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A26951 The life of faith in three parts, the first is a sermon on Heb. 11, 1, formerly preached before His Majesty, and published by his command, with another added for the fuller application : the second is instructions for confirming believers in the Christian faith : the third is directions how to live by faith, or how to exercise it upon all occasions / by Richard Baxter. Baxter, Richard, 1615-1691. 1670 (1670) Wing B1301; ESTC R5103 494,148 660

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work on earth And that some should do the extraordinary work in laying the foundation and leaving a certain Rule and Order to the rest and that the rest should proceed to build hereupon and that the wisest and the best of men should be the Teachers and Guides of the rest unto the end 24. And how necessary was it that our Sun in glory should continually send down his beams and influence on the earth even the Spirit of the Father to be his constant Agent here below and to plead his cause and do his work on the hearts of men and that the Apostles who were to found the Church should have that Spirit in so conspicuous a degree and for such various works of Wonder and Power as might suffice to confirm their testimony to the world And that all others as well as they to the end should have the Spirit for those works of Love and Renovation which are necessary to their own obedience and salvation 25. How wisely it is ordered that he who is our King is Lord of all and able to defend his Church and to repress his proudest enemies 26. And also that he should be our final Judge who was our Saviour and Law-giver and made and sealed that Covenant of Grace by which we must be judged That Judgement may not be over dreadful but rather desirable to his faithful servants who shall openly be justified by him before all 27. How wisely hath God ordered it that when death is naturally so terrible to man we should have a Saviour that went that way before us and was once dead but now liveth and is where we must be and hath the keyes of death and Heaven that we may boldly go forth as to his presence and to the innumerable perfected spirits of the just and may commend our souls to the hands of our Redeemer and our Head 28. As also that this should be plainly revealed and that the Scriptures are written in a method and manner fit for all even for the meanest and that Ministers be commanded to open it and apply it by translation exposition and earnest exhortation that the remedy may be suited to the nature and extent of the disease And yet that there be some depths to keep presumptuous daring wits at a distance and to humble them and to exercise our diligence 29. As also that the life of faith and holiness should have much opposition in the world that its glory and excellency might the more appear partly by the presence of its contraries and partly by its exercise and victories in its tryals and that the godly may have use for patience and fortitude and every grace and may be kept the easilier from loving the world and taught the more to desire the presence of their Lord. 30. Lastly And how wisely is it ordered that God in Heaven from whom all cometh should be the end of all his graces and our duties and that himself alone should be our home and happiness and that as we are made by him and for him so we should live with him to his praise and in his love for ever And that there as we shall have both glorified souls and bodies so both might have a suitable glory and that our glorified Redeemer might there be in part the Mediatour of our fruition as here he was the Mediatour of acquisition I have recited hastily a few of the parts of this wondrous frame to shew you that if you saw them all and that in the●r true order and method you might not think strange that Now unto the principalities and powers in heavenly places is made known by the Church the manifold wisdom of God Ephes 2.11 which was the first part of Gods Image upon the Christian Religion which I was to shew you But besides all this the WISDOM of God is expressed in the holy Scriptures thes● several waies 1. In the Revelation of things past which could not be known by any mortal man As the Creation of the world and what was therein done before man himself was made Which experience it self doth help us to believe because we see exceeding great probabilities that the world was not eternal nor of any longer duration than the Scriptures mention in that no place on earth hath any true monument of ancienter original and in that humane Sciences and Arts are yet so imperfect and such important additions are made but of late 2. In the Revelation of things distant out of the reach of mans discovery So Scripture History and Prophecy do frequently speak of preparations and actions of Princes and people afar of 3. In the Revelation of the secrets of mens hearts As Elisha told Gebe●i what he did at a distance Christ told Nathaniel what he said and where So frequently Christ told the Jews and his Disciples what they thought and shewed that he knew the heart of man To which we may add the searching power of the Word of God which doth so notably rip up the secrets of mens corruptions and may shew all mens hearts unto themselves 4. In the Revelation of contingent things to come which is most frequent in the Prophecies and Promises of the Scripture not only in the Old Testament as Daniel c. but also in the Gospel When Christ foretelleth his death and resurrection and the usage and successes of his Apostles and promiseth them the miraculous gifts of the Spirit and foretold Peters thrice denying him and foretold the grievous destr●ction of Jerusalem with other such like clear predictions 5. But nothing of all these predictions doth shine so clearly to our selves as those great Promises of Christ which are fulfilled to our selves in all generations Even the Promises and Prophetical descriptions of the great work of Conversion Regeneration or Sanctification upon mens souls which is wrought in all Ages just according to the delineations of it in the world All the humblings the repentings the desires the faith the joyes the prayers and the answers of them which were foretold and was found in the first Believers are performed and given to all true Christians to this day To which may be added all the Prophecies of the extent of the Church of the conversion of the Kingdoms of the world to Christ and of the oppositions of the ungodly fort thereto and of the persecutions of the followers of Christ which are all fulfilled 6. The WISDOM of God also is clearly manifested in the concatenation or harmony of all these Revelations Not only that there is no real contradiction between them but that they all conjunctly compose one entire frame As the age of man goeth on from infancy to maturity and nature fitteth her endowments and provisions accordingly to each degree so hath the Church proceeded from its infancy and so have the Revelations of God been suited to its several times Christ who was promised to Adam and the Fathers before Moses for the first two thousand years and signified by their Sacrifices was
Essence or that which streameth further to other creatures And this last is either that which it sendeth to us before its own appearing or rising or that which accompanieth its appearing or that which leaveth behind it as it setteth or passeth away so must we distinguish in the present case But all this is but One Light and One Spirit So then I should in order speak 1. Of that Spirit in the words and works of Christ himself which constituteth the Christian Religion 2. That Spirit in the Prophets and Fathers before Christ which was the antecedent light 3. That Spirit in Christs followers which was the concomitant and subsequent Light or witness And 1. In those next his abode on earth And 2. Of those that are more remote CHAP. IV. The Image of Gods Wisdom 1. AND first observe the three parts of Gods Image or impress upon the Christian Religion in it self as containing the whole work of mans Redemption as it is found in the works and doctrine of Christ 1. The WISDOM of it appeareth in these particular observations which yet shew it to us but very defectively for want of the clearness and the integrality and the order of our knowledge For to see but here and there a parcel of one entire frame or work and to see those few parcels as dislocated and not in their proper places and order and all this but with a dark imperfect sight is far from that full and open view of the manifold Wisdom of God in Christ which Angels and superiour intellects have 1. Mark how wisely God hath ordered it that the three Essentialitie● in the Divine Nature Power Intellection and Will Omnipotency Wisdom and Goodness and the three persons in the Trinity the Father the Word and the Spirit and the three Causalities of God as the Efficient Directive and final Cause of whom and through whom and to whom are all things should have three most eminent specimina or impressions in the world or three most conspicuous works to declare and glorifie them viz. Nature Grace and Glory And that God should accordingly stand related to man in three answerable Relations viz. as our Creatour our Redeemer and our Perfecter by Holiness initially and Glory finally 2. How wisely it is ordered that seeing Mans Love to God is both his greatest duty and his perfection and felicity there should be some standing em●nent means for the attraction and excitation of our Love And this should be the most eminent manifestation of the Love of God to us and withall of his own most perfect Holiness and Goodness And that as we have as much need of the sense of his Goodness as of his Power Loving him being our chief work that there should be as observable a demonstration of his Goodness extant as the world is of his Power 3. Especially when man had fallen by sin from the Love of God to the Love of his carnal self and of the creature and when he was fallen under vindictive Justice and was conscious of the displeasure of his Maker and had made himself an heir of Hell And when mans nature can so hardly love one that in Justice standeth engaged or resolved to damn him forsake him and hate him How wisely is it ordered that he that would recover him to his Love should first declare his Love to the offender in the fullest sort and should reconcile himself unto him and shew his readiness to forgive him and to save him yea to be his felicity and his chiefest good That so the Remedy may be answerable to the disease and to the duty 4. How wisely is it thus contrived that the frame and course of mans obedience should be appointed to consist in Love and Gratitude and to run out in such praise and chearful duty as is animated throughout by Love that so sweet a spring may bring forth answerable streams That so the Goodness of our Master may appear in the sweetness of our work and we may not serve the God of Love and Glory like slaves with a grudging weary mind but like children with delight and quietness And our work and way may be to us a foretaste of our reward and end 5. And yet how meet was it that while we live in such a dark material world in a body of corruptible flesh among enemies and snares our duty should have somewhat of caution and vigilancy and therefore of fear and godly sorrow to teach us to rellish grace the more And that our condition should have in it much of necessity and trouble to drive us homeward to God who is our rest And how aptly doth the very permission of sin it self subserve this end 6. How wisely is it thus contrived that Glory at last should be better rellished and that man who hath the Joy should give God the Glory and be bound to this by a double obligation 7. How aptly is this remedying design and all the work of mans Redemption and all the Precepts of the Gospel built upon or planted into the Law of natural perfection Faith being but the means to recover Love and Grace being to Nature but as Medicine is to the Body and being to Glory as Medicine is to Health So that as a man that was never taught to speak or to go or to do any work or to know any science or trade or business which must be known acquisitively is a miserable man as wanting all that which should help him to use his natural powers to their proper ends so it is much more with him that hath Nature without Grace which must heal it and use it to its proper ends 8. So that it appeareth that as the Love of Perfection is fitly called the Law of Nature because it is agreeable to man in his Natural state of Innocency so the Law of Grace may be now called the Law of depraved Nature because it is as suitable to lapsed man And when our pravity is undeniable how credible should it be that we have such a Law 9. And there is nothing in the Gospel either unsuitable to the first Law of Nature or contradictory to it or yet of any alien nature but only that which hath the most excellent aptitude to subserve it Giving the Glory to God in the highest by restoring Peace unto the Earth and Goodness towards men 10. And when the Divine Monarchy is apt in the order of Government to communicate some Image of it self to the Creature as well as the Divine Perfections have communicated their Image to the Creatures in their Natures or Beings how wisely it is ordered that mankind should have one universal Vicarious Head or Monarch There is great reason to believe that there is Monarchy among Angels And in the world it most apparently excelleth all other forms of Government in order to Vnity and Strength and Glory and if it be apter than some others to degenerate into oppressing Tyranny that is only caused by the great corruption of humane
