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A97360 The works of the judicious and learned divine Dr. Thomas Taylor, part 1. sometimes preacher of Aldermanbury, London. Published by himself in his life time, in several smaller volumes, now collected together into three volumes in fol. two of which are here bound together. The first volume containing, I. An exposition on the 32. Psalm ... The second volume containing, I. An exposition of the parable of the sower and seed, on Luk. 8. ... The third volume is in the press, and will containe in it, I. The progress of sts, to full holinesse ... Taylor, Thomas, 1576-1632. 1659 (1659) Wing T560A 683,147 498

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as 1 To serve God is to reign and to be a King over the world fleshly lusts c. and to suit with Saints and Angels 2 God hereby becomes our protector maintainer and revenge● a David often prayeth Lord save thy servant teach thy servant revenge the cause of thy servant c. 3 Servants of unrighteousness meet with the wages of unrighteousness 4 All our comfort in crosses and afflictions stands in our service of God and a good Conscience or else we have none 5 To fear and keep his Commandements is the whole duty of a man and that which makes him f●lly happy Notes of a good servant of God 1 Labour to know the will of the Lord which hee hath revealed in his Word as David prayed Psal 119.125 For in the Scripture hee hath laid but our work for us and let us expect our calling to every business there let us be ready to hear not lightly absent nor present for custom but conscience 2 Let us serve him in affection and be glad to doe any thing to please him and grieve when we fail either in doing that wee should not or in not doing that we ought or not in that manner that may please the Lord. 3 Be ever imployed in his work How know I a mans servant but by his labouring in his Masters business Yee are his servant to whom yee obey Rom. 6.16 and Joh. 15. Yee are my Disciples if yee doe whatsoever I command you If I see a man spend his time in the service of sin of lusts of games pleasure the world c. I know whose servant he is certainly he is not in the service of God hee is not in Gods work 4 Intend thy Lords profit and glory A good servant knows his time and strength is his Masters and hee must bee profitable to him and seek his credit It will be with every servant of Christ as with Onesimus Phileus 11. being converted howsoever before grace he were so unprofitable and pilfering as he was unfit for any honest mans house and much more the house of God yet now he profits the Lord and credits him and takes not his meat and drink and wages for nothing 5 A good servant sets forward his Masters work in others hee will provoke his fellow-servants and not smite and hinder them as the evil servant did he will defend his Lord he will venture his life for him he will stand also for his fellow-servants while they are in their Masters business he will be a law to himself if there were no Law no Discipline he will not idle out his time his eye is upon the eye of his Master his mind upon his account his endeavour to please him in all things Vers 11. Then the Devil left him and behold the Angels came and ministred unto him HAving by the assistance of God now finished the two former general parts of this whole History which stood in the 1 Preparation and 2 The combate it self we proceed to the third and last which is the issue and event of all which affordeth us the sweet fruit and comfort of all our Saviours former sufferings from Satan and of our labours and endeavours in opening the same In this issue two parts are to bee considered 1 Christs victory 2 His triumph His victory and conquest in that the Devil left him His triumph in that the Angels came and ministred unto him In both which shine out notably the marks of his Divine power which even in all his lowest abasements did discover it self to such eyes as could see it and gave shew of a person far above all that his outward presence seemed to promise as for example His conception was by the Holy Ghost His birth as mean and base as might be but graced with a Star and the testimony of Angels and his Circumcision with Simeons His Baptism performed by John in Jordan but graced by his Fathers testimony and the Spirits descent in a visible shape of a Dove His civil obedience causeth him to pay tribute but hee sends for it to a Fish His person was called Beelzebub but Beelzebub confesseth him to be the Son of God At his Passion what greater infamy than to be hanged between two Theeves What greater glory than to convert and save one of them At his apprehension they that took him fell backward to the ground Joh. 18.6 In death he trod upon Deaths neck and being shut up in the Grave he opened it So here he is carried and recarried in the hands of the Devil but as one weary of his burden hee is forced to leave him on the plain field and to give up the bucklers because a stronger than hee is come This is the great mystery of God manifest in the flesh 1 Timothy 3.16 In the victory of Christ consider three things 1 The time when the Devil left him Then 2 The manner hee departed from him 3 How long hee left him and that is in Luke for a season Then This particle may have reference to three things 1 When the temptations were ended saith Luke namely all those which his Father had appointed him to indure at this time in the Wilderness For as the Son of God knew how much to suffer so Satan