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A57537 A godly & fruitful exposition upon all the First epistle of Peter by that pious and eminent preacher of the word of God, John Rogers. Rogers, John, 1572?-1636.; Simpson, Sidrach, 1600?-1655. 1650 (1650) Wing R1808; ESTC R32411 886,665 744

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his conscience he disswaded them therefrom so Davids conscience told him that he should do ill to kill Saul and thereupon would not give ear to those that perswaded him hereto Thus being tempted to Lye Deceive Swear Prophane the Lords day c. the conscience tells us that its evil so to do Again being called upon to any good duty the conscience tells us its good and provokes us to do it Why then Conscience is a Puritan if it do thus is not this corrupted as well as the other faculties O yes therefore it gives judgement very weakly and imperfectly in all but especially in the unregenerate and especially in the most ignorant and most wicked yet it retains some part of her office and power and will be doing as its enlightened and therefore it will give this judgement in foul and gross things in the worst of all as when they go to commit Murther Adultery c. or tell them on the other side they should go to Church c. but in the regenerate it doth much good work it s as a guide to conduct us in our way and whereby we shun all by paths It s a bridle to keep us from sin and a spur to goodness it s joyned in Commission with the Spirit of God they are obeyed or rejected together 1. Our duty then in token of our thankfulness is That we listen to the voyce of Conscience and be ruled by it we must take advice thereof ere we do any thing If we will not be ruled thereby but do contrary thereto it will one day exclaim against us when God shall judge us for our disobedience Why did not I give thee a Conscience to tell thee of these things will God say Yes Lord shall Conscience answer I told him it was naught and yet he would do it I told him such and such a thing was his duty and urged him to it and yet he would not give ear but put off the time from one day to another he would not repent have prayers in his family c. such shall then be stricken speechless Most are so eagerly carried after their passions and unruly affections as that they do not hear the voyce of their conscience the noise of those drowns the voyce of this 2. Even natural men have a light of conscience urging them to good and restraining them from evil None so evil but they have in them some light by which conscience is set on work to advise or counsel to the doing or avoiding this or that good or evil it s therefore no note or sign of grace in any because their conscience doth thus and thus This is in meer natural men from the light and knowledge that conscience hath of things good or evil yea oftentimes so forcible are those stirrings of conscience in them as that it keeps and restrains them from many sins which they are inclined to and would otherwise commit and puts them upon many good things which it urgeth them to which of themselves they have neither will nor power to do not from the love they have of the good or hatred of the evil but beca●se they would please Conscience which will not suffer them to be at quiet till it be obeyed this they may do and yet in the mean time may be onely in the state of Nature for though here they obey Conscience yet they do it not for Conscience sake Their obedience ariseth not from the purity and holiness of the Law of God but from fear of men from discredit or shame from hope of reward desire of ease or the like If there were no other cause to move them to enter upon good duties or to restrain them from doing evil but the Law of God they would not yield that obedience to Conscience which now they do And thus conscience gives judgement before things be done For its judgement after our Actions It then gives sentence This was well done This was ill done and not so onely but with an Absolution or Condemnation This was well done therefore you are innocent in it and deserve neither guilt nor punishment This was ill done therefore you are guilty and have deserved Gods wrath hereby Samuels Conscience spake for him Whose Ox have I taken c. Pharaohs against him I have sinned c. Thus is Conscience as a Judge acquitting or condemning us yea a little God as it were in the midst of man giving sentence beforehand as it shall be at the Tribunal seat of God on the last day If it acquits us then it worketh Peace Joy Comfort Boldness if it condemn us especially forcibly O then it causeth shame as in Adam when he fled and hid himself in the thicket after he had offended so also fear yea in the midst of all jollities as in Belshazzar and at small things as the shaking of a leaf so also sorrow which the world judgeth to be melancholy whereas it is far otherwise and yet both may and do often meet together yea desperation as in Cain and Judas and an universal distraction of body and minde the accusation of conscience are wounds to the heart Davids heart smote him A wounded Spirit who can bear They are as the gnawing of a Worm that never dyeth but lyeth continually gnawing at ones heart 1. If our consciences do excuse and acquit us bearing witness of the truth and integrity of our hearts of our hatred of evil our delight in Gods word and endeavor to please him above all things c. then may we rejoyce and be of good comfort the same being an infallible mark of our Salvation and may be bold in believing the same against Satan and all his discomforts There 's a great fault in many Christians though as the Apostle saith They know nothing by themselves but that their hearts bear witness with them of their care and faithfulness in all things yet are never the more comforted but are still cast down through Satans suggestions and lyes and their own unbelief If thine own conscience well informed according to Gods Word acquit thee why shouldst thou not be of good comfort you may be humbled for your failings yea deeply for your strong corruptiōs yet for the main be of comfort if in any particular we have done well we may be comforted 2. Let us always keep our selves in well-doing that we may hear our consciences speak comfortably so may we keep a continual feast 3. If we have any thing lying on our consciences for which they boyl within us and accuse and pronounce judgements against us let us not make a slight matter of it but seek to God for mercy and to be discharged of it that so we may still conscience which then may be done not before Stop not the mouth of conscience as many do by mirth and toys this is but to delude thy self and delay time others let
counsel of Daniel to Nebuchadnezzar even that they would break off their sins by repentance O turn ye why will ye dye acknowledge I beseech you all your rebellions and treacheries against God and that you have deserved hereby to be cut off entreating yet for pardon and mercy through Jesus Christ Turn to God with your whole hearts and learn to know that sin is odious bringing dishonor to God and destruction upon your selves O shun all evil little and great shun it at all times in all places how gainful or pleasing so ever and whosoever commands it or whomsoever you see practice it together with all the appurtenances and occasions of the same Means to evil may be these 1. Labor to understand the ten Commandments and so what is good and what is evil 2. Labor for faith which purifieth the heart from evil even the assurance of Gods love to us which may work in us love to his Majesty and so an hatred of all evil 3. A sanctified heart the inseperable companion of true faith 4. Attend on Gods ordinances publikely the Word and Sacraments and in private use meditation conference prayer c. 5. Watch and pray that we enter not neither be led into temptation 6. Make we a Covenant against evil as Job and David 7. Call to minde the fearful wrath of God and the wages of sin and the examples thereof on many both in Scripture and our own experience as also the hour of death when it will trouble us and lie heavy on our conscience and the day of Judgement when and where we would be loath to meet with it 2. This also rebukes them that eschew some evil but not all nor at all times or in all places Being commanded what will they not do What not for profit pleasure preferment The sins of their complexion and trade they will in no wise leave they run upon things because lawful though they cannot use them lawfully If they can sin secretly they make no conscience thereof 3. This may serve for instruction with rebuke to most Christians and to us that be most ancient professors that though we have a general purpose against evil yet we neither hate it so deeply nor shun it so carefully as we ought nor are so much humbled when we have been overtaken and have fallen thereinto as we ought we complain of our crosses but grieve not so much that we have fallen into sin If one should threaten to run at us with a naked sword or shoot at us whensoever he could finde an opportunity we would be wary and watchful upon our going abroad having an eye in every corner c. O do we thus against sin which watcheth but an opportunity to do us mischief If we would thus do we should not be so often overtaken as we are we should see better days scape numbers of crosses have more peace to our consciences more joy in our death and a freer passage to Heaven But alas we judge even that which is a great evil to be but a little one it pleaseth us if we have any colour for the same as that we have but once committed it that others do so and so c. Thus do we prophane the Lords-day despise his