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A01894 Aggravation of sinne and sinning against knowledge. Mercie. Delivered in severall sermons upon divers occasions. By Tho: Goodvvin B.D. Goodwin, Thomas, 1600-1680. 1637 (1637) STC 12033; ESTC S103262 74,779 150

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life and he thought he might also have presently been brought to the barre with him if he had beene discovered to have been his Disciple so as his passion being up his soule was distempered reason had little time to recover it selfe and therefore though it was against knowledge yet the lesse against knowledge because knowledge had laesam operationem it had not its perfect worke upon his heart but now Iudas in betraying his Master had not onely warning before but was not tempted to it but went of himselfe and made the offer to the Pharisees sought how conveniently to doe it plotted to doe it had his wits about him had time to think of it and therefore it was besides the hainousnesse of the act more also against knowledge and so the greater So David when he went to slay Nabal was in hot blood in a passion but when hee plotted to kill Vriah he was in cold blood he was drunke when he lay with Bathsheba but sober when hee made Vriah drunke hee went quietly and sedately on in it And therefore we find David blamed onely in the matter of Vriah not so much for that of Bathsheba Secondly the more sorrow renisus or reluctancie and regreeting of mind there is against a sinne 't is a sign that the knowledge of it is the stronger and quicker against it and so the sinne the more against knowledge for that gaine-saying and displeasure of the minde against it ariseth from the strength and violent beating of the pulse of conscience and opposition of it against the sinne it springs from the greater and deeper apprehension of the evill of the sinne in the action which is then in doing and though that reluctancie be a better signe of the estate of the person than if there were none at all as there is not in those who are past feeling commit sin with greedinesse whose estate is therefore worse and more uncapable of repentance yet the fact it self is argued to be the more hainous for it argues it to be against strong active stirring knowledge This argued Herods sinne to be much against knowledge as indeed it was Mark 6. 26. the text sayes he was exceeding sorrowfull now that he could not have beene unlesse he had exceedingly apprehended what a great sinne it was to behead Iohn who he knew was a just and an holy man ver 20. and who was one that had a great place in his estimation for he observed him and was wrought much upon by his ministerie and he knew that he did but sacrifice him to the malice of a wicked woman and in this case the sinne is also hereby made so much the greater in that Conscience doth stir up a contrary violent passion in the heart against the temptation and therefore yet to doe it when there is such a bank cast up that might resist it yet then to break all downe such a sin wasts the conscience much Thirdly on the contrary the more hardnesse of heart there is and want of tendernesse in committing that sinne which a man knowes to be a sinne it is argued thereby to be the greater sinne against knowledge not onely the greater sinne but the greater sinne against knowledge For hardnesse of heart in sinning is an effect of having formerly sinned much against knowledge before For as the light of the Sun hardneth clay so the beames of knowledge and conscience lighting upon mens hearts use to harden them and doe make them in the end past feeling And therefore in 1 Tim. 4. 2. sinning against knowledge is made the cause of a seared conscience they speak lyes in Hypocrisie and therefore knowingly that they are lyes and such lyes as damne others as well as themselves which who beleeve are damned 2 Thes 2. 11 12. and if so no wonder if it followes having their Consciences seared with an hot iron It is not a cold iron will seare their consciences and make them insensible but an hot iron a burning and a shining light which once having had place in their consciences and being rejected they begin to be hardned and seared For knowledge makes sinnes and the apprehensions of them familiar to a man and so lesse terrible and frightfull in the end as Beares and Lyons doe become to their keepers through custome Iudas had a hard heart when he came to betray his Master surely his conscience had smitten him at first more for nimming out of the bag than it did now for this of murder He could never have had such a hard heart had he not had much knowledge was it not a hard heart that when he was challenged to his face hee could set a brazen face on it and did aske as well as the rest Is it I when also Christ cursed him to his face who should doe it and the Disciples all abhorr'd it had not Iudas lived under such blessed and glorious meanes and sinned long against knowledge all this would have startled him and have staggered in his purpose but he goes on as if it were nothing though when he had done it his conscience was then opened too late when a man formerly hath beene troubled with a small sinne more than now with a grosse lye which he can digest better than once the other or when before if he omitted praying it troubled him now he can goe a weeke without and is not sensible of it it is a signe that his knowledge hath hardned him Thus having given such rules whereby you may estimate the sinfulnesse of particular acts I will now proceed to