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A12198 The soules conflict with it selfe, and victory over it self by faith a treatise of the inward disquietments of distressed spirits, with comfortable remedies to establish them / by R. Sibbs ... Sibbes, Richard, 1577-1635. 1635 (1635) STC 22508.5; ESTC S95203 241,093 618

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it lookes upon all things it hath or desires to have as comming from God and his free grace and power it desireth not onely wisdome but to be wise in his wisdome to see in his light to be strong in his strength the thing it selfe contents not this grace of trust but Gods blessing and love in the thing it cares not for any thing further then it can have it with Gods favour and good liking Hence it is that trust is an obsequions and an observing grace stirring up the soule to a desire of pleasing God in all things and to a feare of displeasing him Hee that pretends to trust the Lord in a course of offending may trust to this that God will meet him in another way then he lookes for Hee that is a tenant at curtesie will not offend his Lord hence it is that the Apostle inforceth that exhortation to work out our salvation with feare and trembling because it is God that worketh the will and the deed and according to his good pleasure not ours Therefore faith is an effectuall working grace it workes in Heaven with God it workes within us commanding all the powers of the soule it workes without us conquering whatsoever is in the world on the right hand to draw us from God or ●…n the left hand to discourage us it works against Hell and the powers of darknesse and all by vertue of trusting as it draweth strength from God It stirres up all other graces and keepes them in exercise and thereupon the acts of other graces are attributed to faith as Heb. 11. It breeds a holy jealousie over our selves lest we give God just cause 〈◊〉 stop the influence of his grace to●…ds us so to let us see that wee stand ●…ot by our owne strength Those that take liberty in things they either know 〈◊〉 doubt will displease God shew they want the feare of God and this want of feare shewes their want of dependancy and therefore want of trust dependancy is alwayes very respective it studieth contentment and care to comply this was it made Enoch walke with God ●…d studie how to please him when wee know nothing can doe us good or hurt but God it drawes our chiefe care to approve our selves to him Obedience of faith and obedience of life will goe together and therefore he that commits his soule to God to save will commit his soule to God to sanctifie and guide in a way of well pleasing Not onely the tame but the most savage creatures will bee at the beck of those that seede them though they are ready to fall violently upon others disobedience therefore is against the principles of nature This dependancy is either in the use of meanes or else when meanes failes us true dependancy is exactly carefull of all meanes When God hath set down a course of meanes wee must not expect that God should alter his ordinary course of providence for us deserved disappointment is the fruit of this presumptuous confidence the more wee depend on a wise Physitian the more we will observe his directions and bee carefull to use what hee prescribes yet we must use the meanes 〈◊〉 meanes and not set them in Gods room for that is the way to blast our hopes The way to have any thing taken away and not blest is to set our heart too much upon it Too much griefe in parting with any thing shewes too much trust in the enjoying of it And therefore he that uses the meanes in faith will alwayes joyne prayer unto God from whom as every good thing comes so likewise doth the blessing and successe therof where much indeavour is and little seeking to God it shewes there is little trust the Widdow that trusted in God continued likewise in prayers day and right The best discovery of our not relying too much on meanes is when all meanes faile if we can still relye upon God as being still where he was and hath wayes of his owne for helping of us either immediately from himselfe or by setting a worke other meanes and those perhaps very unlikely such as we thinke not of God hath wayes of his ●…ne Abraham never honoured God more then when he trusted in God for ●…son against the course of nature and when he had a son was ready to sacrifice him upon confidence that God would raise him from the dead againe This was the ground upon which Daniell with such great authority reprooved Baltbazar that he had not a care to glorifie God in whose hand his breath was and all his wayes The greatest honour we can doe unto God is when wee see nothing but rather all contrary to that we looke for then to shut our eyes to inferiour things below and looke altogether upon his Al sufficiency God can convey himselfe more comfortably to us when he pleaseth without meanes then by meanes True trust as it sets God highest in the soule so in danger and wants it hath present recourse to him as the Conyes to the Rockes And because Gods times and seasons are the best it is an evidence of true trust when we can waite Gods leisure and not make hast and so runne before God for else the more hast the worse speed God seldome makes any promise to his Children but he exerciseth their trust in waiting long before as David for a Kingdome Abraham for a sonne the whole world for Christs comming c. One maine evidence of true trust in God is here in the text wee see here it hath a quieting and stilling vertue for it stayes the soule upon the fulnesse of Gods love joyned with his ability to supply our wants and releeve our necessities though faith doth not at the first especially so stay the soule as to take away all suspitious feares of the contrary There be so many things in trouble that presse upon the soule as hinder the joyning of God and it together yet the prevailing of our unbeliefe is taken away the raigne of it is broken If the touch of Christ in his abasement on earth drew vertue from him certain it is that faith cānot touch Christ in heaven but it will draw a quieting and sanctifying vertue from him which will in some measure stop the issues of an unquiet spirit the Needle in the Compasse will stand North though with some trembling A Ship that lyes at Anchor may bee something tossed but yet it stil remains so fastned that it cannot bee caried away by winde or weather the soule after it hath cast anchor upon God may as we see here in David be disquieted a while but this unsetling tends to a deeper setling the more we beleeve the more we are established faith is an establishing grace by faith we stand and stand fast and are able to withstand whatsoever opposeth us For what can stand against God upon whose truth and power faith relyes The devill feares not us but him whom
for God delights to have his will of those that are wedded to their owne wils as in Pharaob No men more subject to discontentments then those who would have all things after their owne way Againe one maine ground is False reasoning and errour in our discourse as that wee have no grace when wee feele none feeling is not alwayes a fit rule to judge our states by that God hath rejected us because we are crossed in outward things when as this issues from Gods wisdome and love How many imagine their failings to be fallings and their fallings to be fallings away Infirmities to be Presumptions every sinne against Conscience to be the sinne against the Holy Ghost●… unto which misapprehensions weake and dark spirits are subject And Satan as a cunning Rhetorician here inlargeth the fancy to apprehend things bigger then they are Satan abuseth confident spirits another contrary way to apprehend great sinnes as little and little as none Some also thinke that they have no grace because they have not so much as growen Christians whereas there bee severall ages in Christ. Some againe are so desirous and inlarged after what they have not that they minde not what they have Men may be rich though they have not millions and be not Emperors Likewise some are much troubled because they proceed by a false method and order in judging of their estates They will begin with Election which is the highest step of the ladder whereas they should begin from 〈◊〉 work of grace wrought within thei●… hearts from Gods calling them by hi●… spirit and their answer to his call and so raise themselves upwards to know their Election by their answer to God calling Give all diligence saith Peter to make your calling and election sure your election by your calling God descends downe unto us from election to calling and so to sanctification wee must ascend to him beginning where he ends Otherwise it is as great folly as in removing of a pile of wood to begin at the lowest first and so besides the needlesse trouble to be in danger to have the rest fall upon our heads Which besides ignorance argues pride appearing in this that they would bring God to their conceits and be at an end of their worke before they beginne This great secret of Gods eternall love to us in Christ is hidden in his breast and doth not appeare to us un till in the use of meanes God by his spirit discovereth the same unto us The spirit letteth into the soule so much life and sense of Gods love in particular to us as draweth the soule to Christ from whom it draweth so much vertue as changeth the frame of it and quickneth it to duty which duties are not grounds of our state in grace but issues springing from a good state before and thus farre they helpe us in judging of our condition that thoug●… they bee not to bee rested in yet a●… streames they lead us to the spring head of grace from whence they arise And of signes some be more apt to deceive us as being not so certaine as delight and joy in hearing the word as appeareth in the third ground some are more constant and certaine as love to those that are truly good and to all such and because they are such c. these as they are wrought by the spirit so the same spirit giveth evidence to the soule of the truth of them and leadeth us to faith from whence they come and faith leads us to the discovery of Gods love made knowne to us inhearing the word opened The same spirit openeth the truth to us and our understandings to conceive of it and our hearts to cloze with it by faith not only as a truth but as a truth belonging to us Now this faith is manifested either by it selfe reflecting upon it selfe the light of faith discovering both it selfe and other things or by the cause of it or by the effect or by all Faith is oft more knowne to us in the fruit of it then in it selfe as in plants the fruits are more apparant then the sappe and roote But the most setled knowledge is from the cause as when I know I beleeve because in hearing Gods gracious promises opened and offered unto me the spirit of God caryeth my soule to cleave to them as mine owne portion Yet the most familiar way of knowledge of our estates is from the effects to gather the cause the cause being oftentimes more remote and spirituall the effects more obvious and visible All the vigour and beauty in nature which we see comes from a secret influence from the heavens which we see not In a cleare morning we may see the beames of the Sun shining upon the top of hils and houses before wee can see the Sun it selfe Things in the working of them doe issue from the cause by whose force they had their being but our knowing of things ariseth from the effect where the cause endeth wee know God must love us before wee can love him and yet we oft first know that we love him the love of God is the cause why wee love our brother and yet we know we love our brother whom we see more clearly then God whom we doe not see It is a spirituall peevishnesse that keepes men in a perplexed condition that they neglect these helps to judge of their estates by whereas God takes liberty to help us sometime to a discovery of our estate by the effects sometimes by the cause c. And it is a sin to set light by any work of the spirit and the comfort we might have by it and therefore we may well adde this a●… one cause of disquietnesse in many that they grieve the spirit by quarrelling against themselves and the work of the spirit in them Another cause of disquiet is th●… men by a naturall kinde of Popery fe●… for their comfort too much in sanctification neglecting justification relyin●… too much upon their own performances Saint Paul was of another minde accounting all but dung and drosse compared to the righteousnesse of Christ. This is that garment wherewith being deeked we please our husband and wherein we get the blessing This giveth satisfaction to the conscience as satisfying God himselfe being performed by God the Sonne and approved therefore by God the Father Hereupon the soule is quieted and faith holdeth out this as a shield against the displeasure of God and temptations of Satan why did the Apostles in their Prefaces joyne grace and peace together but that we should seek for our peace in the free grace and favour of God in Christ. No wonder why Papists maintaine doubting who hold salvation by workes because Satan joyning together with our consciences will alwayes finde some flaw even in our best performances Hereupon the doubting and misgiving soule comes to make this absurd demand as Who shall ascend to heaven which is all one
