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A10010 The saints qualification: or A treatise I. Of humiliation, in tenne sermons. II. Of sanctification, in nine sermons whereunto is added a treatise of communion with Christ in the sacrament, in three sermons. Preached, by the late faithfull and worthy minister of Iesus Christ, Iohn Preston, Doctor in Divinitie, chaplaine in ordinary to his Majestie, Master of Emmanuel Colledge in Cambridge, and sometime preacher of Lincolnes Inne. Preston, John, 1587-1628.; Sibbes, Richard, 1577-1635.; Davenport, John, 1597-1670. 1633 (1633) STC 20262; ESTC S115180 353,805 720

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your Sanctification And if there were no other reason but Gods will that those that be justified shall be sanctified it is enough God hath called you to holinesse he hath appointed it hee wills it and his will is sufficient to enforce it Againe consider when we are ingrafted into Christ it it not simply an ingrafting but wee are ingrafted into the similitude of his death and resurrection Rom. 8. that is no man is ingrafted into Christ but sinne is crucified in him hee is dead thereto that is he is a dead man in regard of the life of sin and is alive to God as Christ rose from the dead so he is raised to newnesse of life If it had beene simple ingrafting into Christ there had needed no further Relation but we are ingrafted into the similitude of his Death and Resurrection Again it was the end of the Lords comming If hee had come only to save men there had beene no need of being New Creatures but he came also to purifie unto himselfe a peculiar people zealous of good workes and to destroy out of man the workes of the Devill and to purchase to himselfe an holy Generation and Royall Priest hood Now whatsoever the Lords end is he never failes of Againe you must consider that to whomsoever Christ is a Priest hee is also to them a Prophet and a King he is annointed to all these Offices And therefore if you will be saved by him by the vertue of his Priest-hood you must take him as a Prophet that is you must take his counsell in all things and not only so but he must also be your King you must not only learne his way but you must also be perfectly subject and obedient to him to walke therein Indeed as a Priest he reconciles God unto us but not us to God except hee come with his other two Offices for man stands out and will not know the way and therefore as a Prophet Hee is to guide our feet into the way of peace and that is not all therefore because our hearts are stubborne and will not come in he exercises his Kingly Office And brings into subjection every thought to the obedience of his will Againe looke to all the meanes as first to Faith the same Faith that justifieth doth also purifie the heart Having their hearts purified by faith Act. 15. And as many as are sanctified by faith that is in me Act. 26.28 And likewise the bloud of Christ not only covers but also heales Hebr. 9.14 How much more shall the bloud of Christ who through his eternall Spirit offered himselfe to purge your Consciences from dead workes c. It hath not onely vertue to take away the guilt of Sin but it is effectuall also to purge the conscience from the power of sinne Againe the Gospell wee preach doth not only offer Christ but likewise cleanseth You are cleane through my Word Ioh. 15. And in the hundred and nineteenth Psalme and the ninth verse Wherewith shall a young man cleanse his way by taking heed thereto according to thy Word The Spirit as it is a Spirit of Adoption so is it of Sanctification making clean the roome where it dwelleth and making it a fit Temple for the Lord. Consider the Sacraments Baptisme doth not only wash from the guilt of sin but from the filth of sin also from the blot and deformity of sinne And so I have done with these two points how Sanctification rises from Iustification and that they cannot be separated Before we proceed to other Observations we will by way of Vse from the inseparability of Iustification and Sanctification draw this consequent that if they be inseparable we should goe to God and beseech him that having given us the first that he would grant us the second also If you have any assurance that your sins are forgiven you let him not deny you this to make you new Creatures they be inseparable and therefore you have just cause to pray him not to separate them therefore you may claime them both as your due seeing you have his promise for both and you must urge him on his promise we desire Iustificatio●●or our owne sake but Sanctification that we may glorifie God and therefore when you come to God with this request Lord make mee a new Creature that I may bring glory to thy Name that I may serve thee and do good in the place wherein I live he will not deny thee Consider but this very Sacrament which we are now going to receive you must know that the Sacrament seales the whole Covenant of God as 1 Cor. 11. This is the New Testament in my bloud that is this Cup is a signe and seale of the new Covenant which I have made with man and which is confirmed with my bloud Now what is that Covenant You shall see it it Ezek 36.26 and it containes three parts all which are sealed by this Sacrament First hee promiseth to wash them from their filthinesse that is from the guilt of their sins which is the first part Secondly A new heart will I give you and a new Spirit I will put into you that is I will make you new Creatures which is the second part of the Covenant Thirdly I will call for the Corne and will encrease it and will lay no famine upon you c. that is hee will give all outward comforts you shall inherit he Earth and be heires of the world and of ●ll in the world for the world is yours 1 Cor. 3. All and all in it is yours This is the whole Covenant of God and this hee seales to every one of you when you come to receive the Sacrament If you receive it worthily for it is the New Testament in his bloud And therefore seeing hee seales it to you that he will give you a new heart and a new Spirit and make you new Creatures you should go to him and claime it of him for you may sue him of his own bond written and sealed and he cannot deny it therefore begge it and you cannot misse of it This is a very comfortable doctrine if it be well considered For what is that that keepes a man from comming to Christ but his discouragements He thinkes it so hard a thing to be a new Creature that he cannot attaine it that he cannot leave such a course of life and therefore he stands off and though he will come in yet he will not as yet because it is a bondage intollerable But you do not consider what it is to have a new Nature If it were to have a new life and an old heart it were otherwise but the Lord will give a new heart and if he will not deny you but make you new Creatures you may be encouraged to goe to him If there be any Rebellion in your heart any untowardnesse in your nature if you goe to him for the removall of it it is
may goe and yet how farre they fall short And now have I done with those three things that the good things that carnall men have doe them no good Secondly that they doe them hurt Thirdly that they may goe farre and yet that you may not be deceived in apprehending what men they are and what Condition we speake of that they fall short of that which is proper to the Saints and so much for the second use Thirdly if this be the Condition of men to with-hold the Truth in unrighteousnesse then this will likewise follow that commonly men sin not out of mistake not out of want of Information and conviction but out of the very love of unrighteousnesse And this serves to take away the Common excuse whereby men doe usually mitigate and extenuate their sins as if they were committed by accident out of incogitation or want of due consideration you see it is not so but that is the case of every man out of the state of Regeneration to commit sin out of love to unrighteousnesse And this is a point that needs much to bee urged because men are not humbled you know the scope of this Text is to humble men to convince them of their sins to shew them the Circumstances by which their sins are justly to be aggravated now because men will pretend they sin out of Infirmity and their meaning is good and they intend not to doe such and such evils or if they doe them it is not with an ill minde I advise you take heed you deceive not your selves you know it was Ionas his case when he had no minde to goe to Niniveh he pretends faire reasons God that searches the heart knowes your hearts howsoever you defend and dispute for your sins and there is a Truth within that tels you such and such things ought not to be done Therefore learne from hence to know your sins and the quality of them And if you object we doe not resist this Truth we obey it in many things Let me aske you Doe you obey it in those things that crosse that particular unrighteousnesse wherein you are delighted for there is the proofe there be some personall sins to which a mans nature is most enclined examine if out of love to them you doe not withhold the Truth for it fares commonly with Truth in this case as it did with Iohn Baptist all the while he preached Herod heard him willingly yea gladly but when he came to touch upon Herodias then he tooke away his head and as he dealt with Iohn so doe we with Truth so long as it suggests nothing to us that crosses our desires we are willing to obey it in all things that it shall dictate to us but when it tels us of sins that we are unwilling to heare of we first imprison it and then extinguish it as there be degrees in restraining of it first in one degree then in a greater degree and at last we put it quite out Therefore take heed to it labour to know your sins to see those which are most naturall to you whether in these you doe not with-hold the Truth in unrighteousnesse which is done after this manner When a man shall have his heart set upon any particular thing which he is not willing to part with and the Truth shal tell him something that is contrary thereto now let him trie himselfe Pilate the Text saith knew that the Pharisees had delivered CHRIST for Envie this he knew but yet to content the people sayes one Evangelist and out of feare of Caesar sayes the other he delivered him to them Out of those two respects because he would not part with his love of the people nor with the good-will of Caesar he would part with CHRIST Now here is the Triall Suppose thou esteemest credit and applause with men the Truth comes and tels thee thou art to doe a thing that crosses this marke what thou art ready to doe in this case you shall see an instance in Iohn 12.42 There were many among the chiefe Rulers which beleeved on CHRIST but for feare lest the Pharisees should cast them out of the Synagogue they durst not confesse him for they loved the praise of men more than the praise of God They beleeved on him the Truth did its part they were thereby informed well enough what they were to doe but because they loved the praise of men they resisted this