stretched out my hand and no man regarded but ye have set at naught all my counsel and would none of my reproof I also will laugh at your calamity I will mock when your fear cometh Prov. 1. 24 25 26. This is a dreadfull hearing every word hath its weight what shall the Lord call and sinners not come shall he reprove and they refuse shall he offer and they oppose he counsel and they contemn shall the great God be thus condescending and wilt thou be no more corresponding It will be a vain plea to say thou canst not effectually call thy self such excuses and defences Causa patrocinio non bona major erit will increase and not decrease thy fault For you can oppose and with a stiff-neck resist the grace of God You have not heard nor read nor kept Godly company c. as you might besides God hath made a gracious promise of giving his spirit and this spirit hath Prov. 1. 23. come and you have given it churlish use and frowned it out of doores Is it nothing to hear the Lord thundring against thee as he did against his old people the Jews And now because ye have done all these works saith the Lord and I spake unto you rising up early and speaking but ye heard not and I called you but
ye answered not Therefore will I do unto this house which is called by my name as I have done to Shiloh and I will cast you out of my sight Jer. 7. 13 14 15. This reprehension and commination concernes thee as well as them because thou art in the same predicament and condition with them You see the hardness of your heart and the heavinesse of Gods hand go together want of conversion brings woful confusion and such as continue vassals of sin are like to prove vessels of sorrow Is it a light matter in your account not to Eccho to the voice of God from Heaven Is it nothing to have the Lord of life and glory stand and knock at the door of your cottage and you not let him in He hath promised to open to you if you knock Matt. 7. 7. and will not you open to him when he knocks Is it nothing to have God make tenders from Heaven and we be unwilling to accept of his termes Is it nothing for the Lord to complain and say All day long I have stretched forth my hands unto a disobedient and gainsaying people Rom. 10. 21. If you be not past shame you cannot but be ashamed of these things let not the Lord have cause to say Were they ashamed of what they had done nay they were not ashamed at all neither could they blush Oh that you Jer. 8. 12. should make no more account of such a work as this is That you should spend your time and never seek for this Bear with my chiding and reproof the Lord set it home upon your hearts It is out of love and desire of thy good I must not flatter thee Open rebuke is better than secret love faithful are the wounds Prov. 27. 5 6. Magis ama tobjurgator sanans quam adulator dissimulans of a friend but the kisses of an Enemy are deceitful Such as you are must be rebuked sharply You are in much fault your sin is great your condition is sad and not to deal plainly were to destroy thee and my self too That this use may not fall off from your spirit I shall fasten it with three nailes and that I may make it more full and compleat give me leave to lay before you a trinity of considerations which are these 1. Aggravating circumstances 2. Administring causes 3. Astonishing consequences or considerations 1. Aggravating circumstances In the first place S. 2 I shal aggravate the neglect want of effectual calling It is good for souls to view their sins round about and to look upon them not onely in the substantials but also in the circumstantials of them not only in their essentials but also in their accidentals That may be a mole-hill in Tanto majus peccatum esse cognoscitur quanto major qui peccat ●abetur one as it were which is a mountain in another That may be less in one which is larger in another The quantity of sin beareth proportion with the quality of the sinner Not only the absolute constitution of sin but the relative dimensions thereof also are to be taken into our consideration Now these following circumstances do exceedingly greaten and enhance your neglect and slighting of effectual calling and the work of grace 1. The multitude of your calls in regard of 1. The frequencie of the Act. 2. The variety of the agent 2. The altitude of your inexcusablenesse 3. The magnitude of God's providences 4. The lenitude of the spirit 5. The longitude of your life 6. The latitude of your comforts 1. The multitude of your calls You have had many calls many wayes 1. In regard of the frequency of the Act S. 3 You have been often called upon to turn in to the Lord you have been often invited to the marriage Feast The Lord hath repeated his calls and do you renew your resistance The Lord hath multiplied his calls and you have not magnified his grace by your acceptance The Lord hath often called from Heaven and thou hast not taken one step from Earth to meet with him may not Christ say to thee as he said to the Jews How often would I have gathered you together as an Hen doth gather her Brood under her wings and ye would not Luke 13. 34. That how often implieth often 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Lord Christ hath many times stretched out his wing of love and thou hast refused to come under his shelter This is very sad and shouldst thou then hear any other voice then that of Punitione gravi dignus est qui saepius Dei gratiam contempsit chiding and other language then that of reproof Thou art not able to reckon up the many times that God hath called thee In the Canticles we find Return return O Shulamite return return Cantic 6. 13. Four times but this is nothing to the times that thou hast been called The Lord called to Samuel four times before he understood his voice 1 Sam. c. 3. beginning of it but thou hast been called not four but four hundred four thousand yea innumerable times and thou knowest not his language and hast not yet made answer speak Lord for thy servant heareth Thou hast been called in thy non-age in thy middle age yea in thine old age and yet thou art in thine old condition Thou hast been called long ago and of later time Thou hast been called in thy single in thy sociated estate Thou wast called in the time that is past and art called still in the time that is present God hath and doth send many messengers spokes-men to woo thee for himself and thou hast said nay to all The Cock hath crowed not three but three hundred Matt. 26. 75. times and yet thou hast not remembred the words of the Lord nor wept bitterly for thy sins You have been called on the Lord's day and yet not one of your dayes have been spent for the Lord You have been called on lecture dayes and yet you have never truely leaned on Christ You have been called in fasting seasons and yet you have not fasted from sin You have been called on thanks-giving dayes and yet you have not given in your name to Christ You have been called publikely and privately and yet will not be prevailed withall Your callings have been frequent and yet your Zeal is not fervent Your calls have been many but your graces not any Your calls have been several but your faith not saving You have had divers invitations but no dutiful inclinations The dew hath fallen upon you every morning and yet you have not sprouted out The showers have descended upon you continually and yet you have not ascended Heavenward the Heavenly Elatum cor durum expers est pietatis ignarum compunctionis drops have fallen upon you every day and yet your heart more hard then stone hath received no impressions The Lord may complain and say I have shewed thee my wayes and taught thee my pathes