would not give over till hee had spent all his powder and had exercised all his malice in these most hellish Temptations wherein hee used all his skill strength and malice if he might possibly in this seed of the woman overthrow all the Sons of men and in the Head kill all the members Whence wee may Doct. Observe The obedience of the Son of God who stood out resolutely and departed not the field at all nor expected any rest till all the Temptations for this time were ended Christ could have confounded Satan in the beginning of the temptations and so have freed himself from further molestation but he continues and abides all the trial to the end And why Reason 1 His love to his Father made him submit himself to the lowest abasement even to the death of the Cross and refuse no difficult service for which his Father sent him into the World of which this was a principal The speech of David was most proper to this Son of David Behold here am I let the Lord do with mee even as hee will In his greatest agony hee said Not my will but thy will be done For he that loveth God his Commandements are not grievous to him 2 His love to his Church made him stand out the uttermost peril in this dangerous combate Eph. 5.25 Christ loved his Church 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and exposed himself for it and made himself liable to all wrongs and dangers for it as a loving Husband steps between his Wife and danger 3 Hee persisted in the Combate to teach us to hold out after his example in temptation and to expect freedome from temptation when wee have indured all but not before It is absurd to expect the
quiet enough till God set him apart to deliver his Brethren and after that hee was never at quiet The like may bee said of David an eminent type of Christ while hee kept his fathers sheep hee was at rest but if hee will set upon Goliah and bee annointed King by Samuel let him look to himself Saul will hunt him like a Partridge and so narrowly espy his haunts that himself will say hee must surely one day fall by the hand of Saul Zech. 3.1 when Jehoshuah the High Priest another type of Christ commeth to stand before the Lord in his service the Devil commeth and standeth at his right hand to resist him The Apostle Paul so long as hee was of the strict sect of the Pharisees hee was highly esteemed and lived quiet enough but when hee became an elect vessel to carry the Gospel among the Gentiles then hee was tryed and buffeted now hee knows that bonds and imprisonment abide him every where 2 Cor. 7.5 6.5 1 Satans hostility against God and his glory and the means of it Reasons forceth him to hinder whatsoever may further Gods Kingdome and hinder his own While the Prisoner is in fetters under bars and bolts the Jailor sleeps quietly and while the strong man keeps the hold all is in peace but disturb him a little and you shall hear of him Hence it is that the more weighty any calling is and the more conscionably a man sets himself to discharge it which wee see in Christ himself the more vigilantly doth Satan watch to hinder it Reach once at Satans head and hee will surely reach as high as hee may at thine 2 This is not without the good providence of God who hereby will prove his servants to whom hee will commit some special work whether they will shrink or no hee will have them also to have good proof and trial of his strength and faithfulnesse in supporting them that they may the better commit themselves unto him in time to come who hath upheld them formerly and go on undaunted in constant walking with him through the experience of his goodness 3 God seeth though Satans malice blindeth him that his children without such strong trials should not bee so fitted for his service It is a training of them to great employments and makes them not onely more expert in themselves but also far more able to help others in any kinde God would not exempt his natural and only Son from temptations that hee might know how to help others that are tempted Heb. 2.18 nor the Apostles for the same end 2 Cor. 1.4 6. Use 1 All sorts of men the more they set themselves to glorify God in their places the more they should expect trialls A Christian can no sooner give his name unto Christ nor the Spirit descend upon him but Satan with all his malice will assault him Christ was no sooner baptised but hee must go forth to bee exercised with Satan and his Members also who not onely by outward profession but inward sincerity also make a league with God to renounce Satan sin and this evil world shall not want all the molestation that Satan can create them Rev. 12. the red Dragon watcheth for the Child to bee born to devour it and such is his malice Whom Sat●● cannot 〈◊〉 in the end● which is sal●●tion bee w● trouble the● in the way● that whom hee cannot hinder of Salvation hee will hinder of their peace and joy as much as hee can if hee cannot chase vertue out of the world hee can disgrace it and if he cannot quite hinder all good proceedings hee will by molestation delay them as long as hee may Hee is subtile if hee cannot do the greatest evil that hee would hee will do the lesser that hee may as by Sanballat hee did hinder the re-edifying of the Temple The condition of the child of God is military in this life Hee hath Satan and all his Army of wicked ones mortal foes against him Many deceive themselves who mean to profess Religion so long onely as they may injoy peace and credit and the applause of the world so long as they may see Christ with a golden crown and scepter and follow him into Jerusalem with Hosanna But they have not cast their accounts right nor weighed the difficulties of sound profession of Christ and therefore like the foundation of the foolish builder when winds and floods rise they fall down right with shame they forsake Christ and religion and all they look back and run back to the filthinesse of the world they embrace a course which standeth with their own ease but never shall they have the honor of honouring God or of effecting any thing which shall bring God true praise and themselves true peace It will bee the wisdome therefore of every Christian undertaking any commendable action so to look and begin with God that ever hee have another eye upon Satan and his malice both to expect it and resolve not to bee beaten off for it Shall the Israelites being set out of Egypt run back again because Pharaoh pursues them no but hye them more hastily away Shall I give ●●er my profession because the greatest part of men hate and reproach it no I must see Satans old malice renewed who casts a flood of poysoned water against Christ himself who should not avoid the same measure of obloquie and reproach if hee lived again upon earth Was it thus with the green tree it is no marvail then if it bee so with a dry Shall I neglect my duty to which God and good conscience ties mee A wise Christian may stop the mouth of Satan but never his malice because I would not displease men and bee thought no medler then farewel Gods glory if I go about to stop the Devils mouth which if I could yet I shall never stop his malice Use 2 The more publike a mans calling is the more doth Satan aim at him to cast him down who doth conscionably intend it as for example 1 The Magistrate Satans chief aim is against Chief●●in● in Church and Common-wealth Satan stirs up David to number the people 1 Chron. 21.1 2 The Minister being the Lords standerd-bearer the Devil seeks to winno● him especially and begges leave to bee a lying spirit in the mouths of four hundred false Prophets at once And both these because God hath specially instituted these callings for the beating down of Satans Kingdome and lifting up the Scepter of Christ and again if Satan can foil the Leaders the bands are soon overcome smite the Shepheard and the sheep will bee scattered cast down Cedars and they will crush many shrubs with their fall Hence must both these bee more careful of themselves than ordinary men as being in greater danger as men set upon steep and slippery hills beset with enemies to cast them down And the less that men see these oppositions the less service do they to God or his
but seeing he who is thy head is in Heaven thou that art a member of him must be there also And as Christ while hee continued upon earth after his resurrection lived a kind of supernatural and heavenly life so if thou be risen with him thou livest not the life of nature but hast begun the life of grace and an heavenly conversation Quest But how shall I know whether I live by this heavenly life or no Heavenly life disce●n●d by two notes Ans There be two special notes to discern this truth by the former is the dissimilitude and opposition which it hath with the life of sinful natural men upon earth the latter is the similitude and agreement it hath with the life of Saints and glorified men in heaven Concerning the former ● In the matters of this life the Natural man will follow and pursue things which tend to a sensual and natural life he will beat his brains for gold and silver meat and cloth goods and lands for himself and his as for Heaven he will have nothing to doe there till he be dead and for the way thither hee cateth not to know it till he be dying at the soonest But the Spiritual man hee coveteth after Spiritual things the power of Christs Spirit where it is present will lift up his heart be it never so heavie to seek the Kingdom and the righteousnesse or it and hee seeketh after the wisdome of God as for gold and treasures he accounteth of the graces of faith love hope humility and the fear of the Lord above all pearls and precious things he provideth for himself and his the food that perisheth not and thinketh h●mself warmly and comely arrayed when he hath put on the Lord Jesus Christ as knowing that only the garment of his righteousnesse can fence him from all the injury of wind and weather The Natural man doth not more seriously listen after great purchases of Lands and Fields as he doth cast with himself to purchase the pearl hid in the field for which he will sell himself as we say into his shirt nay and further how own self liberty life and if he had any thing dearer than that The Spiritual man as for the things of this life if he have them not hee wanteth not his portion If he have them his care is that they have not him or become his portion If riches increase he setteth not his heart upon them If they decrease his heart faileth not with them In abundance he carrieth himself warily and weanedly In want cheerfully and contentedly The things hee hath he useth as not using them the things hee hath not hee knoweth he hath no good use of them or else he should have them And thus as the Natural man bestirreth himself and all his motion tendeth to the bettering of his outward estate at home so contrarily doth an heavenly-minded man accounting himself from home while he is here in the body bend his chief care to settle his estate at home in heaven and all his trading and converse in this