Truth out of love to unrighteousnesse So put case thy minde be set upon wealth and in that thou wilt not be crost This truth tels thee thou must doe one thing but it will crosse thee in matter of thy estate as the Young-man had that Triall put on him Goe and sell all thou hast and thou shalt have Treasure in heaven Compare thine owne with the Young-mans behaviour hee went away sorrowfull Whence we may gather that he was enlightned to see the Truth he knew it was best to follow CHRIST the Truth was thus farre revealed to him for otherwise why should he goe away sorrowfull If he had not beleeved him to be the Messiah he needed not to have sorrowed but in that sorrow was left in his heart it manifested what his minde was set upon Is it thus with thee Learne hence to humble your selves to judge aright of your sins and of your Condition by them And if all this will not perswade you take this one instance which I will give you Take a view of thy selfe as thou art affected at some apprehension of Death in some dangerous sicknesse in some good mood after some quickning of the Spirit in thee after some great trouble into which thou art cast and see what thou wilt doe in such a case See what libertie this Truth hath at such a time how ready thou art to obey it in all things how ready will the Truth be to informe thee these and these things thou oughtest not to doe and thou hast neglected these and these duties how imminent this Truth is to dictate to thee what thou oughtest to doe Consider againe what thy behaviour is in time of health and strength in time of Peace when thou livest in abundance of all things See how farre short thou art of performing what in those times thou wouldest doe and in the same measure thou with-holdest the Truth in unrighteousnesse in such measure thou imprisonest it for that declares what light is in thee Take a survey of one or two dayes goe through the actions that passe by thee in the same see what evill thou hast done and what good thou hast omitted and say thus Might not I have forborne this evill if I would have set my selfe to doe it Might not I have performed this duty if I would have gone about it and let this humble thee For this cause I have chosen this Text that you might be driven out of your selves and why should you be backward in it seeing it is the first
the worke is so farre accepted as it hath an operation on our hearts and affections It is so in every duty as in Prayer when you call on God in private doth God regard the words of a prayer No but ' its working on your hearts ' it s humbling of them ' it s bringing of them into frame and making them perfect with God every day by a thorow renewing of your repentance and this is the doing of the thing Amongst your selves if a servant doth onely make a show of doing a thing it is not regarded but hee that brings the thing to passe is accepted of you and that is it which the Lord requires and accepts in our performances Now we shall see that this Text will helpe us to all that is required in a Fast as will appeare in the particulars Phineas the sonne of Eleazar c. In the former part of the Chapter the disease is set downe and that is Sinne which is indeed the onely disease of the soule illustrated from two consequents First from the wrath of God who as the Text saith was very angry with Israel for they had committed whoredome and joyned with Baal-Peor That was the disease the sin for which they had brought on them Gods wrath And secondly from an effect of that wrath the Plague God struck them with pestilence that is the punishment In this verse is set downe the remedy and that is the turning away of Gods wrath For as the Physitian sayes Morbi curantur contrarijs so it is true in Divinity as the wrath of God was the cause of the Plague so the turning away thereof is the remedy This turning away of his wrath is set forth by the cause of its turning away and that was the zeale of Phineas while hee was zealous for my sake and that is made good by two reasons One is in the latter end of my Text therefore have I not consumed them in my jealousie As if hee had said If Phineas had not beene zealous my jealou● should have burned more and more and the jealousie of that should have beene utter destruction The second is Gods owne Testimony set downe before my Text. The Lord himselfe said unto Moses that his wrath was turned away I will say no more for opening the words but in them you shall see these five points lye evidently before you First in that the removall of the Plague is attributed to God and to the turning away of his anger this is clearely deduced That it is God only that doth good and evill for you see his anger brought the Plague on them and the turning away of his anger healed them againe Secondly it is sin that causes Gods anger anger in God hath alway relation to sinne for sinne is the cause of it Thirdly the way to turne away the Lords anger is zeale for his sake Fourthly if there be want of this zeale among us his jealousie shall grow hotter and hotter it shall encrease upon us more and more Fifthly and lastly the issue of this jealousie of his will be utter destruction Wee will begin with the first which is That it is God onely that doth good and evill to every Nation to every Church and Kingdome yea to every particular person As you see here it was not the corruption of the Aire that brought the Plague nor the clearing of it with f●ost and wind that turned it away but the cloud of the Lords wrath shed this storme on them and when he was appeased with them there followed health and peace The Lord wounds and the Lord heales For what is the Plague but a sword in the hand of an Angell who drawes it out and puts it into its sheath againe at his Masters appointment And is not there the same reason of all other evils Warre you know is a terrible thing when Enemies come as Bees on a Land but doth not the Lord hisse for them And againe they are driven away as with a breath at his appointment Famine is a leane devouring evill which causes the Land to eate up the inhabitants thereof but is not the Lord the onely cause of it Doth not he make the Heaven as Brasse and the Earth as Iron Doth not he when he will open the windowes of Heaven and unstop the bottels of the clouds and powre outraine unseasonably And is not hee the cause of death which is the journeys end of both the former To which every one of us is subject yet wee consider it not Though we see men fall from the Tree of Life every moment yet wee regard it not This the Lord takes onely to himselfe Psal. 68.20 To the Lord belong the issues from death and therefore let us give to the Lord this great Prerogative of his That he onely doth good and evill and let no man question it You will say who doth question it It is very true we doe not question it in words but if we question it in our deeds it is an argument that our hearts make a doubt of it though our tongues doe not question it Therefore let us examine the matter If wee thinke the Lord onely doth good and evill why then will not we obey him and serve him and please him in all things But provoke him to anger by our words and by our workes as the Prophet speakes Perhaps you will say to me as Saul answered Samuel when he came from the warre of the Amalekites Oh thou blessed of the Lord I have fully kept the Commandement of the Lord but saith Samuel If thou hast done so What meanes the bleating of the Sheepe and the lowing of the Oxen So I say to you if you obey the Lord what meanes so many sinnes amongst us What meanes Fornication and Whoredome which is so frequent What meane those Oathes amongst us for which the Land mournes Not onely greater oathes but smaller oathes which exceed the greater for frequency though the greater exceed them in that they take the Name of God in vaine Againe what meanes the breaches of the Sabbath Of which I will speake a word by the way and that you may know that I doe not blame you for that as a sinne which is no sinne I will make this digression Doe you not think that Sabbaths are to be kept and to be kept holy I will name but two reasons to make it good you shall finde them in Esay 57.30 It is My Holy Day First it is a Holy Day and if it be holy you may doe nothing thereon that is common A Vessell that is sanctified and made holy may not bee imployed to take up common water or used in common services for it is holy So the time of the Sabbath is holy therefore you must not spend it about common actions for if you doe you prophane that which is holy Seeondly it is My Day and if it be My Day rob mee
is fallen into sinne continues in it the guilt and power of it remaines upon his soule and he excuses himselfe with the smalnesse of it This is a common fault and therefore I will presse it the more Consider that which Christ saith Heaven and earth shall passe but the least jot of this Law shall not passe What is the meaning of that It is as if he had said somethings in the Law of God you may thinke small which are but ïotas though other things be greater but take you heed that you keepe every particular for there is not a jot of it but the Lord will have all his servants regard it exactly they shall have respect to every Commandement and to every part of that Commandement the least particular in his Law shall not passe away For consider if it were not so it would bee a prejudice to the Lords wisdome for there would bee something that hee commands which wee might slight But the Lord that hath commanded all both great and small knowes that it is best that all shall bee kept and therefore though heaven and earth shall passe yet the least jot of that Law shall not passe that this is the meaning of the place you may see by Christs exposition of the Law The Pharisies said Adultery must not be committed but I say saith CHRIST He that lusts hath committed adultery in his heart They said You must not sweare by the Temple but I say Sweare ●ot at all they said An eye for an eye and a tooth for a tooth but I say You must forgive your brethren Thus we must labour to resist sin in every even the least particular and reforme our selves in the omission of the least particle of the Law And so much likewise for the second point Thirdly we come now to consider what it is that turnes away his wrath and that is Zeale Phineas hath turned away my wrath while hee was zealous for my sake so that Zeale turnes away the Lords wrath You shall see it exemplefied in Elijah's answer to the Lords demand 1 Kings 19.4 What dost thou here Elijah As if he had said what hast thou done abroad in the world Sayes hee I have beene zealous for the Lord of Hosts because the children of Israel have broke thy covenants throwne downe thine Altars and killed thy Prophets and I onely am escaped As if he had said I have done the most I could for the safety of the Church I have beene zealous for the Lord and therefore hee prevailed with God for his owne deliverance You may see it likewise in Iehu who being zealous not in word onely but in deed also turned away the wrath of the Lord. And you may know it by the contrary that it