with our ow●… hearts than with the trouble it selfe We are not hurt till our soules be hurt God will not have it in the power of any creature to hurt our soules but by our owne treason against our selves Therfore we should have our hearts in continuall jealousie for they are ready to deceive the best In suddaine encounters some sinne doth many times discover it selfe the seed whereoflyeth hid in our natures which wee thinke our selves very free from Who would have thought the seeds of murmuring had lurked in the meeke nature of Moses That the seeds of murther had lurked in the pittifull heart of David That the seeds of deniall of Christ had lyen hid in the zealous affection of Peter towards Christ If passions breake out from us which we are not naturally enclined unto and over which by grace wee have got a great conquest how watchfull need wee be over our selves in those things which by temper custome and company wee are carried unto and what cause have wee to feare continually that wee are worse than we take our selves to be There are many unruly passions lye hid in us untill they be drawne out by something that meeteth with them either I by way of opposition as when the truth of God spiritually unfolded meets with some beloved corruption it swelleth bigger the force of Gunpowder is not knowne untill some sparke light on it and oftentimes the stillest natures if crossed discover the deepest corruptions Sometimes it is drawne out by dealing with the opposite spirits of other men Oftentimes retyred men know not what lies hid in themselves 2. Sometimes by crosses as many people whilest the freshnesse and vigour of their spirits lasteth and while the flower of age and a full supply of all things continueth seeme to be of●… pleasing and calme disposition b●… afterwards when changes come like Iobs wife they are discovered Th●… that which in nature is unsubdued openly appeares 3. Temptations likewise have a searching power to bring that to light in us which was hidden before Sathan hath beene a winnower and a sister of old hee thought if Iob had beene but touched in his body hee would have cursed God to his face Some men out of policie conceale their passion untill they see some advantage to let it out as Esau smoothered his hatred untill his fathers death When the restraint is taken away Men as wee say shew themselves in their pure naturalls unloose a Tyger or a Lyon and you know what he is 4. Further let us see more every day into the state of our owne soules what a shame is it that so nimble and swift a spirit as the soule is that can mount up to heaven from thence come downe into the earth in an instant should whilest it lookes over all other things over-looke it selfe that it should bee skilfull in the story almost of all times and places and yet ignorant of the story of it selfe that we should know what is done in the Court and Countrey and beyond the Seas and be ignorant of what is done at home in our owne hearts that we should live knowne to others and yet die unknowne to our selves that we should be able to give account of any thing better then of our selves to our selves This is the cause why we stand in our owne light why wee thinke better of our selves than others and better then is cause This is that which hindreth all reformation for how can wee reforme that which wee are not willing to see and so wee lose one of the surest evidences of our sincerity which is a willingnesse to search into our hearts and to bee searched by others A sincere heart will offer it selfe to triall And therefore let us sift our actions and our passions and see what is flesh in them and what is spirit and so separate the precious from the vile It is good likewise to consider what sinne we were guilty of before which moved GOD to give us up to excesse in any passion and wherein we have grieved his Spirit Passion will bee 〈◊〉 moderate when thus it knowes it must come to the triall and censure This course will either make us weary of passion or else passion will make us weary of this strict course Wee shall find it the safest way to give our hearts no rest till we have wrought on them to purpose and gotten the mastery over them When the soule is invred to this dealing with it selfe it will learne the skill to command and passions will be soone commanded as being invred to be examined and checked As wee see doggs and such like domesticall creatures that will not regard a stranger yet will be quieted in brawles presently by the voice of their Master to which they are accustomed This fits us for service Unbroken spirits are like unbroken horses unfit for any use untill they be thorowly subdued 5. And it were best to prevent as much as in us lieth the very first risings before the soule bee overcast Passions are but little motions at the first but grow as Rivers doe greater and greater the further they are carried from their Spring The first risings are the more to bee looked unto because there is most danger in them and we have least care over them Si●… like rust or a Canker will by little a●… little eate out all the graces of the soule There is no staying when we are once downe the hill till we come to the bottome No sin but is easier kept out t●… driven out If wee cannot prevent wicked thoughts yet wee may deny them lodging in our hearts It is our giving willing entertainment to sinfull motions that increaseth guilt and hinder●… our peace It is that which moveth God to give us up to a further degree of evill affections Therefore what we are afraid to doe before men we should bee afraid to thinke before God It would much further our peace to keep our judgements cleare as being the eye of the soule whereby we may discerne in every action and passion what is good and what is evill as likewise to preserve rendernesse of heart that may checke us at the first and not brooke the least evill being discovered When the heart begins once to be kindled it is easie to smother the smoke of passion which otherwise will fume up into the head and gather into so thicke a cloud as wee shall lose the sight of our selves and what is best to bee done And therefore David here labours to take up his heart at the first his care was to crush the very first insurrections of his soule before they came to break forth into open rebellion stormes we know rise out of little gusts Little risings neglectd cover the soule before wee are aware If wee would checke these risings and stifle them in their birth they would not breake out afterwards to the reproach of Religion to the scandall of the weake
same mould subject to the same impressions from without as other men And their nature is upheld with the same supports and refreshings as others the withdrawing and want of which affecteth them And besides those troubles they suffer in Common with other men by reason of their new advancement and their new disposition they have in and from Christ their Head they are more sensible in a peculiar maner of those troubles that any way touch upon that blessed condition from a new life they have in and from Christ which will better appeare if we come more particularly to a discovery of the more speciall causes of this distemper some of which are 1 Without us 2 Some within us CAP. II. Of discouragements from without 1. GOD himselfe who sometimes withdrawes the beames of his countenance from his children whereupon the soule even of the strongest Christian is disquieted when together with the crosse God himselfe seemes to be an enemie unto them The child of God when hee seeth that his troubles are mixed with Gods displeasure and perhaps his conscience tells him that God hath a just quarrell against him because he hath not renewed his peace with his God then this anger of God puts a sting into all other troubles and addes to the disquiet There were some ingredients of this divine temptation as wee call it in holy David at this time though most properly a divine temptation bee when God appeares unto us as an enemy without any speciall guilt of any particular sin as in Iobs case And no marvaile if Christians bee from hence disquieted when as the Sonne of God himselfe having alwayes before enjoyed the sweet communion with his Father and now feeling an estrangement that he might be a curse for us complained in all his torments of nothing else but My God My God why hast thou forsaken me It is with the godly in this case as with vapours drawne up by the Sunne which when the extracting force of the Sunne leaves them fall downe againe to the earth from whence they are drawn So when the soule raised up and upheld by the beames of his countenance is left of God it presently begins to sinke We see when the body of the Sun is partly hid from us for totally it cannot in an Eclipse by the body of the Moone that there is a drouping in the whole frame of nature so it is in the soule when there is any thing that comes between Gods gracious countenance and it Besides if we looke downe to inferiour causes the soule is oft cast down by Satan who is all for casting downe and for disquieting For being a cursed spirit cast and tumbled downe himself from heaven where hee is never to come againe is hereupon full of disquiet carying a hell about himselfe whereupon all that he labours for is to cast downe and disquiet others that they may bee as much as he can procure in the same cursed condition with himselfe He was not ashamed to set upon Christ himselfe with this tempration of casting downe and thinke●… Christs members never low enough till he can bring them as low as himself By his envy and subtlety wee were driven out of Paradice at the first and now hee envies us the Paradice of a good conscience for that is our Paradice untill wee come to heaven into which no serpent shall ever creepe to tempt us When Satan seeth a man strongly and comfortably walke with God he cannot endure that a creature of meaner ranke by creation then himselfe should enjoy such happinesse Herein like some peevish men which are his instruments men too contentious and bred up therein as a Salamander in the fire who when they know the cause to be naught and their adversaries to have the better title yet out of malice they will follow them with suits and vexations though they be not able to disable their opposites title If their malice have not a vent in hurting some way they will burst for anger It is just so with the devill when he seeth men will to heaven and that they have good title to it then he followes them with all dejecting and uncomfortable tentations that he can it is his continuall trade and course to seek his rest in our disquiet he is by beaten practise and profession a temper in his kinde Againe what Satan cannot doe himselfe by immediate suggestions that he labours to work by his instruments who are all for casting down of those who stand in their light as those in the Psalme who cry downe with him downe with him even to the ground a character and stamp of which mens dispositions we