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A19693 Time vvell spent in sacred meditations. Divine observations. Heavenly exhortations Serving to confirme the penitent. Informe the ignorant. ... And, cherish the true-hearted Christian. By that late able, painfull, and worthy man of God, Mr. Ezechiel Culvervvel minister of the Word. Culverwell, Ezekiel, 1553 or 4-1631.; Symson, Andrew. 1634 (1634) STC 6112; ESTC S116358 98,125 394

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and hard that nothing will please him which hath infirmitie whereas indeed as hee knoweth what wee doe or can doe so hath hee revealed himselfe to bee as readie to bee pleased with the meanest endevours and to forgive and beare with wants as ever parents were Againe if we had not infirmities what need we Christ one main benefit of his being to cover our infirmities so then wee ought to beleeve that God in Christ will forgive and accept us 4. To have a sweet feeling of Gods fatherly love and so to know and be assured our names are written in heaven that wee cannot perish being as Christ teacheth the matter of greatest joy as whereon all other comforts depend and without which there can bee no sound joy no marvaile though so few attain thereunto it being reserved for such of Gods children as be deepest in favour with him the rest but seldome and the hypocrite never soundly but in fancie enjoying the same Though this bee the free gift of God given to whom and so long as pleaseth him yet bee there many lets which keepe men from it and meanes to attaine and keepe it Besides the common contemners even in those that faine would have this assurance and oft mourne for it there be many lets 1. A great part bee ignorant how or whereon to build this assurance the most building their faith on their life which cannot be sound and oft faileth and can never be constant whereas the true building is to build life on faith and faith onely upon Gods mercy and truth revealed in his word not to the righteous and godly but sinners and ungodly thus Seeing the Sonne of God who hath given himselfe to worke mans redemption hath freely offered himselfe to save me a wretched sinner voide of all grace and subject to damnation promising fully to save me if I will come to him and wholly cast my selfe upon him receive him for my Saviour Lord and Husband and giving my selfe wholly body and soule to be his to serve him for ever therefore knowing and beleeving that hee both can and will indeed fully performe his promise and defiring to enjoy the same doe faithfully give and betroth my selfe to him and thereon doe build my assurance that I in him shall obtaine Gods favour and all the fruits thereof for my present cōfort and eternall happiness 2. Another great and common let of this spirituall joy and comfort in the Lord even in those that oft complaine of the want thereof is this that they will not goe to the price of it that is valuing it above all wee can aske or thinke therefore to sell all for it forgoe any thing for it and seeing what will keepe us from it to put it away though as deare as our right eye our gaine credit ease and pleasure and knowing any meanes that will helpe us to it to spare no cost no time no labour but constantly to use all meanes till wee get it and so to keepe it Now seeing this is tedious to our corrupt nature many through meere forgetfulnesse minding other things too much let all this care and travell alone seldome or sleightly minding this matter Others of meere slothfulnesse neglect to take the paines for it whereas without much paines it will not bee gotten and kept and none can bee too much Others too much in love with the world seeing the attaining and keeping of this assurance of God favour will not stand with the use of any unlawfull gaine credit in the world or vaine delight or with the abuse of lawfull therefore the covetous ambitious and voluptuous loath to forgoe any part of their wealth pomp and state of their braverie feastings pastimes and the like can never get or hold this pretious treasure of rejoycing in the Lord. Among those may be reckoned such who not so much choaked with these yet seeing that to hold this confidence will cost them sore trouble and many afflictions of meere fearefulnes and over-tendernesse being loath to suffer any thing are discouraged from seeking it and so content to live without it Others through meere distrust that they shall never attaine or hold it faint and give over In some there hath been some foule and reproachfull sinne which lyeth as a thorne in the flesh that til it be pulled out there is no ease which they loath to see and more loath should bee seene and they should beare the shame of doe so hide and smother that in the end it flameth out to their greater confusion In all the Lord hath his stroke who for these or other most just causes often hideth his loving countenance from his owne children and though he love them will not let them see it lest they should abuse it and to make them set more by it to seeke it earnestly above all when they want it and to keepe it charily when they have it The remedies of all the former diseases be the earnest labour for the contrary vertues more to value this pearle more to minde it to spare no paines in prayer meditation and other good exercises love and desire nothing in comparison hereof to hearten our selves against al discouragements and to be content to suffer any thing for it and to rest on Gods mercy and truth that as he hath given an heart to seeke so wee shall in the end obtaine and therefore to be patient and constant to the end to pull up any stub in our conscience by wise meanes cleering our selves before God and the world as need requires and lastly to consider the many tokens wee have of Gods love though hee seeme to frowne upon us and to hide his face 5. He that most denyeth himselfe and of love yeelds himselfe wholly to God may have most assurance of his effectuall vocation and election 6. Hee that feeleth his heart fully perswaded of his Salvation must examine whether it breede answerable love zeale and care to please God with griefe for offending his Majestie else may it be but presumption Atheisme Atheisme is more to bee feared then Papisme seeing many renounce Popery who yet care not for Christianity Baptisme 1. A Godly man may have his childe baptized of a minister though unreverently handling that holy mysterie that being alone the ministers sinne and which cannot hinder the blessing of Gods ordinance the Apostles being very ignorant baptised 2. The Fathers presence is requisite at the baptizing of the childe to promise for it or if he cannot come to certifie the congregation that hee would have his childe baptized and make that promise by others which present hee ought 3. Baptisme is a seale of the Crosse of Christ 4. The childe of an harlot may bee baptized though not for her sake yet for the forefathers within the same generation Benefits or Blessings 1. In all our mirths and rejoycing wee are to remember
for our soules Note The use of holy dayes We are to be in readinesse against our departure out of this vvorld daily preparing for the same To meditate on death or judgemēt vvhich best liked Hovv to meditate on death profitably Hovv to thinke of life and death The feare of death not to be disliked The use to be made of dying people A great judgement it is not to thrive by the many helps vvee have of our spirituall nourishment The causes hereof 1. 2. The R●medie The causes vvhy many decrease in godlinesse 1. 2. 3. 4. The Remedies Why the Lord often delayeth comfort Who the Lord delighteth in A description of the devills or evill spirits Of olde men vvere more affraid of the devill then novv Note The protection of the good angels comforteth in vvell doing as the evill spirits being about us humbleth in evill doing Man seeth not as God seeth Wisedome and charitie requisit Three notes vvhereby to try those vvith vvhom vve vvould converse Gods vvisdome in affording no stricter discipline A good order of discipline Hovv the devill driveth to despaire Satan tempteth at sometimes to desperation as at other to presumption Hovv capitall a sin distrust is Wee are prone to it Hovv vvee fall therein Hovv to remedie it Gods former liberalitie doth not prejudice his future mercies Note Hard to discerne vvhat doubting stands vvith faith Gods children doubt and vvaver oftentimes vvhich the Lord disposeth to good To doubt is a sinne and to bee vvithstood Hovv to remove the same Causes of Salvation The assurance of our nevv birth a remedie against doubting Sense of our vveaknesse and infirmities no breeder of security Faith and an holy life goe together Comfort to a tender conscience The hypocrite disproved Having fallen into sinne to doubt of Gods favour vvill not raise up They vvho most suspect their ovvne vveaknesse prove strongest in the time of tryall The saints looke too much on the effects too little on the causes of justification Many seeing much corruption in themselves vveaken their faith that they might by feare be made more carefull in life vvho should indeed increase their faith that they might be more quickened thereby to an holy life A principall means of vveakning faith The removall thereof It s no presumption to give credit to God in his Word Unbeleefe an horrible sinne Causes of distrust Our unvvorthines must not let us from beleeving Hovv to remove doubts of Gods favour The use to be made of dreames vvhether evill terrible or good Dulnesse vvhen chiefely found The causes thereof to be searched The remedie to bee used Gods help to be vvaited for Note Why the godly are sometimes more dull vvith the publique meanes then vvithout The omission of a duty for infirmities sake hovv dangerous In earnestnesse the heart is to be searched Long ease hovv dangerous Difference betvveene the faith of the elect and of the reprobate What it is to come to Christ Tvvo dangerous evills Unvvillingnesse to do good to be striven against Particular examples vvhen to be made generall instructions The variety of heavenly exercises tedious to our nature What use is to bee made of our failings A proofe of a vveake faith What benefits vvee enjoy by faith Hovv to encrease faith M●anes vvhereby to be encouraged unto all godlinesse 1. 2. 3. Difference betvveene knowledge and faith The true doctrine and practise of faith a stranger Fevv knovv or doe every thing in faith Foure things to be laboured for of him that vvould doe any thing 〈…〉 1. 2. 3. 4. Note True faith never throughly quenched An holy life shevveth in vvhat sort vve beleev as iniquity vvho beleeve not Hinderances of faith 1. Security occasioned thorough ignorance neglect or contempt 2. Presumption or discouragements Remedies hereof 1. 2. 3. Faith likened to fire How dangerous not to be armed vvith faith Whether this speech I vvill goe to my father be of faith or before it Whence it is that being persvvaded that God is true in all that he saith vvee should yet not beleeve some things vvhich hee saith Faith cōpared to a noble princesse Graces preceding and succeeding faith By the temper of the heart faith may be best tried Note Many deceived in thinking they have faith and have not Chiefe lets of faith or causes vvhy so fevv beleeve 1. Simil. 2. Wee more easily beleeve vvhat God hath said shall be though it be above nature then things cōcerning our selves if they bee contrary to nature Faith like unto fire in sundrie particulars How it s to be kept The vvay to get faith 1. 2. 3. 4. The surest proofe of faith is by the causes and effects thereof The causes The tryall of our humiliation The tryall of our desire of Christ The try all of dravving to Christ The effects Comfortable notes of a sound heart 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. A speciall point of Gods mercie Hovv to prove vve have saith A reverend estimation of Gods mercies to be-retained A svveet comfort In affliction of minde vvhat is to be done The greatest faith is vvhere there is least feeling No man but may fall they soonest that think least of it What use to make of the falls of others He that standeth is to take heed lest he fall Even the best have some slips the vvorse some goodnesse The elect hardly fall tvvice into one grosse sinne Familiaritie vvith sinne hovv dangerous Fellovvship vvith the ungodly hovv fearefull With vvhat sort of persons and hovv farre vve are to converse Hypocrisie is to be avoided in fasting Benefits by fasting Difference betvveene feare and presumption How profitable to feare even those things vvhich never come to passe Those feares vvhich have not their events not to be accounted triviall We are to feare though not immoderately What use to be made of feasts Want of feeling to be prayed against Note Where and why the ungodly love or hate Affinitie vvith the vvicked dangerous The friendship of the vvicked deceitfull The flesh is to bee beaten dovvne the motions of the spirit to bee entertained The dutie of ministers tovvards their flocks A fault in friends meeting Hovv to have comfort of our friends What gift may bee received Upon the event of spirituall blessings upon any hovv to behave our selves Whence it commeth to passe that vvee are more affected vvith mans favour then Gods To meditate on Gods goodnesse how profitable it is Christians are to bee humbled for their light esteeme of Gods glorie In glorifiing God vve seeke our ovvne glory Gods glory still to be aimed at Hovv to knovv when God is glorified An encouragement to glorifie God God in shewing mercie is farre unlike unto man The use to be made of Gods long-suffering Hovv dangerous it is to play vvith our affections Serò sed seriò Gods providence in every thing is duely to be vveighed Gods providence to be observed in the speeches of our enemies Secret things are for the Lord the revealed for us Wherein the godly are