Ministers and run upon all sorts of evils 4. This affords consolation to all such as do indeed eschew evil and that out of an unfained hatred thereof rejoycing in nothing more then when they prevail against it grieving at nothing more then when they are overcome thereby such do indeed love God such fear him in truth and so are beloved of God and shall be everlastingly blessed these shall live happily here in joy and bliss hereafter O go on in this Christian course though the world hate you because ye do not as they do though they call you precise fools because ye dare not swallow such goblets as they do yea though hereupon ye pull danger upon your selves yet must ye eschew evil and so let us It s no matter though we have the worlds frown as long as we have Gods favor and what if we shall miss many a sweet morsel of profit pleasure and promotion if we be free from the gripes and vexations of conscience and the wrath of Almighty God they that now have their sweet meat would one day vomit up their morsels if they could as Judas did who though he rid himself of the money yet could not be rid of his wound of Conscience nor of the Judgement of God upon him were they ever the worse or had they any cause to grieve that they had not a share with him in the thirty pieces And do good This necessarily followeth on the other No man can have his heart truly nor aright set to do good whose heart is not first purged of the love of all evil for they cannot stand in one heart and at once and that man that lives and bears himself in the practice one sin never did good aright in his life neither ever pleased he God Who can serve God in one thing that serves the Devil in another This may serve to rouse up some that fain would do well and many good things they do but some one old accustomed sin which they know is a sin they cannot leave Well there 's no hating sin it will not do well the end will not be good it s but to be almost Christians Some will say Such a Preacher hath prevailed much with me and done me much good but as long as one known sin is lived in all is nothing worth to Salvation It s true a childe of God through strong temptations may be overcome of the same evil which he hates but he both covenants against it is careful that he may not fall into it having fallen he is much grieved He that is not grieved but doth again upon the next occasion fall to it is indeed in a grievous condition Thus from the order To do good is sometimes taken in a strict sence for the performance of the works of mercy whether for body or soul or both Here more largely for that good we are to do to our neighbor enemies that do us hurt or yet more largely for whatsoever God hath commanded in his Word Whose will is a perfect rule of Righteousness and makes that good which he requireth Whosoever would see good days here and hereafter must set himself in body and soul to the obedience of Gods will in doing good No other shall be saved good is the way leading to this end To come to this end we must walk in this way Reasons 1. It s good and amiable of it self as the Lord is 2. God commands it who is our Soveraign Lord and King Thou shalt do thus and thus saith he often throughout the Scriptures for I am the Lord thy God 3. All promises in Scripture of good things here or
he should be poured upon us And for the common people they are far inferior to Christians now they saw Christ to come afar off we already come yea that he is dead risen ascended and shall come to judgement They had him under Types and Shadows we have the substance the body it self their 's was as the seed time our time as the harvest they had the twilight we have the noon day And there was great reason that the time when Christ himself should come should bring more glory with it as the coming of a King himself hath more solemnity and priviledges then when the Kings Harbenger comes before and that when the sun of Righteousness should arise there should be more light then before But why did God send his Son no sooner and not in their time rather A. We must not quarrel with God we may as well ask him why he made the world no sooner why he put distinction between the summer and winter day and night We must know that all things are done in infinite Wisdom and Justice by the Lord though we know not always the reasons of his dealings He came in the fulness of time he could come no sooner nor tarry any longer we are to thank God that he is come The difference between them and us is onely in the measure of Revelation and means therefore we call their time the Old Testament or Covenant and ours the New not two but one onely the Covenant to them was sealed in the blood of Bulls and Goats ours in Christs own blood as he himself witnesseth The cause why their time was called the time of the Law ours the days of the Gospel was not but that they had the Gospel also preached as Adam in Paradise so Abraham so the Jews in all their sacrifices and cleansings but because then the Law was so much preached and the Gospel so darkly and sparingly as now the Law more sparingly the Gospel more frequently Neither is God to be charged with inconstancy because he taught his Church otherwise then then now he doth no more then a Father for training his children up otherwise when they be children then when they are men grown he doth both in wisdom The Lord trained on his children in their infancy by those babish rudiments fit for the time reserving greater things for the grown age of his Church yea such is his constancy that he hath never altered the way of Salvation but hath ever been the same from the beginning and shall be Seeing then that the Lord hath honored us to live in these days and revealed his will so plentifully O how joyfully should we embrace Christ Jesus and labor to be found answerable in Knowledge Faith Repentance Zeal and Holiness Our Forefathers saw but a little and took great pains for it and were glad of it How glad then should we be of that we have Simeon waited for the consolation of Israel and was so glad that he had seen and taken Christ in in his arms though then in his swadling clothes that he was willing to dye O how joyful would he have been if he had seen his Miracles heard his Preaching known his Resurrection Ascension and Glory as we do David was so glad of the Word that he accounted it better then gold and silver and sweeter then the honey and the honey-comb and Job esteemed it above his appointed food Alas What a little had David especially Job in respect of that we have we have the whole Old Testament which some of them had not and the New also an Exposition and Commentary thereof which they had not at all How cheerfully then may we come to Christ and believe in him How should we walk that know he is gone up to heaven to prepare a place for us and will come again to receive us But alas if the Lord come to look for these fruits where be they Alas to whom is the Gospel welcom How many be there that would as willingly there were no Preaching as any and are there not many that hear onely for the fashion that will hear but when they list The Lord publisheth his Gospel and offereth his Son to the world but alas men have more minde to their Oxen Farms Pleasures then to imbrace it many savor not of the Gospel many count it rather a burthen then a jewel yea of those that hear the word usually How few are there that hear it with delight how few finde such need of Christ as they desire him more then all the world as they will willingly stoop to his yoke and serve him And as many have no more knowledge then if they had never had the means thereof so even they that have some measure of knowledge make no conscience of their ways are utterly void of Reformation Thus do not they take thankfully this great jewel of the Gospel the onely glory of the World but most unkindely requite the Lord yet what 's their saying They hope to be saved by Christ as they that believe stedfastly in him but how they came by their Faith or any good fruits thereof they can shew none For this God must needs have an heavy controversie with the Land and were 't not for a remnant that he hath to gather we should quickly perceive it O therefore let our conversation be such as becometh the Gospel bring we forth meet fruit to the pains God hath bestowed on us But as for those that live and make no account of nor receive any profit by this Gospel their condition will be heavy God will take his Word from them or snatch them from it and not onely Abraham Isaac and Jacob and old times shall rise up against such but even the good Souls that saw but a little light fifty or sixty years ago and had but a little knowledge for the means were small yet were zealous and godly and sundry gave their lives for the Truth even these I say shall rise up and condemn them Then would they be glad of one of the days they have had but shall not have any Awaken therefore to day while it is called to day for we may fear it draws to night-ward towards the Sun-setting of the Gospel The things which are now reported unto you by them that have preached the Gospel unto you c. The second part of the commendation The same Gospel preached by the Prophets was also preached by the Apostles since Christ men that were trained up with Christ all the time of his preaching and were witnesses of his Life Death Resurrection and Ascension These have preached this Gospel and that not of their own mindes but by the Spirit of God which was sent down from heaven upon them and that in an extraordinary and visible maner The Prophets preached of the same Christ and that by the Spirit as we have heard so that they and the Apostles agree notably in one