other wayes aggravations taken from the kind of knowledge a man sins against to sin against what kind of knowledge is most hainous and dangerous and these are five drawn from the severall qualifications of that knowledge and the light which men sinne against For the greater or the more strong efficacious the light and knowledge is the greater is the sinne of knowledge thou committest and this I make a third generall head to explaine this doctrine by All these five rules being applicable and common both to particular acts against knowledge and also lying in an estate of impenitencie against knowledge and all other particulars which have beene mentioned First then to sinne against the inbred light of nature that is in such sinnes as though thou hadst wanted the light of the word in thou wouldst have knowne to be such This is a high kind of sinning Such the Apostle speaks of Iude 10. What things they know naturally in these they corrupt themselves as bruit beasts putting as it were no difference of actions no more than beasts no not in what nature teacheth them and therefore therein are as beasts for it is the light of nature puts the first difference betweene men and beasts and in such kinde of sinnes the Apostle instanceth in this first Chapter as namely that of unnaturall uncleannesse in three particulars as 1. self-uncleannesse ver 24. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉
1. What it is to sin against knowledg explained 49 1. Distinction To sinne with knowledge and against knowledge doe differ ibid. A regenerate man guilty of more sins knowne than another ibid. Yet not of more sins against knowledge 50 2. Distinction Men sin against knowledge either objectively or circumstantially only 51 1. What it is to sinne directly against knowledge ibid. 2. What to sinne against knowledge circumstantially onely ibid. This distinction explained out of this Chap. ibid. Sinnes directly against knowledge reduced to two heads 52 1. In regard of our selves 5. wayes ibid. 1. When we abuse knowledg to help us to sin ib. 3. Wayes 1. To plot and contrive sin 2. To colour sins committed by lyes 3. To colour sins by pretence of religion and use their knowledg of religion to plead for and justifie their sin ibid. 2. When men neglect to get knowledge that might preserve them from sinning 53 3. When men refuse knowledge that they may sin more freely 55 4. Is to hate the light and to endevour to extinguish it 55 5. When men hold opinions ag their consciences 57 2. Men sin directly against knowledge it selfe in respect of others 58 1. By concealing knowledge ibid. 2. Men indevor to suppresse knowledg in others ib. 3. When men go about to make others sin against their consciences 59 2. Generall Branch Sins committed collaterally or circumstantially against knowledge 60 It is done 1. Either in particular acts of sinning or 2. In continuing in an estate of sinning against knowledge ibid. Particular instances being infinite 61 A distinction is given concerning them ibid. 1. Some sins more transient ibid. 2. Some more permanent and continued untill recalled though but once committed ibid. Which are of all other most dangerous to commit when against knowledge 62 2. Going on in a sinfull estate against knowledge ibid. Three sorts of men thus sin 1. Such as for worldly ends forbear to professe Christ and his wayes which they know to be such 63 2. Those that defer repentance 65 3. Apostate Professors goe on in an estate of sinning against knowledge ibid. Application 67 2. Head Rules whereby to estimate sins against knowledge 68 Of two sorts before sinning or in sinning 69 1. Before sinning 3. Rules 1. The more a man considers the issues and consequents of a sin ibid. 2. The more consultation and debates before 70 3. The more testimonies and warnings against a sin 71 2. Rules to measure the sinfulnesse of such acts in sinning 3. 73 1. The lesse passion or temptation to a sinne against knowledge ibid. 2. The more inward regreet and sorow reluctancy the stronger is the knowledg so more against it 75 3. The more hardnesse of heart in committing a sin known to be a sin the greater the sin as it is a sin against knowledge 76 3. Head Aggravations drawn from the kind of that knowledge we sin against which are five 77 The more strong the knowledg the greater the sin 78 1. To sin against the inbred light of nature ibid. 2. To sin against the light of education 80 3. The more real experimental light men sin against 82 4. The more shining the light is in the conscience joyned with a taste the greater the sin 83 5. To sin against professed knowledge 85 How great an ingagement and motive it is to men of knowledg to turn to God and to take heed of sinning 87 1. Such an one cannot sin so cheap as others their sins are more castly and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ibid. And will have lesse pleasure in sinning ibid. 2. Such are given up to greater hardnesse of heart 88 3. Such God gives up to the worst grossest of sins ibid. 4. At death knowledge sinned against gives up to more horror and dispaire 89 5. In hell it increaseth torment 90 FINIS AGGRAVATIONS OF SINNING AGAINST KNOWLEDGE ROM 1. 21. Because that when they knew God they glorified him not as God neither were thankfull but became vaine in their imaginations and their foolish heart was darkned THere are two generall aggravations the Apostle insists on in these two Chapters of the Gentiles sinfulnesse First their unthankfulnesse ver 21. in despising the riches of Gods goodnesse Chap. 2. 