comforteth the Christian heart for otherwise it were a double griefe to suffer these things in vaine yea not to profit by chastisements is and ought to bee a fearefull terrour to our consciences 2. As for such as have running sores to be without physick is dangerous for festering so for us that have running sores of sinne to bee without afflictions 3. All outward afflictions serve to worke the inward griefe for sinne which if it be the other is needlesse 4. An especiall remedie in trouble is to be prepared to undergo the same whensoever it commeth 5. Our wofull experience daily shewes how unwelcome any affliction is unto the outward man and therefore what neede wee have to bee well armed in the inner man against greater tryalls lest wee sink under them 6. It cannot bee denied but that sinne is the onely deserving cause and occasion of whatsoever evill befalleth us and therefore the Lord is just in all the evills he bringeth upon us howbeit he hath many ends why hee layeth them as well on the elect as reprobate The wicked hee plagueth to shew his justice on them to encrease their sinne and condemnation as also to make them inexcusable The elect hee chastiseth to turne them from sinne and keepe them from damnation to make them partakers of his holinesse and preserve them from further danger to exercise their faith manifest their strēgth or weaknesse and draw them nigher unto himselfe 7. When we are in affliction we are not so witty of our selves as to see the cause of it or if wee see the cause wee see not the mercy of God that his hand which is upon us is not a destroying hand but a delivering hand 8. Whereas all Gods children bee in continuall battell against sinne more or lesse it falleth out for the most part that as earthly soldiers living at ease in their campe the enemie hath more vantage and more prevaileth so in our prosperity the flesh usually prevailes over the Spirit but when God sends some affliction its as a fresh band of men to helpe the Spirit against the flesh whereby they daily get more victorie 9. This is a speciall comfort in all afflictions when first wee beleeve that Gods meaning is to make us better and Secondly we finde by experience that wee bee so and daily hope for more gaine thereby 10. The gaine we are to make by our afflictions is to be brought to more sight of our chiefe sinnes and sorrow for the same to seeke more earnestly for pardon thereof and power to amend to fight the more against them whereby they may bee the more overcome 11. When God layeth his hand upon us it s that our faith and patience may be the more tryed and exercised to his glory the example of others and our owne comfort 12. Howsoever God hath divers ends in the afflicting of his and all are not for the same yet it s safer for most Christians to take them as Physick to cure their infirmities which else would fester 13. Wee must take all afflictions as meanes to pull us neere unto God from sloathfulnesse 14. The visitation of such as grow in grace is not so much to be feared as their deliverances lest through unthankfulnesse and ease they lose the fruit they have so dearely purchased of the Lord. 15. A Christian in the time of his affliction for the hardnesse of his heart cannot judge of himselfe no more then a man sleeping of that hee did waking whence it is that many deceive themselves in looking to fee alwayes the like measure or greater of Gods graces in them for there is some intermission in the worke of the new birth though the Spirit never depart yet must not they bee secure herein for this must humble them though not dismay them 16. No affliction so much crucifieth a true hearted Christian as his owne corruptions and temptations 17. It s good for afflicted consciences to remember the state to come that they which sow in teares shall reape in joy 18. It s a common fault to bee more touched when the crosse privately toucheth us then when the whole Church suffereth Angels How the good Angels of God watch over us is not curiously to be searched after but we must pray that by faith we may feele that they pitch their tents round about our Tabernacles Anger Whether our anger bee carnall or spirituall may bee thus discerned If it hinder not but quicken our holy exercise of prayer and other religious duties if it interrupt not our meditations nor withdraw us from performing our duty to the party offended neither make us peevish to others its spirituall not carnall Assurance of Gods favour Election and Salvation 1. As it is a most blessed estate to be hid under Gods wing that is to be sure by faith of Gods favour and protection that hee will keepe us from danger or preserve us in it that it hurt us not and so in the end deliver us and make it profitable So its hard to come to this and harder to keepe it whereof amongst others these may bee the causes We too little think of such matters or prise them not when we doe yet either wee despaire or presume and post off if we goe about them yet through ignorance or sloath attend not thereon The remedy is to labour and pray to see the gaine which might make our paine pleasant till then all will be tedious Wherein this may further to consider our present dayes wherein no small store have beene suddenly taken away from all they sore toiled for And seeing our father hath allowed us sufficient of thesc things below what childish follie is it to spend our time in play as it were and leave our chiefe duties wherein wee should most please God and most procure our owne welfare present peace and eternall happinesse 2. For our comfort in the assurance of salvation wee must consider what worke of Gods Spirit wee doe certainely finde in our selves as in particular these 1. A sound knowledge of the doctrine of Salvation 2. a true beliefe of it 3. Joy and comfort in it 4. desire and care to glorifie God for it in hating and striving to forsake all sinne in loving and endevouring to doe all good in every of them being humbled by reason of our weaknesse yet comforted through the measure of Gods grace in us 3. As Gods children bee hindered many other waies so this way not the least that by reason of our common infirmities in our best actions wee have not comfort that God is pleased with us and so are discouraged and finde not that joy in our profession wee might doe for redresse hereof know we thus much that herein wee offer great injurie to God and our selves in thinking God so strait
and their owne great unworthinesse doe feare they shall never obtaine it though they above all desire it they I say ought to be bold and count it no presumption to give credit to God in his word that hee will according to his promise bestow his Sonne and in him eternall life upon them for such doth Christ expressely call unto him Mat. 11. 28. yea hereupon ought they boldly without feare to adventure their soules health eternall happinesse that by this perswasion they may bee drawne to love and obey God and so bee confirmed yea more to feare their hearts from this horrible sinne of unbeleefe the greatest of all other whereby they knowing what God hath said yea unto them doe yet in not giving credit to him that he will be as good as his word make him a lyar and so a false God much more such as have received the earnest of Gods Spirit renewing their heart● and lives ought to be of good comfort and shake off such doubts The cause of this distrust is in many their owne unworthiness which bewrayeth great ignorance and errour that God giveth his Sonne to the worthy though not of merit which no Protestant holdeth but ofmeer mercy to those that truely repent them which is petie Poperie whereas the truth of God is that hee having given his Son to none but such as had no grace nor repentance in them that they by receiving Christ by faith might receive grace to beginne to repent and so daily to grow therein therefore as none ought to beleeve because they have repented so none ought to be afraid to beleeve because of his unworthinesse the sense whereof doth make him most fit to beleeve and receive Christ The want of knowledge and due regard of this one point is a principall cause of distrust on the one side and vaine presumption on the other both workes of perdition 7. For removing of our doubts of Gods favour either generally or in some particular actions there must bee 1. A sound judgement to direct when wee ought to doubt or not and 2. A daily labour according to our judgement to doubt and beleeve as cause is Dreames Of dreams which make some deepe impression in us and abide longer its good to make some profit and they may be thought to come from God or the devill according to their divers ends and effects An evill dreame shewes an evill heart in some sinne either committed or whereto we be subject and may shortly follow If they be terrible they may forewarne of some evill to come that we may avoide it by good meanes yet so as we neither feare them too much nor quite contemne them so for the good that we perswade not our selves of having it nor yet neglect it The same may be said for the event of witcheries and slanders Dulnesse and Deadnesse 1. A common thing it is in Gods children after their greatest joyes to feel great dulnesse and deadnesse of minde When the same seiseth upon us 1. We ought to search the cause whetherdoing some evill leaving off some good to bee done neglecting the meanes of salvation not seeing or not repenting some sinne seene or not repenting so soundly or for unthankfulnesse for former graces 2. Wee must use the remedie not pleasing our selves in this deadnesse but stirring up our selves as from slumber calling to minde Gods speciall mercies on us and our unworthy receiving and using of them using all good meanes to quicken us 3. In using the meanes to offer our selves to God waiting patiently for his helpe esteeming neither too little nor too much our affliction 2. It falleth out that Gods children are sometimes more dull with the publique meanes then without which may arise from hence that either they are too remisse in the use of the private or else fall to loathing the publique because they have them so often or put too much confidence in such places which the Lord correcteth by denying the use and such like Dutie For infirmities sake to leave a duty undone is to cover sinne not to overcome it Earnestnesse IN our earnestnesse its necessary to searth our hearts whether it be of the Spirit or of the flesh and if we cannot see the depth of our hearts it argueth want of prayer and travailing with our affections to know them Ease Long ease will bring either superstition prophanenesse or heresie through our corruption Elect and Reprobate A Reprobate of knowledge lying in despaire may beleeve that both Christ can and would ease him if hee could beleeve and