have in the verse before this text Mine enemies saith David reproach me As sweet and as compassionate a man as hee was to pray and put on sackcleth for them yet he had enemies and such enemies as did not suffer their malice only to boile and concoct in their own breasts but out of the abundance of their hearts they reproached him in words There is nothing the nature of man is more impatient of then of reproaches for there is no man so meane but thinkes himselfe worthy of some regard and a reproachfull scorn shews an utter disrespect which issues from the very superfluity of malice Neither went they behind his back but were so impudent to say it to his face a malicious heart and a slandering tongue goe together and though shame might have suppressed the uttering of such words yet their insolent cariage spake as much in Davids heart We may see by the language of mens cariage what their heart saith and what their tongue would vent if they dared And this their malice was unwearied for they said daily unto him as if it had beene fed with a continuall spring malice is an unsatiable monster it will minister words as rage ministers weapons But what was that they said so reproachfully and said daily Where is now thy God they upbraid him with his singularity they say not now where is God but where is thy God that thou dost boast so much on as if thou hadst some speciall interest in Him Where we see that the scope of the devill and wicked men is to shake the godlies Faith and confidence in their God As Satan laboured to divide betwixt Christ and his Father If thou beest the Son of God command that these stones be made bread So hee labours to divide betwixt Father and Son and us they labour to bring God in jealousie with David as if God had neglected him bearing himselfe so much upon God They had some colour of this for God at this time had vailed himselfe from David as hee does oft from his best children for the better discovery of the malice of wicked men And doth not Satan tippe the tongues of the enemies of Religion now to insult over the Church now lying a bleeding What becomes of their
our courses Is it not the greatest pl●… of the world First to have their lu●… satisfied Secondly to remove either by fraud or violence whatsoever standeth in their way And thirdly to put colours and pretences upon this to delude the world themselves imploying all their carnall wit and worldly strength for their carnall aimes and fighting for that which-fights against their owne soules For what will be●… the issue of this but certaine destruction Of this minde are not onely t●… dregs of people but many of the m●… refined sort who desire to be emine●… in the world And to have their ow●… desires herein give up the liberty o●… their owne judgements and consciences to the desires and lusts of others to bee above others they will bee beneath themselves having those mens persons in admiration for hope of advantage whom otherwise they despise and so substituting in their spirits man in the place of GOD lose heaven for earth and bury that divine sparke their soules capable of the Divine nature and fitter to be a sanctuary and temple for God to dwell in then by clozing with baser things to become base it selfe We need not wonder that others seeme base to carnall men who are base both in and to themselves It is no wonder they should bee cruell to the soules of others who are cruell to their owne soules that they should neglect and starve others that give away their owne soules in a manner for nothing Alas upon what poore termes do they hazard that the nature and worth whereof is beyond mans reach to comprehend Many are so carelesse in this kinde that if they were throughly perswaded that they had soules that should live for ever either in blisse or torment wee might the more easily work upon them But as they live by sense as beasts so they have no mo●… thoughts of future times then 〈◊〉 except at such times as conscience is awaked by some suddaine judgement whereby Gods wrath is revealed fro●… heaven against them But happy were it for them if they might die like beasts whose miserie dies with them To such an estate hath sinne brought the soule that it willingly drowneth it selfe in the senses and becomes in some sort incarna●…e with the flesh Wee should therefore set our sel●… to have most care of that which Go●… cares most for which he breathed i●…to us at first set his owne image upon gave so great a price for and values above all the world besides Shall all our study bee to satisfie the desires 〈◊〉 the flesh and neglect this Is it not a vanity to preferre the casket before the jewel the shell before the pearle the gilded potsheard before the treasure and is it not muc●… more vanitie to preferre the outward condition before the inward The soule is that which Satan and his hath most spite at for in troubling our bodies or estates hee aimes at the vexation of our soules As in Iob his aime was to abuse that power God had given him over His children body and goods to make him out of a disquieted spirit blaspheme God It is an ill method to beginne our care in other things and neglect the soule as Achitophel who set his house in order when hee should have set his soule in order first Wisedome begins at the right end If all bee well at home it comforts a man though he meets with troubles abroad Oh saith he I shall have rest at home I have a loving wife and dutifull children so whatsoever we meet withall abroad if the soule be quiet thither we can retire with comfort See that all bee well within and then all troubles from without cannot much annoy us Grace will teach us to reason thus God hath given mine enemies power over my liberty and condition but shall they have power and liberty over my spirit It is that which Satan and they most seeke for but never yeeld Oh my soule And thus a godly man will become more then a conquerer when in appearance hee is conquered the cause prevailes his spirit prevailes and is undaunted A Christian is not subdued till his spirit be subdued Th●… Iob prevailed over Sathan and all his troubles at length This tormente●… proud persons to see godly men enjoy a calme and resolute frame of mind●… in the midst of troubles when th●… enemies are more troubled in troubling them then they are in being troubled by them Wee see likewise here how to fra●… our complaints David complaines n●… of God nor of his troubles nor of others but of his owne soule hee complaines of himselfe to himselfe A●… 〈◊〉 he should say Though all things else be out of order yet O my soule thou shouldst not trouble mee too thou shouldst not betray thy selfe unto troubles but rule o●… them A godly man complaines to Go●… yet not of God but of himselfe a carnall man is ready to justifie himselfe and complaine of God He complaines not to God but of God at the least in secret murmuring hee complaines of others that are but Gods violls hee complaines of the grievance that lies upon him but never regards what is amisse in himselfe within Openly he cries out upon fortune yet secretly he strike that God under that Idoll of fortune by whose guidance all things comes to passe whilst he quarrells with that which is nothing hee wounds him that is the cause of all things like a gouty man that complaines of his shooe and of his bed or an aguish man of his drinke when the cause is from within So men are disquieted with others when they should rather bee disquieted and angry with their owne hearts We condemne Ionas for contending with God and justifying his unjust anger but yet the same risings are in men naturally if shame would suffer them to give vent to their secret discontent their heart speakes what Ionas tong●… spake Oh but here we should lay o●… hand upon our mouth and adore God and command silence to our soules No man is hurt but by himselfe first Wee are drawen to evill and allur●… from a true good to a false by our ow●… lusts God tempts no man Satan hath 〈◊〉 power over us further then wee willingly lie open to him Satan wor●… upon our affections and then our affections worke upon our will Hee do●… not worke immediatly upon the wi●… wee may thanke our selves in willing yeelding to our owne passions fo●… that ill Satan or his instruments draw us unto Saul was not vexed with●… evill spirit till he gave way to his ow●… evill spirit of envy first The devill 〈◊〉 tred not into Iudas untill his cove●… heart made way for him The Apo●… strengtheneth his conceit against 〈◊〉 and lasting anger from hence th●… this wee give way to the devill I●… dangerous thing to passe from G●… government and come under Sata●… Satan mingleth himselfe with 〈◊〉 owne passions therefore wee should blame our selves first bee ashamed of
to desire to be troubled with a preventing trouble Let those that are not in the way of grace thinke with themselves what cause they have not to take a minutes rest while they are i●… that estate For a man to bee in debt both body and soule subject every minute to be arrested and caried prisoner to Hell and not to bee moved Fo●… man to have the wrath of GOD ready to bee powred out upon him and Hell gape for him nay to cary a hell about him in conscience if it were awake and to have all his comfort here hanging upon a weake threed of this li●…e ready to bee cut and broken off every moment and to bee cursed in all those blessings that he enjoyes and yet not to be disquieted but continually treasuring up wrath against the day of wrath by running deeper into God●… books for a man to bee thus and not to bee disquieted is but the Devills peace whilest the strong man holds possession A burning Ague is more hopefull than a Lethargy The best service that can be done to such men is to startle and rouze them and so with violence to pull them out of the fire as Iude speakes or else they will another day curse that cruell mercy that lets them alone now In all their jollity in this world they are but as a Booke fairely bound which when it is opened is full of nothing but Tragedies So when the booke of their consciences shall be once opened there is nothing to bee read but lamentations and woes Such men were in a way of hope if they had but so much apprehension of their estates as to ask themselves What have I done If this bee true that there are such fearefull things prepared for sinners why am I not cast downe Why am I no more troubled and discouraged for my wicked courses Despaire to such is the beginning of comfort and trouble the beginning of peace A storme is the way to a calme and hell the way to heaven But for raising of a right grief in the soule of a holy man looke what is the state of the soule in it selfe in wh●… termes it is with God whether there be any sinne hanging on the fyle unrepented of If all bee not well with in us then here 's place for inward trouble whereby the soule may afflict it selfe God saw this griefe so needfull for his people that he appointed certaine dayes for afflicting them because it is fit that sinne contracted by joy should bee dissolved by griefe and sinne is so deepely invested into the soule that 〈◊〉 separation betwixt the soule and it cannot be wrought without much griefe when the soule hath smarted for sinne it sets then the right price upon reconciliation with God in Christ and it fe●…leth what a bitter thing sinne is and therefore it will bee afraid to bee 〈◊〉 bold with it afterward it likewise aweth the heart so that it will not bee so loose towards GOD as it was before and certainely that soule that hath 〈◊〉 the sweetnesse of keeping peace wit●… God cannot but take deeply to heart that there should bee any thing in us that should divide betwixt us and the fountaine of our comfort that should stop the passage of our prayers and the current of Gods favours both towards our selves and others it is such an ill as is the cause of all other ill and damps all our comforts 2. Wee should looke out of our selves also considering whether for troubles at home and abroad God calls not to mourning or troubling of our selves griefe of compassion is as well required as griefe of contrition It is a dead member that is not sensible of the state of the body Ieremie for feare he should not weepe enough for the