let me begin to plead it with your consciences Are you Believers Do you live the life of Faith or not Do you live upon things that are unseen or upon the present visible baits of sensuality That you may not turn away your ears or hear me with a sluggish sensless mind let me tell you first how nearly it concerneth you to get this Question soundly answered and then that you may not be deceived let me help you toward the true resolution 1. And for the first you may perceive by what is said that saving Faith is not so common as those that know not the nature of it do imagine All men have not faith 2 Thes 3.2 O what abundance do deceive themselves with Names and shews and a dead Opinion and customary Religion and take these for the life of faith 2. Till you have this faith you have no special interest in Christ It is only Believers that are united to him and are his living Members and it is by faith that he dwelleth in our hearts and that we live in him Ephes 3.17 Gal. 2.20 In vain do you boast of Christ if you are not true Believers You have no part or portion in him None of his special Benefits are yours till you have this living working Faith 3. You are still in the state of enmity to God and unreconciled to him while you are unbelievers For you can have no peace with God nor a●●ess unto his favour but by Christ Rom. 5.1 2 3 4. Ephes 2.14 15 17. And therefore you must come by faith to Christ before you can come by Christ unto the Father as those that have a special interest in his love 4. Till you have this Faith you are under the guilt and load of all your sins and under the curse and condemnation of the Law For there is no Justification or forgiveness but by Faith Act. 26.18 Rom. 4 5 c. 5. Till you have this sound Belief of things unseen you will be carnal minded and have a carnal end to all your actions which will make those to be evil that materially are good and those to be fleshly that materially are holy Without Faith it is impossible to please God Rom. 8.5 8 9. Prov. 28.9 Heb. 11.6 6. Lastly Till you have this living Faith you have no right to Heaven nor could be saved if you die this hour Whoever believeth shall not perish but have everlasting life He that believeth on him is not condemned but he that believeth not i● condemned already He that believeth on the Son hath everlasting life and he that b●lieveth not the Son shall not see life but the wrath of God abid●th on him Joh. 3.16 18 36. You see if you love your selves it concerneth you to try whether you are true Believers Unless you take it for an indifferent thing whether you live for ever in Heaven or Hell it 's best for you to put the question close to your consciences betimes Have you that Faith that serves instead of sight Do you carry within you the evidence of things unseen and the substance of the things which you say you hope for Did you know in what manner this question must be put and determined at judgement and how all your comfort will then depend upon the answer and how near that day is when you must all be sentenced to Heaven or Hell as you are found to be Believers or Vnbelievers it would make you hearken to my counsel and presently try whether you have a saving Faith 2. But lest you be deceived in your trial and lest you mistake me as if I tryed the weak by the measure of the strong and laid all your comfort upon such strong affections and high degrees as fight it self would work within you I shall briefly tell you how you may know whether you have any faith that 's true and saving though in the least degree Though none of us are affected to that height as we should be if we had the sight of all that we do believe yet all that have any saving belief of invisible things will have these four signs of faith within them 1. A sound belief of things unseen will cause a practical estimation of them and that above all earthly things A glimpse of the heavenly glory as in a glass will cause the soul deliberately to say This is the chief desirable felicity this is the Crown the Pearl the Treasure nothing but this can serve my turn It will debase the greatest pleasures or riches or honours of the world in your esteem How contemptible will they seem while you see God stand by and Heaven as it were set open to your view you 'l see there 's little cause to envy the prosperous servants of the world you will pitty them as miserable in their mirth and bound in the fetters of their folly and concupiscence and as strangers to all solid joy and honour You will be moved with some compassion to them in their misery when they are braving it among men and domineering for a little while and you will think alas poor man Is this all thy glory Hast thou no better wealth no higher honour no sweeter pleasures than these husks With such a practical judgement as you value gold above dirt and jewels above common stones you will value Heaven above all the riches and pleasures of this world if you have indeed a living saving faith Phil. 3.7 8 9. 2. A sound belief of the things unseen will habitually incline your wills to embrace them with consent and complacence and resolution above and against those worldly things that would be set above them and preferred before them If you are true believers you have made your choice you have fix● your hopes you have taken up your resolutions that God must be your portion or you can have none that 's worth the having that Christ must be your Saviour or you cannot be saved and therefore you are at a point with all things else they may be your Helps but not your Happiness you are resolved on what Rock to build and where to cast anchor and at what port and prize your life shall aim You are resolved what to seek and trust to God or none Heaven or nothing Christ or none is the voice of your rooted stable resolutions Though you are full of fears sometimes whether you shall be accepted and have a part in Christ or no and whether ever you shall attain the Glory which you aim at yet you are off all other hopes having seen an end of all perfections and read vanity and vexation written upon all creatures even on the most flattering state on earth and are unchangeably resolved not to change your Master and your hopes and your holy course for any other life or hopes Whatever come of it you are resolved that here you will venture all Knowing that you have no other game to play at which you are not sure to lose and that you
the nature and cause of light and heat the order course and harmony of the universal systeme of the world what joyful acclamations would this produce in the literal studious sort of men what joy then should it be to us to know by Faith the God that made us the Creation of the world the Laws and Promises of our Creatour the Mysteries of Redemption and Regeneration the frame of the new Creature the entertainment of the spirits of the just with Christ the Judgement which all the world must undergo the work and company which we shall have hereafter and the endless joyes which all the sanctified shall possess in the sight and Love of God for ever How blessed an invention would it be if all the world could be brought again to the use of one universal language Or if all the Churches could be perfectly reconciled how joyful would the Author of so great a work be should we not then rejoyce who foresee by Faith a far more perfect union and consent than ever must be expected here on earth Alas the ordinary lowness of our Comforts doth tell us that our Faith is very small I say not so much The sorrows of a doubting heart as the little joy which we have in the fore-thoughts of Heaven when our title seemeth not much doubtful to us For those sorrows shew that such esteem it a joyful place and would rejoyce if their title were but cleared But when we have neither the sorrow or solicitousness of the afflicted soul nor yet the joy which is any whit suitable to the belief of such everlasting joyes we may know what to judge of such an uneffectual belief at best it is very low and feeble It is a joy unspeakable and full of glory which unseen things should cause in a Believer 1 Pet. 1.6 7 8. Because it is an exceeding eternal weight of glory which he believeth 2 Cor. ● 17 18. 8. Finally Learn to Die also as Believers The life of Faith must bring you to the very entrance into glory where one doth end the other begins As our dark life in the womb by nutriment from the Mother continueth till our passage into the open world You would die in the womb if Faith should cease before it bring you to full intuition and fruition Heb. 11.22 By faith Joseph when he died made mention of the departing of the children of Israel Josephs faith did not die before him Heb. 11.3 These all died in faith confessing that they were strangers and pilgrims on the earth and declaring that they sought a better Country They that live by faith must die in faith yea and die by faith too Faith must fetch in their dying comforts And O how full and how near a treasure hath it to go to To die to this world is to be born into another Beggars are best when they are abroad The travail of the ungodly is better to them than their home But the Believers home is so much better than his travail that he hath little cause to be afraid of coming to his Journeys end but should rather every step cry out O when shall I be at home with Christ Is it Earth or Heaven that you have prayed for and laboured for and waited and suffered for till now And doth he indeed pray and labour and suffer for Heaven who would not come thither It is Faith which overcometh the world and the flesh which must also overcome the fears of death and can look with boldness into the loathsome grave and can triumph over both as victorious through Christ It is Faith which can say Go forth O my soul depart in peace Thy course is finished Thy warfare is accomplished The day of triumph is now at hand Thy patience hath no longer work Go forth with joy The morning of thy endless joyes is near and the night of fears and darkness at an end Thy terrible dreams are ending in eternal pleasures The glorious light will banish all thy dreadful specters and resolve all those doubts which were bred and cherished in the dark They whose employment is their weariness and toil do take the night of darkness and cessation for their rest But this is thy weariness Defect of action is thy toil and thy most grievous labour is to do too little work And thy uncessant Vision Love and Praise will be thy uncessant ease and pleasure and thy endless work will be thy endless rest Depart O my soul with peace and gladness Thou leavest not a world where Wisdom and Piety Justice and Sobriety Love and Peace and Order do prevail but a world of ignorance and folly of bruitish sensuality and rage of impiety and malignant enmity to good a world of injustice and oppression and of confusion and distracting