4. Secondly of Rebellion in sinning against knowledge That when they knew him they glorified him not as God And of all other hee inculcateth this of sinning against knowledge as the greatest for bringing in a long large and particular indictment of many severall sinnes Idolatry ver 23. unnaturall uncleannesse ver 26. c. and all kinds of unrighteousnesse ver 29. hee doth both in the beginning and end of the bill bring in this aggravation that they sinned against knowledge in all these So ver 18. he begins the indictment and promulgation of Gods wrath above all for this that they with-held the truth in unrighteousnesse which was as much as all that unrighteousnesse committed barely in it selfe considered And then again in the end when hee comes to pronounce sentence he comes in with this after all particulars had beene reckoned up Who knowing the judgement of God against those which doe such things yet doe them So that this Doctrine is cleare from hence That to sinne against knowledge either in omitting good duties which we know we ought to performe or committing of sinnes we know wee ought not to doe is the highest aggravation of sinfulnesse I put both in both sinnes of omission and commission for so the particular sinnes the Gentiles are taxed for here are of both sorts as not glorifying or worshipping God as well as turning his glory into a lye c. to omit prayer when your consciences tell you you ought to doe it to omit holy discourse examining the heart when you know you ought to doe them are as well sinnes against knowledge as to tell a lie against your knowledge or as to steale and forsweare or murder or be drunke c. Now when I say it is an aggravation to these sinnes my meaning is this That take any sinne thou thinkest most grosse and view it barely in the act of it put the act nakedly in the one scale be it a sinne of uncleannesse or drunkennesse and then put this circumstance which was added to it in the other scale that before and when thou diddest it thou knewest it to be a sinne this alone weighs as much yea more than the sinne it selfe doth that as it is said of Herod that he added this to all his other sinnes that he cast Iohn in prison who told him of his Herodias and so is made as much as all his former sinnes so is this brought in here that in and unto all their unrighteousnesse this was added they with-held the truth the light of their consciences which is as a Prophet from God they did imprison in unrighteousnesse ver 18. And therefore when Daniel would convince Balshazzar of his deservednesse to lose his Kingdome and that he was not
good pretences to cover their sins and dissemble them not onely by finding out some cunning artificiall colour as David did in the matter of Vriah Chance of warre sayes he falls to all alike but when men are so impudently hypocriticall as to make use of religious pretexts as the Devill sometimes doth as Saul who pretends to Samuel I have done the will of the Lord and when Samuel told him of the cattell oh sayes he they are for a sacrifice when God had expresly commanded to kill them all But this shift shifted him out of his Kingdome Samuel pronounceth him a rebell in it Rebellion is sinne against knowledge therefore he knew it Thus also Iezabel coloured over the stoning of Naboth with a solemne fast So Iudas fisheth for money with a charitable pretence This might have beene sold and given to the poore In sins against knowledge usually the mind indevours to find out a colour and that provokes God more than the sinne because we goe about to mock him We see men cannot endure a shift much lesse the All-knowing God not to be mocked and we see it is hard to convince such an one David was faine to be brought to the rack ere he would confesse when he had a shift and men doe seeke such shifts onely in case of sinning against conscience for else there were no need they would be sure to plead ignorance as Abimelech did Secondly when men neglect the getting and obtaining of knowledge which knowledge might keep hinder them frō sinning and might make them expert in duties This is as much as to sin against knowledge although the sins be committed out of ignorance yet that ignorance being through their owne default it comes all to one when it may be said of men as the Apostle doth of the Hebrewes Chap. 5. 12. That for the time they have had to learn they might have beene teachers they had yet need be taught againe the first principles If a man had an Apprentice who through negligence and want of heeding and observing what hee daily sees and heares about his trade might have got for his time much knowledge in his trade whereby he might have saved his master much which hee now hath lost him and rid and perfected much worke hee daily spoiles him such carelesse blockish ignorance it is just for his master to correct him for and to charge on him all that waste and losse because he might have knowne how to have done better And therefore even they who thought ignorance in it selfe no sin wherein they erred yet the neglect of knowledge upon this very ground they thought a great sinne and that it would be so farre from excusing sinnes as that it would aggravate them So here we see these Gentiles shall not onely be reckoned with for the actuall knowledge they had attained to and sinned against but also for what they might have had and have picked out of the creatures For so the Apostle brings in this here in the 20. verse that the power of God being cleerly seen in the creatures they neglecting to spell and reade it so much knowledg as they might have got God will reckon to them and aggravate their sins by Thirdly which is yet much worse when men refuse knowledge that they may sinne the more freely and doe stop the eare lest they should be charmed As when men are loath and afraid and dare not reade such a booke as discovers or might discover that truth to them the submission to which would prejudice them and this to the end that they may plead ignorance of their sinne Thus also those that assent not to truth when it comes in strongly upon them but seek to evade it But 1 Cor. 14. 38. when the Apostle had cleerely discovered the truth in those things controverted so as who ever was spirituall or not fully blind might see and would acknowledge the truth then he shuts up his discourse about them ver 27. If any be ignorant let him be ignorant for it is wilfull it is affected hee speakes it as elsewhere Revel last it is said He that is unjust let him be unjust still that is hee that will be unjust and refuseth to turne let him goe on This is a great sinne for God you see gives such a man over one that is but neglectfull or dull of capacity God will take paines with him to teach him and beare with him as Christ did with his Disciples but if he be wilfully ignorant he lets him die in his ignorance and yet will reckon with him as if all his sinnes had beene committed against knowledge because hee refused to know The fourth is to hate the light and to endevour to extinguish it This is yet much worse when men hate the Word and the Ministers of it the examples of Gods people and the light they carry with them they shining as lights in a crooked generation Phil. 2. 15. and yet they hate these as theeves doe a torch in the night and fly against the light as batts doe and as the Iewes did Iohn 3. 20. This Christ sayes is the great condemning sinne of all others So these Gentiles put Socrates to death for reproving them And thus men sinne also when they labour to extinguish the light in their owne consciences and like not to retaine God in their knowledge verse 28. but would studie the art of forgetfulnesse When men have put the candle out and drawne the curtaines that they may sinne and sleepe in sin more freely and securely Thus those also sin in a higher measure who have had a cleare conviction that they ought to be thus strict and ought to sanctifie the Lords day and pray privately but now have lost this light and think they need not be so strict when men continue not in what they were once assured of as the Apostle speaks 2 Tim. 3. 14. these sinne against their knowledge and are the worst of such sinners and this estate Aristotle himselfe makes statum maligni the state of a wicked one namely when the sparkes of light are extinguisht or hated For when any mans light is lost and turned into darknesse by sinning then as Christ sayes how great is that darknesse When good lawes are not onely not enacted and embraced but repealed also it is Aristotles similitude to distinguish an incontinent person and a wicked man this is an high kind of sinning So of these Gentiles it is said their foolish heart was darkned they had extinguisht some of that light God gave them As some drink away their wits so some sin away their consciences and thus by degrees they first sinne away the light of the word they had as they in Iude who were religious once and then they quench even that little sparke of nature that is left Also verse 10. corrupting themselves in what they know naturally Fiftly Men sinne against knowledge yet worse when they hold opinion against their knowledge So
Lawes come in force when promulged There is the more contempt cast upon the Law In sins again●… knowledge 〈◊〉 will of the sinner closeth more with sin as sin In sinning against knowledge a man condemns himselfe ● Things handled concerning sins against knowledge 1. What it is 〈◊〉 sinne gainst knowledge explained 1. Distinction To sinne with knowledge and against knowledge doe differ A regenerate man guilty of more sinnes known than another Yet not of more sinnes against knowledge 2. Distinction Men sin against knowledge either objectively or circumstantially onely What it is to sin directly against knowledge What to sinne against knowledg circumstantially onely This distinction explained out of this Chapter Sins directly against knowledg reduced to two Heads 1. In regard of ourselves five wayes When we abuse knowledge to help us to sin 3. wayes 1. To plot and contrive sinne 2. To colour sins committed by lyes 3. To colour sins by pretence of religion and use their knowledg of religion to plead for and instifie their sin● When men neglect to get knowledge that might preserve them from sinning c. When men refuse knowledge that they may sin more freely Is to hate the light and to endevour to extinguish it When men hold opinions against their consciences 2. Men sin directly against knowledge it selfe in respect of others By concealing knowledge Men endevour to suppresse knowledge in others When men go about to make others sinne against their consciences Iohn 9. 