distressed estate of the Church desired of God that his eyes might be made a fountaine of teares A Christian as hee must not bee proud flesh so neither must he be dead flesh none more truely sensible either of sinne or of misery so farre as misery carries with it any signe of Gods displeasure then a true Christian which issues from the life of Grace which where it is in 〈◊〉 measure is lively and therefore sensible for God gives motion and sense for the preservation of life As God bowels are tender towards us so God people have tender bowells toward him his cause his people and his Church The fruit of this sensiblenesse is earn●… prayer to God as Melanchton 〈◊〉 well If I cared for nothing I would pr●… for nothing 2. Griefe being thus raised must as wee said before bee bounded a●… guided 1. God hath framed the soule a●… planted such affections in it as may answere all his dealing towards his children that when he enlargeth himselfe towards them then the soule sho●… enlarge it selfe to him againe when 〈◊〉 opens his hand wee ought to open o●… hearts when hee shewes any token●… displeasure we should grieve when 〈◊〉 troubles us wee should trouble a●… grieve our selves As God any 〈◊〉 discovereth himself so the soule sho●… be in a sutable pliablenesse Then 〈◊〉 soule is as it should bee when it is ready to meet GOD at every turne to joy when he calls for it to mourne when hee calls for that to labour to know Gods meaning in every thing Againe GOD hath made the soule for a communion with himselfe which communion is especially placed in the affections which are the springs of all spirituall worship Then the affections are well ordered when wee are fit to have communion with God to love joy trust to delight in him above all things The affections are the inward movings of the soule which then move best when they move us to God not from him They are the feet of the soule whereby wee walke with and before God When wee have our affections at such command that wee can take them off from any thing in the world at such times as wee are to have more neare communion with God in hearing or prayer c. As Abrahā whē he was to sacrifice left whatsoever might hinder him at the bottome of the Mount When we let our affections so farre into the things of the world as we can●… take them off when wee are to de●… with God it is a signe of spirituall i●… temperancie It is said of the Israelites that they brought Aegypt with the●… into the wildernesse so many bring th●… world in their hearts with them wh●… they come before God But because our affections are ne●… well ordered without judgement 〈◊〉 being to follow not to lead It is 〈◊〉 evidence that the soule is in a fit temper when there is such a harmony 〈◊〉 it as that wee judge of things as they are and affect as we judge and exec●… as wee affect This harmony with●… breeds uniformity and constancie 〈◊〉 our resolutions so that there is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 were an even thred drawne throug●… the
whole course and tenour of 〈◊〉 lives when wee are not off and on 〈◊〉 and downe It argues an ill state of body when it is very hot or very col●… or hot in one part and cold in anoth●… so unevennesse of spirit argues a distemper a wise mans life is of one colour like it selfe The soule bred fro●… heaven so farre as it is heavenly minded desires to be like heaven above all stormes uniforme constant not as things under the Sunne which are alwayes in changes constant onely in inconstancie Affections are as it were the winde of the soule and then the soule is carried as it should be when it is neither so becalmed that it moves not when it should nor yet tossed with tempests to move disorderly When it is so well balaced that it is neither lift up nor cast downe too much but keepeth a steddy course Our affections must not rise to become unruly passions for then as a river that overfloweth the bankes they carry much slime and soile with them Though affections be the winde of the soule yet unruly passions are the stormes of the soule and will overturne all if they be not suppressed The best as wee see in David here if they doe not steare their hearts aright are in danger of sudden gusts A Christian must neither be a dead sea nor a raging sea Our affections are then in best temper when they become so many graces of the Spirit as when love is turned to a love of God joy to a delight in the best things feare to a feare of offending him more then any creature sorrow to a sorrow for sinne c. They are likewise in good temper when they move us to all duties of love and mercy towards others when they are not shut where they should be open nor open where they should be shut Yet there is one case wherein exceeding affection is not over exceeding As in an extasie of zeale upon a sudd●… apprehension of Gods dishonour and his cause trodden under foot It is better in this case rather scarce to be 〈◊〉 owne men then to be calme or quiet It is said of Christ and David that their hearts were eaten up with a holy zeale for Gods house In such a case Moses unparalleld for meekenesse was turned into an holy rage The greatnesse 〈◊〉 the provocation the excellencie of th●… object and the weight of the occasion beares out the soule not onely without blame but with great praise in such seeming distempers It is the glory of a Christian to be carried with full saile and as it were with a spring tide of affection So long as the streame of affection runneth in the due channell and if there bee great occasions for great motions then it is fit the affections should rise higher as to burne with zeale to be sicke of love to be more vile for the Lord as David to be counted out of our wits with Saint Paul to further the cause of Christ and the good of soules Thus we may see the life of a poore Christian in this world 1. he is in great danger if hee be not troubled at all 2. when he is troubled he is in danger to be over troubled 3. when he hath brought his soule in tune againe hee is subject to new troubles Betwixt this ebbing and flowing there is very little quiet Now because this cannot bee done without a great measure of Gods Spirit our helpe is to make use of that promise of giving the holy Ghost to them that aske it To teach us when how long and how much to grieve and when and how long and how much to rejoyce the Spirit must teach the heart this who as he moved upon the waters before the Creation so hee must move upon the waters of our soules for wee have not the command of our owne hearts Every naturall man is carried away with his flesh and humours upon which the devill rides and carries him whither he list he hath no better comsellors then flesh and blood and Sathan counselling with them But a godly m●…n is not a slave to his carnall affections but as David here labours to bring into captivity the first moti●… of sinne in his heart CAP. IX Of the soules disquiets Gods dealings 〈◊〉 power to containe our selves in order MOreover we see that the soule 〈◊〉 disquiets proper to it selfe besides th●… griefes of Sympathy that arise from the bodie for here the soule complaines 〈◊〉 the soule it selfe as when it is out of the body it hath torments and joyes of its owne And if these troubles of the soule be not well cured then by way of fellowship and redundance they will affect the outward man and so the whole man shall bee inwrapt in miserie From whence we further see that God when he will humble a man needs not fetch forces from without if hee let but our owne hearts loose wee shall have trouble and worke enough though we were as holy as David God did not onely exercise him with a rebellious sonne out of his owne loynes but with rebellious risings out of his own heart If there were no enemie in the world nor devill in hell we carry that within us that if it be let loose will trouble us more then all the world besides Oh that the proud creature should exalt himselfe against God and runne into a voluntary course of provoking him who cannot onely raise the humours of our bodies against us but the passions of our mindes also to torment us Therefore it is the best wisedome not to provoke the great God for are wee stronger then he that can raise our selves against our selves and worke wonders not onely in the great world but also in the little world our soules and bodies when he pleases We see likewise hence a necessity of having something in the soule above it selfe it must be partaker of a diviner nature then it selfe otherwise when the most refined part of our soules the very spirit of our mindes is out of frame what shall bring it in againe Therefore we must conceive in a godly man a double selfe one which must be denied the other which must denie one that breeds all the disquiet and another that stilleth what the other hath raised The way to still the soule as it is under our corrupt selfe is not to parlee with it and divide government for peace sake as if wee should gratifie the flesh in something to redeeme liberty to the spirit in other things for we shall finde the flesh will be too encroching Wee must strive against it not with subtilty and discourse so much as with peremptory violence silence it and vexe it An enemy that parlees will yeeld at length Grace is nothing else but that blessed power whereby as spirituall wee gaine upon our selves as carnall Holy love is that which wee gaine of selfe-love and so joy and delight c. Grace
is a subsisting of three persons every one so set out unto us as fitted for us to trust in the Father as a Creator the Sonne as a Redeemer the Holy Ghost as a Comforter and all this in reference to us God in the first person hath decreed the great work of our salvation and all things tending to the accomplishment of it God in the second person hath exactly and fully answered that decree and plot in the worke of our redemption God in the third person discovers and applyes all unto us and fits us for communion with the Father and the Sonne from whom he proceeds 3. GOD cannot be comfortably thought upon out of Christ our mediator in whom hee was reconciling the world to himselfe as being a friend both to God and us and therefore fit to bring God and the soule together being a middle person in the trinity In Christ Gods nature becomes lovely to us and ours to God otherwise there is an utter enmity betwixt his pure and our impure nature Christ hath made up the vaste gulfe betweene God and us there is nothing more terrible to thinke on then an absolute God out of Christ. 