is zeale that turnes away the Lords wrath because it is coldnesse and luke-warmenesse that brings on his wrath Rev. 3.16 consider there what is the reason why the Lord will spue out the Church of Laodicea and cast it away Because it was luke-warme and therefore the meanes to continue or procure his favour is it not heate and zeale Againe Rev. 2.4 The Church of Ephesus fell from her first love what then Therefore I will come against thee shortly and remove thy Candlestick Then to abound in love so that our workes may be more at last than at first to bee zealous for the LORD is the way to stay the Lord among us and to continue his Gospell of peace Therefore by the way it is not only the great sinnes of the Land that are causes of Gods wrath but the coldnesse of them that are otherwise good that causeth the Lord to remove the Candlesticke The very coldnesse of the Church of Ephesus in falling from her first love the luke-warmenesse of the Laodiceans the LORD would not endure in them Let every man consider this is his zeale now as much as it hath beene if not let us know that it is reckoned coldnesse and luke-warmenesse the falling from our first love is the cause of bringing Gods judgements on a Nation But what is this zeale Zeale is nothing else but the intention of all holy affections and actions I will goe no further than this Text to shew the nature of it Phineas was zealous that is he not onely did the thing but his heart burned within him with zeale for GOD. So as First there must be a stirring up of affection Secondly it must be holy it must bee for the Lord and this is it that discovers true zeale to looke onely to the Lord to have no by-respects as there may be zeale that makes a great deale of hea●e and yet it comes from the earth although it makes as great a show as the best Againe there must bee intention not only of affections but also of action Therefore it is said while hee was zealous for my sake among them as if he had said this zeale of Phineas was not kept smothered in his owne brest but it brak● forth into action hee did something for the Lord. And indeed it is action that glorifies GOD and that benefits men onely actions stand on our reckoning for you know God judgeth every man according to his workes It is action that doth our selves good that makes us usefull and serviceable to men and the Church that makes us instruments of Gods glory Therefore adde action to affection and know that zeale stands in both for it is the intention of holy actions and affections I will adde no more in the explication but will briefly apply it And first if it bee zeale that turnes away the Lords wrath then why should wee discourage zeale by it I dare bee bold to say the Citie stands Why doe wicked men cry downe all religion and zeale under the name of precisenesse and overmuch strictnesse of life walking bouldly in the streets and reckoning it their glory to wound God through the sides of men So that they make those that beare the name of Christ ready to reckon that their shame which is their glory to hang downe the wing and to seeke corners to hide their heads in whence it is that the servants of Christ follow their Master a far off as if they were halfe ashamed of his service when as they should weare his Livery in open view as accounting that their greatest honour It were well if some meanes were used to prevent this If it be zeale that turnes away the wrath of God wee should doe well then to nourish and cherish them that are zealous Are not religion and zeale the two which hold all up Are they not the pillars that beare up the Church and Common-wealth Are not they the rescues that deliver the Citie Yet doe not wicked men with them as those that to lop the Tree are still hacking at the boughes But the Lord still holds them up and the world for their sakes For why is this heape
When it is done without Temptation or with small Temptation 5 What it is done against Vowes and Covenants 6 When it is done against much meanes 2 To quicken our desires after Christ take away the Excuses of sinne 1 Excuse Good meanings Quest. 2 Excuse Badnesse of nature Answ. 5 The times are times of the Gospell not of the law Object Answ. Object 4 Excuse The good things we doe will ballance the evill Answ. Object 5 Excuse Others are worse Answ. Means to arme us against these Excuses 1 The Word 2 The Spirit of bondage How it worketh this in a man Doct. 2. There is a Revelation of wrath against all unrighteousnesse of men 2 Things to be observed 1 The certaintie of this wrath Proofes of it 2 What this Wrath is Three things observable 1 It is a Treasure 2 The power of it 3 The suddennesse of it Vse 1. See what Sinne is Vse 2. Labour for a Sense of the wrath of God Vse 3. Goe to Christ. Of with-holding the Truth in unrighteousnesse Three things considerable Doctr. Object Answ. 1 What this Truth is A three-fold Truth 1 The subject of this Truth 2 The Author of it 3 The extent of it 2 How this Truth is withholden Quest. Answ. Foure wayes of imprisoning the Light How great a sinne it is to with-hold the Truth in unrighteousnesse Vse 1. Vse 2. Sheweth the misery of th●se men that are neare the kingdome of God but not in it Their misery is in three things 1 The good things that they have doe them no good 2 They do● them much hurt 3 How farre they goe and yet how farre they fall short of that which is proper to the godly 1 In inlightning 2 In their Conscience 3 In common gifts 4 In their actions 5 In their Conflicts 2 How farre they fall short 1 In light and understanding In two things 2 In their Conscience Note 3 Morall Vertues 4 In Actions In two respects Object Answ. 5 In their Conflict in foure things Vse 3. Men sinne not out of want of information but out of love of unrighteousnesse How the Truth is with-held in unrighteousnesse Vse 4. Consider the danger of disobeying the Truth Object May not a man be too scrupulous Answ. Vse 5. Give the Truth leave to rule 1 The danger of restraining it 2 The benefit of setting it at liberty Object Answ. Means how to set the Truth at liberty Prayer 2 Practice the Truth 3 Communion Saints Act. 21.13 1 That there is such a Truth proved foure wayes Object Answ. 2 That they with-hold the Truth in unrighteousnesse Object Doct. 1. That Truth or Law or knowledge by which every man shall be judged is made manifest by God himselfe 1 What this Truth is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 2 How it is made knowne Foure wayes 1 By the light of Nature 2 By Gods workes 3 By the Scriptures 4 By the Saints 3 It is God that maketh this Truth evident Hence these Consectaries may be deduced Vse 1. To shew the hainousnesse of mens sinnes against this Truth Object Answ. Vse 2. Be thankfull for the Truth Vse 3. Doe nothing contrary to the Truth Object Answ. Seven Cases wherein men detaine this Truth in unrighteousnesse 1 In the Commission of knowne sins Case 2. In unwillingnesse to increase a mans Knowledge Two sorts of those Case 3. In not acting and practising the Truth by the use of meanes Object Answ. Case 4. In suffocating and suppressing it Two wayes Case 5. In removing impediments Case 6. Case 7. Object Answ. Vse 4. Object Answ. Object Answ. Point 3. There is so much revealed to every man as will make him inexcusable The Excuses whereby men endevour to purge themselves Excuse 1. Tha● they know not God Answ. Excuse 2. God requires more knowledge than men have of him Answ. The inexcusablenesse of ignorant Countrey people Pretence 3. We h●ve no ability to performe the things we know Quest. Answ. Object Answ. Pretence 4. From the corruption of nature which they cannot resist Answ. 1. Answ. 2. Answ. 3. Pretence 5. From Temptations of company businesse c. Answ. 1. Answ. 2. Pretence 6. From the want of meanes Answ. Other particular Excuses First by denying the Fact Secondly By sleighting the Fault Ob. It is a smal sinne Answ. Ob. I fell into by infirmity Answ. 1. Ob. But I am sorry that I so sinned Answ. 1. Answ. 2. Vse 1. Object Answ. Object Answ. Vse 2. Means whereby men are kept in their old condition First Inconsideration 2 Some Lust. Fastiug is no Arbitrary dutie Which is proved by ●ex●s of Scripture The definition of a Fast. The defects which we are subject to in performing that duty 1 To rest in the work done 2 To doe it for a fit 3 Not to reforme upon the doing of it There is a double performance of duties 1 When they be performed as Fasts 2 When its affections are wrought upon in the duty Ver. 1.2 The Analysis of the Text. The Israelites disease Sin The consequent of sin is wrath Ver. 3. The effect of Gods wrath the Plague The remedy was the turning away of Gods wrath Which was done by zeale And that for two reasons Five generall points raised out of the text 1 Generall point God only doth good and evill Certaine convictions for demonstrations of the point 1 Conviction The frequency of our sinning A digression touching the Sabbath proving that it ought to be sanctified 1 Because it is a Holy Day 2 It is Gods day It is further convinced 1 From the hazard of Religion by leaving man at liberty 2 From the Antiquity of its celebration 3 From the usefulnesse of a Sabbath 2 Conviction is our neglecting of dutie 3 Conviction is our not fearing and trusting him alone Quest. Answ. Discovering the Nature of trusting in God which is to be content with God alone 2 To rely upon him in Exigents Which is instanced in Hester And Daniel 4 Conviction or not walking perfectly with the Lord. Reason 2. To prove the point Reason 1. If the creatures could do good or evill God were not God Reason 2. The Creature should be God Dan. 5.23 Object 1. From the operation of second causes Answ. 1. 1 The Lord workes by them Reason 1. Which is illustrate by some comparisons By their different effects By places of Scripture Vse 1. To labour to see God in his greatnesse Which would draw our affections to God The want of it carries us to the Creature and brings us upon the danger of Idolatry By advancing the creatures in our opinions Question concerning the use of the Creatures Answ. They are to be used with a subordinate affection To looke to God in all our businesse He doth instance in particulars Vse 3. Set Faith and the Spirit on work to judge of these things Two generall points Sinne c●uses Wrath. Which he illustrates by a Compa●●●●n Object From the