2. Generall Branch Sins committed collaterally or circumstantially against knowledge It is done 1. Either in particular acts of sinning or 2. In continuing in an estate of sinning against knowledge Particular instances being infinite A distinction is given concening them 1. Some sinne more transient 2. Some more permanent and continued until recalld though but once committed Which are of 〈◊〉 other most ●angerous to ●ommit when against knowledge 2. Going on in a sinfull estate against knowledge Three sorts of men thus sin Such as for worldly end forbear to professe Christ a●… his waies whi●●… they know to be such Psal 125. ult Those that defer repentance Apostate professors goe on in an estate of sinning against knowledge Application 2. Head Rules whereby to estimate sinnes against knowledge Of two sorts Before sinning or in sinning 1 Before sinning 3. rules 1. The more a man consider the issues and consequents o● a sinne Rule The more consultations and de●●tes before 3. Rule The more testimonies and warnings against sinne 2. Rules to measure the sinfulnesse of such acts in sinning 3. The lesse passion or temptation to a sin against knowledge The more inward regreet and sorrow and reluctancy the stronger is the knowledge and so more against it The more hardnesse of heart in committing a sinne knowne to be a sin the greater the sin as it is a sin against knowledge 3. Head Aggravations drawne from the kind● of that knowledge we sinne against which are five The more ●…ong the knowledge the ●●eater the sin To sin against the inbred light of nature Hab. 1. 14. To sin against the light of education The more reall and experimentall light men sin against The more shining the light is in the conscience joyned with a taste the greater the sin To sin against professed knowledge How great an engagement motive it is to men of knowledge to turne to God and to take heed of sinning Such an one cannot sin so cheap as others their sins are more costly and chargeable and will have lesse pleasure in sinning Such are given up to greater hardnesse of heart Such God gives up to the worst and grossest of sins At death knowledg sinned against gives up to more horror and despaire Hell it ineaseth torent Ephes 2. 7. Psal 104. 24. Luke 6. 33. Rom. 11. 35. Psal 24. 1. Psal 50. 11 12. 1 Chron. 29. Psal 104. 29. Luke 6. 34. Psal 16. 2. Luke 6. 35. Psal 7. 11. Revel 2. 21. Mat. 18. 29. Luke 13. 17. Heb. 1. Iohn 1. 10. 1 Tim. 1. 16. 2 Pet. 3. 1. Acts 1. 25. 2 Pet. 3. 9. Gen. 6. Acts 17. 26 27 28. Acts 14. 16. Luke 6. Ier. 5. 26 27. Hab. 2. 10 11. Psal 137. 7. Psal 8. 5. Psal 139. 15. Eccl. 12. 2. Rom. 6. Psal 104. 23. Psal 104. 10 11. Psal 65. 11. 1 Pet. 4. 3. Iob 33. Eccles 5. 17. Iob 21. 25. Lamen 3. 22. Acts 14. 17. Psal 41. 3. Psal 127. 2. Ier. 31. 26. Gen. 28. 20. Iob 37. 17. Exod. 15. 26. Psal 68. 19. Deut. 8. 18. Prov. 22. 1. Iob 5. 21. 2 Sam. 1. 26. Gen. 33. 10. Iob 32. 8 9. Acts 14. 17. Eccles 8. 11. Deut. 32. 6. 1 Sam. 2. 25. Esay 7. 13. Hos 11. 6. Mat. 5. 46. Esay 1. Amos 2. 13. Psal 68. 19. 2 Pet. 2. 3. 2 Thes 5.
many are said to doe in 1 Tim. 4. 2. he foretels they should speake lyes in Hypocrisie and invent lyes that should have a pretence of holinesse which they know to be a lye or else they should not be said to speake lyes in hypocrisie but they doe it to maintaine their honour and greatnesse which must downe if their doctrine prove false and though many are given up to beleeve their lyes 2 Thes 2. 11. as a punishment of their not loving the truth yet others of them shall know they are lies and yet vent them for truths Thus when men fashion their opinion to the times and wayes of preferment and their dependances on Great ones or to maintaine and uphold a faction or out of pride having broached an error maintaine it though the pulling out that one tile doth untile all the house These are the two causes given of perverting the truth 1 Tim. 6. 4 5. namely pride and covetousnesse and supposing gaine godlinesse and so fashioning their religion accordingly when men are Knights of the post that will write or speak any thing whereby they may get gaine and preferment Secondly men sin against knowledge in regard of others First by concealing it the Apostle indeed sayes in a certaine case Hast thou knowledge keepe it to thy selfe He speakes it of opinions or practices about things indifferent which might scandalize the weake but if thou hast knowledge which may edifie thy brother thou oughtest to communicate it Socrates knowing there was but one God said in his Apologie for his life that if they would give him life upon condition to keep that truth to himselfe and not to teach it to others hee would not accept life upon such a condition and I remember he expresseth his resolution in words very nigh the same words the Apostles used Acts 4. 20. whether it be better to obey God than men judge you and we cannot but teach the things wee have heard and seene sayes Christ for knowledge is a thing will boyle within a man forvent and cannot be imprisoned It is light and the end why light was made was to be set up to give light And Christ argues from an apparent absurdity to put a light under a bushell which may give light to all the house Hast thou knowledge of God and of his wayes thou canst not but speake if withall thou hast but a good heart to all in the familie to thy wife in thy bosome c. God took it for granted that Abraham would teach his children what he should know from him The same disposition is in all the children of Abraham Secondly when men endeavour to suppresse knowledge As the Pharisees they kept the keyes of it in their hands and would not open the treasures of it themselves nor let others doe it neither So they Acts 4. 