strifes Thou goest not to a world of darkness and of wrath but of Light and Love From hellish malice to perfect amity from Bedlam rage to perfect wisdom from mad confusion to perfect order to sweetest unity and peace even to the spirits of the just made perfect and to the celestial glorious City of God! Thou goest not from Heaven to Earth from holiness to sin from the sight of God into an infernal dungeon but from Earth to Heaven from sin and imperfection unto perfect holiness and from palpable darkness into the vital splendour of the face of God! Thou goest not amongst enemies but to dearest friends nor amongst meer strangers but to many whom thou hast known by sight and to more whom thou hast known by faith and must know by the sweetest communion for ever Thou goest not to unsatisfied Justice nor to a condemning unreconciled God but to Love it self to infinite Goodness the fountain of all created and communicated good to the Maker Redeemer and Sanctifier of souls to him who prepared Heaven for thee and now hath prepared thee for Heaven Go forth then in triumph and not with terrour O my soul The prize is won Possess the things which thou hast so long prayed for and sought Make haste and enter into thy Masters joy Go view the glory which thou hast so long heard of and take thy place in the heavenly Chore and bear thy part in their celestial melody Sit down with Abraham Isaac and Jacob in the Kingdom of God! And receive that which Christ in his Covenant did promise to give thee at the last Go boldly to that blessed God with whom thou hast so powerful a Mediatour and to the Throne of whose grace thou hast had so oft and sweet access If Heaven be thy fear or sorrow what can be thy joy and where wilt thou have refuge if thou fly from God If perfect endless pleasures be thy terrour where then dost thou expect content If grace have taught thee long ago to prefer the heavenly and durable felicity refuse it not now when thou art so near the port if it have taught thee long ago to be as a stranger in this Sodom and to renounce this
done the settling of your faith when once you have found out the soundest evidences and are able to answer all Objections For you must grow still in the fuller discerning and digesting the same evidences which you have discerned For you may hold them so loosely that they may be easily wrested from you And you may see them with so clear and full a knowledge as shall stablish your mind against all ordinary causes of mutation It is one kind or degree rather of knowledge of the same things which the Pupil and another which the Doctor hath I am sure the knowledge which I have now of the evidences of the Christian Verity is much different from what I had thirty years ago when perhaps I could say neer as much as now and used the same Arguments 17. Consider well the great contentions of Philosophers and the great uncertainty of most of those Nations to which the Infidels would reduce our faith or which they would make the test by which to try it They judge Christianity uncertain because it agreeth not with their uncertainties or certain errours 18. Enslave not your Reason to the objects of sense While we are in the body our souls are so imprisoned in flesh and have so much to do with worldly things that most men by averseness and disuse can hardly at all employ their minds about any higher things than sensitive nor go any further than sense conduceth them He that will not use his soul to contemplate things invisible will be as unfit for believing as a Lady is to travel a thousand miles on foot who never went out of her doors but in a Sedan or Coach 19. Where your want of learning or exercise or light doth cause any difficulties which you cannot overcome go to the more wise and experienced Believers and Pastors of the Church to be your helpers For it is their office to be both the preservers and expounders of the sacred Doctrine and to be the helpers of the peoples faith The Priests lips should preserve knowledge and they should seek the Law at his mouth for he is the messenger of the Lord of Hosts Mal. 2.7 20. Lastly Faithfully practise with Love and alacrity what you do believe lest God in justice leave you to disbelieve that which you would not love and practise So much to direct you in the method of your endeavours for the getting and strengthening of faith CHAP. III. The Evidences of Faith THese things in the Order of your enquiry being presupposed proceed to the consideration of the Evidences themselves which fully prove the Christian Verity And here omitting the preparatory considerations recited at large in my Reasons of the Christian Religion I shall only set before you the grand Evidence it self with a brief recital of some of those means which bring it down to our notice in these times The great infallible witness of CHRIST is the SPIRIT of GOD or the Holy Ghost Or that divine operation of the Holy Spirit which infallibly proveth the attestation of God himself as interesting him in it as the principal cause As we know the Coin of a Prince by his image and superscription and know his acts by his publick proper Seal And as we know that God is the Creatour of the world by the Seal of his likeness which is upon it Or as we know the Father of a child when he is so like him as no other could beget So know we Christ and Christianity to be of God by his unimitable image or impression The Power Wisdom and Goodness of God are the essentialities which we call the Nature of God These in their proper form and transcendent perfection are incommunicable But when they produce an effect on the creature which for the resemblance may analogically be called by the same names the names are logically communicable though the thing it self which is the Divine Essence or Perfections be still incommunicable But when they only produce effects more heterogeneal or equivocal then we call those effects only the footsteps or demonstrations of their cause So GOD whose Power Wisdom and Goodness in it self is incommunicable hath produced intellectual natures which are so like him that their likeness is called his Image and analogically yet equivocally the created faculties of their Power Intellect and Will are called by such names as we are fain for want of other words to apply to God the things signified being transcendently and unexpressibly in God but the words first used of and applied to the creature But the same God hath so demonstrated his Power and Wisdom and Goodness in the Creation of the material or corporeal parts of the world that they are the ●estigia and infallible proofs of his causation and perfections being such as no other cause without him can produce but yet not so properly called his Image as to his Wisdom and Goodness but only of his Power But no wise man who seeth this world can doubt whether a God of perfect Power Wisdom and Goodness was the maker of it Even so the person and doctrine of Christ or the Christian Religion objectively considered hath so much of the Image and so much of the demonstrative impressions of the Nature of God as may fully assure us that he himself is the approving cause And as the Sun hath a double Light Lux Lumen its essential Light in it self and it s emitted beams or communicated Light so the Spirit and Image of God by which Christ and Christianity are demonstrated are partly that which is essential constitutive and inherent and partly that which is sent and communicated from him to others In the person of Christ there is the most excellent Image of God 1. Wonderful Power by which he wrought miracles and commanded Sea and Land Men and Devils and raised the dead and raised himself and is now the glorious Lord of all things 2. Wonderful Wisdom by which he formed his Laws and Kingdom and by which he knew the hearts of men and prophecied of things to come 3. Most wonderful Love and Goodness by which he healed all diseases and by which he saved miserable souls and procured our happiness at so dear a rate But as the essential Light of the Sun is too glorious to be well observed by us but the emitted Light is it which doth affect our eyes and is the immediate object of our sight at least that we can best endure and use so the Essential Perfections of Jesus Christ are not so immediately and ordinarily fit for our observation and use as the lesser communicated beams which he sent forth And these are either such as were the immediate effects of the Spirit in Christ himself or his personal operations or else the effects of his Spirit in others And that is either such as went before him or such as were present with him or such as followed after him Even as the emitted Light of the Sun is either that which is next to its
and use the language the motives and the employments of the Country and people where they live so he that is most familiar with such as live by Faith upon things unseen and take Gods promise for full security hath a very great help to learn and live that life himself Heb. 10.24 25. 1 Thes 4.17 18. Phil. 3.20 21. Direct 20. Forget not the nearness of the things unseen and think not of a long continuance in this world but live in continual expectation of your change Distant things be they never so great do hardly move us As in bodily motion the mover must be contiguous And as our senses are not fit to apprehend beyond a certain distance so our minds also are finite and have their bounds and measure And sin hath made them much narrower foolish and 〈◊〉 sighted than they would have been A certainty of dying 〈◊〉 last should do much with us But yet he that looketh to live long on earth will the more hardly live by Faith in Heaven when he that daily waiteth for his change will have easily the more serious and effectual thoughts of the world in which he must live next and of all the preparations necessary thereunto and will the more easily despise the things on earth which are the employment and felicity of the sensual Col. 3.1 2 3. Phil. 1.20 21 22 23. 1 Cor. 15.31 As we see it in constant experience in men when they see that they must presently die indeed how light then set they by the world how little are they moved with the talk of honour with the voice of mirth with the sight of meat or drink or beauty or any thing which before they had not power to deny and how seriously they will then talk of sin and grace of God and Heaven which before they could not be awakened to regard If therefore you would live by faith indeed set your selves as at the entrance of that world which faith foreseeth and live as men that know they may die to morrow and certainly must be gone ere long Dream not of I know not how many years more on earth which God never promised you unl●ss you make it your business to vanquish faith by setting its objects at a greater distance than God hath set them Learn Christs warning to one and all To watch and to be alwaies ready Mark 13.33 35 37. 