exceed for the matter of it nor for the fashion God hath given it for necessity comeliness and decency it must not be newfangled either we use it to wantonness or pride 3. For Recreation it must be sparing in time place measure to make us more fit for our duty for God hath not set us here to satisfie and pamper the flesh but to mortifie the lusts thereof not to play but to do his work to this end is Recreation to be used 1. This rebuketh those that wallow in beastly and unlawful lusts in whoredom chambering wantonness drunkenness c. so in games altogether unlawful yet many make a practice of these to whom Solomons speech would well suit I said of laughter thou art madness For a man to sport at Gods dishonor and their own destruction is madness Can we play with nothing but edge tools the Lord will laugh such to scorn O turn your beastly pleasures into weeping and wailing 2. This rebuketh also such as are drunk with lawful things as some that so glut themselves and so pamper the body that they make themselves unfit for any duty many waste and consume themselves this way Bodies and Goods yea Souls and all Others also are so curious in their meats as that nothing can please them nothing's good enough for them yea are more angry for any want this way then for any sin in themselves or others they have fat Bodies but lean Souls O think they this is a goodly life but indeed it is a swinish life fitter for beasts then men most unseemly for a Christian So for Apparel they that follow every new fangled Fashion and are so proud and costly and so over curious as they spend no small time in trimming themselves taking no care to trim their Souls with Christs Righteousness and Spiritual Graces How are they to be reprehended What painted Sepulchres are these may not an image have gay clothes put on yet how many spend their precious time and goodly patrimonies about this vanity So for Recreations some are so mad on them as they think and speak of nothing else as if they were set here to eat and drink and rise up to play thus spend they the greatest part of their time 3. Let us therefore pare away whatsoever super fluity hath been in us in these things and learn soberly to use these mercies as the Gospel teacheth us so as thereby we may ever be made fitter for our duties and to serve God and that they may be as a staff in our hand to help us on in our journey and this is to walk pilgrim like be we more careful in feeding clothing and making merry the Soul For the latter namely profits we must also be sober both in getting and keeping them We must not onely use no unlawful means to get the world but use the lawful means moderately not setting our affections upon the world or being too earnest to compass it filling our selves with too many businesses and following the same too eagerly lest we neglect good duties or be hindred from doing them as we should 1. This condemns those that use flat unlawful means to get the world swearing lying deceiving oppression usury false weights and the like These pull a w● upon themselves besides that they heap up but chaff which the wind of Gods wrath will scatter God is an avenger of all such things O what reckonings do these multiply against themselves What answer shall they make that sell their souls to hell for pelf 2. This condemns not those onely that get thus but those that follow the world so eagerly as they minde nothing else of which sort most are all day long nothing but of the world no Prayer no hearing of the Word they think and talk of nothing else but the world Lords days and all they think Prayer would be an hindrance they savor nothing but of the earth they make more account of their old Shoes then they do of a Sermon they prize not such things when they are called to the Wedding Feast they have Farms and Oxen to hinder them or if they come all runs over for they be full already or as the Pharisees mock at that they hear or if they hear with joy the thorns worldly cares quickly choke it O this world undoeth most men its an enemy but not of it self but by reason of our sottishness and drunkenness that cannot moderate our selves but take too much of it and wound our selves many ways What will it profit them in the end to have embraced this strumpet she will serve us as Delilah did Sampson deprive us of our strength and give us into our enemies hands and as Jael the Wife of Heber did by Sisera thus will she serve her favorites 3. Learn we to be wise indeed laying up a treasure in heaven and laboring for meat that endureth to everlasting life For what will it profit a man to win the whole world if he shall lose his own soul O that Gods good servants should be so incumbred with the world O that that these base things should beguile and ensnare those that are born from above to the hope of so great glory Many good Christians are half drunk they are unfit for good duties cannot minde heaven from Monday morning till Saturday night and it is well if they be sober on the Lords day many be not but let both their hearts and tongues be employed on the world who yet count themselves Christians O what excellent Christians would some be were it not for the world but how doth it mar many keep them from good duties weigh down their mindes its that wherewith they are too easily beset O let 's winde up our plummets as the clock-keeper once every day keep our mindes from being weighed down with the world we must set apart some time to draw up our minde especially Saturday night not letting them down all the day following We must so use the world as not to run into evil for it neither to neglect any duty to God our Souls our Families our Neighbors the Poor or any other we must use it to further us as the Pilgrim doth his staff Learn we to prize Spiritual graces which are the onely current coyn in the Countrey we are going to yet is not the seeking of Gods Kingdom the way to hinder us of that which is meet but rather the onely furtherer would we have more then will do us good But if we shall have less of the world are we not more then enough recompenced if we shall have more peace of Conscience more credit here more favor with God more joy in death Hope to the end for the grace c. This is the main Exhortation to constancy in the Faith to the which the other two former Exhortations served as furtherances others read the words
always keep a good Conscience Wood is not more necessary and apt to nourish fire then good works and well doing to nourish Faith Also observe the dealings of God and grow by your own experience Many that have believed and were very earnest in their beginning till they got it after growing secure and worldly and withal neglecting the means have with David fallen into some one sin or other thereby losing the peace and comfort they formerly enjoyed A great loss indeed more then if a man were stript of all to his shirt O le ts take heed of this loss as we are to be wise as Serpents so let us shew our Serpentine wisdom in this one thing especially The Serpent will be sure so much as in her lies to save her head so must we our Faith for on this hangs all and if by any means we have fallen therefrom recover we our selves by all means possible 3. That which they are to hope for or trust on is Grace that is Salvation Every benefit is grace but to be delivered out of our lost and undone state and brought again into the favor of God and saved is a most special grace Our Election is of grace so our Redemption so our effectual Calling 1. This condemns the Papists that teach partly Grace partly Works No these cannot be mingled either all or none they be as contrary as light and darkness honey and gall else were grace no more grace To joyn any thing with Christ is to pervert the Gospel They now begin to be ashamed and mince this Opinion saying We be saved most by Grace yet partly by Works and that these Works be died in the Blood of Christ and that it is most safe to rest on his merits alone Well God make them so ashamed as altogether to renounce it and so let us in the mean time 2. Let us serve the Lord with a chearful and constant love and service for his free favor to us all the days of our life 3. Shew we grace and favor to others not to such as have deserved well of us but even to such as have not nay ill as we had of God Grace That is Salvation See he calls their mindes from looking for earthly preferment by Christ whereunto they had a lingring minde and calls them to look for Spiritual riches even Salvation by him What are we then to expect by Christ and by professing the Gospel zealously not Wealth Honor Peace Credit in the world but pardon of our sins freedom from Hell and Gods wrath peace of Conscience joy in the holy Ghost that our persons and works shall please God Angels to be our guard our Prayers to be heard our Souls at death to be carried into heaven both our Bodies Souls to be glorified at the great day Will this satisfie us Hereof we may be assured if we believe in Christ and zealously embrace the Gospel As for other things his Kingdom is not of this world he promiseth not plenty peace ease c. He had them not himself but contrarily troubles as all shall have that live godly in him This teacheth us to lay our hand upon our heart when we go about to profess we know what we shall finde but it may be sorrow withal if we can be content so then may we go forward else not Many having gone on in profession not so advisedly and after having found the wind and tide against profession and reproach trouble and danger for the same have shrunk away and with Demas have forsaken Paul and embraced the present world Others seeing how hardly such be dealt with