come unto Christ to be eased but distrusting this comes not turnes away frō God But the elect beleeving that Christ will ease all commers to him is drawne by Gods Spirit to apply this to himselfe and make reckoning he comming shall bee eased and therefore indeed seeketh with faith to Christ and is eased to come to Christ is not simply to beleeve but beleeving Christ will be as good as his word in spirit to goe unto the throne of grace and desire the same as a begger invited comes for reliefe Evills These be two evills very dangerous To pretend great comfort and make small conscience in our life and to confesse our faith is weake and yet to be content therewith Excuse When we are unwilling to doe good an excuse is too readie its good therefore earnestly to strive to overcome this and then to take opportunity to doe the same Examples Particular examples may be made generall instructions when the cause of the mis generall Exercise As God hath given great variety of heavenly exercises and matters to be exercised in so we shall finde such irkesomenesse in our nature that wee care not to use this variety for our reliefe Failings WHen we see wherein wee have failed in any part of our daily practise we are not to make slight thereof or favour our selves therein but labour speedily to recover lest we grow hardned and incurable Faith 1. Such as by hearing of witches and fearefull practises of Satan be sore frighted are to know their faith is weake and comfort small for the sound beleever shall not feare for any evill tidings and therefore they must never cease striving for faith and comfort till they finde a sweet and bold resting in the Lord their father who will preserve them 2. Faith being the band of our union with Christ we doe thereby enjoy peace with God are favourably accepted of him joy in the hope of happinesse have comfort in affliction patience experience hope boldnesse to pray love to God and delight to serve him wee please God long for heaven 3. The way to encrease faith is to apply to our selves Gods promise in his word and Sacraments by hearing the word praying meditation conference and the like and to this end also every one who desires
reveale them or our friends to fall out with us and so reveale them to whom before we made them knowne or our owne mouth to confesse them either at unawares or in sleepe by dreames or in sicknesse by raving or in frenfie to vomit out thine owne shame or else the torment of thy evil conscience shall wring it out yea if all these should faile the Lord is able to raise a strong suspition in the hearts of others that thou art such a one and therby discredit thee as this is a good meanes to provide for a good name so is it a good rule of all godlinesse to be affraid of secret evills yea in heart and thought A second step of procuring and keeping a good name is to have a godly jealousie over all our doings that they give no occasion of suspicion of evill though we doe not that which is simply evill procuring things honest following and seeking after things of good report so also to be plentifull in good workes one or two being insufficient our light must shine before men Mat. 5. 6. In doing good wee must looke that it be with a sincere affection and 2. with discretion the want of eithertakes away the credit of well-doing by Gods just punishment so that a simple soule shall see the shifts wherewith the wise worldlings bleare mens eyes 7. When we are ill reported of for well doing its good first before wee cleare our selves to examine our hearts in what manner we did it and finding wickednesse therein to be humbled for it before the Lord and receive it as Gods correction to amend us if we finde our heart upright then let us learne that God tryeth us whether we will leave doing well for ill report and therefore with patience to endure this triall and commend our innocencie unto him who maintaines good and honest hearts 8. They which are so past shame that they care not for the Church discipline for their open sinnes little profit by the Magistrate 9 Many that are put to open shame are sorowfull therefore but not aright for it is not because they sinne against God others are sorrowfull for their sin which wrought them shame but the devill bewitcheth them that their sinne is not so great and many doe worse and this shame will not continue long prove a wonder but of nine dayes continuance whereby they be hindered from repentance and though at the first they without dissembling promised amendment yet neglecting the meanes to further their repentance thus bewitched they fall to their sinnes againe They that will profit by such discredit are to labour that as their faces blush before men so their soules may be confounded before the Lord that being humbled by godly sorrow it may please God to raise them up Now to try godly sorrow these be two rules 1. If we can with contented mindes take the punishment as correction from the Lord and yet mourne for our sinne and that in such manner as giving place to Gods justice in punishing we can labour for forgivenesse of sinnes And 2. if when we can conceale our sinne yet wee freely with David confesse it when a sin is committed yet so closely as none can probably suspect him the offendant may conceale his sinne if it can be done without another sinne but if an oath be lawfully required the truth must be told Nurcerie for the Church It were an happy nurcerie for the Church if every grounded Pastor would traine up in life learning doctrine discipline some toward Scholar to make him more fit for the Church as Moses did Ioshua Elias Elisha Ieremie Baruch Christ his disciples Paul Timothie Offences IN private offences a man may goe to his private prayers before he be reconciled till opportunitie be had Parents 1. WHen children have infirmities their parents are to see whether they have not received such sinnes from them if they have they are rather to pray for their children then too much to correct them lest they persecute their owne sinnes in their children 2. The Lord often in his children correcteth the immoderate love of parents to their children for naturall causes as Abraham with Ismael Isaac with Esau David with Absolom and Adoniah so of husbands to their wives 3. If a maide may not performe her vow to the Lord without her fathers consent much lesse her contract to man Patience 1. In greatest troubles there is no greater ease then patience and sufferance as a great cause of madnesse is impatiency of minde or Gods sudden wrath for sinne against conscience 2. Patience then possesseth the soule when our outward wants are thereby supplyed Peace and Ioy. 1. It s not to bee marvelled though so few attaine to the joy in the holy Ghost and to such sweet rejoycings in Gods love which is the height of our happinesse here so that the more this is felt and kept the more heavenly is the life and death 1. The worser sort have no knowledge nor care whether God like or dislike their wayes but blindlie hope all is well till evill come and some of these though they feare God is angry with them yet shake it off and forget it at least flightly appease him 2. A second sort be grieved hereat and this takes away their joy as it ought but seldome come they to sound comfort and lesse rejoycing though fearefull to offend 3. A better sort be warned by their harmes and so more wisely keepe their peace not willingly angering God by leaving undone their duty or presuming to doe contrary but indeede to please God those usually walke with much peace and can come boldly in Gods presence and so sometimes finde a glorying in the Lord and exultation in the Spirit best of all The way then to maintaine our peace and so rejoyce is to consider how we please God if not then 1. not to be quiet but mourne 2. not to languish in sorrow but seeke reconciliation 3. to be chary in maintaining peace which in time will breede rejoycing for which labour we by due meditation on Gods love for infirmities ought not to breake our peace so as there be a true bewailing and striving against them but presumptuous sinnes and God much more will beare with many faults where there is a care to to doe better 2. Although the love of God bee the originall cause of our salvation yet in respect of us the grace of Christ is the first to worke assurance thereof in our hearts for this cause in blessing the people that is set in the first place The grace of our Lord Jesus Christ which they first conceive to be the beginning of their blessing To Please God 1. It s a common and a sore evill that there is so little care whether God be pleased or not and therefore so little labour to please him without which there is no fruit or comfort
the instrumentall cause of justification workes as the effects of the man justified 8. It s a matter much to be bewailed as cause of great danger to many a soul that Satan our sworn enemie in every part of our life so annoying us yet most seldome or never see or avoid his assaults but rather like and embrace them 9. Satan being a Spirit hath a very familiar though secret communion with our spirits 10. It s safest in all temptations to keepe the meane neither to be quiet without griefe for then Satan will account we bee his without any paines neither to be too unquiet as without comfort for then Satan will be the prouder and bolder to take more paine to overcome us 11. As Satan tempting Adam overcame him and all in him so tempting Christ as he could not overcome him so neither shall he us in him 12. Satans temptations follow our affections if wee lightly account of him hee bleares our eyes with Gods m●rcies if we be pricked with conscience of sinne then he ladeth us with the judgements of God making us as ready to aggravate our sinnes as by the former to extenuate them 13 Subtilty and violence are the chiefest distinctions betweene the temptations of the devill and of the flesh 14. When Satan cannot drive into security he laboureth to discourage that they may have no heart to good exercises and so make small use of them for as they who eate with ill stomacks have least strength by their meate so nothing more hinders our profiting by good exercises than want of comfort in them This policie of Satan many not observing doe of purpose discomfort themselves thinking the same best and so take corrasives for cordials The remedie hereof is this that such as be hindered by discouragement should in their meanest discharge of duties feede on these comforts 1. the nature of God so proclaimed and proved more tender pittifull and ready to beare with pardon and accept our least endeavours in truth than parents the frailties of their children 2. that in our weakest duties there is some conscience and fruit The Scriptures 1. Men that dig in mines for any treasure even for the hope of gaine labour sore before they finde any veine and many times misse but when they finde the silver veine with what cheerefulnesse doe they labour it makes them forget their paine though sore and otherwise tedious now wee who studie the Scriptures are even in the veine of heavenly treasure how much then should we bee encouraged 2. The Scriptures barely read without particular looking into the severall doctrines contained therein is like a comming into a treasurie wherein we see many costly things folded up and some ends appearing out but when they be all uncovered then doth their glory more affect us for the present and leave a deeper impression of their excellencie so in the Scriptures by the particular view of the excellent doctrines our memory is more confirmed besides our present use therof 3. It s a most worthy travaile for Students in divinity to referre all their studie first for the true sense of the Scripture which onely will make a man a grounded Divine to teach and confute all errour and secondly for the right use in himselfe and others for amendment of life and all godly duties 4. Wee must redeeme time even from our ordinary callings to read the holy Scriptures Selfe-love This is a dangerous deceit and bewrayes an unsound heart that when our sinne is like to bee reproachfull to us then wee can hold in for our credits sake but in our private dealings there is no such stay and indeed if it bee observed wee shall finde that this selfe-love is a greater cause of leaving much ill and doing good than the true love of God which ariseth from a sound faith The number of Seaven The number of seaven is oft used in the Scriptures for that God foreseeing mans unbeleefe provided many things to call him to the remembrance of the creation and so bring him to meditating beleeving and trusting in God Sicknesse It s most meete in the time of a contagious sicknesse that there be one Minister to teach the whole and another to visite the sicke and that by choice of the people if people admonished will not take this order a godly pastor may in wisedome to his power provide for both speaking to the infected a farre off if any danger come he is free Sinne. 