1 Pet. 4 7. Mat. 24.44 Luke 12.40 He that thinketh he hath yet time enough and day-light before him will be the apter to loiter in his work or Journey When every man will make haste when the Sun is setting if he have much to do or far to go Delaies which are the great preventers of Repentance and undoers of the world do take their greatest advantage from this ungrounded expectation of long life When they hear the Physician say He is a dead man and there is no hope then they would fain begin to live and then how religious and reformed would they be whereas if this foolish errour did not hinder them they might be of the same mind all their lives and might have then done their work and waited with desire for the Crown and said with Paul For I am now ready to be offered and the time of my departure is at hand I have fought a good fight I have finished my course I have kept the faith henceforth there is laid up for me a Crown of Righteousness which the Lord the Righteous Judge shall give me at that day and not to me only but to them also that love his appearing 2 Tim. 4.6 7 8. And so much for the General Directions to be observed by them that will live by Faith I only add that as the well doing of all our particular duties dependeth most on the common health and soundness of the soul in its state of grace so our living by Faith in all the particular cases after instanced doth depend more upon these General Directions than on the particular ones which are next to be adjoyned CHAP. I. An Enumeration of the Particular Cases in which especially Faith must be used 1. How to live by Faith on GOD. THE General Directions before given must be practised in all the Particular Cases following or in order to them But besides them it is needful to have some special Directions for each Case And the particular Cases which I shall instance in are these 1. How to exercise Faith on GOD himself 2. Upon Jesus Christ 3. Upon the Holy Ghost 4. About the Scripture Precepts and Examples 5. About the Scripture Promises 6. About the Threatnings 7. About Pardon of sin and Justification 8. About Sanctification and the exercises of other Graces 9. Against inward vices and temptations to actual sin 10. In case of Prosperity 11. In Adversity and particular Afflictions 12. In Gods Worship publick and private 13. For Spiritual Peace and Joy 14. For the World and the Church of God 15. For our Relations 16. In loving others as our selves 17. About Heaven and following the Saints 18. How to die in Faith 19. About the coming of Christ to Judgement GOD is both the object of our knowledge as he is revealed in Nature and of our Faith as he is revealed in the holy Scriptures He is the first and last object of our Faith It is life eternal to know him the only true God and Jesus Christ whom he hath sent Ye believe in God believe also in me was Christs order in commanding and causing Faith Joh. 14.1 Seeing therefore this is the principal part of Faith to know God and live upon him and to him I shall give you many though brief Directions in it Direct 1. Behold the glorious and full demonstrations of the Being of the Deity in the whole frame of nature and especially in your selves The great argument from the Effect to the Cause is unanswerable All the caused and derived Beings in the world must needs have a first Being for their cause All Action Intellection and Volition all Power Wisdom and Goodness which is caused by another doth prove that the cause can have no less than the total effect hath To see the world and to know what a man is and yet to deny that there is a God is to be mad He that will not know that which all the world doth more plainly preach than words can possibly express and will not know the sense of his own Being and faculties doth declare himself uncapable of teaching Psal 14.1 49.12 20. Isa 1.2 3. It is the greatest shame that mans understanding is capable of to be ignorant of God 1 Cor. 15.34 and the greatest shame to any Nation Hos 4.1 6.6 As it is the highest advancement of the mind to know him and therefore the summ of all our duty Prov. 2.5 Hos 6 6· 2 Chron. 30.21 22. Isa 11.9 2 Pet. 2.20 Rom. 1.20 28. Joh. 17.3 Direct 2. Therefore take not the Being and Perfections of God for superstructures and
conclusions which may be tryed and made bow to the interest of other points but as the greatest clearest surest truths next to the knowledge of our own Being and Intellection And that which all other at least not the proper objects of sense must be tryed and reduced to When there is no right method or order of knowledge there is no true and solid knowledge It is distraction and not knowing to begin at the top and to lay the foundation last and reduce things certain to things uncertain And it is no wiselier done of Atheists who argue from their apprehensions of other things against the Beings or Perfections of God As when they say There is much evil in the world permitted by God and there is death and many tormenting pains befall even the innocent bruits and there are wars and confusions and ignorance and wickedness have dominion in the earth Therefore God is not perfectly good nor perfectly wise and just and powerful in his government of the world The errour in the method of arguing here helpeth to continue their blindness That God is perfectly good is prius cognitum Nothing is more certain than that he who is the cause of all the derived goodness in the whole Universe must have as much or more than all himself Seeing therefore that Heaven and Earth and all things bear so evident a witness to this truth this is the foundation and first to be laid and never more questioned nor any argument brought against it For all that possibly can be said against it must be à minus notis from that which is more obscure Seeing then that it is most certain by sense that calamities and evils are in the world and no less certain that there is a God who is most perfectly good it must needs follow that these two are perfectly consistent and that some other cause of evil must be found out than any imperfection in the chief good But as to the Being of things and Order in the world it followeth not that They must be as g●od and perfect as their Maker and Governour is himself nor one part as good and perfect in it self as any other Because it was not the Creatours purpose when he made the world to make another God that should be equal with himself for two Infinite Beings and Perfections is a contradiction But it was his will to imprint such measures of his own likeness and excellencies upon the creatures and with such variety as his wisdom saw fittest the reasons of which are beyond our search The Divine Agency as it is in him the Agent is perfect But the effect hath those measures of goodness which he was freely pleased to communicate And as I have given you this instance to shew the folly of trying the certain foundation by the less certain notions or accidents in the world so you must abhor the same errour in all other instances Some wit may consist with the questioning of many plain conclusions But he is a fool indeed who saith There is no God or doubteth of his essential properties Psal 14.1 2. Rom. 1.19 20 21. Direct 3. Remember that all our knowledge of God while we are in the body here is but enigmatical and as in a glass and that all words which man can speak of God at least except Being and Substance are but terms bel●w him borrowed from his Image on the Creatures and not s●gnifying the same thing formal●y in God which they signifie in us If you think otherwise you will make an Idol in your conception instead of God And you will debase him and bring him down to the condition of the creature And yet it doth not follow that we know nothing of him or that all such expressions of God are vain or false or must be difused For then we must not think or talk of God at all But we must speak of him according to the highest notions which we can borrow from the nobl●st parts of his Image confessing still that they are but borrowed And these must be used till we come nearer and see as face to face and when that which is perfect is come then that which is imperfect shall be done away 1 Cor. 13.10 11 12. And yet it is in comparison of darker revelations as with open face that we behold as in a glass the glory of the Lord and it is a sight that can change us into the same Image as from glory to glory as by the Spirit of the Lord 2 Cor. 3.18 D●rect 4. Abhor the furious ignorance which brandeth every one with the names of heresie or blasphemy who differ from them in the use of some unnecessary metaphor of God when their different phrases tend not indeed to his dishonour and perhaps may have the same signification with their own When we are all forced to confess that all our tearms of God are improper or metaphorical and yet m●n will run those metaphors into numerous branches and carry them unto greater impropriety and then rail at all as blasphemers that question them this practice is though too common a heinous sin in them as it hath direful effects upon the Church Should I recite the sad histories of this iniquity and shew what it hath done between the Greek and Latine Churches and between those called Orthodox and Catholick and many through the world that have been numbered with Hereticks it would be too large a subject for our sorrow and complaints Direct 5. Abhor presumptu●us curiosities in enquiring into the secret things of God much more in pretending to know them and most of all in reviling and contending against others upon those pretences It is sad to observe abundance of seemingly learned men who are posed in the smallest creature which they study yet talking as confidently of the unsearchable things of God yea and raving as furiously and voluminously against all that contradict them as if they had dwelt in the inaccessible light and knew all the order of the acts of God much better than they know themselves and the motions of their own minds or better than they can anatomize a worm or a beast They that will not presume to say that they know the secrets of their Prince or the heart of any of their neighbours yea they that perceive the difficulty of knowing the state of a mans own soul because our hearts are a maze and labyrinth and o●r thoughts so various and confused can yet give you so exact a Scheme of all Gods conceptions that it shall be no less than heresie to question the order of any part of it They can tell you what Idea's are in the mind of God and in what order they lye and how those Idea's are the same unchanged about things that are changed about things past and present and to come and what futurition was from Eternity as in the Idea of Gods mind they can tell me in what order he knoweth things and by what means and whether future
and to the other to settle the orders of the Gospel Church Christ sent them to teach all things whatsoever he commanded Mat. 28.20 And he promised to be with them and to send them the Spirit to lead them into all truth and to bring all things to their remembrance Accordingly they did obey this Commission and settled the Gospel Churches according to the will of Christ and this many years before any of the New Testament was written Therefore these acts of theirs have the nature and use of a divine Revelation and a Law For if they were fallible in this Christ must break the foresaid Promise 2. But all the Acts of the Apostles which were either about indifferent things or which were about forecommanded duties and not in the execution of the foresaid Commission for which they had the promise of infallibility have no such force or interpretation For 1. Their holy actions of obedience to former Laws are not properly Laws to us but motives to obey Gods Laws And this is the common use of all other good examples of the Saints in Scripture Their examples are to be tryed by the Law and followed as secondary copies or motives and not as the Law it self 1 Cor. 11.1 Be ye followers of me even as I also am of Christ Heb. 6.12 Be followers of them who through faith and patience do inherit the promise 1 Cor. 4.16 Phil. 3.17 1 Thes 1.6 2.16 3.7 9. Heb. 13.7 2. And the evil examples even of Apostles are to be avoided as all other evil examples recorded in the Scriptures are such as Peters denial of his Lord and the Disciples all forsaking him and Peters sinful separation and dissimulation and Barnabas's with him Gal. ● And the falling out of Paul and Barnabas c. 3. And the history of indifferent actions or those which were the performance but of a temporary duty are instructing to us but not examples which we must imitate It is no divine Faith which forgeth an object or rule to it self Whatsoever example we will prove to be obligatory to us to imitate we must either prove 1. That it was an execution of Gods own commission which had a promise of infallible guidance Or 2 That it was done according to some former Law of God which is common to them and us As the first must be the revealing of some duty extended to this age as well as that Direct 12. Faith must make great use of Scripture examples both for motive and comfort when we find their case to be the same with ours We cannot conclude that we must imitate them in extraordinary circumstances nor can we conclude that God will give every extraordinary mercy to us which he gave to them as that he will make all Kings as he did David or all Apostles or raise all as he did L●zarus now c. nor that every Believer shall have the same outward things or shall have just the same degrees of grace c. But we may conclude that we shall have all Gods promises fulfilled to us as they had to them and shall have