16. could not deny but a great miracle was done by the Apostles say themselves but that it spread no further let us threaten them and charge them that they speake no more in his name And this they did against their consciences by their owne profession we cannot deny it as if they had said if wee could we would but it was too manifest it was the truth So when Masters keep their servants from the meanes of knowledge they are thus guilty Thirdly when wee would make others sinne against their consciences The Pharises when the blind man would not say as they said they cast him out they would have had him say that Christ was a sinner when through the small light he had hee judged it evident enough that a sinner should not doe such a miracle as was never done since the world began And so Iezabel made the Judges and witnesses sinne against conscience in accusing Naboth and so some of the Gentiles that would hold correspondencie with the Jewes would have constrained the Galathians to be circumcised Gal. 6. 12. Those that knew that circumcision was to be abolisht yet they would perswade them to it by a clubb argument drawn from avoiding persecution not from evidence of the Truth or by reasons that might convince them and their consciences therfore he sayes they constrained thē The perswaders might indeed glory as having their cause and side strengthened but they wanne little credit to their cause by it for as the perswaders arguments were suited to flesh so the others yeelding was out of flesh and so they glory in your flesh and weaknesse sayes he as the Papists urged Cranmer not by arguments but threats and promises to recant this is the greatest cruelty in the world to have a man murder himselfe stab his conscience To offend a weak conscience is a sinne if but passively when thou dost something before his face which his conscience is against but if thou makest him wound his own conscience and to doe an act himselfe which his owne conscience is against it is much worse as if thou beest a Master and hast a servant who pleadeth conscience that hee cannot lye for thy advantage in thy shop or who will not doe unlawfull businesses on the Sabbath day and pleads conscience wilt thou smite him and whip him God will smite thee thou whited wall How darest thou smite him and so cause him to doe that for which God will whip him worser Shew mercy to those under you enforme their consciences wring them not you may hap to break the wards if you doe Now for sinnes committed collaterally or per modum circumstantia that I may so expresse it against knowledge they are done either when particular acts of sinne are committed and duties omitted against light and knowledge and so the Saints may and doe often sinne against knowledge Or Secondly in regard of a knowne estate of sinne and impenitencie persisted in when men continue and goe on in such a state against conviction of conscience that such is their estates For the first because particular acts of sin committed against knowledge are infinite and there will be no end of instancing in particulars therefore I will not insist Onely in briefe this distinction concerning such acts may be observed and the observation of it may be usefull That some acts of sinnes against knowledge are meerely transient that is are done and ended at once And though the guilt of them is eternall yet the extent of the act is finished with the committing it and reacheth no further as a vaine oath breach of the Sabbath c. which acts cannot be repealed though they may be repented of But others there are which though the act may be but once outwardly and professedly done yet have an habituall and continued permanency life subsistence given it such as that untill a man doth recall them hee may be said continually to renew those acts and every day to be guilty of them and to maintaine it and so habitually to cōmit them As it is with Laws which though made but once are
run through to have it set apart for ease and to be void of torment if the rich man in hell made it such a great suit and counted it so great a favour to have but one drop of water which could but for a little while scarce more than a moment have cooled and eased not his whole body but the tip of his tongue only how much more would he have thought it mercy to have lived so many yeares againe as he had done free from torment what is it then for thee to live so many yeares free from the falling of the least drop of that wrath whereof the full vialls should have been poured out many yeares agoe The same Law was out against us which was out against the Angels That day thou eatest thou shalt dye the death what put the difference the Apostle tells us his long suffering to us ward not to them for in Chap. 2. 4. he had told us that hee spared not the Angels which fell but posted and threw them into hell as soone as they had sinned Sixtly But further in the 6. place Is this all hath it beene barely a time of ease given thee a time of reprivall No it hath beene more space to repent and so to obtaine thy pardon in Rev. 2. 