to raise them againe to preach Remission of sinnes Thirdly to teach the doctrine of Sanctification These three Humiliation Iustification and Sanctification are the three maine things wherein our condition to God consists Therefore my Intent is to goe thorow these three And we will do it briefly beginning with this Text which wee have in hand The occasion whereof is this Paul tels the Romans that his intent was To come to them But what should he doe there He would preach the Gospell yea but it was an ignominious thing to be a Christian a thing that would expose him to much persecution and shame It is no matter saith he I am not ashamed of the Gospell for it is the power of God to salvation But how doth hee prove that it is the power of God to salvation Wee see that in the Gospell the righteousnesse of God is revealed that is there is no way in the world for men to be justified to be counted righteous before God but to have a righteousnesse revealed from heaven even another kind of Righteousnesse than any man hath in himselfe a righteousnesse of Christ a righteousnesse that is to be imputed to men and this saith he is revealed in the Gospell and therefore the Gospell only is the power of God to salvation But here comes the great question Why is it needful that there should be a new kind of righteousnesse revealed a righteousnesse wrought by another and made ours only but by Imputation saith he It must be so else no flesh can be saved every man must needs be condemned for all men are unrighteous every man is full of all impiety and wickednesse which he delivers in this verse thence concluding that it is needfull to have the Gospell revealed for that is it that reveales the righteousnesse of Christ. A righteousnesse of Christ which is onely wrought by Christ and will onely stand out before the Iudgement-seat of God So that the end of the words is to convince men to shew unto them that they have no righteousnesse of their owne to assure them that if they stand in the condition they are in by nature they remaine in condemnation for he that beleeves not is condemned already there needs no new condemnation if he have not the Sonne the wrath of God abides on him So that the maine thing in these words is this assertion That mans nature is full of ungodlinesse and unrighteousnesse Two things are charged upon mans nature First a fulnesse of all kind of sins against God Secondly of all injustice and unrighteousnesse to men one touching the first Table the other the second Now when hee saith All ungodlinesse and all unrighteousnesse of men The meaning is That in mans nature there is all kind of ungodlinesse and unrighteousnesse of all sorts And againe that is to be marked unrighteousnesse of men he sets it down in generall because he speakes it of all men none excepted so you must take both in Every man none excepted is full of all unrighteousnesse all impietie all parts of impietie all kinds of unrighteousnesse are found in him But how will this be proved He proves it by two Arguments First because the wrath of God is revealed against every man and God being a just Iudge his wrath would not be kindled against men except there were just cause and that is one Argument But how shall we know that God is angry with men saith hee It is revealed from heaven Whence three things may be noted For thence you may see the evidence of his wrath It is revealed And secondly the surenesse of it it comes from heaven and God will be as good as his word And thirdly the Terriblenesse of it it is revealed from heaven For when God is said to sit in heaven and to laugh them to scorne And 2 Cor. 6. to sit in heaven it argues he doth things powerfully But you will aske how is the wrath of God revealed from heaven It is revealed by the light of nature Every man hath so much light in him as to know that hee deserves wrath and judgement and punishment And partly it is revealed by the Scripture and partly by continuall experience God is ever and anon executing his wrath and Iudgement on sinners And that is the first Argument The second argument to prove their unrighteousnesse is because they With-hold the truth in unrighteousnesse And here is a secret objection answered For it may be objected There be many excellent things in men as your morall Philosophers had they not much light in their understandings much rectitude in their lives Did they not practice many morall vertues That is all one it will but encrease their condemnation It was Gods worke to put so much light so many excellent things in them which had they used as they should and might those Principles would have shed themselves into their whole soule and conversation but they imprisoned them shutting them up within the walls of their Conscience men doe not use the light they have nor improve it they doe not bring it out in their lives and conversations but With-hold it in unrighteousnesse So that in the words there are three points laid downe all which will helpe exceedingly to humble us First That mans Nature is full of all impietie and unrighteousnesse The second is The wrath of God will surely fall on men for this If sinne went alone it would not so much amaze men but when the wrath of God comes too accompanied with the fruits of his wrath men out of selfe-love will be moved therewith The third That all the good in a man before his regeneration serves only to helpe forward his condemnation But before I come to the handling of these points one point we must needs observe out of the method of the Apostle This that hee saith here in few words is amplified to the middle of the third Chapter All which time he spends in expressing particularly how mans nature is full of impietie and unrighteousnesse and when he hath done that he urges Iustification by Christ and after that he comes to Sanctification Wherein the Apostles method is very observable and therefore from his method before we come to the maine we will briefly deliver this point That Humiliation must goe before Iustification You may observe it from the method used Men must first be convinced of their impietie and unrighteousnesse before they can be fit to receive the Gospell As the Physitians have their method in curing first to purge and cleanse the body and then to give Cordials so it is a rule in Divinitie you must be humbled before you can be justified or Humiliation goes before Iustification Which may be gathered not only from this but likewise from many other places You shall finde it is the course God takes every where with men and it is a very necessary thing to be knowne for by reason of the ignorance of this method men doe not
to particulars you should finde how exceedingly they are out of order Come to love and hatred we little thinke we hate what is good and love sin come and tell any man so much hee will not beleeve it but examine it a little Doe not you hate holinesse in others You will say No we hate no man for his Goodnesse But consider the nature of man doth so every unregenerate man doth so David was hated for that cause And Cain hated his brother because his workes were good And Gen. 3. The Enmity betweene the seed of the Woman and the seed of the Serpent Whence comes it but from the holinesse of the one and the wickednesse of the other Looke to our actions and you shall finde we doe not hate sin we doe not hate our lusts for if we did we should not be angry with them that speake evill of them if we hated these things we should like them that speak against them but we be Enemies to those that be Enemies to them and Friends to those that be Friends to them Doe we not lodge them Doe we not feed them with the things they desire They can aske nothing but they have it Godly men hate their sins though they be carried away with present objects but a wicked man loves the lust it selfe he can say I could wish I were free from this lust from the vexation it puts me to but for all this he is not angry hee may indeed be angry with it as with a friend when he hath done some unkinde Turne but he hates it not for if he hated it he would not be at peace with it againe for hatred is implacable Againe if a man hates he hates all the kinde But why doest thou love one more than another If thou didst hate any one because it is a sinne because it is a rebellion against God thou wouldest love none As the Lambe hates all Wolves Againe if thou hatest them why wilt not thou labour to have them utterly destroyed Why wilt thou cherish them a little Where hatred is it will have the thing hated utterly taken away as if there were no such thing and that shall be laboured for not remissely but we will put our strength to it and doe it with all our might and in good earnest But seeing we doe not thus it appeares we hate goodnesse and love sin It is true we are ready to lay it on other things and to say The Infirmities of the Saints which we see we hate but their goodnesse wee love if it be every way right But let me aske you a question Didst thou love them for their holinesse wouldest not thou rather labour to cover their Infirmities grieving for them Do you not so out of love then your hearts are deceived when you thinke you hate the Infirmities and not the goodnesse in them you hate the goodnesse it selfe and this is the nature of every man before Regeneration Besides these of Love and Hatred looke to your Delight and see if that be not turned upside downe The wheele turnes the quite contrary way We delight in things we should not delight in you know we delight in vain things in sinfull things in things that are sutable to our lusts and humours Againe we delight in the fals and sufferings of others as 1 Cor. 5. They were puft up when others fell and they stood It should no be so we should be humbled at the fals of others and be grieved for them that they being members of the same body with us should bee any way blemished Againe the things we should delight in are they not tedious to us are they not grievous The Sabbath should be kept with delight but how burthensome is it to give God his whole time to keepe it holy and not to rob him of any part of it That is not to pollute it with unholy actions And so holy company should be our delight wee should thinke our selves in our Element among them and so the hearing of the Word how tedious are these to our natures But I cannot stand on this Come we to Feare Doe not we feare men Doe not we feare the Creature and this and that particular evill But God we feare not Take it in that one sin of lying A man will lye to a man to keepe his credit with him but he cares not to lose it with God This is a signe you doe not sanctifie God in your hearts that is not reverence him not value him Come to Sorrow how ready are we to exceed in worldly sorrow Let us be told of an Injury in our names losse in our estate of troubles and calamities any way it affects us much but sin we make nothing of we thinke it is but a passion a trifle and it is not so great a matter to be in passion Yes my beloved it is a great matter to have passion these passions shall condemne us if they be not mortified if you kill them not they will be your death Whosoever is in Christ hath crucified these Againe consider that affections are the Principles of Actions therefore it is not so light a matter to erre in your affections for they will cause errour in your actions Consider that your estimation is taken by your affections according to them you are said to be good or evill Therefore an holy man is described to be one that loves God feares God delights in his Commandements so as it is no slight matter to be distempered in your affections and know this if it be no more than lust you know what Christ saith of that Hee that looketh on a woman to lust after her hath committed adultery already with her in his heart Now if lust breakes the match in the mariage of men these inordinate affections these whorish affections these adulterous affections will breake the marriage betweene God and us Affections are placed in us for this purpose to draw nearer to God but we misplacing them and setting them on the Creature they draw us further from God Againe when they be thus distempered they grow hinderances As the Israelites could not pray for the anguish of their hearts and Peters feare made him to deny Christ. So that this distemper of our Affections as well as the disorder of the rest of the faculties doth shew the Truth of this point That the nature of man is full of all unrighteousnesse and ungodlinesse And so much shall serve to shew the corruption of Nature by the faculties Now this is not all there are besides these actuall sins whereby likewise this Truth will be made manifest And these are of three sorts that is in Thought in Word in Action for they be all actuall sinnes though inwardly they be the Acts of the minde First let us see it by the Thoughts and you shall see in them this great corruption of Nature and the great cause you have to be humbled and it is that that should amaze us wee shall