all that is suitable to our condition As David was pardoned upon repentance so may others I confessed and thou forgavest For this shall every one that is godly pray to thee Psal 32.5 6. Hath God pardoned a Manasseh a Peter a Paul c. upon repentance so is he ready to do to us Hath he helped the distressed hath he heard and pittied even the weak in faith so we may hope he will do by us Isa 38.10 11. Psal 116.3 Acts 27.20 Jonah 2.4 We have the same God the same Christ the same Promise if we have the same Faith and pray with the same Spirit Rom. 8.26 Heb. 4 15. Though we may not have just the same case or the same manner of deliverance Therefore it is a mercy that the Scripture is written historically And therefore we should remember such particular examples as suit our own case CHAP. V. Directions how to live by Faith upon Gods Promises THis part of the work of Faith is the more noble because the eminent part of the Gospel is the Promises or Covenant of Grace and it is the more necessary because our lapsed miserable state hath made the Promises so necessary to our use The helps to be used herein are these Direct 1. Consider that every Promise of God is the expression of his immutable will and counsel It is a great dispute among the Schoolmen whether God be properly obliged to us by his Promises When the word obligation it self is but a metaphor which must be cast away or explained before the question can be answered God cannot be bound as man is who transferreth a propriety to another from himself or maketh himself a proper debter in point of communicative Justice or may be sued at Law and made to perform against his will But it is a higher obligation than all this which lyeth upon God His Power Wisdom and Goodness which are himself do constitute his Veracity And his very Nature is immutable and just and therefore his Nature and Being is the infallible cause of the fulfilling of his Promises He freely made them but he necessarily performeth them And therefore the Apostle saith that God that cannot lye hath promised eternal life before the world began which is either promised according to his counsel which he had before the world began or from the beginning of the world Titus 1.2 Or as the word also signifieth many ages ago And Heb. 6.17 18. Wherefore God willing more abundantly to shew to the heirs of Promise the immutability of his counsel confirmed it by an oath that by two immutable things in which it was impossible for God to lye we might have a strong consolation who have fl●d for refuge to lay hold upon the hope set before us which hope we have as an Anchor of the soul both sure and stedfast And therefore when the Apostle meaneth that Christ will not be unfaithful to us his phrase is He cannot deny himself 2 Tim. 2.13 As if his very Nature and Being consisted more in his truth and fidelity than any mortal mans can do Direct 2. Vnderstand the Nature and Reasons of Fidelity among men viz. 1. To make them conformable to God And 2. To maintain all Justice Order and Virtue in the world And when you have pondered these two you will see that it is impossible for God to be unfaithful For 1. If it be a vice in the Copy what would it be in the Original Nay would not falshood and perfidiousness become our perfection to make us like God 2. And if all the world would be like a company of enemies Bedlams bruits or worse if it were not for the remnants of fidelity it is impossible that the Nature or Will of God should be the pattern or original of so great evil Direct 3. Consider what a foundation of his Promises God hath laid in Jesus Christ and what a seal
It foreseeth also the day of Judgment and teacheth us to use our prosperity and wealth as we desire to hear of it in the day of our accounts Faith is a provident and a vigilant grace and useth to ask when we have any thing in may possession which way I make the best advantage of it for my soul which way will be most comfortable to me in my last review how shall I wish that I had used my time my wealth my power when time is at an end and all these transitory things are vanished 6. And Faith doth so absolutely devote and subject the soul to God that it will suffer us to do nothing so far as it prevaileth but what is for him and by his consent It telleth us that we are not our own but his and that we have nothing but what we have received and that we must be just in giving God his own and therefore it first asketh which way may I best serve and honour God with all that he hath given me Not only with my substance and the first fruits of mine increase but with all 1 Cor. 10.31 When Love and devotion hath delivered up our selves entirely to God it keeps nothing back but delivereth him all things with our selves even as Christ with himself doth give us all things Rom. 8.32 And Faith doth so much subject the soul to God that it maketh us like servants and children that use not their Masters or Parents goods at their own pleasure but ask him first how he would have us use them Lord what wouldst thou have me to do is one of the first words of a converted soul Acts 9.6 In a word Faith writeth out that charge upon the heart 1 John 2.15 Love not the world nor the things that are in the world the lust of the flesh the lust of the eyes and pride of life For if any man love the world the love of the Father is not in him Ye cannot serve God and Mammon But on this subject Mr. Alleine hath said so much in his excellent Book of the Victory of Faith over the world that I shall at this time say no more The Directions which I would give you in general for preservation from the danger of prosperity by Faith are these that follow Direct 1. Remember still that the common cause of mens damnation is their Love of this world more than God and Heaven and that the world cannot undo you any other way but by tempting you to over-love it and to undervalue higher things And therefore that is the most dangerous condition which maketh the world seem most pleasing and most lovely to us And can you believe this and yet be so eager to be humoured and to have all things fitted to your pleasure and desires Mark here what a task Faith hath and mark what the work of self-denyal is The worldling must be pleased the Believer must be saved The worldling must have his flesh and fancy gratified the Believer must have Heaven secured and God obeyed Men sell not their souls for sorrow but for mirth They forsake not Heaven for poverty but for riches they turn not away from God for the love of sufferings and dishonour but for the love of pleasure preferments dignities and estimation in the world And is that state better and more desirable for which all that perish turn from God and fell their souls and are befooled and undone for ever Or that which no man ever sinned for nor forsook God for or was undone for Read over this question once and again and mark what answer your hearts give to it if you would know whether you live by sense or faith And mark what contrary answers the flesh and faith will give to it when it comes to practice I say though many sin in poverty and in sufferings and in disgrace yea and by occasion of them and by their temptations yet no man ever sinned for them They are none of the bait that straled away the heart from God Set deep upon your heart the sense of the danger of a prosperous state and sear and vigilancy will help to save you Direct 2. Imprint upon your memory the characters of this deadly sin of worldliness that so you may not perish by it whilst you dream that you are free from it but may alw●ies see how far it doth prevail Here therefore to help you I will set before you the characters of this sin and I will but briefly name them lest I be tedious because they are many 1. The great mark of damning worldliness is when God and Heaven are not loved and preferred before the pleasures and profits and honours of the world 2. Another is when the world is esteemed and used more for the service and pleasure of the flesh than to honour God and to do good with and to further our salvation When men desire great places and riches more to please their appetites and carnal minds with than to benefit others or to serve the Lord with when they are not rich to God but to themselves Luke 12.20 21. 3. It is a mark of some degree of worldliness to desire a greater measure of riches or honour than our spiritual work and ends and benefit do require For when we are convinced that less is as good or better to our highest ends and yet we would have more it is a sign that the rest is desired for the flesh Rom. 13.14 8.8 9 10 13. 4. When our desires after worldly things are too eager and violent when we must needs have them and cannot be without them 1 Tim. 6.9 5. When our contrivances for the world are too sol●icitous and our cares for it take up an undue proportion of our time Mat. 6.24 25. to the end 6. When we are impatient under want dishonour or disappointments and live in trouble and discontent if we want much or have not our wills 7. When the thoughts of the world are proportionably so many more than our thoughts of Heaven and our salvation that they keep us in the neglect of the duty of Meditation and keep empty our minds of holy things Mat. 6.21 8. When it turneth our talk all towards the world or taketh up our freest and our sweetest and most serious words and leaveth us to the use of seldom dull or formal or affected words about the things which should profit the soul and glorifie our great Creator 9. When the world incroacheth upon Gods part in our families and thrusts out prayer or the reading of the Scriptures or the due instruction of children or servants when it cometh in upon the Lords day when it is intruding in Gods Worship and at Sermon or Prayer our thoughts are more pleasingly running out after some worldly thing than kept in attendance upon God Ezek. 33 31. 10. When worldly prosperity is so sweet to you that it can keep you quiet under the guilt of wilful sin and in the midst of all the
2. It setteth you at enmity with God and holiness because God controlleth and condemneth your beloved lusts and because it is contrary to the carnal things which have your hearts 2. By this means it maketh men malignant enemies of the godly and persecutors of them because they are of contrary minds and waies As then he that was born after the flesh persecuted him that was born after the Spirit even so it is now Gal. 4.29 The world cannot love us because we are not of the world John 15.19 20. Pride covetousness and sensuality are the matter which the burning Feaver lodgeth in which hath consumed so much of the Church of Christ 4. It is the sin that hath corrupted the sacred Office of the Ministry throughout most of the Christian Churches in the world And thereby caused both the Schisms and Cruelties and the decay of serious godliness among them which is their present deplorable case Ignorant persons are like sick men in a Feaver They lay the blame on this and that and commonly on that which went next before the paroxism and know not the true cause of the disease We are all troubled or should be to see the many minds the many waies the confused state of the Christian Churches and to hear them cry out against each other And one layeth the blame on this party or opinion and another on that But when we come to our selves we shall find that it is The worldly mind that causeth our calamity Many well meaning friends of the Church do think how dishonourable it is to the Ministry to be poor and low and consequently despicable and what an advantage is it to their work to be able to relieve the poor and rather to oblige the people than to depend upo● them and to be above them rather than below them And supposing the Pastors to be mortified holy heavenly men all this is true and the zeal of these thoughts is worthy of commendation But that which good men intend for good hath become the Churches bane So certain is the common saying that Constantines zeal did poison the Church by lifting up the Pastors of it too high and occasioning those contentions for grandure and precedency which to this day separate the East and West When well-meaning Piety hath adorned the office with wealth and honour it is as true as that the Sun shineth that the most proud ambitious worldly