21. And as it hath beene more than ease of torment unto thee so also consider it hath beene more than slacknesse in him that hath afforded it to thee as the Apostle there doth tell us It is not that he hath tooke no notice of thy offending him but he is sensible of every idle thought of every oath vaine word and as the Scripture tels us he is pained at the very heart in so much as he repents that ever he made thee he is angry with thee every day thou risest every time hee lookes on thee when ever he meets thee going into the Taverne to be drunk the whorehouse to be uncleane when he meets thee reeling in the streets he hath much adoe to forbeare killing thee as he had to forbeare Moses when he met him in the Inne He is ready to have a blow at thee and it should not need be any great stroake or fetching his arme about if he did but blow on thee thou wert consumed To suffer thee to live doth therefore cost him much riches of patience but to cut thee off need cost him nothing hee can doe that with ease But further all is joyned with a willingnesse that thou shouldst repent and not perish as that place tells thee It were much mercy for a Traytor to be reprived to have a lease of his life for twenty yeeres though there were no hope nor meanes of obtaining his finall pardon after that time spent and this also though moneth a yeere what others who have laine gasping would have given a world for time againe as I have heard one crying day and night call time againe or if not then oh what in Hell The third thing I am to shew is that all this goodnesse patience and forbearance is afforded towards you as a meanes and helpes to bring you to repentance Acts 17. 26 27 28. God sayes the Apostle there hath allotted to men both their times to live in and also their places of abode and habitations all richly furnished with blessings to uphold their lives beings And to what end are both these thus afforded That they might seek the Lord if by groping after him even as men in the darke they might haply finde him But men being in the darke and destitute of guides to bring thē unto God may yet be as far of finding him as ever Therefore adde but the words of my text to what the Apostle sayes there and we see that this goodnesse of God takes us by the hand and leads us to repentance to turne from sinne unto God and so to finde him And thus lead are you unto God by the help of three severall guides which each after other sweetly leade you and point you out to this First all this goodnesse beares witnesse to your hearts of a gracious hand that extends it self in all these therefore in that 17. of the Acts he subjoynes God is not far off any of us That there is a good God bestowes all things on you is a thought lyes at next doore of all his blessings not far off Yea they all sayes the Apostle to the same Gentiles Acts 14. 16. doe beare witnesse of him though they went on in their owne wayes yet sayes he there God left not himselfe without witnesse that is an impression on their hearts that his good hand bestowed all on them when he filled their hearts with foode and gladnesse Secondly His goodnesse having brought thus God to mens thoughts then your owne consciences take you and leade you downe into your selves and beare witnesse that you by walking in your owne wayes doe nothing but provoke and offend this good God So Rom. 2. 15. And then thirdly there is an indelible principle common to all men to love those who love them which after the two former have brought you hitherto point you to Repentance as the conclusion Shall we goe on to sinne against this good so good returne evill for good Is not this a naturall necessary consequent out of all these to say as they Let us therefore feare the Lord who giveth us the early and the latter raine as it is Ier. 5. 26 27 And though men are said not to know this in the text yet the meaning is they doe not throughly and effectually consider thus much so as thereby to be brought to Repentance yet however there is such a witnesse of all this in all mens hearts and thus are they led on unto Repentance would they see their way and follow their guide The use shall be an use of expostulation as here the Apostle carryes it with men sinfull and impenitent for going on to sinne against all this mercy together with an aggravation of their sinfulnesse hereby Men if young doe usually take the advantage of this their precious time which out of so much long suffering is vouchsafed them and of all those precious opportunities and blessings they enjoy to improve them onely in reaping and gathering in to themselves the pleasures of sinne making the time of youth their harvest of sinning and yet thinke to escape by repenting afterwards and then when old after they have already enjoyed a long and a faire Sunshine day to turne to God in and to have sowne much seed to the Spirit the comfort whereof they might now have reaped yet as they have altogether neglected so to doe all their youth so they goe on to doe so still whilst they see they have any day left be it never so neare the setting and doe choose rather desperately to venture their estate in the world to come upon the riches of his mercy pardoning though without all care and endeavour to change their
these armies of blessings thou findest the world filled with to fight against their Maker under the devills banner whom thy wickednesse sets up as the god of this world And as the yeere is crowned with goodnesse so thy yeeres with wickednesse and no moment is barren but all thy imaginations are evill continually Yea thou hast sinned against heaven and earth and subjected the whole creation unto vanity laden the earth and filled it so with wickednesse that it groanes the axeltree of it is even ready to crack under thee and the ground thou treadest on to spue thee out Fiftly since thou camest into the world what a long time hath God suffered thee to live in it hee hath not spared thee three yeares onely as he did the figtree but thirty forty And when thou first madest bold to thrust forth thy trayterous head into the world Death which thy sin brought into the world with it might have arrested but for one treason and though all that time of his reprivall he carryes and behaves himselfe never so obediently But unto thee this time hath beene more than a longer day of life and putting off the execution which for the guilt of that first rebellion should have been acted on thee in the womb it hath beene time to repent in And yet hath not this time of thy reprivall made thee so much the more rebellious and hast not thou spent all this time in making up the measure of thine iniquity full and hath it beene will ingnesse onely in God that thou shouldest not perish yea more joyned with waiting also when it should once be thinking the time long as longing and desiring that thou wouldst repent that he might pardon thee Thus Ierem. 