is one and a principall One even to know the greatnesse of your sins The third and chiefe use of all the rest is this This Corruption of Nature this abundance of Corruption which hath beene shewed to you should drive us to Christ. And that is our end wee doe not preach damnation our end is Salvation Therefore wee would have men to know their condition to know that they bee in state of death For that that keepes men from comming to CHRIST and the reason that so few are saved that so few take the Gospell is they are not poore in spirit And why are they not so Because they see not their sins And for this cause wee have beene thus long in opening this point that you may know your selves And this I dare say If you did know your selves if GOD had kindled a light within whereby to see your Corruptions you would not stand cheapning the Kingdome of Heaven as you doe you come now in a lame and remisse manner but you would then come and give all that you have for it and goe away rejoycing and thinke you have a good bargaine God should not then deny you you would wrestle with him as Iacob did and give him no rest till you have obtained a blessing This would awaken men out of their dead sleepe of security as that is the condition of every man by nature as he is sinfull so he is secure he considers not his sins Therefore to all that I have said you must adde something of your owne what I have said is no more able to shew you the sinnes you are subject to than a little Mappe is to shew you the whole world it doth but point to the sinnes you are subject to as a point in the margent The way to make it profitable is to goe home to your owne hearts to consider these things particularly to see how your minde your Conscience Will and Memorie is out of order to consider how you have offended in thoughts in words and in actions by sinnes of Omission and of Commission and by that meanes you shall reade your Natures in your hearts and make what I have said profitable to you And doe not thinke you may goe too farre Doe not thinke we wrong your nature in saying it is more guiltie than it is for wee doe not so I may boldly say this Take that man that thinkes worst of himselfe hee is worse than he thinkes himselfe to bee and that I may not speake without Ground looke upon the first Epistle of Saint Iohn the third Chapter and the twentieth verse If our Conscience condemne us God is greater than our Conscience and knowes all things That is the Conscience of man hath some light but what is it to the eye of GOD to the light that is in him And so much as his light is greater than ours so much more hee sees what is amisse in us The heart saith Ieremie is deceitfull aboue all things who can know it There is a depth of evill in the heart which no man can search it is deceitfull and puts false glosses on things to hide them from our eyes Therefore doe not thinke thou canst exceed but labour for thy Humiliation to see all these things in a greater measure in thy selfe than as they bee here described and that not nakedly but with all Circumstances The end of the Third Sermon CERTAINE SERMONS VPON HVMILIATION The Fourth SERMON ROMANS 1.18 For the wrath of God is revealed from heaven against all ungodlinesse and unrighteousnesse of men which with-hold the Truth in unrighteousnesse AND this is a thing wee are very unwilling to do for the Medicine shews the Disease The Apostles taking of so much pains to perswade men that they shall not be saved by their own righteousnesse is an argument that it is an hard matter to perswade them It is the hardest thing in the Word to perswade a civill man that he must not sticke to his owne righteousnesse till God himselfe puts his hand to the worke for it is not in any mans power to convince him of his sinne or of the deficiencie of his righteousnesse Therefore that use wee should make of all that hath beene said to see the necessity that lyes on us to goe to Christ and that there is no salvation without him Now to make this Doctrine more effectuall to awaken you the more to rouze men out of that sleepe wherein they are by nature we will handle these two points First that the aggravations of sin are more than the sins themselves Secondly we will take away all excuses that so every mouth may bee stopped and when these two are done you will have much adoe to finde any starting-hole to keepe you from comming to Christ. For that is our End And these are very necessary For though you doe consider in your selves all the sins formerly named if it be done negligently without the Circumstances sin is a sword without an edge the Circumstance is that that gives it an edge that sharpens sin that makes it fit to wound us And secondly if the sword be never so keene and sharpe and yet we be forced to keepe it off it will not wound us Therefore we will I say in the second place take away the excuses by which men fence themselves and decline the stroke of truth decline this wound of the Law And so we will conclude this point and hasten to the rest For the first to make all you have heard before effectuall we will adde the Circumstances which is a thing necessary for it is a true rule the Schoole-men have that in moral things the circumstance is more than the thing it selfe Many times in natural things accidents are nothing in comparison of the forme but In moralibus as they say Circumstantia plus valet quàm forma For it is the Circumstance by which an action lookes if you looke round about it and see all that borders on it it will aggravate and make sin out of measure sinfull To run thorow them briefly First Consider this Circumstance in sinnes committed I speake of the corrupt nature of man that every sin committed against God is not only an offence committed against so great a Majesty for I will not stand to enlarge that Circumstance that the sin is greater as the person is greater against whom it is committed but consider the affection with which you commit it and you shall finde all this in a sin committed by a naturall man First an hatred of God in the sin They thinke they love God but if it be so what is the reason that word is put in Rom. 1.30 where the Apostle speaking of the rebellion of mankinde he reckons up particularly that which here he puts up in the grosse in the generall Haters of God You will say you doe not hate God but let me aske you this question Wouldest thou not live at liberty
sinned that amazed him it made him to know what Originall sinne was wherof this was but a fruit and being the spring it must needs have more efficacie If a man finde any pride in his actions let him looke to his heart it may be God hath left him to such fals that he may see what is within as it was with Hezekiah 2 Chron. 32.31 For this cause God left him to try him that he might know all that was in his heart that it might be discovered to him what an heart he had The Apostle speaketh Rom. 9.22.23 a place very considerable for it may helpe to humble us of vessels prepared for honour and of vessels prepared for wrath and destruction the vessels be of two sorts those for honour they have a fashion peculiar to them which when you see you may say this is made for such a purpose and in other vessels you shall see another fashion and may say This is not a vessell of honour but of dishonour So looke on thy heart see how it is framed and when thou seest the fashion of it thou maist say for ought I see my heart is framed and fashioned to destruction This use we should make of our nature it should be so farre from excusing sin that it should aggravate it The third Excuse is But we live in times of the Gospell and God is full of mercy and will not deale with us now as he did with them in the time of the Law Will you make God all Iustice I answer and shew that there is a great deceit in this out of that place Matth. 5.20 Except your righteousnesse exceed the righteousnesse of the Scribes and Pharisees you cannot enter into the Kingdome of God This is spoken to them that were under the Gospell for he saith I say unto you c. The meaning is this The Pharisees did many things they kept the Law in a great measure and thought to be saved by it but except you doe more than that you shall never be saved As for example in the sequele of this chapter he names foure particulars The Pharisees say Thou shalt not kill but that is not enough I say Thou shalt not be angry unadvisedly Againe they say Thou shalt not commit adultery But I say If thou cherishest any lust though thou never commest to act it thou committest adultery Againe the Pharisees say Forsweare not But I say Sweare not at all but let your yea be yea and your nay nay for whatsoever is more than that is evill Let them that sweare By Faith and Troth consider this Againe the Pharisees say An eye for an eye and a tooth for a tooth But I say You shall doe good to them that hurt you and blesse them that curse you and except you doe this which is more than the Pharisees doe you cannot enter into the Kingdome of God You that thinke your condition so good because you have a new Priesthood a new Iubile a time of liberty I tell you except you yeeld an Evangelicall obedience to all I have now named which are but some of many more at all times and in every particular although you live under the Gospell you cannot be saved for otherwise the Publicans and Pharisees can doe as much as you and you must doe more than men can do by nature you must doe something that is singular and above the reach of Nature you must strive to perfection labouring to be like your heavenly Father So much for that The fourth Excuse is But wee doe many things that will ballance our sins although we doe some things amisse yet we doe many things well we give Almes receive the Sacrament it may be wee come to Church diligently and these things in their conceits ballance their sins and though they sin yet they aske God forgivenesse morning and evening and their sins are not so hainous as if they had done no good