strange Country tendeth to the enriching of him in his own Country Further if we look to the Natural mans course in the matter of his religion we shall see as great difference between them For it is clear 2 In the matters of religion that whereas matters of religion are a burthen to the one they are the joy of the other The one as heavie to pray to hear to read and meditate on the Word and of his own estate as a Bear to the stake if Law of shame or some such by-respect moved him not if were all one to him to bee on his Horse-back as in the Church the other would account his life tedious were it not for these meetings of God and his people in the assemblies and those sweet refreshments they bring back from thence The one if he pray sometimes in publick hee maketh little conscience of private prayer in his family and so of other private duties to which God and a good conscience would bind him as straight as to the former The other walketh wisely and religiously in the midst of his house and preserveth the worship of God at home and maketh his house a little Church and house of God The one maketh little or no conscience of such sins as either in comparison of other or in his own corrupt conceit are smaller sins such as are inferior oathes idlenesse gaming sins of omission idle words of hurtful unclean or wandring thoughts words he thinketh to be but wind if he mean no hurt and if he mean hurt but doe none thoughts are free As for the sins of the time he will not be so undiscreet as to swim against the stream hee is here violently carried without resistance into a gulf of known evils and all is well he doth but as others doe and it were worse for him if hee did not The other maketh conscience of all sin lesser sins and secret sins hee can hate all even those which he cannot avoyd hee hateth the evil that himself doth and willingly will not displease God though all men bee therefore offended with him To conclude this point the one seeketh to appprove himself unto man the other to approve his heart to God because he knoweth he made it and knoweth what is in it And this shall serve for a tast of the opposite disposition between Natural and Spiritual life Agreement which it hath with the life of the Saints in Heaven in two things II. The second note to discern this heavenly life by is the similitude or agreement which it hath with the life of the Saints in heaven For the life of the Saints in Heaven must be a counterpane of the beleevers upon earth to which they must be daily framed in sundry regards 1 In respect of the things they are called from 2 In respect of the things they are called unto 1 The Saints in Heaven are called from three things 1 The world it self 2 The corruptions that are in the world through lust 3 The company of the wicked of the world Even so must beleevers in the world in their degree and measure carry themselves as those that are chosen out of the world and such as are bought from the earth Rev. 14.3 medling no more wich earthly things than needs must enjoying them so as they joy no more in them than in things which are not their own but borrowed only for a time using them so as they abuse them not because they are to be countable for them abiding in them earthly businesse and callings What the Saints are called from in three things so as they be never earthly minded in one word so desiring pursuing having holding and parting from the profits of this life as those to whom God hath shewed better things than any below yea and esteeming of their present life it self so indifferently as that they can account the day of their
must labour to espye Satans suggestion in it together with our own inclinations to swallow down all such temptations and forthwith to cast our eyes upon such Scriptures as may bee back-biasses to our natural motion Satan alloweth his servants stones for bread Vse 3. Note the cold comfort that Satan affords his followers when they need bread hee offers them stones as with Christ here Matth. 7.9 What man is there among you that if his Son ask him bread will give him a stone as if hee had said No Father that loveth his childe can bee so unnatural but Satan who cannot but bee an unnatural murtherer here for bread offers the Son of God a stone It is clean otherwise between God and his children for if Fathers which are evil can give good things to their children much more our heavenly Father giveth good things to them that ask him even things according to their need Your heavenly father knoweth that yee stand in need of all these things If they have need of Christ the bread of life he gives them this bread of life If they need the Holy Ghost hee gives the Holy Ghost to them that ask him that is not only beginnings of grace but increase of it in greater measure and a comfortable feeling and fruition If they need temporal mercies he gives them more than they ask as Salomon yea above all they are able to ask or think VVho would not think himself happy to bee Gods favourite rather than stand to the Devils wages who for bread will reach him stones Use 4. The way to get bread Gods way to get bread contrary to the Devils in three things is not at the Devils appointment to turn stones into bread or use unlawful means but 1 To fear and serve the Lord Exod. 23.25 If thou wilt serve the Lord thy God he shall bless thy bread and thy water the good land and all the fruits of it were promised to the Israelites so long as they were Homagers to God no good thing shall be wanting to such Psal 