13. last God expresseth himselfe when shall it once be yea and consider how many dayes of payment have been set and how many promises made and broken all by thee and yet still hee walteth unto wonderment Thou receiuedst presse money at thy Baptisme when thou didst promise to forsake the devill and all his workes and to begin to serve him when thou shouldst begin to discerne betweene good and evill But no sooner did the light of knowledge dawne in thy heart but thou beganst to fight against him and thy first thoughts to this day have beene onely and continually evill And then haply in thy younger yeares before thou hadst tasted of the pleasures of sinne he gave thee an inkling by meanes of thy education of his goodnesse towards thee and of that happinesse to be liad in him and thou hadst the first offer of him ere thy tender yeares were poysoned by the world and he hath dealt with thee againe and againe both by his Word and Spirit not waited onely but wooed thee and hath beene a suiter to thy heart long and I appeale to your hearts how many promises you have made him of turning from all your rebellions to him after such a Sermon which was brought powerfully home in such a sicknesse and in such a strait thy conscience knowes full well And still God hath made tryall of thee and given thee longer day and though thou hast broke with him againe and againe yet he hath forborne thee againe and againe and hath waited this twenty thirty forty fifty sixty years when thou shouldest come in and be as good as thy word and still thou hast failed him And yet behold and wonder and stand confounded at the riches of his long suffering that after so many yeares expence and promises broken by thee expectations failed in him and many mockeries of him after all this he is yet willing to accept of the remainder if thou wouldst spend the rest of the time left thee in the flesh according to his will as the Apostle speaks 1 Pet. 4. 3. even to lose principall use and all for what is past and requires but the same composition was propounded the first day yea and not onely so but with promise to become a debtor unto thee to bestow further riches on thee than ever yet thou sawest or art able to conceive yea and all this when he could have his penyworths out of thee another way and lose not one farthing by thee but by punishing thee in hell recover all to the utmost Neither seventhly hath it beene barely and simply an act of patience and forbearance though joyned with this willingnesse thou shouldst not perish or meerely a permissive act of suffering thee to live But God shewes forth yet more riches of goodnesse joyned with this long suffering in him ye live and move and have your being and dost thou live in him onely nay thou livest on him also upon his cost and charges I have hung upon thee sayes David from my mothers wombe And consider what thy life is that of so small a bottome he should spin out so long a thred had hee not drawne it out of his owne power as the spider doth her web out of her owne bowels it had beene at an end the second minute to maintaine that radicall moisture that oyle that feeds the lampe and light of thy life that radicale balsamum this is as great a miracle as the maintaining the oyle in the cruze of the poore famished widow And further yet hath he maintained thee onely Nay more hath he not defended thee tooke thy part protected thee tooke thee under his wing as the hen doth her chickens to shelter thee from those many dangers thy life hath been exposed unto Otherwise how many wayes ere this hadst thou been snatcht away out of the land of the living Is thy case the case of the figtree onely which before we mentioned that when God cryed Cut it downe another cryed spare it but there have beene many have cryed Cut thee downe and God hath cryed spare Thee there is never a minute but the devills would have had a blow at thy life as he longed to have had at Iohs That thou a poore lump of flesh shouldst walke through and in the midst of such an host of fierce and cruell enemies whose hearts are swelled with malice at thee and God should say to them all concerning thee as he did to Laban concerning Iacob Touch not this man And yet if thou wert not liable to their malice and power yet consider how many dangers and casualties besides thou hast beene kept in and from as falls drowning killing many wayes how often have the arrows of death come whisking by thee took away those next thee haply of thy kindred brother sister yoke-fellow of the same house family with thy selfe and yet have missed thee And if we look no farther than these dayes of mortality we have lived in two great plagues in this Kingdome how have the most of us all here survived and now the third is increasing and growing upon us To have our lives in such deare yeares of time when to have our life for a prey is mercy enough as Ieremy told Baruch that these arrows should