though in their conscience they think best of such yet keep in their heads thinking that its best sleeping in a whole skin But alas they make but a weak choyce were they not better have these heavenly comforts and priviledges here and be acknowledged of Christ and saved at the great day though with some sorrows here then to make the world their friend and God their enemy and to have him ashamed of them at that day as he will for we cannot have it go on our side now and then too That is to be brought unto you God tarried not till they sought Salvation but he of his goodness brought it them which he useth here as an Argument to perswade them to trust stedfastly to this Salvation and look accordingly for it because God would bring them to the Faith of it when they thought not thereof Note here That Salvation is not of our own procuring or seeking Alas what could Adam and we in him do we could fall but what then towards our Salvation we could run and hide our selves and excuse our sin and encrease our danger but God was fain to bring him the seed of the woman he could not make himself an help a wife for God made and brought her to him much less a Savior So what 's the reason he hath given us the Gospel in this Land and not to our Forefathers not to many other Lands we sought it not but when Idolaters in darkness God brought it So have we not been brought by marriage or by Service into Towns where we have had the Word when we purposed no such thing So to our hearts what were any of us when God called us Did we seek him Alas no we ran from him rather long ere we yielded but he followed us and overcame us See it in Saul did he seek Salvation he was going to Damascus to persecute God brought it him so to Zacheus the Goaler c. so we This teacheth us 1. To be humble 2. To be exceeding thankful all the days of our life 3. To rest confidently on him for the time to come in the experience of that we have had as thus That he that brought us Salvation the Word to us or us to it and gave us to see our misery long after Christ have some taste of his love and some desire to please him that were far from these he will continue this and will never leave us Thus the Apostle reasons But God commendeth his love towards us c. So Jacob in danger of Esau He came over Jordan with his staff and God had given him two bands therefore he was perswaded to relie on God for present deliverance for why might he say I am perswaded thou hast not done all this for me to be lost in an instant as an ox should lick up a flower or a candle be put out at once We use not Gods mercies well when we grow not stronger by them for time to come 4. Comfort to a fearful heart that fears he shall not hold out or that God will cast him away O its impossible did he bring thee Salvation that regarded it not and now hath given thee an heart to prize it above the world and to walk
are married by the Lord and none can divorce them Therefore if any man seem to have the one and not the other he hath neither in truth If therefore any leave evil and do not good or if any do some good and hate not all evil he is but an hypocrite For the order here used he sets renouncing of our lusts first before imbracing of holiness men put off their old rags ere they can put on new apparel purge the stomack of ill humors ere they take good nourishment dig up the weeds ere they sow or set herbs so in this case Where therefore there remaineth the love of any lust or sin there is no true grace in that heart neither will any grow till that be rooted out God will not plant any of his grace there till the Devils planting be pluckt up Many think they be Christians and do many things well though they keep the love of some sin no mark the love of grace and goodness and the love of any sin cannot be in one heart they are so contrary the one to the other therefore while thou livest in any known sin and lovest any lust as sure as God is in heaven thou art an hypocrite and let me perish if there be one dram of true grace in thee but thou standest in the state of damnation Therefore renounce and bid adieu to thy lusts and seeing you make a profession and do many things will you lose heaven for your lust for one sin so run that you may obtain lose not heaven for a little make either something or nothing of thy profession banish from thee all sin that God may work some true grace in thy heart In your ignorance He fathers their following of lusts on their ignorance and ignorance is the cause and root of a wicked and bad life For till men know the will of God out of his Word how can they do it and what are we prone to by nature but to all the evil in the world Therefore the devil labors by all means to hold people in blindness of all books hath most been an enemy to the Bible and to sincere and diligent reading and preaching the Scriptures for were those away he knows all iniquity must needs abound as there did in Popery when people were nuzled up in blindeness O what abundance of sin was committed but it did not so much appear because they were in the dark and the light of Gods word discovers sin which was then very rare As if one come into an house at midnight he ●ees no faults but when the morning comes then he sees a number of things out of order so in this clear light of the Gospel we see the wickedness that then appeared not in the dark Whether will not our nature run and whether may not the devil and world lead one when he hath no eyes to see whether he goes The blinde eats many a fly and a man may lead a blinde man into the deepest pit As the Raven first picks out the Lambs eyes and then kills it at his pleasure when it cannot see to escape away so doth the devil by people Ignorance is often compared to darkness and they that go in the dark often stumble fall and hurt themselves Sampson when blinde was led to any thing as to grinde to make Sports c. 1. This teacheth us to desire that the clear light of the Word may shine more and more brightly into all places of this land for there are many places that have either no preaching or else very seldom So as for want of knowledge people wallow in a number of lusts most fearfully the Lords day most grievously Profaned preachers slighted c. 2. Every Minister is to endeavor to the utmost of his power to bring their people to the knowledge of their duty that so they may be either truly converted or at least hereby restrained 3. People are to labor for knowledge else they must needs be captives of many lusts Think not as many do because ye are poor and not book-learned therefore you shall be held excused many think their very ignorance shall be a good plea because they know nothing God will hold them excused Is light come into the world and shall mens sin their ignorance hold them excused its otherwise 4. All parents are to have a special care where and in what Towns and houses they place their children they must place them where they may learn to know God to discern between good and evil and if it prevail not with them by and by yet there 's hope it shall lie as seed in their hearts that will shoot up in time But how can he say In their ignorance seeing they were well instructed and expert in the Law having it read among them daily and had they not good knowledge in the Law and in the Prophets True yet he justly calls them ignorant 1. Because though they were so cunning in the Law and Prophets yet they knew not Jesus Christ the end of the Law and so the sum of all 2. Their knowledge was onely in their brain and not effectual in their hearts to renew and reform them but they were carried away by their lusts notwithstanding of their knowledge 1. Then all the knowledge in the world without the knowledge of Christ Jesus is nothing If a man could measure the heavens tell the number of the stars had skill in all Arts and Sciences whatsoever yet without the knowledge of Christ it were vanity Paul knew much being brought up at the feet of Gamaliel But he counted all things else loss and dung for the excellent knowledge of Christ Jesus He desired to know nothing but Christ Jesus and him crucified If a man were the wisest in a County to arbitrate and compound controversies yet all this were nothing without the knowledge of Christ. 2. All the knowledge of the world if it reform not a man is but ignorance So much a man knows as he obeys That is not knowledge that is in the brain but that which soaketh down into the heart and transformeth a man into the similitude thereof so much men know as they mortifie their lusts He that lives after his lusts let him have never such store of knowledge he knows nothing yet as he ought to know what if a man know he should not Swear Lye commit Adultery c. yet doing these is he any whit the better Is he not rather much worse Yea the Devil himself hath more knowledge then any man The world wonders many times to see men of great knowledge do such and such things Alas Knowledge and Conscience are two several things and often sundred in the subject 1. Then let no man boast of his Knowledge Many love to hear themselves talk but look what power they have over their lusts what mastery over their affections 2. Do not we