men will be the most studious seekers of that office and will make it their plot and trade and business how by friends and observances and wills to attain their ends And usually he that seeks shall find when in the mean time the godly mortified humble man will not do so but will serve God in the state to which he is clearly called And consequently except it be under the Government of an admirably wise and holy Ruler a worthy Pastor in such a wealthy station will be a singular thing and a rarity of the age whilst worldly men whose hearts are habited with that which is utterly contrary to holiness and contrary to the very ends and work of their own office will be the men that must sit in Moses Chair that must have the doing and ruling of the work which their hearts are set against And how it will go with the Church of Christ when the Gospel is to be preached and Preachers chosen and Godliness promoted by the secret enemies of it and when ambiti●us fleshly worldly men are they that must cure the peoples souls under Christ of the love of the flesh and the world it were easie to prognosticate from the causes if the Christian world could not tell by the effects so that except by the wonderful Piety of Princes there is no visible way in the eye of reason to recover the miserable Churches but to retrive the Pastoral Office into such a state as that it may be no bait to a worldly mind but may be desired and chosen purely upon heavenly accounts And then the richer the Pastors are the better when they are the Sons of Nobles whose Piety bringeth with them their honour and their wealth to serve God and his Church with and they do not find it there to be their end or inducement to the work But instead of invitations or encouragements to pride and carnal minds there may be only so much as may not deter or drive away candidates from the sacred Function 5. Worldliness is a sin which maketh the Word of God unprofitable Mat. 13.22 John 12.43 Ezek. 33.31 prepossessing the heart and resisting that Gospel which would extirpate it 6. It hindereth Prayer by corrupting mens desires and by intruding worldly thoughts 7. It hindereth all holy Meditation by turning both the heart and thoughts another way 8. It drieth up all heavenly profitable Conference whilst the world doth fill both mind and mouth 9. It is a great profaner of the Lords Day distracting mens minds and alienating them from God 10. It is a murderous enemy of Love to one another All worldly men being so much for themselves that they are seldom hearty friends to any other 11. Yea it maketh men false and unrighteous in their dealings There being no trust to be put in a worldly man any further than you are sure you suit his interest 12. It is the great cause of discord and divisions in the world It setteth Families Neighbours and Kingdoms together by the ears and setteth the Nations of the earth in bloody wars to the calamity and destruction of each other 13. It causeth cheating stealing robbing oppressions cruelties lying false-witnessing perjury murders and many such other sins 14. It maketh men unfit to suffer for Christ because they love the world above him and consequently it maketh them as Apostates to forsake him in a time of tryal 15. It is a great devourer of precious time That short life which should be spent in preparing for eternity is almost all spent in drudging for the world 16. Lastly It greatly unfitteth men to die and maketh them loth to leave the world And no wonder when there is no entertainment for worldlings in any better place hereafter Direct 6. If you would be saved from the world and the snares of prosperity foresee death and judge of the world 〈◊〉 it will appear and use you at the last Dream not of long life He that looks to stay but a little while in the world will be the less careful of his provisions in it A little will serve for a little t●me The grave is a sufficient disgrace to all the vanities on earth though there must be more to raise the heart to Heaven Direct 7. M●rtifie the flesh and you overcome the world Cure the thirsty disease and you will need none of the worldlings waies to satisfie it When the flesh is mastered there it no use for plenty or pleasures or honours to satisfie its lusts Your daily bread to fit you for your work will then suffice Direct 8.
us if we seem not to be some what better than we are If we should not hide or extenuate our faults and set out our graces and parts to the full we should be a dishonour to Christ and to his servants and his cause But remember 1. That the way by which God hath appointed you to honour him is by being good and living well and not by seeming to be good when you are not or seeming better than you are The God of Truth who hateth Hypocrisie hath not chosen lying and hypocrisie to be the means by which we must seek his honour It is damnable to seek to glorifie him by a lye Rom. 3.7.8 We must indeed cause our light so to shine before men that they may see our good works and glorifie our heavenly Father Mat. 5.16 But it is the light of Sincerity and good Works and not of a dissembled Profession that must so shine 2. And the Goodness of the pretended end doth greatly aggravate the crime As if the honour of God and our Religion must be upheld by so devilish a means as proud Hypocrisie 3. And though it be true that a man is not imprudently without just cause to open his sins before the world when it is like to tend to the injury of Religion and any way to do more hurt than good yet it is as true that when there is no such impediment true repentance is forward to confess and when the fault is discovered defending and extenuating it is then the greatest dishonour to Religion As if you would father all on Christ and make men believe that he will justifie or extenuate sin as you do And then it is a free self-abasing confession and taking all the shame to your selves with future reformation which is the reparation which you must make of the honour of Religion For what greater dishonour can be cast upon Religion than to make it seem a friend to sin Or what greater honour can be given it than to represent it as it is as an enemy to all evil and to take the blame as is due unto your selves 3. Another cloak for Pride is the Reputation of our offices dignities and places We must live according to our rank and quality All men must not live alike The grandeur of Rulers must be maintained or else the Magistracy will fall into contempt The Pastors Office must not by a mean estate and low deportment be exposed to the peoples scorn And so abundance of the most ambitious practices and hateful enormities of the proud must be vailed by these fair pretences Answ 1. We grant you that the honour of Magistrates must be kept up by a convenient grandeur and that a competent distance is necessary to a due reverence But Goodness is as necessary an ingredient in Government as Greatness is and to be great in Wisdom and Goodness is the principal Greatness And Goodness is Loving and humble and condescending and suiteth all deportments to the common good which is the end of Government See then that you keep up no other height but that which really tendeth to the success of your endeavours in order to the common good 2. And look also to your hearts lest it be your own exaltation which you indeed intend while you thus pretend the honour of your office For this is an ordinary trick of pride To discover this will you ask your selves these Questions following Quest 1. How you came into your offices and honours did they seek you or did you seek them did the place need you or did you need the place If pride brought you in you have cause to fear lest it govern you when you are there Quest 2. What do you in the place of honour that you are in Do you study to do all the good you can and to make men happy by your Government and is this the labour of your lives if it be we may hope that the means is suited to this end But if you do no such thing you have no such end And if you have no such end you do but dissemble in pretending that your grandeur is used but as a means to that end which really you never seek It is then your own exaltation that you aim at and it is your pride that playeth all your game Quest 3. Are you more offended and grieved when you are crost and hindered in doing good or when you are crost and hindered from your personal honour Quest 4. Are you well contented that another should have your honour and preferment if God and the Soveraign Power so dispose of it so be it it be one that is like to do more good than you By these Q●estions you may quickly see if you are willing whether your grandeur be desired by your pride for self-advancement or by Christian prudence to do good 3. And I must tell you that there is abundance of difference betwixt the case of the Civil Magistrates and the Pastors of the Church in this Magistracy must have more fear and pomp But Pastors must govern by Light and Love When his Apostles strove for superiority Christ left a decision of the controversie for the use of all following ages It is the contempt of the world and the mortifying of the flesh and self-denyal that Pastors have to teach the people and withall to seek a heavenly treasure And will not their own example further the success of their Doctrine The reverence that a Pastor must expect is not to be feared as one that can do hurt For all coertion or corporal force is proper to the Magistrate but it is to be thought one that is above all the riches and pleasures of the world and hath set his heart on higher things Such a one therefore he must both be and seem A Pastor will be but the sooner despised if he look after that riches and worldly pomp which is seemly for a Magistrate If he have a sword in his hand it 's the way to be hated If he have teeth that are bloody or claws that can tear he will be accounted a wolf though he have the cloathing of a sheep When our Divines give the reason of Christs humiliation they say that if he had preached up heavenly-mindedness self-denyal and mortification and had himself lived in pomp and fulness the people would not have regarded his words And surely the same reason holdeth in some measure as to all his Ministers Again I say that if ever the Church be universally reformed the Pastoral office must be only encouraged with necessary support to keep the Pastors from despondency and distracting cares but it must not be made a bait of ambition covetousness or sloth but must be stript of that which makes it thus desirable to a carnal mind Otherwise we must expect that except when Princes are very holy the Churches be ordinarily guided by carnal and ungodly men who will do it according to their minds and interest All the world cannot answer the