at all and for this they thinke God may deale better with them But it is true in this as in your Law Stoppage is no payment When a man does somethings that God commands and leaves othersome undone let him know God requires a perfect obedience to every Commandement Iam. 2.10 He that keepes the whole Law and failes but in one that is omits one duty he is guilty of all If that be so then every bush can stop but one gap you have no more than was your duty If you could doe something superfluous and more than God requires at your hands it were some satisfaction But if there be other sins wherein you spare your selfe and would have a little more liberty you would not bee so strait laced in this seeing I say God requires an exact obedience to all all that you doe is nothing It matters not how much you doe if you faile in one though you be carefull to doe all the duties of new obedience so that there is no Commandement but thou endevourest to performe it to the full yet if there be one thing wherein thou takest liberty it is enough to condemne thee Againe But I hope I am not so bad as others I am free from many sins wherewith others are tainted and I have many good things in mee that they want To this I answer briefly and so will passe from it First thou maist deceive thy selfe much in thinking thou art not so bad as others Art not thou cut out of the same peece and made of the same masse the same clay Hast not thou the same nature that other men have And what is the reason thou runnest not into the same Outrages that others doe Not because thy nature is better but because thou art more restrained A Wolfe that is tyed up is the same with the Wolfe that doth all the mischiefe This therefore know that every naturall man is restrained by by-respects That rule is generall Rom. 3.18 They have not the feare of God before their eyes when he would have a reason why the nature of man is so bad having spent the former part of the Chapter in reckoning up the sins to which it is inclined he gives this reason They have not the feare of God before their eyes all are alike in this one is not more restrained than the other The difference of restraint is in regard of outward actions there is no new spring of Grace in them as is in the Saints Againe for thy Vertues take heed thou deceive not thy selfe for thou must know there be natural vertues that imitate those which be true and are very like them as the Bristow stone is very like the Diamond yet there is great difference one is a Pearle the other is only a shining stone So I say naturall vertues may be very like true but in Gods sight there is a great deale of difference For example two men may come to die One man is not afraid out of a stupidity of spirit and on
suddenly which is enough to awake a man out of his sleepe of security for let him thus reason If GOD meant to save mee hee would give mee no rest in sinne for whom he intends to save hee afflicts before-hand that they may not perish with the world but those that will goe with the world he suffers to goe That is a terrible saying in the first Booke of Samuel the third Chapter and eleventh verse speaking of Hophni and Phinees saith GOD When I begin I will make an end and this is the sentence of all the wicked It is small comfort that you are free it being with you as with them that be seldome sicke that when they be sicke for the most part die for it When all things goe well with the wicked then the wrath of GOD comes like an Earth-quake which by reason of the winds being inclosed in the bowels of the earth hath a calme preceding it and so there is a calme in mens spirits before the Earth-quake of Gods wrath comes and then it is as a theefe in the night who comes when they be in a dead sleepe and least looke for him After this manner comes the wrath of God on the wicked as it is threatned Prov. 1.27 There shall come on them sudden desolation and destruction shall over-take them as a whirlewind it shall surprize them on a sudden and this may make men to tremble when they consider that sinne is attended with destruction when they sinne either GOD punishes them presently and then there is small cause of joy for the bitternesse is more then the pleasure or else he lets them alone and there is nothing in the world worse than to thrive in sin for then destruction will come suddenly The use then you are to make of it is First to teach you to see what sinne is in that it hath the wrath of God for its Concomitant Wee are apt to make a mocke of sinne we are ready to slight sin and to lay it in the light ballance of Common opinion and not in the ballance of the Sanctuary and so we come to be deceived Therefore this word Revealed must bee marked it intimates that we are backward to take notice of it except the LORD reveales his wrath from heaven and take us in hand to convince us of sin to shew us our corruption in its owne colours for we look on these things by a false light Thinke with your selves therefore what that must be which God punishes with eternall punishment See what it is in the punishment of CHRIT our Surety thinke what that is that brought CHRIST from heaven what that is that cast those Angels into hell to bee bound in chaines of everlasting darknesse Againe see it as you use to see it in the day of Death for then men are commonly awake see how it is then presented if it be not then terrible Againe judge of sin as men enlightned doe look to holy men how they judge of sin And which is without exception see how the Scripture presents sinne with this Concomitant the wrath of God as an evill and bitter thing See the Prophet Ieremie the second Chapter and it is certaine that the judgement of the Scripture is right And let all this humble you Secondly make this use of it learne to adde this to your humiliation As you must labour to see your state to have that corruption of nature which is in you discovered So you must labour for a sense of the wrath of God which if you get not you will never be humbled Labour to see God himselfe in his wrath looke not nakedly on an affliction but see God in it If a man hath a sight of him the Creator it will wholly amaze and humble the Creature Eliah was not moved with the wind that tare the rockes nor with the Earthquake though terrible but when God came though in a soft voice yet the presence of GOD humbled him that made him cover his face with his Mantle There be two kindes of Affliction one is that which the Creature is able to beare the other sort is when GODS hand is in it when they are mingled with his wrath These bee like Arrowes dipped in venome that make a deeper wound and such an one as is incurable when you feele the wrath God in any affliction let it be but a light apprehension in it selfe yet when the LORD shall set it on and mingle it with his wrath it will grow insupportable Iudas before his Treason thought thirtie peeces of silver to be a great matter and that he had got much by it but when God did manifest himselfe and revealed his wrath a little so that he saw God and had a feeling of him as every man shall have sooner or later you see what a condition he was in So it was with Belshazzer It was his feare of GOD when hee saw the Hand it was not the hand but the apprehension of GODS wrath that raised his thoughts and loosed his loynes and made his knees knocke one against the other So Paul when he heard the Word of GOD by false Samuel it cast him on his face he cared not for any thing that men did to him you know how David described his valour but when GOD comes to him that humbles him Consider what it is to have the mighty GOD of Heaven and Earth to be thine Enemie who hath all things at his Command and if hee bee thine Enemie all things shall worke together for thine hurt as every thing shall be for thy good if thou be in favour and covenant with him If thou say But I feele nothing for the present Remember though thou feelest it not for the present yet there is wrath laid up for thee God hath it in store Remember Gods dealing with them that sinned against him Shimei had committed a sinne that in Gods sight deserved Death so did Adonijah so did Saul and his seven sonnes that were hanged for breaking their oath with the Gibeonites You see how long these lay as if God had forgotten them but at length he brings them all to death Hee doth not powre out his wrath on the sudden perhaps thou shalt feele nothing of a long time but thou art condemned and when the Gaole-delivery comes thou shalt be executed for God remembers thy sins Cains sin lay at his doore though he saw it not it was not taken away but continued and it not onely continued and kept awake but it cried day and night unto him untill the crie entered into the eares of the Lord. The crie of sinne is like the crie of an Hireling to whom the just Master when the day is finished payes such wages as hee deserves So a sinner when his time comes is remembred before God though wrath hath beene restrained for a time yet now it shall seize on him Wee should learne by this to humble our selves And lastly if wee finde the wrath of God
that they have you shall finde a double difference First though in the Truths they know they goe exceeding farre as I have shewed you yet in this they fall short that they understand not the secrets of God There be certaine secrets which God reveales to none but to them that feare him There is something in these Truthes that civill men doe not understand Consider that speech spoken by our Saviour to Ierusalem O Ierusalem that thou hadst knowne the things belonging to thy peace but now they are hid from thine eyes What was hid from them not the things themselves simply considered for they were fully revealed Christ himselfe Preached there there wanted no light to shine to them yet it was hid from their eyes that is there was a certaine secret which if God had revealed it would have perswaded them to have turned to him effectually but that was hid from their eyes and so they were strangers from the life of God So the life of holinesse and religion these men understand not there is something spirituall which they cannot comprehend There light goes as farre as it may when a man hath a naturall a common light it will apprehend common objects such as are sutable to it it apprehends but that which is spirituall it cannot reach unto 1 Cor. 2.14 A naturall man understandeth not the things of the Spirit of God for they are spiritually discerned that is the very thing wherein the Image of God consists wherein true holinesse expresseth it selfe they do not understand Therefore it seemes a strange thing to them as in 1 Pet. 4.4 that others runne not into the same excesse of ryot It seemes strange now marke that word nothing seemes strange but when a man is ignorant of its cause is not acquainted with it and therefore he is still finding fault with it Therefore unholy men have a light that reaches to common Iustice and to a common care of serving God to common morall vertues and to an upright behaviour to men but further they cannot goe they know not what it is to be exact and strict in all