same grace effectually call and convert which should binde our hearts more effectually to praise and serve him all the days of our life 4. That the excellency of this grace is such as all things without it are nothing If we had the wisdom of Solomon the strength of Sampson the policy of Achitophel the wealth of Ahasuerus c. if we could measure the Heaven Earth and Sea and knew the nature of all Creatures therein from the Cedar to the Hysope nay if we could understand the Bible could Preach never so Learnedly and had all gifts of knowledge and utterance yet were we not born again all were nothing Besides it s the more excellent both because so rare only the Elect of God are born again and because Eternal In the natural birth we dye because born of mortal seed and nourished by corruptible food but they that be born again never dye more never come more into their former state as being born of the immortal seed of the Word and Spirit and being thereby nourished are joyned to the fountain of life Christ Again by our first birth we are made miserable by this happy by that sinners by this righteous persons by that children of wrath by this children of God by that slaves of Satan by this servants of righteousnes by that limbs of the Devil by this members of Christ by that heirs of Hell by this heirs of Heaven O happy day O happy birth before Regeneration Sin and Satan wholly ruled in us but after Grace and the Spirit of God 1. This should teach us if we can prove it in our selves to rejoyce and remember our birth-day Many delight to talk of their age as others when where and what year they were born But canst thou tell where and when thou wert born again thou canst else have little joy of thy first birth The older thou art the more shame and greater condemnation if thou art not born again He that is not regenerate is a Bastard for though he have after a sort the Church to his Mother yet he hath not God to his Father and though in the Natural birth the Mothers side is the surest yet in the Spiritual birth it s otherwise Therefore if thou hast Wit Beauty Strength Wealth and the like rejoyce not in them but that thou art born again yea though thou art Poor Weak Sickly yet being born again thou art happy If God hath denied thee Wealth and Health or taken them away yet if he hath given thee grace thou art to rejoyce exceedingly 2. It may teach us to rejoyce if we know our children new born We rejoyce at their Natural Birth but alas wert not for hope because they be of Christian Parents we might rather weep for when a childe is born there 's come a sinner a guilty person into the World one that is in danger of all evil subject to a great deal of sin and sorrow and one that hath deserved to be cast into Hell O therefore if we know them born again there 's cause of rejoycing yea we must rejoyce at the new birth of a servant or any other as the Angels do The World likes such the worse a sign they are the old men 3. If we know it not we are to use the means bring them to Baptism after teach them what is fit that they may make conscience of their Covenant and bring them to the Word if they be any whit forward further them if backward or unwilling use thy Authority over them 4. Rebuke them that desire to see them Strong Fair Rich Healthy and the like in the mean time not respecting whether they be born again or not 5. He that is not born again hath nothing excellent in him but abides in death and is the servant of sin 5. That it s so necessary as without which there 's no entring into the Kingdom of Heaven for thereinto can no unclean thing enter and they onely which are pure in heart shall see God We are born impure sinful defiled from head to foot while we are in this state there 's no possibility of serving God as either by thinking speaking or doing good we must therefore be washed and made clean The world imagine no such necessity herein it s a riddle to them few know what any such work or change meaneth They think to be saved by their good meaning civil life and living orderly O this is sound if these do not well God help us all Again though openly bad if they can cry God have mercy on their deathbed they shall do well enough Here 's no dreaming of a new birth of any change in the understanding will affections yea throughout both body and soul but none of the others will serve the turn therefore try whether ye be new born If we live still in sin as in lying it s a certain argument we are as we were naturally He that is in Christ is a new creature and such a one walketh not after the flesh but after the Spirit if thou art thus thou hast put off thy old conversation and put on a new 6. The effects of Regeneration 1. An hatred of all sin a love of all good 2. A strife and labor to do the one and avoid the other 3. A diligent use of the means for this purpose and a Spiritual combat against the lets wherein being conquerors we have peace and joy if otherwise grief 4. Delight in the Word Prayer and Heavenly things whereas we were wont to delight in vain and worldly things so to cry Abba-Father to love the Father to desire the sincere milk of the Word and to live innocently If upon tryal of thy self by these notes thou findest thy self not born again thy case is fearful it had been better then thou shouldest thus dye that thou hadst never been born or born a Toad whereof when its dead there 's an end but the man that is not born again while he lives when he dyeth the second death will lay hold on him eternally yet alas a number of old folks ready to drop into the grave are not yet born again What shall become of these few men are born again when they become old which I speak not to discourage you quite but to awaken you the more earnestly to look about you some were called about the eleventh hour but let them that have day before them not defer or put it to the venture 6. That the life of a Regenerate man cannot be that it was or as is the life of carnal men for the case is altered he is now united to Jesus Christ as an imp to the stock a member to the head by Faith on our parts but principally by the Spirit of God by which Faith we draw and by which Spirit is conveyed to us vertue from Christs death to kill sin our old man and the corruptions
them betimes then we prevent evil actions The worst action was at first a thought which if it had then been resisted and cast out would not have proved so deadly as we now finde by woful experience for want of this sin grows from one degree to another till it be ripe If we thus resist and cast them out though they be our sins God will not impute them but pardon them in Christ and this may comfort us but yet because it were best not to be troubled with them or commit them at all we should even long to be with God when having laid down our bodies we shall be wholly freed from them But in the mean time let us thank God in Christ Jesus and say It s not I but sin that dwelleth in me when we do to the uttermost of our power prevent them and those we cannot yet we resist earnestly The world make little account of thoughts but let them flie out and the heart range whither it will whether on the Lords day or at other times when duties are performed and no marvel for they make no conscience either of their words or actions even on the Lords-day But they shall one day be called before a Judge that knows them all and made them without them who will condemn them for them Which fight against the soul The first Reason and that of greatest force that which fighteth against our principal part we had need resist manfully but thus do fleshly lusts for 1. They hinder the good thoughts we should have in stead of them and so make us do duties untowardly 2. They egge and entice us to evil and steal away our hearts from God and his obedience as an Adulterer enticeth and draweth a mans wife out of her husbands company so do these draw us from God and so pollute our souls which made the Apostle to complain That they rebelled against the law of his minde and led him captive he was yoked and made to do the evil he would not and so on the contrary 3. They fight against the peace of our Consciences for these make us guilty and so hinder our quiet for as well-doing breeds peace so evil-doings disquiet 4. They seek indeed the ruine and destruction of the soul for the wages of the least of these is death These not resisted or not repented of will surely cause damnation and these in themselves deserve no less 1. How ought we then to watch against these with all diligence as they keep watch that be besieged by Enemies 2. Take away from them all means of nourishment and starve them as besiegers do by their besieged adversaries 3. Mortifie them all we can else they will destroy us If we live after the flesh we shall dye It will not spare us we therefore must not spare it we must admit of no reconciliation no ransom this is holy and lawful revenge But contrarily there are not a few Christians 1. Which do not watch against their lusts and thoughts but let them come and go at their pleasure and take little or no notice of them or not as though they sought their destruction nay how few once regard their thoughts especially such as have no consent How many come and go and no account taken of them 2. Which rather minister mat●er to their lusts for their nourishment as to their pride to anger to wandring thoughts by letting their eyes and ears be at liberty 3. Which do not mortifie them nay bear with them and speak favorably of them and not as if they were deadly Enemies Oh people little think of the danger of these lusts else they would otherwise do If any lie in wait to hurt us in our bodies we watch to resist them and its wisdom or if any come to rob us we cry out Oh he seeks to rob me and get away my goods or if one should sue us for part of our Land What a stir and opposition do we make What a madness is it then that these which fight against our souls we suffer to go in and out at their pleasure without any check entertaining them rather as friends then enemies If one should strike at our leg we would fence it if we could but if he drive at our head then much more If one would thrust us into