4. Therefore for the better drawing of us to trust in God we must conceive of him under the sweet relation of a Father Gods nature is Fatherly now unto us and therefore lovely 5. And for further strengthning our faith it is needfull to consider what excellencies the Scripture giveth unto God answerable to all our necessities what sweet Names God is pleased to be knowne unto us by sor our comfort as a mercifull gracious long suffering God c. When Moses desired to see the glory of God God thus manifested himself in the way of goodnesse I will m●… all my goodnesse passe before thee Whatsoever is good in the creature is first in God as in a fountaine and it is in God in a more emi●… manner and fuller measure All grace and holinesse all sweetnesse of affection all power and wisdome c. as it is in him so it is from him and we come to conceive these properties to bee in God 1. by feeling the comfort and power of them in our selves 2. by observing these things in their measure to be in the best of the creatures whence wee arise to take notice of what grace and what love what strength and wisdome c. is in God by the beames of these which we see in his creature with adding in our thoughts fulnesse peculiar to God and abstracting imperfections incident to the creature for that is in God in the highest degree the sparkles whereof is but in us 6. Therefore it is fit that unto all other eminencies in God wee should strengthen our faith by considering those glorious singularities which are altogether incommunicable to the creature and which gives strength to his other properties as that God is not onely gracious and loving powerfull wise c. but that he is infinitely 〈◊〉 and unchangeably so All which are comprised in and drawne from that one name Iehovah as being of himselfe and giving a being to all things else of nothing and able when it pleaseth him to turne all things to nothing againe As God is thus so he makes it good by answerable actions and dealing towards us by his continuall providence the consideration whereof is a great stay to our faith for by this providence God makes use of all his former excellencies for his peoples good for the more comfortable apprehension of which it is good to know that Gods providence is extended as farre as his creation Every creature in every element and place whatsoever receiveth a powerfull influence from God who doth what pleaseth him both in heaven and earth in the sea and all places But we must know God doth not put things into a frame and then leave them to their owne motion as wee doe clocks after wee have once set them right and ships after wee have once built them commit them to winde and waves but as hee made all things and knowes all things so by a continued kind of creation he preserves all things in their being and working and governes them to their ends Hee is the first mover that sets all the wheeles of the creature a working One wheele may move another but all are moved by the first If God moves not the clock of the creature stands If God should not uphold things they would presently fall to nothing from whence they came If God should not guide things Sathans malice and mans weaknesse would soone bring all to a confusion If God did not rule the great family of the world all would breake and fall to pieces whereas the wise providence of God keepeth every thing on its right hinges All things stand in obedience to this providence of God and nothing can withdraw it selfe from under it If the creature withdraw it selfe from one order of providence it falls into another If man the most unruly and disordered creature of all withdraw himselfe from Gods gracious government of him to happinesse hee will soone fall under Gods just government of him to deserved misery If hee shakes off Gods sweet yoake he puts himselfe under Sathans heavy yoake who as Gods executioner hardens him to destruction and so whiles hee rushes against Gods will he fulfils it And whilst he will not willingly doe Gods will Gods will is done upon him against his will The most casuall things fall under providence yea the most disordered thing in the world sinne and of sins the most horrible that ever the Sunne beheld the crucifying of the Lord of life was guided by a hand of providence to the greatest good For that which is ca suall in regard of a second cause is not so in regard of the first whose providence is most cleerely seene in casuall events that fall out by accident for in these the effect cannot be ascribed to the next cause God is said to kill him who was unwarily slaine by the falling of an axe or some instrument of death And though man hath a freedome in working and of all men the Hearts of Kings are most free yet even these are guided by an over ruling power as the rivers of water are carryed in their channels whither skilfull men list to derive them For setling of our faith the more God taketh liberty in using weake meanes to great purposes and setteth aside more likely and able meanes yea sometimes he altogether disableth the greatest meanes and worketh often by no meanes at all It is not from want of power in God but from abundance multiplying of his goodnesse that hee useth any means at all there is nothing that he doth by meanes but hee is able to doe without meanes Nay God often bringeth his will to passe by crossing the course and stream of meanes to shew his own soveraignty and to exercise our dependance and maketh
till God in judgement gave him up to what his covetous heart led him unto A man is not fit to deliberate till his heart be purged of false aymes for else God will give him up to the darknesse of his owne spirit and he will bee alwayes warping unfit for any byas Where the aymes are good there God delighteth to reveale his good pleasure Such a soule is levell and suitable to any good counsell that shall bee given and prepared to entertaine it In what measure any last is favoured in that measure the soule is darkned Even wise Solomon whilest he gave way to his lust had like to have lost his wisdome We must looke to our place wherein God hath set us if we be in subjection to others their authority ought to sway with us Neither is it the calling of those that are subjects to enquire over-curiously into the mysteries of government for that both in peace and war breeds much disturbance and would trouble all designes The lawes under which we live are particular determinations of the law of God in some duties of the second table For example The Law of God sayes Exact no more then what is thy due But what in particular is thy due and what another mans the lawes of men determine and therefore ought to be a rule unto us so farre as they reach though it be too narrow a rule to be good only so farre as mans law guides unto Yet law being the joynt reason and consent of many men for publique good hath an use for guidance of all actions that fall under the same Where it dashes not against Gods law what is agreeable to law is agreeable to conscience The law of God in the due enlargement of it to the least beginning and occasions is exceeding broad and allowes of whatsoever stands with the light of reason or the bonds of humanity civility c. and whatsoever is against these is so farre against Gods law So that higher rules be looked to in the first place there is nothing lovely or praise-worthy among men but ought to be seriously thought on Nature of it selfe is wilde and untamed and impatient of the yoke but as beasts that cannot endure the yoke at first after they are enured a while unto it beare it willingly cary their work more easily by it So the yoke of obedience makes the life regular and quiet The meeting of authority and obedience together maintaines the order and peace of the world So of that Question Though blindfold obedience such as our Adversaries would have be such as will never stand with sound peace of conscience which alwayes lookes to have light to direct it for else a blinde conscience would breed blinde feares yet in such doubtfull cases wherein we cannot winde out our selves we ought to light our candles at others whom we have cause to thinke by their place and parts should see further then wee In matters of outward estate wee will have men skilfull of our counsell and Christians would finde more sound peace if they would advise with their godly and learned Pastors and friends Where there is not a direct word there is place for the counsell of a prudent man And it is a happinesse for them whose businesse is much and parts not large to have the benefit of those that can give ayme and see further then themselves The meanest Christian understands his owne way and knowes how to doe things with better advantage to his soule then a gracelesse though learned man yet is still glad of further discovery In counsell there is peace the thoughts being thus established When wee have advised and served Gods providence in the use of meanes then if it fall out otherwise then wee looke for wee may confidently conclude that God would not have it so otherwise to our griefe we may say it was the fruit of our owne rashnesse Where we have cause to thinke that wee have used better meanes in the search of grounds and are more free from partiall affections then others there we may use our owne advise more safely Otherwise what wee doe by consent from others is more secure and lesse offensive as being more countenanced In advice with others it is not sufficient to be generally wise but experienced and knowing in that wee aske which is an honour to Gods gifts where we finde them in any kinde When we set about things in passion we work not as men or Christians but in a bestiall manner The more passion the lesse discretion because passion hinders the sight of what is to be done It clouds the soule and puts it on to action without advisement Where passions are subdued and the soule purged and cleared there is nothing to hinder the impression of Gods spirit the soule is fitted as a cleane glasse to receive light from above And that is the reason why mortified men are fittest to advise with in the particular cases incident to a Christian life After all advise extract what is fittest and what our spirits do most bend unto For in things that concerne our selves God affords a light to discerne out of what is spoken what best suteth us And every man is to follow most what his owne conscience after information dictates unto him because conscience is Gods deputy in us and under God most to bee regarded and whosoever sinnes against it in his own construction sinnes against God God vouchsafeth every Christian in some degree the grace of spirituall prudence whereby they are enabled to discerne what is fittest to be done in things that fall within their compasse It is good to observe the particular becks of providence how things joyne and meete together fit occasions and suting of things are intimations of Gods will Providence hath a language which is well understood by those that have a familiar acquaintance with Gods dealing they see a traine of providence leading one way more then to another Take especiall heed of not grieving the Spirit when he offers to bee our guide by studying evasions and wishing the case were otherwise This is to be Law-givers to our selves thinking that we are wiser than God The use of discretion is not to direct us about the end whether wee should doe well or ill for a single heart alwayes aymes at good but when we resolve upon doing well and yet doubt of the manner how to performe it discretion lookes not so much to what is lawfull for that is taken for granted but what is most expedient A discreet man lookes not to what is best so much as what is fittest in such and such respects by eying circumstances which if they sort not doe vary the nature of the thing it selfe And because it is not in man to know his owne wayes we should looke up unto Christ the great Councellour of his Church to vouchsafe the spirit of counsell and direction to us that may make our way plaine before us by
in him If we will not trust in salvation what will we trust in and if salvation it self cannot save us what can out of salvation there is nothing but destruction which those that seeke it any where out of God are sure to meet with How pittifull then is their case who goe to a destroyer for salvation that seeke for help from hell Here also we see to whom to return praise in all our deliverances even to the God of our salvation The virgin Mary was stirred up to magnifie the Lord but why Her spirit rejoyced in God her Saviour Whosoever is the instrument of any good yet salvation is of the Lord whatsoever brings it hee sends it Hence in their holy feasts for any deliverance the cup they drank of was called the Cup of salvation and therefore David when he summons his thoughts what to render unto God hee resolves upon this to take the Cup of salvation But alwayes remember this that when we thinke of God as salvation wee must thinke of him as hee is in Christ to his For so every thing in God is saving even his most terrible attributes of justice and power out of Christ the sweetest things in God are terrible Salvation it selfe will not save out of Christ who is the onely way of salvation called the way the truth and the life David addeth He is the salvations of my countenance that is hee will first speake salvation to my soule and say I am thy salvation and when the heart is cheered which is as it were the S●… of this little world the beames of that joy will shine in the countenance True joy begins 〈◊〉 the center and so passeth to the circumference the outward man The countenance is as the glasse of the soul wherein you may see the naked face of the soule according as the severall affections thereof stand In the coutenance of an understanding creature you may see more then a bare countenance The spirit of one man may see the countenance of anothers inner