1. As he that once could not abide to taste bitter or sowre things when hee was in health may justly suspect that his stomack and body is out of frame when he can well away therewith so he that could not once abide any corruption of sinne in himselfe or others and now can is to feare his soule is sick and therefore no man though never so godly otherwise but is to suspect himselfe and to be grieved when he can passe over his infirmities or see sinne in others without earnest griefe 2. Hee that will profit in true repentance must not by viewing the sinnes of others whether preachers or people be drawne from sight of his owne in his particular calling of Magistrate Minister Parents c. but must so see those that first he cast out the beame out of his owne eye 3. The Lord punisheth every sinne not repented of either in our selves or in our posterities 4. The conscience of Gods graces with the conscience of sinne breedeth an hell in the hearts of Gods children when wee are given to sinne wee are blinde even in the sight of our owne dangers and custome of sinne which preach such iniquity unto us that neither Gods judgements can terrifie us nor his mercies move us 5. Wee shall never throughly leave sinne untill we know and acknowledge sinne to bee sinne and bee truly sorrowfull for the same 6. This above many things is to be lamented in the lives of most professors that by long custome in sinne it is so confirmed that we shall carry the ach thereof to our grave as bruised men in their youth 7. Wee may comfort our selves for particular sinnes if being admonished wee bee humbled for them as David and Iehosaphat but if being admonished we still lye in sinne and so tye one sinne to another then are wee to feare Gods wrath for it is the generall falling into sinne not one particular which displeaseth God 8. There is no sinne whereof every man hath not the seed in himselfe which without the Lords mercie would in time breake out 9. A good helpe to avoide sinne is to remember what punishments we have felt for sinne and what are threatned 10. Though it be very hard to finde out our speciall and secret sinnes yet by oft examining our selves acquainting our selves with our owne estate by often prayer that God would reveale them by
our salvation by Christ But for so much as all our comfort stands in this that God who justifieth the ungodly hath freely given his Sonne and in him is reconciled to us being his enemies and hath by his Gospell called us and by his spirit wrought faith in our hearts to receive Christ so given unto us whereby wee being dead in sinne and having no goodnesse in us were made alive to God and so were new borne and then doe beginne to bee changed first in affection and then in conversation by little and little from a childe growing to a riper age in Christ Therefore if wee have this assurance of our new birth though we feele much weaknesse of the spirituall life yet wee ought not to doubt whether wee bee Gods children seeing hee that is so new borne as aforesaid can never dy but rather we are to remember 1. Wee are but children and therefore weak 2. Wee are very subject to many spirituall diseases some such as take away sense of life and therefore must seeke to bee cured and not despaire of life seeing wee cannot perish This cannot breede securitie in sinne to any for he that seeing himselfe miserable doth beleeve to bee saved by Christ cannot but love God and for love studie and travell to obey him no more then fire can be without heate so that they who say they thus beleeve and live not Christianly are lyars the truth is not in them If any tender conscience ignorant weak for so must they needs be should say I am such a one because they feele so little grace in them they may manifestly be disproved by the true effects of faith which no faith can be without true love of God his Word his Saints desire to please God griefe for former and present sinnes and such like If any hypocrite will say he thus beleeveth and in some measure thus liveth let him try his inward affections why hee doth all duty it will bee found not in love to God and recompence of his kindnesse but either for the credit of the world or mercenarily for obtaining Gods favour whom his securitie jollitie presumption and want of sense of his infirmities and of an holy feare of falling and care to please God in secret will descrie 3. A true beleever falling into sin ought if hee can hold his confidence though he be foulie fallen and rather lament that hee Gods childe should so dishonour his father for the doubting of Gods favour cannot raise him from his fall but the beholding of it is that alone which will breede holy and acceptable sorrow for sinne and conscience of amendment 4. It s evident that many of the carefullest Christians seeing their infirmities doe most doubt whether they have faith who yet for the most part in time of tryall finde more then others who bee more secure and confident but yet this is their fault that they looke too much to effects and not to the cause of their justification and in beholding the effects through ignorance and feare judge amisse not seeing the true effects of faith in them being blinded with their wants 5. This is found in many true Christians that they oft doubt of their salvation and feare they bee not Gods children because they see such sinnes and wants in themselves and hereupon be oft moved to greater care of an holy life thinking that otherwayes they may not beleeve and on the other side that if they see more mortification of their corruptions and more strength to good duties that they may boldly beleeve wherein they pittifully deceive themselves many wayes 1. That they often obtaine not their desire in mortification 2. That if they by this meanes prick themselves to more care for a season yet so soone as their feare is slacked their care is ended 3. That if their care should continue yet this is not that which can either cause them first to beleeve or else any way encrease their faith onely this can more certainely prove that they have and do indeede beleeve and so may comfort them for there is nothing that can beget or encrease faith but Gods promise and seales thereof truly applyed They therefore who doubting doe thus think to encrease faith by leading a better life doe take a wrong course and plainely shew that in their holy life they seeke themselves and not the Lord and are not moved thereto by the true love of God which is the chiefe mother of true obedience whereas they ought rather having good cause to doubt whether they have soundly beleeved seeing they finde in themselves no comfortable fruits of their faith to labour more stedfastly to beleeve that so their faith as fire encreaseth by the heate of it may send forth more fervent effects of love to God and obedience which shall then effectually comfort them seeing such fruits of such a root 6. In the deepest thoughts of our salvation this oft riseth up to weaken our faith that God having ordained some to destruction and yet to make the sole cause of mans perdition to bee in himselfe prepared a remedy for all and in his testament bequeathed it to all and publiquely proclaimed it to the world though for his part determining to give grace to receive it onely to his chosen and to leave the other to themselves what warrant wee have to beleeve that we are of them to whom God hath determined to give his grace and who indeed shal receive it and not of those who herein deepely deceive themselves whereunto the soundest answere is this that the secret determination of God is to himselfe and not to be enquired in to of us who cannot know our election till wee know our effectuall calling who to this end must attend to his revealed will wherein he certifieth all to whom the Gospell commeth that he would have none perish but beleeve therefore inviteth all of them exhorteth entreateth thē by his ministers to be reconciled unto him and sore threatneth if they beleeve not Upon all which this may bee concluded that its great sinne and follie for him to whom the Lord hath revealed his will concerning his salvation and by many meanes prepared him thereto as giving him sight and sense of his miserie knowledge of and unfained desire of Christ the onely remedy calling and commanding him to receive him together with cleere knowledge that he in his word hath promised this remedie to him for him I say its great sinne notwithstanding all this upon no ground but onely a suspicious feare to doubt that God will not yet save him but doth this to his farther condemnation whereof there is no feare but to such as contemne this grace or receive it in vain not being drawne thereby in truth to love and seeke Gods honour by unfained obedience to his will whereas all they who knowing the benefit by Christ in respect of the greatnesse of it
to finde strong comfort in the Lord and thereby good encouragement unto all godlinesse is daily to consider deepely 1. His owne miserable estate by nature that thereby he may be stirred up to cry with the Apostle O wretched man that I am who shall deliver me from the body of this death And 2. he is no lesse to regard the remedie here of in Christ that beholding the singular benefit thereof he may more uncessantly desire it and so 3. the truth of Gods promise that hee may be more and more assured that Christ is his and he the Lords that this may comfort and encourage him in all godlinesse 4. There is great difference betweene knowledge and faith for a reprobate may know by the word of God and so beleeve that God hath promised his Sonne to him as well as to others and yet not lay hold on this promise which is true faith which he onely doth who so receiveth Gods promise that thereby he is certainly perswaded that he shall have the thing promised which makes himselfe stay for his salvation hereon and patiently to waite and looke stedfastly for the same 5. The true doctrine of faith is a stranger much more the practise of it that men seeing themselves most cursed wretches yet should be assured that God hath given them his Sonne and in him eternall life for he that hath this assurance cannot but have much comfort even in afflictions and this only is it which will make a man willing to deny himselfe 6. It s a matter very weakely knowne much more weakely practised of most Christians to doe every thing in faith which must needes deprive them of much comfort if they live not securely contenting themselves with opus operatum for remedy hereof this is to bee knowne and laboured for of him that doth any thing in faith 1. That hee know the thing he doth in omitting or committing bee commanded of God and therefore endeavour to please God therein 2. That he know and remember Gods promise made in Christ to such obedience 3. That he give credit to this promise that God for Christs sake will accept his true though weake obedience 4. That hee with this perswasion doe offer up his service to God in the name of Christ How infinitely in all wee all doe faile is lamentable to consider especially that wee doe not the things we doe in faith and therefore no marvell it is though God withhold many sweet cōforts which otherwise we might finde 7. True faith in my judgement is never so quenched that neither the owner nor any other can see any life thereof but there is ever some fruit of the Spirit to be seen if we marke it 8. An holy life cannot make any unbeleever to beleeve neither properly increase faith but onely as fruits prove the tree good and shew in what sort we beleeve so no iniquity ought to hinder any from beleeving but only sheweth who beleeve not 9. Hinderances from faith are these 1. Securitie