34.10 If we serve him we shall never need turn stones into bread even as Christ here did not who refusing Satans offer was refreshed of the Angels 2 To live in an honest and lawful trade of life painfully Gods ordinance is that in the sweat of thy brows thou must get thy bread the earth brings not forth so naturally now as at first yet at first Adam must Till the ground 3 In our lawful Calling to depend upon Gods blessing which maketh rich leaving all the success to God and this will make us content with that estate which God maketh our portion by good means Vers 4. But hee answering said It is written Man liveth not by bread only but by every word that proceedeth out of the mouth of God IN this answer of our Saviour repelling the Tempter four things are to bee considered 1 The manner 2 The affection negative But. 3 The matter of it a testimony of Scripture It is written 4 The parts of this testimony 1 Negative Man lives not by bread only 2 Affirmative but by every word that proceedeth out of the mouth of God The manner and quality of the answer appears in the whole answer that it was 1 A reasonable 2 A meek 3 A modest answer First it was a reasonable answer our Lord did not shake off the Temper without an answer though he deserved none but to shew that hee did not refuse the motion of a wilful mind but upon just ground he makes him a sufficient answer whence our Saviour would teach us that Doct. If we be to deal with our most deadly adversaries Christi●● must be reas●●able to most ●nreasonable ●dversaries Reasons suppose them as malicious as Satan to Christ yet we must doe nothing nor speak nothing of a wilful mind but take the guide of reason and the ground of conscience with us For 1 The will of man not ordered by reason is like a wilde Colt without a Rider most untamed and untractable most hateful to God and most hurtful to men and a note of man reserved to the Judgement of the Great Day to bee punished is to bee presumptuous and stand in his own conceit 2 Pet. 2.10 2 Reasonable men must have reason for their actions at the least for herein is a difference between the beasts and men they are lead by sense and appetite but men by reason from which if men depart they degenerate into beasts being lead with sensuality 2 Pet. 2 1● 3 Our Saviours example carrieth us further that we should not only bee lead by reason in our affairs but by reason sanctified and renewed reason directed by the word and this not only here but in all his course of life Mar. 10 40. when he refused the unreasonable request of the Sons of Zebedeus hee gave a just reason saying It is not mine to give but shall bee given to them for whom it is prepared I must not give the chief seats in my Kingdom according to kindred and affection but according to my Fathers election When he rebuked Peter and called him Satan he giveth a reason for such unwonted sharpness For thou art an offence unto me thou savourest not the things of God thou wouldest hinder mans Redemption and Satan could have done no more Matth. 16.23 Acts 1.7 when the Disciples would know of Christ at his ascension when he would restore the Kingdom to Israel he denies their request and gives a reason It is not for you to know this my father hath put times and seasons in his own power yee have another task to bee witnesses to me c. intend this look to your Apostleship Vse This reproves the frowardness and unreasonable wilfulness of men and especially in their dealings with their adversaries taking violent courses not respecting conscience religion nor reason it self but standing upon their will and saying This I will doe let see who shall hinder me and let him undoe it if he can Now perswade this man Oh but let not passion guide you but shew your self a man cast away this impotent and womanish reason to such as are bruitishly destitute of reason I will because I will No hee is an enemy to all your perswasion his will out-runs his wit and reason his lust is his law his conscience and his religion But if any thing can reclaime such a man if he be not rather an Heathen than a Christian let him set Christs example here before him who would not be wilful without reason to the Devil himself in a most devillish motion and wilt thou to thy brother to thy neighbour yea to thy wife children c. Either set thy self to walk in thy Lords steps or get thee another Master Five reasons of Christs meekness to Satan Secondly this answer of Christ was a most meek answer Christ was omnipotent able with a book to have confounded the Devil hee might by his power have driven him back
unlesse hee were madd neither is it charity nor humanity to take money for a duty the nature of which is to bee free Charity seeks not her own and much less other mens but of these sorts of wicked men the speech is true Their mercies are cruel As charitable as that Usurer is so conscionable is hee that follows His conscience will not suffer him to take above the law not above ten in the hundred and that he hopes he may according to the wholesome laws of the Land Answ Where were his conscience if the Law of King Edward the sixth were revived whereby it was utterly forbidden according to the Canon of Gods Word and the ancient Canons of the Church but for the Statute now in force enacted Eliz. 13. c. 8. 