man in his outward countenance which hath a speech of its owne and declares what the heart saith and how it is affected But how comes God to be the salvation of our countenance Answ. I answer God onely graciously ●…nes in the face of Jesus Christ which 〈◊〉 with the eye of faith beholding receive those beames of his grace and re●…ct them backe againe God shineth ●…on us first and we shine in that light ●…f his countenance upon us The joy of salvation especially of spirituall and ●…all salvation is the onely true joy all other salvations end at last in destruction and are no further comfortable then they issue from Gods saving love God will have the body partake with the soule as in matter of griefe so in matter of joy the lanthorne shines in the light of the Candle within Againe God brings forth the joy of the heart into the countenance for the further ●…eading and multiplying of joy to others Next unto the sight of the sweet countenance of God is the beholding of the cheerefull countenance of a Christian friend rejoycing from true grounds Whence it is that the joy of one becomes the joy of ma●… and the joy of many meet in one by which meanes as many lights together make the greater light so many lightsome spirits make the greater light of spirit and so God receiveth the more praise which makes him so much to delight in the prosperity of his children Hence it is that in any deliverance of Gods people the righteous doe compasse them about to know what God hath done for their soules and keep a spirituall Feast with them in partaking of their joy And the godly have cause to joy in the deliverance of other Christians because they suffered in their afflictions and it may be in their sinnes the cause of them which made them somewhat ashamed Whence it is that Davids great desire was that those who feared God might not be ashamed because of him insinuating that those who feare Gods name are ashamed of the falls of Gods people Now when God delivers them this reproach is removed and those that had part in their sorow have part in their joy Againe God will have salvation so open that it shall appeare in the countenance of his people the more to daunt and vexe the enemies Cainish hypocrites hang downe their heads when God lifts up the countenance of their brethren when the countenance of Gods children cleares up then their enemies hearts and looks are cloudy Ierusalems joy is Babylons sorow It it with the Church her enemies as it is with a ballance the scales whereof when one is up the other is downe Whilst Gods people are under a cloud carnall people insult over them as if they were men deserted of God Wherupon they hang down their heads the rather because they think that by reason of their sins Christ his Religion will suffer with them Hence Davids care was that the miseries of Gods people should not be told in Gath. The chief reason why the enemies of the Church gnash their teeth at the sight of Gods gracious dealing is that they take the rising of the Church to bee a presage of their ruine A lesson which Hamans wife had learned This is a comfort to us in these times of Iacobs trouble and Zions sorrow The captivity of the Church shall returne as rivers in the South Therefore the Church may say Reioyce not over me O my enemy though I am fallen I shall rise againe Though Christs Spouse be now as black as the Pots yet shee shall be white as the Dove If there were not great dangers where were the glory of Gods great deliverance The Church at length will be as a Cup of trembling and as a burthensome stone The blood of the Saints cry their enemies violence cryes the prayers of the Church cry for deliverance and vengeance upon the enemies of the Church and as that importunate widow will at length prevaile Shall the importunity of one poore woman prevaile with an unrighteous Iudge and shall not the prayers of many that cry unto the righteous God take effect If there were Armies of Prayers as there are Armies of men wee should see the streame of things turned another way A few Moses●… the Mount would doe more good then many souldiers in the valley If wee would lift up our hearts and hands to God he would lift up our countenance But alas wee either pray not or crosse our owne prayers for want of love to the truth of God and his people It is wee that keepe Antichrist and his faction alive to plague the unthankfull world The strength he hath is not from his owne cause but from our want of zeale we hinder those Hal●…luiahs by private brabbles coldnesse and indifferency in Religion The Church begins at this time a little to lift up
workes If I be a Father where is mine bo●…r Speciall relations are speciall enforcements to duty 4. The spirit of God which knowes the deep things of God and the depths of our hearts doth reveale this mutuall interest betwixt God and those that are his it being a principall worke of the spirit to seale this unto the soule by discovering such a cleare and particular light in the use of meanes as swaieth the soule to yeeld up it selfe wholy to God When we truly trust wee may say with S. Paul I know whom I have trusted he knew both that he trusted and whom he trusted The spirit of God that reveales God to be ours and stirres up faith in him both reveales this trust to our soules and the interest we have in God thereby The Lord is my portion saith my soul but God said so to it first If instinct of nature teaches dammes to know their young ones and their yong ones them in the middest of those that are alike shall not the spirit of God much more teach the soule to know its owne father As none knowes what is in man but the spirit of man so none knowes what love God beares to those that are his but the spirit of God in his All the light in the world cannot discover the Sunne unto us onely it discovers it selfe by its own ●…eames So all the Angels and Saints 〈◊〉 heaven cannot discover to our soules ●…he love that is in the breast of God towards us but onely the spirit of God which sheds it into our hearts The spirit onely teaches this language to say my God It is infused onely into sanctified hearts and therefore oft-times meane men enjoy it when great wise and learned persons are strangers to it 5. The spirit when it witnesseth this to us is called the spirit of adoption and hath alwayes accompanying of it a spirit of supplication whereby with a familiar yet reverent boldnesse wee lay open our hearts to God as to a deere Father All others are strangers to this heavenly intercourse In straits they run to their friends and carnall shifts whereas an heire of heaven runs to his Father and tells him of all 6. Those that are Gods are known to be his by speciall love-tokens that ●…e bestowes upon them As 1. the speciall graces of his spirit Princes children are knowne by their costly jewels and rich ornaments It is not common gifts and glorious parts that set a character upon us to be Gods but grace to use those gifts in humility and love to the glory of the giver 2. There is in them a sutablenesse and connaturalnesse of heart to all that is spirituall to whatsoever hath Gods stampe upon it as his truth and his children and that because they are his By this likenesse of disposition wee are fashioned to a communion with him Can two walke together and not be agreed It is a certaine evidence that we are Gods in Christ if the spirit of God hath wrought in us any impression like unto Christ who is the image of his Father both Christs looking upon us and our looking upon Christ by faith as ours hath a transforming and conforming power 3. Spirituall comforts in distresse such as the world can neither give nor take away shew that God lookes upon the soules of his with another eye then he beholdeth others He sends a secret messenger that reports his peculiar love to their hearts He knowes their soules and feeds them with his hidden Manna the inward peace they feele is not in freedome from trouble but in freenesse with God in the midst of trouble 4. Seasonable and sanctified corrections wherby we are kept from being led away by the errour of the wicked shew Gods fatherly care over us as his Who will trouble himselfe in correcting another mans childe yet we oftner complaine of the smart wee feele then thinke of the tender heart and hand that smites us untill our spirits be subdued and then we reape the quiet fruit of righteousnesse Where crosses worke together for the best we may know that we love God and are loved of him Thriving in a sinfull course is a black marke of one that is not Gods 7. Then wee make it appeare that God is our God when wee side with him and are for him and his cause in ill times When God seems to cry out unto us who is on my side who Then if wee can say as those in Esay whereof one sayes I am the Lords and another calls himselfe by the name of Jacob and another subscribes with his hand unto the Lord it s a blessed signe Thus the Patriarchs and Prophets Apostles and Martyrs were not ashamed of God and God was not ashamed to own thē Provided that this boldnesse for God proceed not onely from a conviction of the judgement but from spirituall experience of the goodnesse of the cause whereby we can justifie in heart what we justifie in words Otherwise men may contend for that with others which they have no interest in themselves The life must witnesse for God as well as the tongue it is oft easier for corrupt nature to part with life then with lust This siding with God is with a separation from whatsoever is contrary God useth this as an argument to come out of Babylon because we are his people Come out of her My people Religion is nothing else but a gathering and a binding of the soule close to God that fire which gathers together the gold separates the drosse Nature drawes out that which is wholesome in meates ●…nd severs the contrary The good ●…hat is to be had by God is by clea●…ing to him and him onely God loves 〈◊〉 ingenuous and full protestation if ●…alled to it It shewes the coldnesse of ●…he times whē there is not heat enough ●…f zeale to separate from a contrary ●…ith God is a jealous God and so wee ●…all finde him at last When the day of severing comes then they that have ●…ood for him shall not onely be his but his treasure and his jewels There is none of us all but may some time or other fall into such a great extremity that when wee looke ●…bout us we shall finde none to help ●…s at which time we shall throughly ●…now what it is to have comfort from heaven and a God to goe unto If there be any thing in the world worth labouring for it is the getting sound evidence to our soules that God is ours What madnesse is it to spend all our labour to possesse our selves of the Cisterne when the fountaine is offered to ●…s O beloved the whole world cannot weigh against this one comfort that God is ours All things laid in the other ballance would be too light A Moath may corrupt a theefe may take away that we have here but who can take our God away Though God doth convey some