there are some Nebuchadnezzars that would never be humbled and some Pharaohs that would never confess their sins and some Manassehs that would never be converted Many in Heaven are thankful for affliction and so should we Eccles 7.2 3 4 5 6. It is better to go to the house of mourning than to the house of feasting For that is the end of all men and the living will lay it to heart Sorrow is better than laughter for ●y the sadness of the countenance the heart is made better The heart of the wise is in the house of mourning but the heart of fools is in the house of mirth It is better to hear the rebuke of the wise than for a man to hear the song of fools For as the crackling of thorns under a pot so is the laughter of a fool Do you not perceive that a merry prosperous state inclineth to folly levity rashness inconsiderateness stupidity forgetting the latter end c And that a sadder frame is more awakened illuminated fixed sensible considerate and fit for great employments Quarrel not then with your Physician because he dyeteth you as tendeth to your cure and turneth you not over to the dyet of desperate patients or of fools Direct 15. If God afflict you add not causless affliction to your selves If he touch your friends or body or estate do not you therefore touch and tear your hearts If you have not enough why do you complain of it If you have enough why do you make your selves more He that hath said Blessed are they that mourn did never mean that those are blessed that mourn erroneously for nothing or for that which is their benefit or that plevishly quarrel with God and man or that wilfully by pride or impatiency torment themselves He meant not to bless the sorrow of the covetous that grieveth because he is not rich or because he is wronged or is a loser in some commodity nor to bless the sorrow of the proud who is troubled because he is not observed honoured or preferred Nor the sorrow of the sensual who grieve when their lusts and pleasures are restrained Nor the sorrows of the idle who grieve if they are called to diligent labour nor the sorrow of the envious who grieveth to see another prosper nor the sorrows of the cruel who grieve when they cannot be as hurtful to Gods servants and their neighbours or enemies as they desire It is neither wicked sorrows nor wilful self-vexation which Christ doth bless But it is the holy improving and patient enduring the sufferings laid upon us by God or man Direct 16. Let Patience have its perfect work He that believeth will not make haste James 1.3 Isa 28.16 God's time is best and eternity is long enough for our ease and comfort It is by patient continuance in well doing that glory honour and immortality must be sought Rom. 2. We shall reap in due season if we faint not Galat. 6.9 James 5.7 8 9. Be patient therefore Brethren unto the coming of the Lord. Behold the husbandman waiteth for the precious fruit of the earth and hath long patience for it until he receive the early and latter rain Be ye also patient stablish your hearts for the coming of the Lord draweth nigh When others by impatience lose themselves do you in your patience possess your souls Luke 21.19 Rom. 5.4 Patience worketh experience and experience hope which maketh not ashamed If we hope for that we see not thee do we with patience wait for it Rom. 8.25 Through patience and comfort of the Scriptures it is that we have hope Rom. 15.4 Therefore we have need of patience that when we have done the will of God we may inherit the promise Heb. 10.36.11 CHAP. XX. How to live by Faith in troubles of Conscience and doubts or terrours about our spiritual and everlasting state HAving written a Treatise called The Right Method for Spiritual Peace and Comfort c. upon this subject already I must refer the Reader thither and here only add these few Directions Direct 1. Distinguish of the several Causes of these troubles and take heed of those unskilful Mountebanks who have the same cure for every such disease and speak present comfort to all that they hear complain and that think every trouble of mind is some notable work of the Spirit of God when it is often the fruit of the manifold weakness or wilfulness of the troubled complainers Direct 2. When it is some heinous sin committed or great corruption indulged which doth cause the trouble be sure that sound Repentance be never omitted in the cure and that a real reformation prove the truth of that Repentance For Christ never died to justifie and save the impenitent sinner And a deceitful Repentance is the common self-deceit and undoing of the world And how can that be true Repentance which changeth not the will and life God will not give you peace and comfort as long as you indulge your wilful sin Note here the difference between 1. The grosly impenitent 2. And the mock-repentance of the Hypocrite 3. And the true Repentance of sound Believers 1. The grosly impenitent cannot bring his heart to a serious purpose to let go his sin nor to a consent or willingness that God should cure him and change his mind but he had rather have his pride and covetousness and sensuality to be fully pleased than to be mortified Like a fool in a Feaver or a Dropsie that had rather have drink than have the cure of his thirst 2. The mock repentance of the Hypocrite hath some purposes under an extraordinary conviction to leave his sin and for a time may seem to do it But when the temptation is as strong again he is the same and returneth to his vomit or else exchangeth his sin for a worse And if you ask him whether he had rather have the mortifying of all his lusts or the pleasing of them his understanding and conviction may cause him truly to say at the present that if God would presently mortifie his sin or offer him this in choice he would rather consent to it than take the pleasing of them But mark it 1. That though he consent that God should do this himself yet he will not consent to use the means and do his duty to attain it If a cold wish or bare consent would change his soul and take away all sinful inclinations at once that he might never more desire the pleasure of sin nor be put to any conflict to overcome it nor any great difficulty to deny it and all this might be done without any labour of his own I doubt not but the Hypocrite would consent to be so mortified But to watch and pray and read and meditate and use the means which God appointeth him both to get mortification and to use it for the conquering of every temptation this the Hypocrite will not consent to 2. And what he doth consent to at the present he
give them over to find abundance of Bedlam joy in the sudden change of their opinion And falshood may comfort that man whom the truth which he was false to would not comfort But if it be a weak sincere Believer if God shew him not so much mercy as to rescue him from the temptation he will do as the foresaid Country patient he will try one mans medicine and another womans medicines and hearken to every one that can speak confidently and promise him a cure till he hath tryed that their case and his were not the same and that they were all but ignorant deceived deceivers and when all fail him he will come back again to the faithful experienced directors of his soul Direct 11. If weakness of grace be the cause of doubting which is of all other the commonest cause in the world the way to comfort is that same which is the way to strengthen grace Such a one if ever he will have joy must be taught how to live the Life of Faith and to walk with God and to mortifie the flesh and get loose from the world and to live as entirely devoted to God and especially how to keep every grace in exercise and then grace will shew it self as the air doth in a windy season or as the fire when it is blown up and flameth There is no surer or readier way to comfort than to get Faith Repentance Love Hope and Obedience in a vigorous activity and great degree and then to keep them much in action Mountebanks and Sectaries have other waies but this is the constant certain way Direct 12. If you perceive that trouble is caused by misunderstanding the Covenant of Grace and looking at Legal Works of merit as the ground of peace and over-looking the sufficiency of the Sacrifice Merits or Interc●ssion of Christ the principal thing to be done with such a soul is to convince them of the impossibility of being justified by works on legal terms and to shew them the necessity of a Saviour and the design of God in mans redemption and that there is but one Mediatour between God and man and one Name by which we can be saved and that Christ is the way the truth and the life and no man cometh to the Father but by the Son and that he was made sin for us who knew no sin that we might be made the righteousness of God in him and that of God he is made unto us wisdom and righteousness and sanctification and redemption and that God hath given us eternal life and this life is in his Son and that he that hath the Son hath life and he that hath not the Son hath not life and that there is no condemnation to them that are in Christ Jesus who walk not after the flesh but after the Spirit but he that believeth not is condemned already Thus must Christ crucified the propitiation for the sins of all the world be preached to them who are troubled as for want of a Saviour or an attonement a sacrifice or ransome or propitiation for sin or because they are not instead of a Saviour to themselves But to tell a man only of the sacrifice and merits of Christ who doubteth only of his interest in him and of the truth of his own Faith Repentance and Sanctification is to prate impertinently and to delude the sinner and to deal injuriously with Christ Direct 12. If Melancholy be the cause of the trouble which is very ordinary it will be necessary 1. Well to understand it And 2. To know the cure Of which having spoken more largely elsewhere I shall now give you only this brief information 1. The signs of this Melancholy are overstretched confused ungovernable thoughts continual fear and inclination to despair and to cry out undone undone I am forsaken of God the day of grace is past I have sinned against the Holy Ghost never mans case was like mine And usually their sleep is gone or broken and they are enclined to be alone and to be alwaies musing with their confounded thoughts and at last are tempted to blasphemous thoughts against the Scriptures and the life to come and perhaps urged to utter some blasphemous words against God and if it go to the highest they are tempted to famish or make away themselves 2. The cure of it lyeth 1. In setting those truths before them which tend most to quiet and satisfie their minds 2. In engaging them in the constant labours of a calling in which both mind and body may be employed 3. In keeping them in fit and chearful company which they love and suffering them to be very little alone 4. In keeping them from musing and that meditation or thoughtfulness which to others is most profitable and a duty 5. Keeping them from over-long secret prayer because they are unable for it and it doth but confound them and disable them for other duties and let them be the more in other duties which they can bear 6. And if the state of their bodies require it Physick is necessary and hath done good to many if rightly chosen Direct 13. Take heed of foolish carnal hasty expectations of comfort from the bare words of any man but use mens advice only to direct you in that way where by patience and faithfulness you may meet with it in due season Nothing is more usual with silly souls than to go to this or that excellent Minister whom they deservedly admire and to look that with an hour or twos discourse he should comfort them and set all their bones in joynt And when they find that it is not done they either despair or turn to the next deceivers and say I tryed the best of them And if such a man cannot do it none of them can do it But silly soul do Physicians use to charm men into health Wilt thou go and talk an hour with the ablest Physician and say that because his talk doth not cure thee thou wilt never go to a Physician more but go to ignorant people that will kill thee Thou hast then thy own deserving even take the death which thou hast chosen and drink as thou hast brewed The work of a Minister is not to cure thee alwaies immediately by comfortable words What words can cure an ignorant melancholy or uncapable soul But to direct thee in thy duty and in the use of those means which if thou wilt faithfully and patiently practise thou shalt certainly be cured in due time If thou wilt use the Physick dyet and exercise which thy Physician doth prescribe thee it is that which must restore thy health and comfort and not the saying over a few words to thee If thou lazily look that other mens words or prayers should cure and comfort thee without thy own endeavours thou mayest thank thy self when thou art deceived Direct 14. The principal means of comfort is to live in the exercise of comfortable duties Faith Hope and especially the Love of God