the arm we would avoyd all we can but if he go about to stab us at the heart then much more so should we most of all for our souls These lusts pretend friendship but they are Enemies fighting Enemies an Host as the word imports against our souls O let us be wiser and deal with them as deadly Enemies O our fault herein If some come and tell us this night some be pointed to rob us or there is one lies in our field armed threatning to kill us as we come that way O I thank you good Neighbor say we that you would tell me I shall love you while I live but if any come and tell us of a Lust Pride Covetousness Hastiness that is in us he had need behave himself wisely in the doing of it that shall have any thanks for his labor nay not one of many but will take it ill and snuff and think the worse of him O what folly is this to bear with such deadly foes 4. If these inward lusts fight against the soul if these ill thoughts yea the least of them be enemies to the soul and must be resisted What then do the ugly sins and abominable speeches and actions of the wicked These wound and pierce the soul most deeply their Oaths Cursing Drunkenness Prophanation of the Sabbath Whoredom Oppression Lying gash the soul most fearfully and kill it at last eternally What mad people then be most of the World which love and live in the practise of these thus murthering their own souls As the man that was possessed of a Devil broke all fetters so do these kept among the graves so do these in Alehouses cut himself with sharp stones so do these with ugly sins If a man seek to make away himself stab himself or cut his own throat we say He is beside himself its time to binde him when the World therefore gash themselves and stab themselves with their vile sins are they not mad yea so much more then the others as the soul is better then the body As strangers and pilgrims The second Reason Hereby are meant such as are out of their own house out of their own Nation which he speaks not because they were out of Canaan and dispersed in other countreys in that sence he called them Strangers in the former Chapter not in a worldly but in a Spiritualsence namely in respect of the Kingdom of Heaven which was their Countrey and from which wandring here in this world they were absent Hence Note that All Gods Servants and Believers are Pilgrims here in this world This is not their Countrey They
a Hammer a Sword and sharp Arrow they are like the Devil who both slandred God to Adam and Eve and Job to God and to this day is the accuser of the Brethren Such shall not be established on Earth neither shall they come into Heaven no place fit for them but Hell yea not onely the devisers but spreaders of Lyes so common a thing is fearful Thou shalt not walk about with tales among thy people saith God by Moses The receivers also of a false report are excluded out of Heaven and they that love lyes Oh! let none wrong their Neighbors any maner of way Magistrates Informers or whosoever Let none devise or spread abroad lyes no nor truths to their Neighbors discredit without a calling But alas what more common all folks talk then to talk of other folks matters and many times of their faults not at all of any good that 's in them We must not rashly believe what we hear against any especially having before given good testimony of their goodness yea as we would have God deal with us and ours we must not wrong any do right even to our poorest servant For them that suffer wrongfully it s their duty to behave themselves patiently looking up to God as David did when Shimei railed not fretting or raging or saying as its usual It would never have grieved me if it had been so rather say It grieves me much less because it is not so I thank God for the same it might have been if God had not kept me it was of him and not for any goodness in me more then in others I le bear it patiently for though I have not deserved it of men yet of God I have even to be made a threshold for all to tread on and a by-word and though I have not deserved it of men in this yet in some other things I have I have been faulty towards my Neighbors good name and now it s come home to me I pray God I may make a good use of it Besides it may be the Lord sees I might have faln into that or some other sin and hath sent this to prevent it preventing Physick is good blessed be his Name or he doth it to keep me humble c. Thus God that brought light out of darkness teacheth us how to bring good out of evil Thus we may make use of a slander Neither must we think that because it is wrongul we may fret and rage and make a stir and rail so should we make our selves guilty who were innocent before but may open our innocency and clear our selves as Job yea if it should concern us nearly but especially the Gospel then may we have recourse to the Magistrate for redress Thus of suffering wrongfully Touching suffering for well-doing Abel Isaas Joseph Micaiah are pregnant Examples hereof So David met with enemies because he followed goodness so our Savior Christ so suffered the Prophets Apostles Martyrs Thus many at this day even for their goodness they are hated and the better they be the worse they are hated They are not of the world and the world hateth them As sore eyes cannot abide the Sun so cannot the ill lives and consciences of worldlings who wallow in their works of darkness abide the light of Gods Word or the good conversation of godly men it makes their wickedness the more seen and they must mislike either themselves or the others but themselves you are sure they will not nay so wretchedly minded are they as to hate those that they know not but as they have heard of their goodness and rail on them and its pity they live or are suffered will they say who notwithstanding if they were put to it were unable to say one word justly against them By this time the Gospel ought to have been so beloved as that all that have shewed any good countenauce thereto should have been the better thought of but now Oh fearful that 's become a Reproach which should be every mans glory Oh you are a Professor of the Word c For those that thus hate men for their goodness it s as dreadful a sign as can be They be like the Devil are in darkness shall not enter into Heaven they are of Cains generation and Ishmaels brood God loves men because of goodness and the Angels rejoyce at a sinners conversion but these hate them for their goodness and so are unlike unto God If such as give but a cup of cold water unto a disciple in the name of a disciple shall not lose his reward shall not they be extremely punished which mock and despise them which hate and persecute them and that for their goodness They that do the least wrong to them in that respect or eo nomine shall not go unpunished For they that will smite with the tongue now would with the fist if they might yea carry to the Prison and to the Stake if times would give leave Well let them know the persecutors reward belongeth to them and how hath God from time to time dealt with such The examples of Cain Ishmael Ahab Jezabel Herod c. witness the same Besides when they would be glad to have part with the Children of God they shall be banished and have their portion with Devils and Reprobates and that in a fearful maner For if they shall stand on the left hand and hear that dreadful sentence Go ye cursed c. that have not given them meat and drink c. What shall become of them and what place shall they have in Hell that take away their meat and drink that cast them into Prison and do there deal cruelly with them The Papists are notable in this kinde who have even been drunk with the blood of the saints God will recompence tribulation to them that thus trouble his For those that are hated and punished for well-doing let them learn to bear the same patiently It s not without Gods will that hereby they might give glory to him and a seal to his truth We must not flinch away when trouble comes as many and most have done and so save themselves whole and leave Christ and his cause to shift for it self the world count them fools that will suffer any thing for his cause and themselves wise that can carry themselves so as they will be for all assays but Moses was not of that minde He chose rather to suffer affliction with the people of God then to enjoy the pleasures of sin for a season These will prove fools at last that for a few days of short life in pleasures and profits transitory have sold away their part in that which is eternal For he that saves his life shall lose it and they which deny Christ before men them will he deny before his heavenly Father When we suffer for well doing we must not suffer frettingly with raging against them