making no reckoning of it or too small or both either of ignorance neglect or contempt and therefore either never goe about it or too slightly using some meanes not all or not constantly to the end And 2. in such as make reckoning of it either presumption that they have it when they have it not or may and shall have it without such meanes used as without which it cannot be looked for or discouragements 1. That it is impossible for any or for them either so weake that they shall never hold out or so unworthy that God will not give it them 2. That it is over tedious to attaine to will cost too much paines or bring too much trouble by forgoing all delights and gaine or falling into many dangers and persecutions To remedie which 1. we must make chiefe reckoning of it as the pearle for which wee will sell all 2. Consider the difficultie that we suspecting our false hearts and weake strength may use all meanes to attaine it 3. Comfort our hearts by the word of the Lord that it s not only possible but easie even for us in our owne eyes most unworthy through him who is able to performe what he hath spoken and is more willing to grant then wee to seeke as appeares by his inviting us who seeke not after him 10. Faith is well likned to fire whereof if a man have a sparke covered in the ashes if he shall content himselfe therewith not labouring to encrease it in time it will goe out and if not hee shall yet have but small use of it and oft have much to doe to finde it So they who finde some faith in them and therewith content themselves shall soon leese it or be so to seeke of it that they have small use of it in their lives either to comfort them they are the Lords or to guide their lives whereas every one ought to kindle his litle sparke so that he might alwayes have the heate of it and warme others 11. Whosoever armes not himselfe with faith shall live securely or fearefully not comfortably 12. Qu. Whether is this speech I will goe to my father of faith or may it be before faith An. The parable is to bee understood of professors such as the Jewes were who were in profession the children of the covenant and had God for their father and therefore the ungodly among them and us are like the prodigall childe who returnes to his Father 13. It seemeth strange that a man being fully perswaded that God is true in all that he saith should yet not beleeve some things which he knoweth God doth say and so make God a lyar which is yet the sin of all men who know God and his word The cause hereof is not easily seene and therefore so hardly removed indeede if God speake any thing which our judgement cannot object against why it should not be we doe readily beleeve as of al things past and many to come that our bodies shall rise and wee come to judgemēt the wicked be dāned the godly saved but that we being ungodly shall be justified by Christ this is hardly beleeved not only because wee be naturally moved to feare that God for sinne will condemne us but also because wee measure God by man that he will not love such as hate him and doe good to his enemies 14. Our most holy faith is worthily compared to a noble princesse who hath ever harbengers going before to prepare for her and a goodly traine after so faith hath knowledge sorrow feare desire of pardon going before it as all the honourable Ladies of vertue peace of conscience love of God and men for his sake and such others follow after 15. The easiest tryall whether our faith be alive and burning not halfe dead and cold is by the temper of the heart
not profiting so much by Gods wayes are reclaimed by his corrections Godlinesse 1. Whereas every thing hath his time of growing and his growing in time it s most unreasonable that any godlinesse should bee so straitned that no growing is to be looked for in it yea also it s a grosse errour that in knowledge of the truth there may be a stay and rest in true zeale too great a fervencie in holinesse of life too great precisenesse when as our knowledge shall alwayes be in part our zeale too cold our conversation too much corrupted be we never so precise 2. This is a good comfort to any Christian heart never to be quiet or liking his state when hee feeles not some readinesse and cheerefulnesse in the practises of godlinesse 3. That we may be furthered in the practise of pietie consider wee these particulars 1. That the enjoying of earthly treasures is uncertaine and dangerous the dealing with them great hinderances the great delight most hurtfull 2. That the unchangeable purpose of a godly life is a continuall consolation 3. That the bold reprehension of sin in others is a notable bridle to our selves 4. That the daily use of all holy exercises prayer meditation reading conference are the onely nurses of a Christian life and of much comfort and assurance of Gods favour to our salvation 5. That seeing the Lord is at hand wee must not be weary of this course but labour so to hold out to the end that we may be found thus occupied 6. That the daily consideration and use of these will make our battell against sinne more easie and fruitfull for our very hearts will be better kept in order then otherwise 7. That if we well behold what exceeding comfort and joy through the assurance of salvation we finde in this godly life and what heavinesse in the neglect thereof its reason sufficient to perswade us to hold on to the end yea this present sense and further hope of the unspeakable reward to come makes Christs yoke easie 4. He hath most profited who spends most time in this practise of godlinesse denying himselfe and taking no thought to satisfie his carnall minde 5. Except we keepe this in the purpose of our hearts and resolutely bind our selves hereto it cannot bee wee should stand fast but many things as the rarenesse of this course in others and our owne dulnesse will beat us from it and sore shake us 6. We have great need to take heed of leaving off seeing so many fearefull examples who harkening to the world seeking themselves and waxing weary of this strait way and practise of repentance have given over their diligence in teaching fervencie in exhorting zeale in prayer painfulnesse in private instructing and readinesse in conference for the edifying of others in meetings and daily meditation lamenting their owne and other mens sins earnest desire of forgivenesse daily purpose of amendment meeknesse patience liberalitie great rejoycing in God with earnest thanksgiving and the like The oft perusing of those will awaken us when we are fallen asleep Gospell 1. The letter of the Gospell that is the bare historie thereof being received without the Spirit thereof that is the true use thereof applyed unto us by faith doth no lesse kill then the Law for what comfort can it bring to a wounded conscience to know Christ dyed c. nay it woundeth them more if by faith they apply it not to themselves 2. Nothing more strange to reason then the Gospell of salvation by Christ Grace with the growth therein 1. This may be justly complained of by many good ministers and people of our times that exceeding much more grace of wisedome and strength to every duty and experience for guiding others might have beene obtained under so long peace and many helpes had they not trifled out much time unprofitably and beene as sloathfull in paines taking as affraid to bee ill occupied 2. It s our shame and ought to bee our griefe that we having had so many helps above others are so farre behinde them that hardly we can follow them whom we should have gone before for what is it but our owne sin that we are not as patterns for others to follow A principall cause hereof is this our too great respect of all earthly things which must needs hinder this godly proceeding as also that wee are not capable of such a lifting up being too much conceited for the little grace we have and not humbled sufficiently with our many wants 3. Considering with my selfe what the cause should be why almost all Christians doe very little grow since their first calling though they use ordinarily the exercises of religion and many of them dwell under a profitable ministerie mee thinkes this may be said that either they use not a full but an halfe dyet or else by some ill meanes hinder the same There is no Christian who useth not some meanes whereby he maintaines life and by Gods blessing on his ordinance all holy meanes have their profit therefore the more is our sinne in not using all whereby we might bee fat and flourishing in Christianitie But as it fareth with crasie bodies they must have a dyet prescribed and rules to order their whole life else can they not long hold out but weaknesse and diseases will oppresse them whereas otherwise by precise keeping their dyet in all points they be much preserved and freed from much griefe and paine So for all the world it is with our soules the best whereof is so crasie that without a good direction precisely followed long health and peace cannot bee held but our lives will be filled with many griefes and troubles And if these be not felt at first the longer they fester inward they will cost the more paine and griefe before they bee cured It shall be our wisedome therefore never to rest till we have a good direction fit to preserve our soules in peace and good estate and then precisely to keep it in all parts lest the neglect of one marre another and so wee much hinder our selves At least this care must be had that wee doe not as men sold to their appetite who to please their tast will leave that which is wholesome and take that which is poyson to their nature who therein for a short pleasure bring long and tedious paine which makes repent too late when this yet is more that some bee so farre spent that they having once or twice broken their dyet and finding no present paine doe wilfully proceede saying As good bee sicke for something as for nothing and in the end cast off utterly all care and so bring upon themselves incurable diseases horrible paines and certaine death That this former advice may be the more profitable that is that wee may see what good cause wee who bee Gods children have to seeke after
therfore few true Christians As all trades some more some lesse bee not easily learned to become skilfull in so that we allow seven yeares to be apprentise thereto so much more the Christian trade wherein we see many botchers few cunning to make the wedding garment meet wherin to grow is not seene of most who looke not after it The Scriptures oft summe all to these two heads faith and love more particularly 1. Our growth must be in cleerer sight of our owne vilenesse and herein specially what most hinders which cannot be but by a tracing out the wayes of our hearts and lives and to this end to take the glasse of the Law and not as blinde but having the light of knowledge to examine our selves and that particularly in every one so shall wee see matter more to humble us and drive us to Christ 2. Spreade before us and deeply and often meditate on Gods promises to heale the wounds of the Law and to comfort us that wee may rest on God for this life and that to come 3. In thanks obediēce studying to please God in all things both to know and doe his will 15. It s a common and just complaint of many true Christians that oftentimes they see their whole course is far out of frame and such as yeelds them small comfort though they be well thought of by their neighbours which as they grieve at so they have many purposes to do better but in the end these come to nothing and they never the better and so go on from yeare to yeare with little growth much lesse such as their profiting might appeare to others which is especially to bee observed of us Ministers casting with our selves what might be the best remedie hereof we searched what might be the causes which chiefely hinder the profiting of such who saw and sorrowed for their wants and purposed a better course which wee found these three besides that common that men see not in particular their chiefe defects 1. That being thus prickt and wounded wee did suffer this to close up and quickly let this purpose die and so we fell to our old course againe and so the longer the worser 2. That wee neglect or carelesly use the meanes whereby our course might be better and grace encreased as specially private prayer