sanctification but if they live endeavour it by all possible care in a wise and godly education Remember that nature and your dedicating them to God do both oblige you to this care for their salvation And that the education of children is one of the greatest duties in the world for the service of Christ and the prosperity of Church and State And the neglect of it not the smallest cause of the ruine of both and of the worlds calamity Many a poor sottish lazy Professor have I known who cry out against ignorant dumb and unfaithful Ministers as guilty of the blood of souls and are so religious as to separate from the Assemblies that have Ministers that are but partly such when as their own children are almost as ignorant as Heathens and they only use them to a few customary formal duties while they think they are enough against forms and turn over the chief care of their instruction to the Schoolmaster And are themselves so ignorant dumb and idle unfaithful and unnatural to their poor childrens souls as that it is a doubt whether in a well-ordered Church they ought not to be denyed communion themselves They so little practise Deut. 11.18 19. 6.7 Ephes 6.4 c. Direct 5. If your children live to the flesh in an ungodly course of life contrary to the Covenant which by you they made they forfeit all the benefits of the Covenant And you can have no assurance by any thing that you can do for them that ever they shall be converted though it is not past hope And if they be converted at age their pardon and adoption will be the effect of Gods Covenant as then it was newly entered with themselves and not as it was made before for them in infancy Direct 6. Y●t because that still while there is life there is hope you ought not by despair or negligence to omit prayer exhortation or any other duty which you can perform in order to their recovery And though now they have wills of their own their salvation is not laid so much upon you as it was in Infancy at their first covenanting with God yet still God will shew his love to his servants in their seed and faithful endeavours are not vain nor hopeless and therefore it is still one of your greatest duties in the world to seek their true recovery to Christ Direct 7. If God make your children a scourge or a heart-breaking to you bear and improve it as becomes Believers That is 1. Repent of your own former sin your own youthfull lusts your disobedience to your Parents your carnal fondness on your children your loving them too much and God too little the evil examples you have given them and your manifold neglect of a prudent seasonable earnest unwearied instructing them in godliness your bearing with their sin and giving them their own wills till they were masterless c Renew your Repentance and you have got some benefit 2. Think how unkindly and unthankfully you have dealt with a gracious Saviour and a heavenly Father 3. Let it take off your affections from all things under the Sun and call them up the more to God For who would love a world where none are to be trusted and where all things are vexatious even the children of your love and bowels Direct 8. If they die impenitently and perish mourn for them but with the moderation of Believers That is 1. Consider that God is more the owner of your children than you are and may do with his own as he list 2. And he is more wise and merciful than you and therefore not to be murmured at as wanting either 3. And it is an unvaluable mercy that your own soul is sanctified and shall be saved 4. And the most godly have had ungodly children before you Adam had a Cain Noah had a Cham Isaac had an Esau David had an Absalom c. 5. And if all the godly that pray for their childrens salvation must be therein gratified all the world would then have been saved For Noah would have prayed for all his children and they for theirs and so to the worlds end Object Oh but my conscience telleth me that it is my own sin which hath had a hand in their undoing Answ Suppose it be so it is certainly a pardonable sin Do you then repent of it or not If you repent as you mourn for your relations so you should rejoyce that God hath forgiven you For repented sin is certainly pardoned to you and pardoned sin to you is as great cause of joy as unpardoned sin in your relations is cause of sorrow Therefore mourn with such moderation and mixed comfort and thanksgiving as becometh one that liveth by faith The affliction indeed is neer and great and heavier than any calamity that could have befallen their bodies and is not to be slighted by an unnatural insensibility But yet you have a God who is better to you than a thousand children and your cross is but as a feather if you set it in the ballance against your blessings even the Love of God and your part in Christ and life eternal CHAP. XXIV How by Faith to order our Affections to publick Societies and the unconverted world Direct 1. TAke heed that you lose not that common Love which you owe to mankind nor that desire of the increase of the Kingdom of Christ which must keep up in you a constant compassion to the unconverted world viz. Idolaters Infidels and ungodly Hypocrites It is pittiful to observe the unchristian senslesness of most zealous Professors of Religion in this point Though God hath purposely put the three publick Petitions first in the Lords Prayer to tell them what they must first and most desire that is the hallowing of his Name and the coming of his Kingdom and the doing of his Will on Earth as it is in Heaven yet they seem not to understand it or to regard it But their thoughts and desires are as selfish and private and narrow as if they knew nothing what the World or the Church is or cared for neither Their mind and talk is all of their own matters for body or soul or of their several Parties and particular Churches or if any extend his care as far as this spot of Land in Brittain and Ireland or some of the Reformed Churches they go further than their companions their selves and their side or party is almost all that most regard Perhaps the poor scattered Jews have a few words in the prayers of some but the miserable case of the vast Nations of the Earth who seem to be forsaken of God is neglected by them Five parts in six of the earth are Heathens and Mahometanes and of the sixth part the Protestants are but about a sixth compared with the poor ignorant Abbassines Armenians Syrians the Greek Churches and the Papists to say nothing what the most of the Protestants themselves are Yet are almost all these put by with
increase the flame And Satan hath still the bellows in his hand He knoweth that if he can corrupt or win the Commander he can rout the Army and ruine them with the greatest ease It hath been Satans grand design since the Christian name was known on earth to advance the selfish interest of men against the interest of Christ and to entangle the Rulers of the world in some cause that Christ and his Word and Servants cannot favour and so to make them believe that there is a necessity on them to watch against and subdue the interest of Christ As if it were necessary that the shore be brought to the boat and not the boat to the shore And that the Physician be brought to the Patients mind or else destroyed or used as his enemy I am afraid to speak out the terrible words of God in Scripture that are against such persons lest you should misunderstand me and think I misapply them But Christ feareth no man and hath not spoken his Word in vain and his Messengers must be faithful for he will bear them out and preventive cautions are easier and safer than reprehensive corrasives I will but refer you to the texts that you may peruse them Matth. 21.44 Matth. 18.3.6 Matth. 25.40 45. Luke 18.7 Psal 2. Luke 19.27 Acts 9.4 5. 1 Thess 2.15 16. Read them with fear as the Words of God Blessed are those Rulers and Nations of the Earth that perceive and escape this pernicious snare of the grand deceiver that with all his subtilty and industry endeavoureth to breed quarrels and sow dissentions between them and the universal King The more God giveth to the carnal and unwise the more they think themselves engaged against him because by his commands he seems to take it from them again by crossing the flesh which would use it only to fulfil its lusts Like a Dog that fawneth on you till he have his bone and then snarleth at you lest you take it from him and will fly in your face if you offer to meddle with it Men readily confess that they have their wealth from God because it cannot be denyed and because they would use the name of God as a cover to hide their covetousness and unlawful waies of getting But if you judge by their usage of it and their returns to God you would think that they believed that they had nothing at all from God but some injuries and that all their benefits and good were from themselves The Turkish and Tartarian Emperour will say that all his grandeur and power is from God that by making it most Divine he may procure the more reverence and obedience to himself But when he hath said so for his own interest he useth the same power against God and his interest to the banishing of his Word and holy Worship and the forbidding the preaching of the Gospel of salvation and to the cherishing of tyranny pride and lust As if God had armed them against himself and made his Officers to be his enemies and gave them power that they might powerfully hinder mens salvation and made great to be great oppressors As a believing Pastor is a Priest that standeth between God and the people to mediate under the great Mediatour to receive from God his Word and Ordinances and deliver them to the flocks and to offer up supplications in their names to God So believing Governours of civil Societies or Families receive from God a power to rule the subjects for their good and they use it to make the subjects good that God may be pleased and honoured by all And the obedience which they require is such as may be given to God in them They take power from God to use it for God and are so much more excellent than the greatest of ambitious carnal Princes as the pleasing and honouring of God is a more excellent design and work than the gratifying of fleshly lust and the advancement of a lump of clay The Kingdoms of the world would all be used as the Kingdoms of the Lord if the everlasting Kingdom were well believed The families of men would be sanctified as Churches unto God if the eternal house not made with hands were truly taken for their home and their trade were to lay up a treasure in Heaven In Cities and Countries Brethren would dwell in holy peace and all concur in honouring God if once they were made fellow Citizens with the Saints and their Burgeship and conversation were in Heaven Ephes 2.19 Phil. 3.20 21. 6. Resist Temptations as Believers If you live by Faith then fight against the world and flesh by Faith Faith must be your helmet and the Word of Faith must be your shield Eph. 6.16 And your victory it self must be by Faith 1 Joh. 5.4 If Satan tell the flesh of the preferment riches or the pleasures of lust answer him with a believing foresight of Gods Judgement and the life to come Never look on the baits of sin alone but still look at once on God and on Eternity As a just Judge will hear both parties speak or see their evidences before he will determine So tell the Tempter that as you have heard what fleshly allurements can say you will see also what the Word of God saith and take a view of Heaven and Hell and then you will answer him 7. Rejoyce as Believers Can Faith set open the windows of the soul and no light of heavenly pleasures enter Can it peruse the Map of the Land of Promise or see and taste the bunch of Grapes without any sweetness to the soul That is the truest Belief of Heaven which maketh men likest those that are in Heaven And what is their character work and portion but the Joyes of Heavenly Light and Love Can we believe that we shall live in Heaven for ever Can we believe that very shortly we shall be there and not rejoyce in such believing I know we commonly say that the uncertainty of our proper title is the cause of all our want of joy But if that were all if that were the first and greatest cause and our belief of the promise it self were lively we should at least set our hearts on Heaven as the most delightful and desirable state and Love would work by more eager desires and diligent seekings till it had reacht assurance and cast out the hinderances of our joy How much would a meer Philosopher rejoyce if he could find out natural evidence of so much as we know by Faith You may perceive what their content in finding it would be by their exc●eding pains in seeking The unwearied studies by day and night which many of them used with the contempt of the riches and greatness of the world do tell us how glad they would have been to have seen but half so far as we may If they could but discover more clearly and certainly the principles and elements and forms of Beings the nature of spirits the causes of motion