present state They were once in a poor case in a piteous taking in a miserable and dangerous case but now through Gods mercy they were come home to Christ who most carefully did and would protect them to their Salvation Before they came to Christ their case was woful and dangerous as is the state of all unregenerate persons but now having taken hold of Christ their condition was safe happy as it s with all believers and penitent persons For ye were as sheep going astray Speak we first of the miserable state of all unregenerate men of all men without Christ they are as sheep going astray 1. Every Natural man is like a beast who is therefore in Scripture compared to several sorts of beasts for one ill quality or another as to Dogs for their malicious barking and biting at them they live with to Wolves for their greedy devouring of the poor to Lyons for their cruel tyranny to fat fat Bulls for their proud abuse of their prosperity to Hogs for their rude and unreverent base esteeming of Spiritual things as the Word and Sacraments and Gods Ministers to Foxes as Herod for their craft so to Horses and Mules for their ignorance and unruliness yea sometimes the beasts are preferred before them to shame them and sometimes they are sent to school to them nay all Gods Creatures are more serviceable then Man they obey God in their kind and abide in their first estate the Sun Moon and Stars obey God in their courses the huge Sea rageth and is calm at his bidding if he command it to stand as a wall it doth so to let Israel go through and will return again upon the same warrant and drown Pharaoh if God bid the Whale swallow Jonah and cast him up again it obeys him in both if he forbid the Lyons to touch Daniel they stir not though very hungry as the fire did not burn the three Children c. But man that should be best of all and for whom all were made as he for God yet walk stubbornly and rebelliously omitting what 's required of him and doing what 's again and again prohibited therefore God calls all Creatures to witness against man yea they are many times to set themselves against us as when the heavens become as brass and the earth as iron c. and to groan because of us as being weary of doing any further service to such as we are O how ought this to humble all that be such that know no mark of conversion or change in themselves from their unregenerate condition small cause hast thou to be proud the Horse thou ridest on is far better then thou art it doth that for which God did ordain it but thou doest not that which the Lord requireth of thee nay the Dog that keeps thy Yard and ears bones under thy table is in a better case then thou art its serves God in its kinde thou never didst any thing that God set thee here for O humble thy self before God crave of him to work an alteration in thee for he onely can do it and that by the Ministery of his word Thus can he bring it to pass delivering thee from thy brutish nature turning thee into a Christian man renewing in thee his image and working of grace that so thou mayest serve him in a better maner then other creatures either do or can do so shalt thou be more happy then they for they as they have no pain so they shal have no glory but thou shalt go from hence to everlasting glory in the Kingdom of Heaven But as for all that continue in their Rebellion as they are worse then beasts in their life so shall they be in their end for their death is but a beginning to eternal misery O how happy were it for every man that shall dye in his sins if he were turned this day into a Dog or Toad and no further account to be taken of him 2. As a Sheep that wandereth is out of his way so is every natural and unregenerate man quite out of his way out of the way to Peace and Happiness We were created in the right way but in Adam all went astray we have no minde but of wandering and roaming further and further the longer we live till God take us into the right way so that whosoever dyes in the way he was born in and lived in first must needs perish it s the way of ignorance of sin the broad way to destruction Some go out of the way by ignorance some by superstition some by prophaneness by hypocrisie by trusting to civility c. naturally we do all go from God and Peace to Hell and the Devil Abraham was out of his way whilest he was an Idolater so Paul whilest he was a Persecutor The wicked they go astray even from the womb they wander from every good work and do nothing well or pleasing to God They delight to wander and take pleasure in their sins yea that they thus wander may appear by these signs They refuse instruction and reproof whether publike or private whereas the regenerate account those to love them indeed which tell them of their faults they live even in known sins they are altogether for the world having no communion with God in holy duties they have no love to good company but associate themselves with others like themselves and of their own stamp If they do good duties it s for sinister respects not out of conscience Thus the Devil misleads some Antichrist seduceth thousands by false Doctrine and miracles as wicked Ministers by seldom or erroneous teaching and bad lives So is the world a great deceiver by bad examples by false reports of the servants of God and by the profits and pleasures thereof yea a mans own heart is a great deceiver as whereby many think they are in the way to Heaven when they be in the way to destruction Ignorance also of the Scriptures is a great cause of being deceived Ye erre saith our Savior not knowing the Scriptures nay God in justice gives some over to believe lyes as Ahab was seduced by false Prophets to his destruction they may provoke God so long by their wandering that he will never reclaim or bring them home but swear in his wrath they shall never enter into his rest they may despise the means so long as no Sermon shall do them good These are in a fearful state marked to destruction as Trees to be felled This also should humble men for what are they but stragling creatures and make them desire to get into the right way But how few will take knowledge they be out of their way thinking still their case to be good enough as the Lord complained by Jeremiah I hearkened and heard but none spake aright no man repented him of his wickedness saying What have I done c. There
blessings and that which the wicked have as well as the good yea rarely doth any man enjoy very great prosperity in this world and happiness in the world to come yea be we thankful to God that seeing need doth so require he will rather chasten us then suffer us to perish in our sins we are thankful to our bodily Physitian how much more should we express our thankfulness unto the Physitian of our souls Neither must we grudge at the prosperity of the wicked though we be in trouble for its better to be here held in awe thereby that we may rest with God for ever then prosper a while here to our mindes and perish hereafter A thief on the ladder with the halter about his neck hath elbow room and sits aloft at his ease whereas the people below stand crowded and sweating but which of the two is in the best condition who knoweth not Thus is it in this particular Q. May we then pray for afflictions A. No we have no commandment nor example for it we may and ought to pray when a cross is on us that it may be sanctified but to desire that a cross may befal us we must not as being in it self evil God turns our sins to our good oftentimes yet may not we pray to sin If God send adversity we may know that its needful which yet through care we might have prevented as through profiting by one we may prevent another trouble Besides adversity hath no power in it self to do us good neither are we very fit to bear the same Let him refrain his tongue from evil c. Now of the duties to be performed for the compassing of the forementioned blessings they are eschewing evil and doing the contrary good both in tongue and hand By evil we may understand blasphemy mocking lying cursing swearing c. and thus even Gods children out of humane frailty and through the remainder of sin in them are subject at some times to sin Moses spake unadvisedly Job cursed the day of his birth Peter swore and cursed c. but it s not their practice it s not their minde so to do they are heartily ashamed thereof Therefore must not their example be urged for the justification of the wicked whose continual practice is to use their tongue to evil The point from hence observable is this That Whosoever would have a good conscience enjoy Gods blessing and partake of good days here and eternal life hereafter he must refrain his tongue from evil we must labor to have a good tongue The Law of God bindes the tongue as well as the hands neither can a bad man or ungovern'd tongue enter into Heaven If any man seem Religious and bridleth not his tongue his Religion is vain Again no unsanctified person can enter into Heaven the inheritance there is for the sanctified ones but whoso is not sanctified in tongue is not sanctified in heart 1. This condemneth the most horrible abuse of the tongue by the most of the world that make no conscience what they say Their tongues are their own who should control them Multitudes abuse their tongues to Blasphemy quarrelling with Scripture jesting out of the Scriptures Swearing Forswearing Cursing and Banning idle vain and wicked talking on the Lords day so in railing reviling brawling miscalling in ribaldry filthy talk singing bawdy songs so in backbiting slandering talebearing guibing mocking c. Such declare unto all that they have rotten and unsavory hearts for out of the abundance of the heart the mouth speaketh their Religion also is vain they want a good conscience Their tongue is set on fire of hell By their words they shall be condemned for even of every idle word that they speak they must give an account and therefore much more of their blasphemous oathes c. yea even in this world they may look for some fearful judgement as befel Denis Benefield for blaspheming the Gentleman of Cornwal for swearing the Sheriffs man for slandering James Abbs one Leaver for railing on Mr. Latimer c. They that have any spark of grace let them lay to heart all their rotten vile communication which God hath registred say not Words are but wind true in some sence they are wind to blow up the fire of Gods judgements against us otherwise think not they vanish but know they are all upon record and repent that they be not laid to your charge else as the tongue is set on fire of Hell so will the whole body go thither as sure as God is in Heaven If any have been