reading meditatiō 3. That we harbor some master sin which robbes us of all our gaine and keepes backe Gods grace and blessing from us The remedie then is 1. To keepe the wound open by thinking oft what will be the fearefull end of this course continuall uncōfortablenesse and some foule fall 2. While the wound is open to ply carefully all good meanes to cure our soules and to performe our holy purposes 3. To search out what speciall sinne spoiles us and to strive most to keepe it downe 16. We have so lost our time and neglected the meanes that we are like to die beggers and never attaine to such grace as others doe and we might the principall use whereof is to keepe downe our pride and quicken prayer 17. It s an excellent care of a good Christian that his after fruits of the Spirit exceede the former that he may answer to the good opinion conceived of him 18. The care for inward graces and obtaineing of them will breede a godly neglect of outward commodities 19 Many be barren in grace because they be barren in prayer 20. Knowledge Faith feeling joy and practise doe not alwayes succede one another 21. The graces of God are sweetest in our new-birth because wee fall againe somewhat to the flesh otherwise it is not so and its the worke of Gods Spirit when and in what measure although in respect of our selves that wee differ from the world that they thinke that their present pleasures are sweetest we that the present feelings of the Spirit alwayes least whereas on the other side we thinke our present temptations and corruptions ever greatest though in both wee may be deceived Griefe 1. If we will truly lament the sinnes of others we must first be touched for our owne and as touching others so to lament as the sinne requireth and with love not contempt of the person and pray for him 2. When we have no feare or griefe wee can hardly profit in any godlinesse 3. In cares of extremitie by bodily paines and griefes and feares of the minde we must make this use to trie our hearts wherein particularly wee have deserved this chastisement and so to humble our selves or having no such particular accusation to prepare our selves for the Lords triall who forewarneth us of his comming to us or that he will passe by us and therefore wee must arme our selves especially with praier the effect whereof is exceeding great but wee must take heede in such cases lest we make hast to end our prayer as desirous to bee rid out of it and so commit our selves to God The Heart 1. IT s vaine to controule the outward senses without rebuke of the heart 2. The Lord is best pleased with their intents which prepare their hearts to seeke him 3. A true token of an hard heart when the consideration of all Gods mercies cannot bend us to duty 4. Hardnesse of heart is the sorest plague common infectious and deadly if it breake not or stop up againe our remedie is to take the opportunitie of this time and helps we have to deale more effectually then before to search our sinne mourne for it seeke to God in Christ by prayer of faith for pardon and amendment and then shall wee with more boldnesse and comfort of speeding pray for the poore sheepe that so perish Helpe Then is the fittest time for God to helpe when all hope of helpe is gone for this most sets out Gods glory and nurtures our faith in resting upon him who is above all meanes Hereticks and Heresies 1. Wee must humble our selves to see hereticks doe more for vaineglory and for their sect then we will doe for Gods glory and for his truth 2. As there were in the bookes of the fathers dispersed sentences which as a seede did lurke in them and by an evill spirit being gathered together did make an heresie so in the writings of others For the family of love hath drawn their sects out of writers new and olde As the Gospell first beganne in simple men and after came to the more learned sort so heresie beginning now in the simple people may for so little love of the truth invade the best learned and a lying spirit may as soone through Gods judgements fall upon 400. learned men such as Ahabs priests may bee thought as on the common Israelites An Holy life 1. Considering what the Scriptures in sundry places witnesse of all those that be the members of Christ namely
be gotten thereby which is glory to God grace to our selves and others 2. The sweetnesse of the duty to be all day sucking hony Magistrate A Magistrate having a thing privately tolde him may upon some occasion keepe it close Man It seemeth to many men a wonder that man in the whole frame of his soule and body excelling all the creatures upon earth and in most wonderfull manner expressing the image of his Creator should yet in highest measure dishonour him and be thereby most loathsome unto him yet this is most just with the Lord seeing hee preferred man by creation above all earthly creatures for his rebellion to take away all grace from him for wheras he was most able above all other earthly creatures to glorifie his maker his sinne must be the greater and by Gods justice his punishment answerable for so wilfull disobedience and this commonly is seen among men the more excellent naturall gifts any man hath if they bee not sanctified the viler that man is in Gods sight above others and his sinne more grievous for armed iniquity is more dangerous then naked Marriage Such as finde themselves unfit for this condition are to use all lawfull meanes and that a good while and so not prevailing to submit themselves to Gods ordinance Meanes 1. There is a corruption of nature which maketh us most dull when we have most meanes which ariseth from hence that when wee have the meanes publickly wee esteeme lesse of them then when wee wanted them using the private meanes likewise more sparingly yea because wee put too much confidence in the outward the preaching of the word not so earnestly seeking the inward and principall which is the blessing of Gods most holy Spirit 2. It s not safe to tie the working of Gods Spirit to any one particular meane seeing all must be used Meditations 1. Christians must often meditate and consider what blessings and what afflictions they have in private and in common and how they undergoe both and what use they make of them likewise to what corruptions they be most carryed and what meanes they use against them and what profit they finde by them also how constant or unsetled they be in a good course and what be causes of either 2. What infinit store of heavenly matter is to be meditated on seeing every doctrine in the Scripture containes more then ever we can sufficiently consider and yet so unexpert are most professors in this exercise of meditation that they are empty of any fit matter to meditate on A principall cause whereof is they savour the things of the flesh and very little the things of the Spirit 3. Those things wee heare and read are other mens untill by applying them unto our selves by meditation they bee our owne 4. Matters fittest for daily meditation bee such as every man in his condition hath daily most need of as to humble or breede sorrow in us to comfort us to awake us being asleepe and when we think our selves senselesse or benummed to soften our hardnesse to pull us backe from any evill way to weaken any corruption to strengthen such graces as be weakest in us to weane us from the love of this world to teach us a sober use of our prosperitie to arme us against uphold us in adversitie and such like 5. Meditation is a study to get grace whereby upon all occasions wee make some good use of all that comes to our minde whereof the frequentest use shewes the most heavenly soule as contrarily the neglect thereof the carnall 6. Wee are to meditate at set times and on speciall occasions the oftner the better but hard to doe it well 7. To have our meditation tyed to the word wee must occupie it upon some particular matter and reverently consider that wee as it were draw neere the Lords privie chamber 8. To reade and not to meditate is unfruitfull to meditate and not reade is dangerous for error to reade and meditate without prayer is hurtfull Memorie Whereas many complaine of ill memorie in good things thinking thereby to cover many wants this is found the only remedie that wee must first reforme our hearts and bring them to affect such heavenly doctrines and then valuing them as they be they would aswell remember as a worldly man hearing of a good bargaine whereby hee is assured he may have great gaine will hardly forget the same yet hereto let this be added an hiding of Gods word and treasuring of it up in our hearts which oftrecounting with our selves and others the same shall not be forgotten Mercies 1. In speaking of any of Gods mercies towards us it s profitable to thinke upon our sinnes lest wee be too proud and robbe God of his glory and also a fit opportunity in respect of others must be chosen lest the same bee not beleeved and so edifie not 2. Of all the mercies of God this is a principal not to be left without some favourable exercise of conscience though it bee grievous to the flesh therby to be drawne neerer to God if for Paul it were so necessary how much more for us Ministers or Preachers 1. It s a matter whereof we that are Gods ministers may justly complaine that in teaching others we doe not so carefully teach our selves but too often binde heavy burthens upon others which we our selves will not set our hands unto urging the people to many excellent practises of Christianity and not so carefully urging our selves to the practise of the same that wee might by experience commend the excellencie of such heavenly medicines and so perswade by our practise as well as doctrine which is in our dayes most necessary seeing men look most to our lives A chiefe cause of this evill is that through our corruption we deale with the word as merchants doe with their wares they seeke after the best wares not to use them themselves but to utter them to others so we seek out most heavenly instructions not to use our selves but to commend to others The remedie whereof is when wee first finde out some precious matter which we like of then to make use of it our selves and as it were trie the medicine on our selves so shall we better commend it 2. To content our selves with preaching profitably to others and not to practise those things our selves is very dangerous and cannot be free from hypocrisie and must needs breede hardnesse and so a very bad course the end whereof is miserable and wofull In any hand therefore wee are to be disquieted with such an estate else no amendment and it must feare us that we be not disquieted when as we heare Gods children professe that they have no longer peace then they thēselves be ready to every Christian duty and have some delight therein and therefore we must by all