this world that Gods people are like Israel at the red ●…ea invironed with dangers on all ●…des What course have wee then to ●…ake but onely to looke up and wait for ●…he salvation of our God This is a breast full of consolation let us teach our hearts to suck and draw comfort from ●…ence Is God our God and will he suffer any thing to befall us for our hurt Will he lay any more upon us then he gives us strength to beare Will hee suffer any wind to blow upon us but for good Doth he not set us before his face Will a Father or Mother suffer a child to be wronged in their presence if they can help it Will a friend suffer his friend to be injured if he may redresse him And will God that hath put these affections into Parents and friends neglect the care of those hee hath taken so neere unto himselfe No surely his eyes are open to looke upon their condition his eares are open to their prayers a booke of remembrance is written of all their good desires speeches and actions hee hath bottles for all their teares their very sighs are not hid from him he hath written them upon the palmes of his hands and cannot but continually looke upon them Oh let us prize the favour of so good a God who though he dwels on high yet will regard things so low and not neglect the meane estate of any Nay especially delights to be called the comforter of his Elect and the God of those that are in misery and have none to flye unto but himselfe But wee must know that God onely thus graciously visits his owne children he visits with his choysest favours those onely that feare his name As for those that either secretly undermine or openly oppose the cause and Church 〈◊〉 God and joyne with his enemies ●…ch as savour not the things of God ●…t commit spirituall Idolatry and A●…ltery with Gods enemies the world ●…d the devill God will answer these 〈◊〉 once he did the Israelites when in ●…eir necessity they would have forced ●…cquaintance upon him Goe to the gods ●…m you have served to the great men ●…hose persons you have obeyed for ad●…antage to your riches to your plea●…re which you have loved more then God or goodnesse you would not lose 〈◊〉 base custome an oath a superfluity a ●…hing of nothing for me therefore I will not owne you now Such men are more impudent then the devill himself ●…hat will claim acquaintance with God 〈◊〉 last when they have caried themselves as his enemies all their dayes ●…athan could tell Paul and Sylas they ●…ere the servants of the living God but ●…e would not make that plea for himselfe knowing that he was a cursed creature Miserable then is their condition who live in the world nay in the Church without God Such are in 〈◊〉 worse estate then Pagans and Iews for living in the house of God they are strangers from God and from the covenant of grace usurping the name of Christians having indeed nothing to doe with Christ. Some of these like spirituall vagabonds as Cain excommunicate themselves from Gods presence in the use of the meanes or rather like devils that will have nothing to doe with God because they are loath to be tormented before their time they thinke every good Sermon an arraigning of them and therefore keep out of reach Others will present themselves under the meanes and cary some savour away with them of what they heare but it is onely till they meete with the next temptation unto which they yeeld themselves presently slaves These shrowd themselves under a generall profession as they did who called themselves Iewes and were nothing lesse But alas an empty title will bring an empty comfort at last It was ●…old comfort to the rich man in flames that Abraham called him sonne Or to 〈◊〉 that Christ called him friend Or ●…o the rebellious Iewes that God stiles ●…em his people Such as our profession 〈◊〉 such will our comfort be True profession of Religion is another thing then most men take it to be it is made 〈◊〉 of the outward duty and the inward 〈◊〉 too which is indeed the life and ●…ule of all What the heart doth not 〈◊〉 Religion is not done God cares for no retainers that will ●…ely we are his livery but serve themselves What hast thou to doe to take his 〈◊〉 into thy mouth and hatest to be refor●…d Saul lived in the bosome of the Church yet being a cruell Tyrant ●…hen he was in a desperate plunge his ●…tward profession did him no good ●…d therefore when he was invironed ●…ith his enemies he uttered this dole●… complaint God hath sorsaken mee 〈◊〉 the Philistims are upon me A pitti●… case yet so will it be with all those 〈◊〉 rest in an outward profession thinking it enough to complement with God when their hearts are not right within them Such will at length bee forced to cry Sicknesse is upon mee death is upon me hell is before me and God hath forsaken me I would none of God heretofore Now God will have none of me When David himselfe had offended God by numbring the people then God counted him but plaine David Goe and say to David c. whereas before when hee purposed to build a Temple then goe tell my servant David When the Israelites had set up an Idoll then God Fathers them on Moses THY people which thou hast brought out of Egypt he would not owne them as at other times then they are MY people still whilest they keep covenant No care no present comfort in this neere relation The price of the Pearl is not known till all else be sold and we see the necessary use of it So the worth of God in Christ is never discerned till we see our lost and undone condition without him till conscience flyes in our faces and dragge us to the brink of hell then●…ver ●…ver we taste how good the Lord is wee 〈◊〉 say Blessed is the people whose God is 〈◊〉 Lord. Heretofore I have heard of 〈◊〉 loving kindnesse but that is not a ●…sand part of what I see and feele ●…e joy I now appreheud is unuttera●… unconceiveable Oh then when we have gotten our ●…les possest of God let our study be 〈◊〉 preserve our selves in his love to ●…ke close with him that he may de●…t to abide with us and never for●…e us How basely doth the Scripture●…ak ●…ak of whatsoever stands in our way 〈◊〉 makes nothing of them What is 〈◊〉 but vanity and lesse then vanity 〈◊〉 nations but as a drop of the bucket as 〈◊〉 dust of a ballance things not at all ●…siderable Flesh lookes upon them 〈◊〉 through a multiplying glasse making ●…m greater then they are but faith 〈◊〉 God doth sees them as nothing This is such a blessed condition as 〈◊〉 well challenge all our diligence in ●…ouring to be assured
a grace wher●…y the soule resigneth up it self to God ●…n humble submission to his will because he is our God as David in extremity comforted himselfe in the Lord his God Patience breeds comfort because it brings experience with it of Gods ow●…ing of us to be His. The soul shod and ●…enced with this is prepared against all ●…bs and thornes in our way so as wee ●…e kept from taking offence All troubles we suffer doe but help patience to its perfect worke by subduing the unbroken sturdinesse of our spirits when wee feele by experience wee get but more blowes by standing out against God 4. The Spirit of God likewise is a spirit of meeknesse whereby though the ●…ul be sensible of evill yet it mode●…tes such distempers as would otherwise rob a man of himselfe and together with patience keepeth the soul in possession of it selfe It stayes murmurings and frettings against God or man It sets and keepes the soul in tune It is that which God as hee workes so hee much delights in and sets a price upon it as the chiefe ornament of the soul. The meek of the earth seek God and are hid in the day of his wrath whereas high spirits that compasse themselves with pride as with a chain thinking to set out themselves by that which is their shame are looked upon by God a farre off Meek persons will bow when others break they are raised when others are pluckt down and stand when others that mount upon the wings of vanity fall these prevaile by yeelding and are Lords of themselves and other things else more then other unquiet spirited men the blessings of heaven and earth attend on these 5. So likewise contentednesse with our estate is needfull for a waiting condition and this we have in Our God being able to give the soul full satisfaction For outward things God knowes ●…ow to dyet us If our condition be not 〈◊〉 our minde he will bring our minde 〈◊〉 our condition If the spirit bee too ●…gge for the condition it is never qui●… therefore God will levell both Those wants be well supplyed that are made up with contentednesse and with ●…hes of a higher kinde If the Lord●…e ●…e our Shepheard we can want nothing This lifteth the weary hands and feeble ●…ees even under chastisement wherein though the soule mourneth in the sence of Gods displeasure yet it rejoyceth in his Fatherly care 6. But patience and contentment are ●…o low a condition for the soul to rest 〈◊〉 therefore the spirit of God raiseth it vp to a spirituall enlargement of joy So much joy so much light and so much hight so much scattering of darknesse of ●…pirit We see in nature how a little light will prevaile over the thickest clouds of darknesse a little fire wastes a great ●…eale of drosse The knowledge of God to be our God brings such a light of joy into the soul as driveth out●… dark uncomfortable conceits this light makes lightsome If the light of knowledge alone makes bold much more the light of joy arising from our communion and interest in God How can wee enjoy God and not joy in him A soule truely cheerefull rejoyceth that God whom it loveth should think it worthy to endure any thing for him This joy often ariseth to a spirit of glory even in matter of outward abasement if the trouble accompanyed with disgrace continue the spirit of glory rests upon us and it will rest so long untill it make us more then Conquerours even then when we seeme conquered for not onely the cause but the spirit riseth higher the more the enemies labour to keepe it under as we see in Stephen With this joy goeth a spirit of courage and confidence What can daunt that soule which in the greatest troubles hath made the great God to be its owne Such a spirit dares bid defiance to all opposite power setting the soule above the world having a spirit larger and higher then the world and seeing all but God beneath it as being in heaven already in its head After Moses and Micah had seene God in his favour to them how little did they regard the angry countenances of those mighty Princes that were in their times the terrours of the world The courage of a Christian is not onely against sensible danger and of flesh and bloud but against principalities and powers of darknesse against the whole kingdome of Sathan the god of the world whom hee knowes shortly shall be trodden under his feet Sathan and his may for a time exercise us but they cannot hurt us True beleevers are so many Kings and Queens so many Conquerours over that which others are slaves to they can overcome themselves in revenge they can despise those things that the world admires and see an excellency in that which the world sets light by they can set upon spirituall duties which the world cannot tell how to goe about and endure that which others tremble to think of and that upon wise reasons and a sound foundation they can put off themselves and be content to be nothing so their God may appeare the greater and dare undertake and undergoe any thing for the glory of their God This courage of Christians among the Heathens was counted obstinacy but they knew not the power of the spirit of Christ in his which is ever strongest when they are weakest in themselves they knew not the privy armour of proofe that Christians had about their hearts and thereupon counted their courage to be obstinacy Some think the Martyrs were too prodigall of their bloud and that they might have beene better advised but such are unacquainted with the force of the love of God kindled in the heart of his childe which makes him set such a high price upon Christ and his truth that he counts not his life dear unto him He knowes hee is not his owne but hath given up himselfe to Christ and therefore all that is his yea if hee had more lives to give for Christ hee should have them He knowes he shall be no looser by it Hee knowes it is not a losse of his life but an exchange for a better We see the creatures that are under us will be couragious in the eye of their Masters that are of a superiour nature above them and shall not a Christian be couragious in the presence of his great Lord and Master who is present with him about him and in him undoubtedly hee that hath seene God once in the face of Christ dares look the grimmest creature in the face yea death it selfe under any shape The feare of all things flyes before such a soule Onely a Christian is not ashamed of his confidence Why should not a Christian be as bold for his God as others are for the base gods they make to themselves 7. Besides a spirit of courage for establishing the soule is required a spirit of constancie