1 I say it alloweth no usury but punisheth the excess of it 2 The title of the Act is An Act against Usury How then is it for it 3 It calleth usury a detestable sin how then can it secure thy conscience 4 All usury above ten in the hundred is punishable by the forfeit of the usury 5 What if the Laws of men should permit what Gods Law condemns is it not plain that this conscionable man flyeth Gods law to shelter his sin under mans as though the Laws of man were the rule of conscience and not Gods laws or as if the law of an inferiour can dispense with the law of the superiour or as if Moses permitting one evil in the Jews namely the putting away of their wives for preventing a greater did allow thereof or warrnnted the sin to the conscience of the hard-hearted Husband Wee conclude then that the Usurer lives not by any word of God but against it And to these adde the bands of this sin the Brokers to Usurers that live or raise gains by letting out other mens mony I will say no more to them but if hee bee shut out of heaven that lends his money to usury be shall hardly get in that is his Agent And humane Laws condemn theeves and accessaries It is a Statute of Henry the 7. Anno. 3. that all such Brokers for usury shall pay for every default twenty pounds and suffer half a years imprisonment and bee brought to the open shame of the Pillory It is just with God that Saul and his armour-bearer should fall together and dye on their own swords IV. Such live not by any word of God as encroach upon the Sabbaths of God by labouring either in themselves or in their servants as 1 by buying or selling wares Neh. 13.18 2 By works of the six daies whether in harvest or caring time Exod. 16.29 34.21 Neh. 13.15 3 by travelling for gain or pleasure For the Sabbath was made for our spiritual profit it is a day to give and collect almes and not gain Manna it self must not bee gathered on the Sabbath much lesse must more ignoble sustenance if it bee sought it shall not bee sound Object 1 May I not do a little to set forward my work for the beginning of the week Answ No Manna might not bee sought though early in the morning and though it was but a little way off and required little labour Object 2 May I not take a fair day when it comes the weather being uncertain and catching Ans Thou mayest as well say May I not take a purse when it comes wilt thou bee a theef and rob God of his due Should not ill weather and Gods judgements rather force thee to Repentance and obedience than to sin Object 3 It lies me upon a bond my estate and many poor men depend upon mee Answ First pay thy bond to God saith and obedience never brought losse with it and better were it to loose a little commodity than Gods favour and a good Conscience nothing is so heavy as Gods curse for this sin V. Common Gamesters and such as make a gain of play live not by any word of God it is a common theft and they come directly under the eight Commandement and that Precept of the Apostle Eph. 4.28 Let him that stole steal no more but rather labour with his hands And as they live out of a calling so their course is an unjust taking into their possession that which no law of God or man doth warrant them by any manner of lawful contract See August Epist 54. and the Civil law and Fathers condemn that gain which is gotten by play In the same rank of theeves are they that live by keeping dice-houses or gaming houses and such places of lewd resort Use 4. Let us take some rules whereby wee may comfortably pass our lives according to Gods Word and avoid all these sins against it There are three 1 Concerning our calling 2 our states 3 Our maintenance of life The first Rule concerning our Calling is this The carriage of our calling according to Gods Word is a special part of that word of God by which man must live Quest How may I carry my calling according to Gods word Answ By these means 1 Wee must make choice of such callings for our selves and ours as bee profitable for the Church or Common-wealth there bee many vain and new-fangled inventions which rather maintain sin than bring any good to the Church or Common-wealth But God therefore bestoweth variety of gifts to furnish men to the variety of callings all for the common and every ones private good 2 Seeing not the having of a Calling but the right use of it glorifieth God wee must use our callings with the practice of sundry vertues 1 In faith and obedience to God Faith makes our persons obedience makes our actions approved of God yea every duty of our calling ought to bee an obedience of faith looking at the commandement and promise the Commandement keeps us within the compass of our callings the promise secureth us of good success A good action not warranted by a calling is sin 2 In diligence not wilfully neglecting but serving and redeeming the means of Gods providence Every man must abide in his calling and keep him in his way for so long hee is sure to bee provided for thus bee avoides idleness and destruction and maintains the order and rank wherein God hath set him 3 In cheerfulness not carking or excessively careful but doing the labour and leaving all the success to God Some are heart-lesse in their calling because it brings in so little profit and return and labour as the Oxe who must go out his journey but without cheerfulnesse or heart which God looks for in all our duties Such should consider 1 That Callings were not onely ordained to get money but help us cheerfully through our way and contain us in a course wherein to please God 2 That the goodnesse and worth of a calling is not to bee measured by that profit it brings in to us but by the publike benefit and as it is rightly used God may bee served as well in the basest as in