often hearing reading meditating the word by marking the checks of our consciences and reproches of our enemies we may be much helped therein 11. Some sins against knowledge are of frailtie and be remissible others are not being of a rebellious and finall obstinacie which is not in those who feare it and carefully avoide it rejoycing that it s not in them Slander By well doing to stop the mouthes of slanderers is the onely remedie of all slanders Sorrow for sinne 1. It is observed that even of those that are grieved for sinne the cause is in most for the danger it brings them unto and not for dishonouring of God whereby it comes to passe that when they gather hope of deliverance from the danger then the griefe and feare for sinne decayeth which if it were otherwise would daily encrease for the more wee are assured of Gods love the more we love him and the more we love him the more we desire Gods honour and therefore the more are we grieved with our sinne which offends him This may be a most sufficient answere to that doubt which troubleth many why divers of those that be true Christians were moved to feare sinne and be grieved at it more in the beginning than after 2. There is no greater bane of sound godlinesse than to favour and make light of our sinne not being grieved thereat 3. It is found by wofull experience that a principall cause why many who hope to be saved by Christ and be indeed true though weake Christians are so sloathfull and unwilling to take any paines to lead the strait life of godlinesse and to come under and precisely keepe the Christian dyet namely that holy direction that prescribeth how we are the whole day long and so all our life long to be well occupied the cause I say hereof is manifest to be this that they be little grieved with their diseased estate and feele not such smart of their sinnes as should make them never cease till they found some ease by this soveraigne dyet which is proved so sufficient to releeve and refresh a true Christian heart This therefore above others is to be travailed in that we may feele our sinne so bitter and grievous unto us that we may never bee at rest till wee come under this dyet and thereby also may be held to a constant keeping thereof To this end these things are with all conscience continually to be thought on 1. that our sinnes be most dishonourable to God such as much offend him and grieve his holy Spirit whereby wee are sealed These if they be not grievous unto us we may justly feare that either we bee bastards and no true children or at least that wee are fallen into a deadly security which will hardly in long time be recovered and will cost us much griefe and sorrow to bewayle our decay 2. that they bee very hurtfull to man our selves and others both good and bad to our selves as which hinder good things from us earthly and spiritual bring judgements temporall and eternall to others provoking Gods wrath on our Land Church Congregation Familie Kindred Posteritie offending the godly as whereby they are made sorrie the wicked making them reproach our profession the weake also being strengthned in sinne by ill example 4 It is a speciall sinne amongst most professors that by reason of outward prosperity and peace they doe not walke humbly with God so little griefe of heart or feare of God is any wayes to bee found indeed sorrow is tedious and unwelcome and therfore except there be great cause and that outward we put sorrow away and soone ease our selves of the hurthen whereby it comes to passe that men being loosed as it were from the Lords bands live securely and serve God carelessely and spend their dayes in jollitie which is the bane of all godlinesse and enemie to all heavenly rejoycing whereas God gives grace to the humble and hee will dwell with those that be of a contrite spirit In regard hereof I judge it highly necessary for the most of us by all means to turne our laughter into mourning and our joy into heavinesse which that we may doe we are to put away and withdraw our selves from all occasions of carnall rejoycing as pastimes merry-meetings bravery belly-cheere foolish jesting and other such companies as might make the heart light and merry insteed hereof to occupie our minde much upon our old and late sinnes to see how farre wee come short in grace of others and more short of that which God requires and by the meanes which wee have we might attaine to and herein particularly to deale so much as may be Herewith to consider the terrour of Gods wrath heare how many wayes he may make our lives bitter unto us by bodily and spirituall plagues on our selves or such as be neere us our wives children parents kindred families and acquaintance and in the world to come the torments of hell how extreame and everlasting and easelesse in what danger hereof wee bee who have so little or no faith at all and so little pray to escape this endlesse woe how God is angry with us and regards not our prayers and this is the more that we offend so mercifull a father Besides these causes of griefe for our selves this should grieve us for others either the faithfull their infirmities and grievous punishments of God upon the● bodily and spirituall deprived of the meanes of salvation and the like or the wicked that they live so prophanly and licenciously persecute the godly and cast away their owne soules whose care if we did pitty it would move to many teares and prayers for thē In all these this ought to be chiefe that the honour of God which is the most precious treasure that can be is not onely so lightly esteemed but defaced and contemned 5. There is a double sorrow for sinne one specially in respect of the punishment which goeth before faith and may bee in those who never come to faith in whom it either weares away of it selfe or is eased with a false faith or if it continue it drives to despaire and this also remaines after faith by reason of the weaknesse of faith which is sometimes more or lesse The other sorrow for sinne ever followes faith which thus ariseth that when we consider Christs love to us which breeds love in us to him with a desire and purpose to please him then seeing how by our corrupt nature we faile it cannot but grieve us accordingly and this sorrow onely is a proofe of faith 6. These bee two rules to trie godly sorrow 1. if wee can with contented mindes take the punishment as correction from the Lord and yet mourne for our sinne and that in such manner in giving place to Gods justice in punishing wee can labour for forgivenes of our sins 2. if when wee can
con ceale our sinne yet wee with David freely confesse it 7. When many are more grieved with the losse of worldly credit the motion whereof is sinne than with the sense of their sinnes and losse of Gods glory the Lord striketh them with the want of that which is most precious to them when they make no conscience of his honour which is most precious unto him 8. If we will truely lament the sinnes of others we must first bee touched for our owne and as touching others so to lament as the sinne requireth and with love not contempt of the person and pray for him 9. When we have cause of sorrow it is good not to cast it off till wee see the fruit thereof 10. Heavenly sorrow it is to talke of good things which we want or ill which we have 11. We cannot heartily be grieved for that sin in others whereof wee have made no great conscience our selves 12. That is a true godly sorrow for sinne when no outward pleasure can steale it away nor continuance of time waste it but onely Christ 13. This ought to bee alwayes in Gods children that in the want of affection to any godly exercise when they should have it that at least they should be grieved thereat 14. Two notes there are of godly sorrow 1. that it be for a just cause and 2. a proportionable measure to the cause for it is a subtle policie of Satan against tender consciences to urge them to a continuall sorrow whereby he may more prevaile in his accusation against them for when they sorrow so much for little offences hee will dismay them in their greater faults or accuse them of hypocrisie in making no more account of great sins than of common infirmities wee are then to take heed how wee give our selves to sorrow continually especially seeing wee are commanded to rejoyce alwayes and never to sorrow alwayes although there be a necessary time of sorrow and moreover this ought to be considered that God will not account of men for one particular defect but according to his generall course and tenour of life Soule and Body 1. It were great wisedome and grace to bee more carefull to feede and provide for our soules which even a world cannot ransome than our bodies not feeding these till those be fed 2. There is never any corrupt action in the body whereof there hath not beene first a corrupt motion and affection in the soule so that the soule is the enemy of the body in using it to sinne and not the contrary as many falsely complaine and therefore punish their bodies and spare their soules whereas wee ought rather to nourish the body as the friend to the soule for the exercise of repentance of mortification and of sanctification Spirituall decay It s high wisdome when wee see any plague upon us earthly or spirituall as losse of our spirituall comfort and cheerefulnesse in well-doing or wound of conscience by sinne remitted then to turne to the Lord crave help of him both to shew us the cause and to teach us truely to remove it that so humbling our selves wee may obtaine mercy and be freeed from the plague Disquiet Spirit A punished minde is a disquiet Spirit Godly Strife Seeing we are naturally unwilling to any good thing it is good to strive to that thing which wee are most unwilling to doe Students This course have I by experience found profitable and resolved upon namely to bee diligent in reading the holy Scriptures and of them at the least every day foure chapters in like manner for the encrease of my knowledge to spend three houres in the forenoone in searching out the sense of the hardest places as two in the afternoone in the searching out the proprieties of the tongues and other two in perusing the tracts and commentaries of learned men one in meditation and prayer what time remaineth to spend the fame in brotherly conference Suffering They that will suffer great things in persecution and that of Papists must suffer smaller in peace and that of Protestants Selfe-suspition He that can neglect the private meanes and use them without any lively touch and he that can heare the word without any check of his conscience when the word rebuketh his corruption or he that hath his heart accusing him of sinne and can bee merry and follow the world and passe over his sinne is greatly to suspect himselfe and to deny comfort to his heart till God truly humble him The best may accuse themselves and this is comfortable if wee truly judge our selves in this case Table-talke SEeing all are anointed with the same oyle and not the Minister alone all men at a table are to move and further good matters with reverence and discretion Teares Howsoever wee please our selves with smal grace yet if wee compare our selves with that wee see should be in us and is in some wee are exceeding short as in this one thing that so few teares come from us in any cause we are too ready to excuse our selves hereby that we are not so prone to weepe as others and yet for earthly things wee can readily What was it in Paul that drew so many teares continually from him but his tender love to God and his Saints Let this be in us so shall wee weepe Temptations 1. As it is a great comfort that no temptation invade us but that which taketh holde of the nature of man so this ought to make us with profit humble our selves that there is no temptation in any man which may not take hold on us in time 2. Wee are never the further from temptation for misliking it but the neerer unlesse as in judgement wee mislike it so in affection wee humble our soules in feare and prayer before the Lord as knowing the same in time may invade us 3. Satan in good causes doth use golden temptations to allure the children of God as in prayer he affordeth meditation in meditation prayer in hearing almesgiving in reading admonition and still envyeth the good thing whereunto wee are called 4. As there is a vicissitude of the meanes and comforts of our salvation so is there of temptations which being repelled will come againe 5. As some sicknesse takes away all sense of life so some temptation may take away the feeling of spirituall life 6. In any grievous temptation wee must flee to prayer and to reading the word that part thereof which is fittest and this not prevailing to conferre with some faithfull brother and bee diligent in these meanes when if yet we prevaile not then must we follow our callings diligently and with patience waite the Lords leisure not reasoning with our temptation lest thereby we be made dull or desperate neither yet wholly contemning it as a trifle lest we fall into