est nos velle cū volumus sed ille facit ut velimus Aug. Duties 1. 2. Obser. 1. 2. Rom. 8. 28. 3. 4. Iam. 5. 17. 5. Gen. 8. 11. Object Answ. Trust in God tho an offended God Psal. 97. 10 6. Vnde hoc montrum quare istud Aug. Confess Non ex toto vult non ex toto imperat in tantum non sit quod imperat in quantum non vult 7. Esay 26. 3. Ephes. 6. 10. Psal. 80. 19 Animus aeger semper errat 8. Jussisti Domine sic est ut omnis inordinatus affectus sibi sit poena Aug. Gen. 3. God and the Soule must be brought together by trust Ionah 1. 17 Dan. 3. Esa. 28. 29. 1. 2. 3. 1 Cor. 5. 19. 4. 5. Exo. 34. 6. Exod. 33. 16. 1. 2. 6. 7. What God is hee maketh good by providence Deut. 19. 5 Prov. 21. 1. Ps. 135. 6. 1. 2. Intimior intimo nostro 3. 4. Psal. 125. 3 Deus est prima causa cujuscunque non esse Esther 6. 1. Divinum consilium dum devitatur impletur humana sapientia dum reluctatur comprehenditur Greg. Ex. 10. 11. Psal. 39. 9. Lev. 10. 1 2. Psal. 73. 1. 2. Voluntas Dei necessitas rei 2 Sam. 15. 26. 1 Sam. 3. 18. Acts 21. 14 Vox vere Christianorum Rev. 6. 10. 3. Propria voluntas Deū quantum in ipsa eximit Prov. 3. 6. Esa. 48. 10. 4. Quest. 1. Answ. Summa ratio quae pro religione sacit 2. 3. Nimis angusta innocentia ●…st ad legem bonam esse 5. Sententia boni viri 6. 7. 8. Phil. 2. 4. Dan. 3. There must be a discovery of the mind of God as well as of his nature 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. Rom 8. 39. Heb. 13. 8. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. Psal. 19. 7. Trust must answer the truth of God Why saith so requisite in Christians 1. 2. 3. 4. Iere. 31. 3. Mat. 9. 20. Directiōs about trusting 1. It must be by divine light Esa. 54. 13 2. By subduing and changing the will 3. By carying the whole soule to God 4. By putting cases to our selves Psal. 3. 6. Psal. 46. 3. Psal. 27. 3. 5. By fitting the promise to every condition of our lives 6. By trusting in God alone 7. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 8. By trusting God for all things in all times 9. By trusting God when it sees no helpe 2 Cor. 5. 7. Why God suffers his children to fall into great extremities 1. 2. 3. 4. Christians should trust God most in the worst times Esa. 50. 10 1. Psal. 31. 7. 2. 10. By calling to minde former experiences of Gods love Psal. 22. 4. Psal. 9. 10. Psal. 119. 140. Psal. 12. 6. Christians should cōmunicate their experiences Psal. 66. 19 Ps. 142. 7. 11. By walking in the wayes of God 12. By setting a high price upon Faith 1 Pet. 1. 7. Luke 17. 6 Hos. 8. 12. The meanes to get an high esteeme of Faith is to undervalue all things else Object Answ. 1. 2. Iames 1. 8. Luk. 16. 13 Ioh. 5. 44. Psal. 30. 6. 1. 2. Psa. 62. 10 Jere. 17. 5. Eccles. 1. 2. Eccles. 12. 13. 1. 2. Esa. 47. 10 3. 4. We should labour to subdue the first inclination of our soules to the creatures 1 Cor. 13. 11. 13. Our trusting should follow Gods order of promising Eph. 1. 20. Defects in life rise frō defects in trust Sathans study is to unloose our hearts frō God Heb. 3. 12. What trust in God is The tryall of trust 1. It can and is willing to endure tryall Psal. 39. 7. 2. It looks to all the promises Fides non eligit objectum 3. It makes the soule bold 1. 4. yet hūble Motus ex indigentia 5. Trust is dependant 6. and obsequions Phil. 2. 12 13. Heb. 12. 5. 1 Pet. 4. 7. It serveth Gods providence in the use of meanes Tim. 5. 5. Gen. 2. 2. Dan. 5. 23. Pro. 30. 25 8. It runnes not before God 9. It stills and quiets the soule upon good grounds Psal. 29. 2. Nihil est tentatio vel universi mundi totius inferni in unum conflata ad eam qua Deus contrarius homini ponitur Luther Tentatio blasphemiarum Ion. 2. 4. Isay 50. 10 Esa. 63. 16 2 Cor. 1. 4. Object Answ. 2 Cor. 5. 21 Psal. 38. Object Answ. Mic. 7. 18. Psal. 51. Rom. 5. 17 Gods mercy not to be limited Isay 55. 8. Zac. 13. 1. Isay 55. 8. Sinnes of continuance dangerous How to deale with such as have lived long in sinne Bonitas invicti non vincitur infinita miserecordia non finitur Fulgent Cavendu●… est vulnus quod dolore curatur Rom. 3. 26. Ier. 3. 2. Object Answ. Object Answ. Luke 15. Caution Object Answ. 1. Sorow not required for it selfe as sorow Ans. 2. The greatest sorow can make no satisfaction for sinne Ans. 3. Causes of our want of griefe for sinne 1. Want of consideration Vse of crosses 2. Want of a divine worke 3. A kinde of doublenes of heart Selfe-deniall 2 Cor. 7. 10. 4. 5. Because God sees not griefe so fit for one disposition as another Earnest desire of too much sorow for sin dangerous Mr. Leaver Caution The most constant state of the soule in regard of sinne Quest. Answ. 1. 2. 3. 4. A never-failing character of a good soule 5. Quest. 1. When the soule is sufficiently humbled 2. Feare is the awbād of the soul 3. 4. 5. How to know that we hate sin rightly 1. 2. 3. 4. What wee must doe in want of griefe for sinne 1. 2. Isay 63. 3. Al a Christians grief is not at first Griefe arises not alwayes frō our poring on sinne 4. That there may be a spice of Popery in this our earnest desire of much griefe The scope of this discourse of griefe Mat. 5. That the great conflict in us betwixt grace and corruption doth also much cast us downe Proximorum odiae sunt acerbissima Rom. 7. Rom. 7. That the sight and sense of this sharpe conflict should cause us to trust the more in God Object Of pe●…severance to the end answered Answ. Pet. 2. Object Answ. Zach. 4. 7. Psal 95. Object Answ. Ephes. 5. Object Answ. Object Answ. 1. 2. 1. For outward evils Amaziah 2. For the miseries of this life of our nature and condition Psal. 116. Iob 6. 15. Joh. 16. 32. Solus non est cui Christus comes est Cypr. Tim. 17. Ps. 69. 120 Comfort in departure of friends Mat. 12. 50 Comfort in sicknes Meanes not to be relyed on Optimi sumus dum infirmi sumus 2 Cor. 1. 9. Sin the greatest trouble Avoid not trouble by finne 1 Pet. 4. 3. 21. Iohn 1. Esay 50. ●…lt * Me●…or est tristitia iniqua patientis quam ●…titia iniqua facientis Aug. Luk. ●…3 34 Comfort in the houre of death Ioh. 11. 25 Comfort from the state after death Iohn 14. 2. 1 Thes. 〈◊〉 Comfort in regard of our generall calling Exod. 7. 11 Iam. 1. 5. Caution
which cannot brooke the most secret corruption but rather casts it out by a holy complaint as strength of nature doth poyson which seekes its destruction And let us bee in love with that worke of grace in us which makes us out of love with the least stirrings that hinder our best condition Se●… againe We may be sinfully disquieted for that which is not a sinne to be disquieted for David had sinned if he had not beene somewhat troubled for the banishment from Gods house and the blasphemie of the enemies of the Church But yet wee see hee stops himselfe and sharply takes up his soule for being disquieted Hee did well in being disquieted and in checking himselfe for the same there were good grounds for both He had wanted spirituall life if he had not beene disquieted Hee abated the vigour and livelinesse of his life by being over-much disquieted CAP. VIII Of unfitting dejection and when it is excessive And what is the right temper of the soule herein §. 1. THen how shall we know when a man is cast downe and disquieted otherwise then is befitting There is a 3. fold miscarriage of inward trouble 1. When the soule is troubled for that 〈◊〉 should not be vexed for as Ahab when hee was crost in his will for Nab●… vineyard 2. In the ground as when we grieve for that which is good and for that which wee should grieve for but it is with too much reflecting upon o●… owne particular As in the troubles of the state 〈◊〉 Church we ought to be affected b●… not because these troubles hinder any liberties of the flesh and restrain pride of life but from higher respects A●… that by these troubles God is dishonoured the publike exercises of Religion hindred and the gathering of soules thereby stopped As the States and Common-wealths which should be harbours of the Church are disturbed as lawlesse courses and persons prevaile as Religion and Justice is triumphed over and trodden under Men usually are grieved for publique miseries from a spirit of selfe-love only because their owne private is imbarqued in the publique There is a depth of deceit of the heart in this matter 3. So for the measure when wee trouble our selves though not without cause yet without bounds The spirit of man is like unto moist elements as ayre and water which have no bounds of their owne to containe them in but those of the vessell that keepes them water is spilt and lost without something to hold it so it is with the spirit of man unlesse it be bounded with the Spirit of God Put the case a man be disquieted for sinne for which not to be disquieted is a sin yet we may looke too much and too long upon it for the soule hath a double eye one to looke to sinne another to looke up to Gods mercy in Christ. Having two objects to looke on wee may sinne in looking too much on the one with neglect of the other §. 2. Seeing then disquieting and dejectin for sinne is necessary how shall wee k●… when it exceeds measure First when it hinders us from holy duties or in the performance of them by distraction or otherwise whereas they are given to carry us to that which is pleasing to GOD and good to our selves Griefe is ill when it taketh off the soule from minding that it should and so indisposeth us to the duties of o●… callings Christ upon the Crosse was grieved to the utmost yet it did not take away his care for his mother so the good theefe in the middest of his pangs laboured to gaine his fellow and to save his owne soule and to glorifie Christ. If this be so in griefe of body which taketh away the free use of reason and exercise of grace more then any other griefe then much more in griefe from more remote causes for in extremity of body the sicknesse may be such as all that wee can performe to God is a quiet submission and a desire to bee carried unto Christ by the prayers of others we should so minde our griefe as not to forget Gods mercy or our owne duty Secondly when wee forget the grounds of comfort suffer our minde to runne onely upon the present grievance it is a sinne to dwell on sinne and turmoile our thoughts about it when we are called to thankfulnesse A Physitian in good discretion forbids a dish at sometimes to prevent the nourishment of some disease which another time hee gives way unto So wee may and ought to abstaine from too much feeding our thoughts upon our corruptions in case of discouragement which at other times is very necessary It should be our wisedome in such cases to change the object and labour to take off our minds and give them to that which calls more for them Griefe oft presseth unseasonably upon us when there is cause of joy and when we are called to joy as Ioab justly found fault with David for grieving too much when GOD had given him the victory and rid him and the State of a traiterous sonne GOD hath made some dayes for joy and joy is the proper worke of those dayes This is the day which the Lord hath made Some in a sicke distemper desire that which increaseth their sicknesse so some that are deepely cast downe desire a wakening ministery and what ever may cast them downe more whereas they should meditate upon comforts and get some sweet assurance of Gods love Joy is the constant temper which the soule should bee in Rejoyce evermore saith the Apostle If a sinke bee stirred we stir it not more but goe into a sweeter roome So wee should thinke of that which is comfortable and of such trueths as may raise up the soule and sweeten the spirit Thirdly Griefe is too much when it inclines the soule to any inconvenient courses for if it bee not lookt to it is an ill counsellor when either it hurts the health of our bodies or drawes the soule for to ease it selfe to some unlawfull liberty When grief keeps such a noise in the soule that it will not heare what the messengers of God or the still voice of the Spirit saith as in combustions loud cries are scarce heard so in such cases the soule will neither heare it selfe nor others The fruit of this overmuch trouble of spirit is increase of trouble §. 3. 3. Another question may bee What that sweet and holy temper is the soule should be in that it may neither bee faulty in the defect nor too much abound in griefe and sorow 1. The soule must bee raised to a right griefe 2. The griefe that is raised though it bee right yet it must bee bounded Before wee speake of raising griefe in the godly wee must know there are some who are altogether strangers to any kinde of spirituall griefe or trouble at all such must consider that the way to prevent everlasting trouble i●…