things and that is the first difference they know not the secret of God they may goe thorow the whole course of Divinity and be acquainted with all the mysteries of Salvation but that secret of his they understand not Secondly there is this difference in the things they doe know they know them indeed I speake of them they doe know that are within their owne sphere their owne compasse but they have not the savour of what they know that is it which the Scripture cals 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the savour of these Truthes they want and therefore they receive the Truth but not the love of the Truth they doe not relish it they apprehend it not aright and for that cause they practise it not You have them excellently set downe in Iude 14. they speake evill sayes the Apostle of the things they know not You see there be some things they know not and therefore they speake evill of them And what things they doe know as be●sts without reason in them they corrupt themselves that is they doe not practice according to their knowledge though they are acquainted with the wayes of God in that measure that they know they ought to abstaine from these and these sins yet in these things that they know naturally they are corrupt So you see the difference betweene them and the truly regenerate in matter of understanding Secondly to keepe the same method I did in the other for matter of Conscience you shal finde this difference and in this they fall short Though they doe make Conscience of many things notwithstanding they have not a good Conscience for Conscience is good in two respects either because it witnesses good to us and so wee commonly use it or as it is subjectively good and so the love of God is good and the feare of God is good and in this they have not a good Conscience for it is required that the Conscience be inherently and subjectively good that a man make Conscience not out of slavish feare but out of willingnesse as a chaste wife desires to please her husband because shee loves him shee is loth to displease him will not lose his favour for any thing and therefore shee observes him exactly and will not offend him when the Conscience stands in this reference to God it is a good Conscience On the other side let a man make Conscience of never so many things yet if it be out of feare as a servant feares his Master or as the Theefe feares the Iudge his Conscience is not good So that the civil men cannot be said to have a good Conscience in the things they abstaine from out of Conscience because they doe it not willingly but as of necessity Now all God lookes to is to have what is done done willingly and therefore it is no wonder that Divines give this as a sure rule that Desire is a signe sure enough of Grace If a man hath a true desire to please God it cannot deceive him for the desire is more than the deed as Saint Paul saith in 2 Cor. 8. In matter of giving You have not onely beene ready to doe but to will and to be forward as if the will were more than the deed and so it is indeed A man may performe many actions of Religion abstaine from many sins reforme his life in many things but it is another matter to desire to please God according to that of Nehemiah 1.11 Let thine eare be attentive to the prayer of thy servants that desire to feare thy Name there is none but the servants of God that desire to feare him If others be asked whether they could not be content there were no law to restraine them that no necessity of holinesse lay on them they will answer they could desire that there were none that they were at liberty and therefore when they make Conscience of any thing it is not out of willingnesse but out of a slavish feare though it be out of Conscience yet the Conscience is not good and in this respect they fall short Thirdly for matter of morall vertues they may have many excellent vertues planted in their hearts which are the gifts of the Holy Ghost for the Holy Ghost doth not only enlighten the understandings of some that shall never be saved but also places many gifts in their will and affections But this defect they have they neither come from a right Principle nor tend to a right end they come from no higher a Well-head than Nature they be common to them that be only naturall and therefore it cannot be proper to them that shall be saved I say Nature is able to bring forth these vertues even as the earth for that similitude will expresse it is able to bring forth two things Weeds and Grasse You know weeds are unprofitable and many of
truth and would let it goe no further but now it sheeds into the soule what the understanding knowes is infused into the will and all the affections so there is a generall change and when the change is generall the combate must needs be generall the combate must now be in every part whereas before it was but in one Againe there is a difference in successe for in the contention betweene the conscience and the rest of the soule the conscience still loses and the other gets the victory But in the other alwayes the new man prevailes The House of David prevailes against the House of Saul There must needs be warres betweene two contraries but the House of David growes stronger So by which our Divines use to resembe this Iacob got the better in the end So there is a different successe the new man out-wrestles the flesh Sometimes a man is foiled but we doe not say a man hath lost the battell because he hath a wound or a foile or hath beene beaten backe a little he hath got the victory that wins it in the end and that is the case of all the Saints Thirdly there is difference in the object about which the controversie is The common nature hath but a common light therefore sees but grosse sinnes as our eyes see only starres of a greater magnitude when a man hath a glimmering light things that be great and conspicuous he discernes that is all he doth A naturall mans contention is about sinnes of a great nature because light goes no further but in them that be sanctified a cleare light come into the house and shines as thorow a glasse in a cleare day where you doe not onely see the great heapes of dirt and dust but the smallest mote the others doe not see the moathes because they have not that peculiar light therefore they are never troubled about motes So the contention differs in the object the Saints contention is about small things about the very manner of doing holy duties about the inward turnings of the affections about the sanctifiednesse of them about ill thoughts they have a peculiar light this doth not put out common light but makes you see more than you did before there be many hundred sinnes now which you never saw to be sinnes before Had not Paul a new light Before he had not considered that lust was sinne but afterwards he knew it In the Saints the affections wherewith they performe holy duties yea their affection to their ill affections the controversie is about that Last of all there is difference in the continuance this contention of the naturall conscience lasts but for a time but it being betweene the old Nature and new it continues to the end it is never given over others may be in controversie for a fit but hold not out because the cause of controversie continues not it is worne out and overcome but in a new Nature when it begins it lasts for ever there is no end So you see there is difference If then you have new Natures expect a combate yea so as if you have it not be sure there is no new Nature there The sixth Consectary that I will deliver to you is that if you must be New then let it not seeme strange to you though you finde a little aukednesse in the waies of godlinesse at the first for new things are a little troublesome sudden changes are so when the thing is New Be not discouraged it is that you must expect and remember that custome will make it pleasant when you are used to it a little Therefore complaine not lay not aside the Armour of God because it is a little heavie and ungainsome at the first as David who would not goe in Sauls armour because he was not accustomed to it lay it not aside when thou art accustomed to it thou wilt beare it well enough Custome makes the worst things even grievous things pleasant how much more when one fals on that which is good indeed Therefore you must know this is the nature of the burthen of Christs Commandements which he calls a burthen the more you beare it the lighter it is and there is good reason for it because indeed it is not a burthen to the new man but a delight though to the flesh it is a burthen the longer you beare it the better it is If you reckon it a burthen as it seemes to be at the beginning yet remember it is as Physike is a burthen to a sicke man you know a sicke man reckons it a burthen to take physike and eat wholsome meats but it is that that takes away the disease So is godlinesse it is a burthen as Physike is and as wholesome diet is but it partly heales and partly strengthens therefore the longer you goe in his wayes the lesse burthensome they will be the disease will be taken away As the more physike and wholesome meat the more the disease is weakned and the man strengthned This deceives us and take heed of being deceived we think we must be tied from drinke and have the dropsie still and have our feaver stil we thinke we must eat wholesome meats and be sick still it is impossible it should be so you must know therefore that the dropsie is healed and then what if abstinence be commanded you must know that sicknesse is cured and health is come in the roome then what matter is it if you are bound to these duties they are burthensome before they will not be now Therefore be not discouraged the insolence the uncouthnesse the unaccustomednesse of a thing makes it usually burthensome It is not so with the wayes of wickednesse they are pleasant in the beginning but bitternesse in the latter end but the wayes of godlinesse though they are a little auke and hard at the first yet they are pleasant in the end and you must be content to endure a little pains as we say Qui fugit molam fugit farinam If you will not take paines at the mill you shall not have any meale if you will not take a little paines at the beginning you shall want the fruit of it therefore be content with it that you may have the fruit A man doth not say because a new sute or a new paire of shooes is hard at first putting on therefore I will goe in ragges but he saith the new is better than the old and after I have worne it a while it will be more easie So be sure the wayes of God will be as easie as pleasing yea more pleasing than any thing for they are jucunda per se pleasing in their owne nature others are pleasing to this or that humour to this or that case now this is a true rule whatsoever is so per se is alwayes so So thou shalt finde this new man more easie and pleasant for thou shalt finde it to be so at all times it is a continuall feast pleasing in all