security and Satan overcome us without wrestling for if we feare it too much he overcomes us before wee fight 7. All temptations come either of ignorance or want of feeling 8. As Iacob left not striving though his thigh were loosed till he had the blessing no more must we faint in our temptation though we be humbled till wee obtaine the victorie 9. As striving against our temptations they soon depart for little paines we enjoy longer ease and quietnesse so in not resisting the temptation the same encreaseth and our little pleasure is paid with long griefe and bitter 10. This is a sure experiment whether the sinne which often tempteth us shall prevaile or not if the more we be tempted the more we be grieved for it strive against it and labour more for the contrary vertue it shall not long continue but if the first comming of sin wrought this care and griefe and the second waxed lesse the● it will prevaile unlesse the former course be speedily repaired Thankes Such are meere mockers of God and deepe dissemblers which make great profession of thankes in words but have little or no care by their lives in obedience to testifie the same Thoughts 1. A man is not to spend his thoughts after the abundance of these earthly things for the roving of the heart after the world is a wonderfull hinderance to a godly course 2. It is found by many true Christians a very hard thing to keepe their minds upon heavenly matters the reason is manifest that being by nature earthly our mindes sinke downe thither as the stone downward and will not without force bee carryed upward Our onely help must be that wee doe acquaint our mindes to ascend upward that at length they may bee acquainted with the path and so as readily goe in it as in the former 3. A principall cause why so many be troubled in their holy exercises with by-thoughts is this that they be not exercised at other times to governe their mindes in chasing away vain evil thoughts and in holding their minds and hearts to good things without which travaile I see not how the former disease can bee cured on the other side he that shall bestow good travaile this way shall finde the yoke of Christ easie and no tedious thing to live godly but shall be freed from many falls reproches sorrowes and discouragements which many daily meetwith be filled daily with such comforts as many professors seldome tast of though they would Triall of a mans selfe 1. Then may a Christian soundly judge his state good when hee findes all heavenly matters a recreation to him and his earthly affaires his labour 2. There is nothing more necessary than daily more and more to make sure our calling which most professors be either ignorant of or negligent in deceiving themselves Let every one therforeduly examin himself in these points whereby he shall cleerely see his state as whether he be carelesse of his state towards God such not knowing or not regarding how it is are most miserable or carefull whether fearefull either not knowing or not assured how to be saved both dangerous and damnable to such as die so Rev. 21. 8. or comfortable whether upon faith alone or workes alone both deceitfull or upon faith confirmed by works which onely i● sound for tryall whereof consider what thou beleevest that thou shalt bee saved by Christ this onely justifieth the beleefe of nothing else why thou beleevest because thou knowing thy selfe miserable and Christ as willing as able to ease thee laden comming to him doth therefore in heart come unto him with assurance to be eased seeing he promised Whether thou have thy conscience bearing thee record and because the heart is deceitfull if thou seest the effects hereof in the chāge of the heart peace in God love feare and the like and both thy selfe and others may see thy course hereupon amended and daily bettered 3. The soundest tryall whether we have received Christ is by our comfort and care 1. such as finde neither must bewaile their state else no hope 2. such as be in doubt must never give over till they finde those 3. such as finde those must encrease them which will not bee easie for prosperity and adversity will quench joy in the Spirit Thus must wee seeke for comfort by removing all that may discomfort and using all meanes to maintaine it as above all to thinke oft and deeply on Gods goodnesse to us which will stirre up faith and love 4. It s a godly wisedome to suspect and try our willingnesse and unwillingnes to any thing so strong and deceitfull are our affections 5. Many are altogether looking to the outward corruptions others to the inward the meane betweene both is best as a man is in tryall and temptation such a one is hee The Truth 1. The best thing in us is to love the truth and to hate heresies and that not because the time doth so serve as to praise profit or preferre them that love the truth though all the world loved heresies and hereticks though all be against us and love them 2. As for the love of the truth the Gospell proceeded from fishermen to be embraced of the more learned sort so for want of love thereof it s to bee feared that heresie beginning in the simpler sort will infect the learned and if God purpose to punish the blindenesse of our age hee can as well send an hereticall Spirit into 400 of our learned preachers as hee sent a lying Spirit in 400. Prophets Time 1. To have a watchfull eye over the expence of our time that no part of it slip away without doing some good and that especially which most appertaines to us is a notable meanes to make us walke all the day long with God as the holy fathers did 2. As the wicked will dearely buy the time to commit iniquity and that secretly which they dare not publiquely so Gods children in the midst of sinners if they want that strength to professe publickly yet ought they to redeeme all opportunities for exercise of godlinesse prayer and fasting Vertue AS the right way is but one and by-wayes many so the vertue commanded being one the sinnes contrary thereto be many which as it s to bee seene in all other so in true liberalitie and that kinde of goodnesse which pertaines to the goods of our neighbour The vertue required is that we have an earnest desire that our neighbour may have a benefit as well as our selves and therefore that we procure their good as our owne but the contrary vices bee many not easily seene for our hearts bee deceitfull for when we finde our selves indifferently voide of one sort of covetousnesse wee imagine we are as free from all when as it is nothing so for many in buying and selling can deale conscionably
and be worthy commendation who yet in free giving are very backward who therby may see their love to the world others be frank enough in giving and hard in buying and selling too much seeking themselves who may besides their covetousness suspect their hearts bee false and moved to give for some finister respect as privie pride to be wel spoken of or secret merit to please God thereby or that their conscience could not else bee quiet but feare Gods displeasure whereas the true root of this grace ought to be faith in Christ love to his needie members for which cause only freely to relieve is in none but Gods deare children Againe some are not so scraping in getting as pine at their losses and are miserable in spending others prodigall be extreame in getting by hook or crook so that this love of the world shewes it selfe in many things Visions There may bee visions now but extraordinarie which must have no credit without the word for Satan will twice or thrice shew the truth that thereby in weightier matters he may seduce Warfare HE that feels not his life a battle and so feares his adversarie and is grieved with the wounds of sinne can have small comfort in Christianitie Watchfulnesse 1. Watchfulnesse is a looking to our selves for our soules health oft required standing in avoiding all hurtfull things and procuring all good 2. As security sets open to all danger whereby many fall as appeareth by the examples of David Solomon and Peter so through watchfulnesse are many upholden 3. Watchfulnesse is either generall which must be in every action or speciall at set times and upon speciall occasions Wishes Wee must bee carefull of our wishes lest the Lord grant them when we would not have them as often falleth out The word of God 1. It is ever best to note the generall vertue of the word and not to use exceptions but upon particular and constraining necessitie 2. The cause why wee profit not in the word is because wee pray not to have our hearts striken therewith 3. Who so heares the word carelesly no marvell though he have no delight therein 4. The word of God of it selfe doth only as a light reveale Gods will and cannot work on the heart but that is onely the work of the Spirit who by the word lighteneth humbleth feareth comforteth perswadeth 5. This sore evill have I observed among many diligent hearers of whom is to bee well hoped for some worke of grace in them as a chiefe cause why they heare much with little profit and therfore no growth can be seene in them yea rather a decaying namely that they content themselves with such a marking of that which is delivered as that they can in any measure report what they heard and approve thereof which as its necessary so its insufficient and can little edifie the soule in sound godlinesse and therfore ought not to pacifie the conscience whereas that onely hearing can soundly edifie and ought to pacifie when as our hearts be delighted in the knowledge revealed or confirmed and our consciences pricked with the sense of those sins whichbe rebuked in such sort that we can at our most convenient time turne aside and bewaile them and labour by prayer with the Lord for forgivenesse and power unto amendment or otherwise bee drawne by hearing of our duties to de●●re and purpose to performe them and so make new covenants with the Lord hereof wherein this care is so much the more necessarie for that this fruitfull hearing is the principall nurse of all Christianitie Besides this there is another great danger in that wee so soon let slip our hold forget or neglect our purposes and so soone waxe weary in good courses But it s to be hoped that they who have in truth purposed and begunne well shall be recovered from their falls and quickened afresh by new instructions which especially doth commend the necessity of continuall hearing or living under an ordinary ministerie 6. As nothing more concernes our bodily life then food so for our spirituall life the word 7. Our chiefe default in hearing is that wee are not so affected with sorrow or comfort as that we be perswaded to leave the sinne and doe the duty spoken of 8. Touching the hearing of the word on the weeke dayes this may be resolved that if our work be such as cannot at another time be done or bee for the present well omitted its lawfull for us to stay therefrom A tryall whereof may bee had in this if a man of honour or great credit with us should require us at such times to come to him whether wee would deny him or not if we would not deny him how can we with good conscience deny the Lord our presence in the congregation Worldly-mindednesse It s a matter much to be lamented that among so many Professors we see so exceeding few scarce one of a thousand who hath apparantly overcome the world by his faith setting light by these things below the heavenly having wholly his heart Though it bee our desire to have our hearts withdrawne herefrom yet so weakly doe we labour the same that with shame we may bewaile our want Worldly-wisedome It s the shame of our holy profession that the children of the world are in their kinde wiser than the children of light The wisedome of worldlings for this world is admirable how deepe a reach have they to see into their matters how quick to spy out all advantages to forecast all doubts to prevent all that may crosse them and to follow all opportunities to attain their desires and to make all sure O but how retchlesse and babish be most Christians for grace and happinesse Some securely defer all to God taking no thought what shal become of them others content themselves with bare shewes to have a name of Christianitie others with smal beginnings as though every little were enough most deceive themselves with foolish conceit their care is better then it is few or none match the worldling in prying into the privy commoditie of Christianitie and so valuing it aright in deep reach to compasse these in forecasting all doubts and preventing all impediments taking and pursuing all occasions sparing no cost time paines of attaining and never give over till we be sure and then with all watch and ward to hold fast that wee have gotten and daily to encrease the same Young children YOung children may be taught things concerning God Zeale 1. SEeing the most zealous in time doe coole it s a most necessary prayer that God would keep us in our age from the sinnes of the time we live in 2. We are to take heed that the love of mens persons slack not our zeale in rebuking sin in them and that our zeale against sin slack not our love to the person 3. It s a godly