2 62 Our Hearts should melt at Christs love 3 41 See God Hell Out of Christ wee are subject to Hel● 3 49 Aggravations of the misery of Hell 3 50 Hid. The state of Gods children Hid 2 41 Honour Sanctification stands with Gods Honour 2 89 House What kinde of House God is 2 195 Humbled Humiliation Humiliation must goe before Iustification 1 6 Israelites how God Humbled them 1 7 Humiliation two things in it 1 8 Humiliation to bee laboured for 1 18 Triall of true Humiliation 1 22 Helpes to Humiliation 1 26 Good men shoud desire Humiliation 1 30 Humiliation a remedie against Gods wrath 1 278 Hundred-fold Hundred-fold with persecution 2 223 Hunger Hunger out of Christ 2 215 I Iealousie IEalousie of God provoked by want of zeale 1 299 Idolatrie Idolatrie to attribute that to the Creature that belongs to God 1 265 Idolatrie a sinne of Israel 1 295 Impediment Impediments not removed suppresse the Truth 1 206 Impediments of two sorts 2 152 Impossible That which GOD requires of Christians not Impossible 2 255 Transubstantiation a doctrine Impossible 3 8 Imprison See Truth Inclination Inclination wrought by the Spirit 2 16 Inclination changed 2 63 Inclination changed how to bee Knowne 2 64 Independent Independent riches make men independent 2 212 Inconsideration Inconsideration keeps men in their old state 1 240 Infirmitie Men excuse sinne from their Infirmitie 1 232 Incredulity Incredulity of mans understanding 1 45 Instigate Conscience corrupted cannot Instigate to good 1 55 Inlightned Carnall men may be Inlightned 1 152 Inconstancie Inconstancie of mans will 1 50 Instrument Ministers and ordinances Instruments 2 158 Insensible Ill signe to be Insensible of Gods wrath 1 272 Inexcusable So much revealed as makes man Inexcusable 1 219 Ioy. Ioy mortifieth Lusts 1 18 Israelites See Humbled Iubile Iubile a resemblance of libertie in the Gospell 1 19 Iustifie Iustification Why we are Iustified by anothers righteousnesse 1 3 Iustification and sanctification inseparable 2 4 Iustification how it admits degrees 2 177 The clothing of the soule in Iustification 3 95 See Humiliation and Sanctification Iudge How to Iudge of things 1 270 Iudgement Sinne in time brings forth Iudgement 1 272 Execution of Iudgement commended 1 295 Iustice. What makes men acknowledge Gods Iustice 1 13 Iustice of God on whom it appeares most 1 147 Want of Iustice a cause of Iudgement 1 295 K Kinde NAture common to the whole Kinde 2 96 Kingdome Kingdome we have by Christ 3 72 Knowledge Knowledge an aggravation of sin 1 92 Knowledge in naturall men without rellish 1 155 Knowledge sinned against imprisoneth Truth 1 195 A sin of Knowledge what 1 197 Sinne excused for want of Knowledge 1 221 It is a sinne not to encrease Knowledge 1 198 Men might have more Knowledge 1 222 Knowledge of our estate at the first conversion 2 51 What kinde of Knowledge makes new Creatures 2 76 L Law THe Law shewes mans nature to be corrupted 1 34 Law how to be understood 1 35 Law the least breach of it punished 1 36 Law compared to Aegyptian Tasks-masters 1 37 Law against which men sin is exact 1 282 Law of God approved by natural men 2 104 See Schoole-master Leaven Sinne likened to Leaven 2 128 Liberty Benefits of setting the Truth at Libertie 1 171 Meanes to set Truth at Libertie 1 172 Libertie by Christ 3 73 Libertie what ibid. See Iubile Life Life promised to the taking of Christ 3 55 Life spirituall the excellencie of it 3 56 Exhortation to partake of this Life 3 57 Life how it is a Christians 3 83 Light Light imprisoned foure wayes 1 134 Aggravations of sinnes against Light 1 146 Naturall men defective in Light 1 154 The burden of Christ in bearing growes Light 2 141 Long-suffering Wee should give God the glory of his Long-suffering 1 237 Lord. Zeale for the Lord 1 285 Sacrifice offred to the Lord 2 86 Love Love mortifieth Lusts 1 13 Men sinne out of Love to evill 1 163 Love of Christ the greatnesse of it 2 39 Love cannot be counterfeit 2 92.3 29 Perwasion of Christs Love unites to him 2 179 To serve Christ in Love a part of the Covenant 3 26 Love constant 3 28 Lusts. Lusts detained keep men in their old state 1 241 Lusts why God suffers them in his children 2 35 Excellencie of the new Creature above Lusts 2 37 Old Lusts must be mortified 2 84 M Mannah MAnnah how it is Angels food 2 215 Manifest The Law of Mans judgement Manifest foure wayes 1 181 Marke Marke of Christ what 3 53 Meanes Meanes enjoyed aggravate sin 1 99 Sin excused from want of Means 1 228 Difference of feare in respect of Meanes 1 303 Meanes of Grace tend to Sanctification 2 21 Meaning Sin excused from good meaning 1 101 Mediator Why God hath appointed us such a Mediator as Christ 1 187 Memory Memory the corruption of it in two things 1 53 Mercy Mercy of God the greatnesse of it 3 22 Mercy to whom it is shewed 3 52 Metaphor Metaphors used in the Sacraments of the old Law 3 7 Ministery Ministery to be advanced 1 298 Misery Our Misery out of Christ 2 178 Forgivenesse of sinnes takes away the cause of Misery 2 18 See Apprehension Morall vertues Morall vertues nothing without change of nature 2 102 N Naked OVt of Christ we are Naked 2 209 To be Naked what 2 213 Nature Mans Nature full of ungodlinesse 1 4 33 All in mans Nature corrupt 1 41 Badnesse of Nature aggravates sinne 1 101 Men by Nature how far they may goe 1 151 How farre men by Nature fall short 1 153 God made manifest by the light of Nature 1 181 Sinne excused from corruption of Nature 1 226 What keepes men in the state of Nature 1 240 Conversion of men are turning the course of Nature 2 8 More than Nature required in the New Creature 2 91 Those that are in Christ have another Nature 2 95 Not to be content without a new Nature 2 101 Two things in a new Nature 2 112 Naturall When a thing is said to be Naturall 2 95 Good duties must bee Naturall to us 2 107 Necessitie No Necessitie of Transubstantiation 3 3 Need. Riches helpe in time of Need 2 211 Neglect Neglect keepes men from Christ 1 12 Neglect in serving of God 1 257 Net Gospell a Net 1 23 New Creature New Creature the excellencie of it 2 37 New Creature signes of it 2 49 New Creature what 2 61 New Creature the parts of it 2 84 New Creature required 2 122 Noblenesse The Spirit workes Noblenesse of spirit 2 15 Number Consideration of the Number of former sins helps humiliation 1 27 O Oath THE Covenant confirmed with an Oath 2 24 Object Faculties knowne by their Object 2 56 Objection Objection of Papists out of Iohn 6. concerning eating Christs flesh answered 3 33 Offices Offices of Christ goe together 2 20 Offices of Christ to be improved 2 183 Old Old
combate Object Answ. Differences betweene the combate in the New Creature and that fight that seemes to be in naturall men Consect 6. Thinke it not strange that you finde some aukednesse in the wayes of God at first Object Answ. Consect 7. Give God the praise of chanting thy Nature Object Answ. Observ. 4. The New Creature is Gods worke This is proved by foure Arguments Arg. 1. Arg. 2. Arg. 3. Object Answ. Arg. 4. Object 1. Answ. 1. Impediments of two sorts Answ. 2. Answ. 3. Object 2. To what use serveth this doctrine Answ. To foure uses Vse 1. To let us see that our condition in Christ is better than in Adam Vse 2. That it may appeare that God setteth us now about a worke which he doth not inable us to performe Vse 3. To make us love Christ the better seeing how much we are beholding to him Vse 4. To make us take heed of putting off the worke when Christ cals Vse 1. See what the businesse of Preachers is and with whom you have to doe when you heare the Word Learne hence 1 To come to heare the Word with reverence and feare 2 To give the praise of any good you receive by the preaching of the Word to God onely 1 Tim. 1. 3 expect not that the Minister should come with excellency of wisdome or of words Observ. 4. What workes you finde upon your owne hearts in the preaching of the Word Object Answ. In what sense he would be understood when hee affirmeth the wil● of Regenerate persons to be free Observ. 5. The order first in Christ and then New Creatures Hence learne 1 Not to be discouraged from going to Christ for any defect or imperfection that is in us Reason 2. From your union with Christ to perswade you to good workes Doctr. To bee in Christ is the ground of all Salvation 1 What it is to be in Christ. What giving is 1 Of what moment this union is Vse 1. Exhortation two-fold 1 Those that have this union with Christ let them seeke to enlarge it more In what sense this is to be understood Object Answ. How it may be done Five helpes to doe it 1 Consider your misery without him 2 Labour more to know the Vertues and excellencies of Christ. 3 Be perswaded of his love to you 4 Get experience of him 5 Pray that the Holy Ghost may draw thee to Christ. Object Answ. 2 Those that want this Vnion let them seeke to get it In what this taking consists In two Acts. Motives Mot. 1. You shall finde rest Object Answ. Forgivenesse of sinne makes a man blessed foure wayes 1 In taking away that which is the cause of all miseries 2 In giving boldnesse 3 In taking the sting out of affliction 4 In making God ours Matth. 1.21 Object Answ. Sinne is a burthen in two respects 1 As it brings a man under guilt 2 As it is a sicknesse or disease of the soule Mot. 2. If you be united with him you shall be free from all evill and enjoy all good In particular consider 1 Mans misery out of Christ. 2 Mans happinesse by being in Christ. Object Answ. If you beleeve you shall be saved if not you shall be damned Salvation and Damnation are matters of great moment 1 They belong to the soule 2 They continue for ever Mot. 3. Your thirst shall be satisfied and healed Quest. Answ. Quest. Answ. Object Answ. Iohn 6. Mot. 4. If you be united with Christ all things shall worke together for your good if not for your hurt 1 Cor. 3.18 Mot. 5. If you be out of Christ you are poore and naked and miserable 1 Poore What that poverty is 2 Naked Nakednesse what 3 Hungry Object 1. Answ. Object 2. Answ. Object 3. Answ. Pleasure what Object 4. Answ. Luke Object Answ. The time when some Fathers lived Why the Fathers are not so distinct in the doctrine of Transubst Damascene set transubstantiation a broach in Grecia 730. yeares after Christ. Lan●ranke Bishop of Canturbury 1030 yeares after Christ brought transubstantiation into England B●ringerius lived foure hundred yeares since The benefits by Christ. What the wearinesse of sin is 1 In the service of sinne 1 Rest by Christ. 2 Wearinesse in the guilt of sinne 3 Wearinesse in the fruit of sinne Afflictions without sinne as the Adder without a sting 4 Wearinesse in the habite of sinne Sinne to the soule as sicknesse to the body 5 In all that sinne touches Folly quarrels at the best condition Wisdome makes the worst condition comfortable 4 Benefit by Christ. Kings have 1 Liberty Liberty what Christia●s live as they list because they list not but to doe that which is good 2 Plenty Quest. Answ. 3 Peace To overcome what 3 Glory Object Answ. Object Answ. Object Answ. Object Answ. Object Answ. Object Answ. Object Answ. Object Answ. Object Answ. Object Answ. 6 Benefit a feast Object Answ. 1 Property of spirituall foode it endures for ever 2 Satisfieth Quest. Answ. 7 Benefit apparell