such evil tongued persons as Swearers Mockers Blasphemers c. but now from their hearts truly repent thereof and do wholly abstain from such speaking it s a good sign that all that is past is forgiven O repent of all thy vile words and for the time to come use thy tongue as a Trumpet to sound out Gods praise 2. As we desire to enjoy Gods blessing and good days with a good conscience let us have great care of our tongues and words To this end 1. We must get a good heart for what the tongue speaks the heart indites 2. We must pray unto God with David To set a watch before our mouthes and to keep the door of our lips 3. We must take heed thereunto and watch over the same for speech is a goodly blessing The want of it in any declares it no creature hath it but man therefore ought it not to be abused to the dishonor of God the hurt of our neighbors or damning of our selves God made our tongues good at first and fit to praise his name therefore must we labor that they may be brought to their first plight By our words also we shall be justified or condemned yea if we look well to our tongues it s a sign we have good hearts and that our Religion is not vain but powerful Again our tongue though a little member yet can do a great deal of good if well lookt to as To praise God Instruct men Pray Counsel Advise Admonish c. therefore it should be well employed as the Rudder for the Ship and the bit for the Horse contrarily if not well lookt to it can do a great deal of hurt as fire or poyson Oh it can dishonor God hurt poyson vex men damn our own souls and was our speech given us to such ends O let none make a small matter of words for God doth not so account of them neither let any say There 's no need of such perswasion to look to the tongue it s but a little member therefore easily ruled No it s an unruly evil Lyons and Bears have been tamed but never man ruled the tongue God onely can rule it by his Spirit It will do prodigious and monstrous things bless and curse God and men it daily affords such contraries He is a wise and happy
when he is angry 3. God hates it and such as commit the same 4. It brought misery into the world with shame and confusion upon us all and hath always been the cause of all evils For this the Angels were cast out of Heaven Adam out of Paradice the old world drowned and Sodom burnt c. yea it wounds the Conscience which God hath set in us as a Monitor Notary Accuser Judge and Tormentor 5. It bringeth eternal destruction both of body and soul O who would not hate that Mother which brings forth no better children Besides we shun lesser things therefore should shun this much more we shun crosses exceedingly which yet are so far from hindring our Salvation as that they further the same but sin is the destruction of our souls That sins is worse then all crosses appears by the Devils practice who is that subtile one he had rather draw Job to commit sin against God by impatiency then have power to take away all his goods he did this to bring him to that and its true if a man should break an Arm or Leg or lose all he hath it were not so bad or so much to be shunned as is sin To eschew this is the note of a man that loves God of a man that fears him for eschewing this are Gods Servants commended in Scripture as on the contrary the wicked branded for committing the same We are to Eschew all evil even the least we must not give way unto any one no not the least idle thought or word even one is able to destroy us yea and he that breaks one is guilty of all Yea and All persons are to eschew the same not the greatest excepted Gods Law bindes them be they Princes Magistrates Ministers Householders c. They should eschew it most for by their example they do most hurt and as no mans greatness will bear him out so will not any mans meanness excuse him in doing of evil And as all persons are to eschew it so must they shun it At all times Amonst all the times which the Preacher setteth down there 's none for sin we must serve God in holiness and righteousness all the days of our life Some things be in season at one time some at another but sin is never in season Many make the Lords days the times of disorder and they that will be orderly all the year yet at Christide they take liberty to ryot gaming drinking c. as if those times were not to be as well if not better employed then others We must also eschew it In all places God is the God of all places neither can any place change the nature of sin thou must eschew sin as well abroad as at home in thy House Chamber Shop as well as at Church All kindes of sin are also to be avoided Error in judgement and wickedness in Conversation evil against God our Neighbors or our selves We must also shun and avoid evil under what colour or pretence soever it comes as Usury is pretended to be lawful on the behalf of Orphans to kill ones self to preserve Chastity to separate from the Church lest they partake with the wicked c. whosoever doth command it as appears by the examples of the three Children Daniel Peter and John whose example soever we have for it for we are not to follow even a multitude though of great learned men in evil though it be never so gainful What got Achan Gehazi Judas by their booties Our Savior would not listen to the Devils proffer that of fered him All the Kingdoms of the world and we should be losers if we did gain the whole world with the loss of our souls never so pleasannt for though it be sweet in the mouth it will be gall afterward bite like a Serpent and sting like a Cockatrice for a vain short pleasure to sell our souls to everlasting pain were folly indeed yea though we could bring to pass some good thereby we must not do evil that good may come thereof better that good be left undone then that it should be purchased with Gods dishonor as to steal or take usury that we may do good to the poor c. nay we must so hate and eschew evil as we may eschew the very appearance thereof as to go to a place that is of ill report though having no ill purpose c. and must avoid the occasions leading thereunto as going in the twylight by the Harlots house anger multitude of businesses the company of angry persons multiplying of words c. yea if even things good and lawful in themselves be an occasion of evil and cause us to offend we must forbear them as some in using their recreations break out into impatience and anger and others cannot leave the same in any time better for such to pluck out this their eye cut off this their right hand and to eschew this we must eschew the persons and places where in likelyhood we are to be drawn thereunto as the company of bad persons and private familiarity with wicked doers and that not for any sinister respect but because its evil though haply we may be hated for our labor eschewing especially those sins that be most incident to our nature complexion and calling and whereunto we have been most accustomed 1. This condemns them that be so far from hating and eschewing evil though it be as poyson as the Plague that they love it with their hearts live in the continual practice thereof drink it down like water running thereunto as the horse rusheth into the Battel This is the state of most they are workers of iniquity the whole world lieth in wickedness they love not the means nor persons whereby they may be pulled out of their sins but eschew them and goodness as much as they can What Rebels be these against God their Maker Preserver and Soveraign Being made to honor him will they do nothing but dishonor him and so requite all his blessings will nothing serve those to play with but swords and fire-brands and mortal things nothing please them but to cross God and nothing like them but their own poyson Have they sped so well formerly that have done thus Do they provoke the Lord and not themselves to the confusion of their faces If they have vowed they will have their pleasures and lusts whatsoever comes of it then it must be so what remedy These have no love of God neither is there any fear of God in them They are prophane and godless persons which may look for wages answerable to their work shame and the wrath of God in this world and eternal destruction in the world to come For life is in the way of righteousness but death is in the way of sin and the paths thereof tend to Hell O that these persons would hear the
so called in the Scriptures he gave his Son to make our peace with him and loves that we should live in peace one with another and therefore gives us the Gospel of peace and Spirit of peace yea he so likes it that he pronounceth them blessed that helps it forward On the contrary the Devil delights in contentions and he onely gains thereby 2. This shall be a sign that we are taught of God and whereby our Prayers will become the more acceptable Our hands must be lifted up without wrath whosoever is addicted hereunto can neither pray aright nor duly partake of the Sacrament neither rightly perform any other duty 3. This is most comely like the oyntment which was poured on Aarons head which was made of most fragrant sweet things and to the dew upon new mowed grass O how sweet is it to them that do enjoy it how sweet to the lookers on what a comely thing is it to see a Land agree in it self so a Town a Family It s as an instrument whereof all the strings be in tune Better is a dry morsel with this then an house full of Sacrifices with strife Better is a dinner of herbs where love is then a stalled Ox and hatred therewith Better to be in the corner of the house top then with a contentious woman in a wide house 4. Great is the profit hereof as the rain makes the mown grass shoot out and grow so is peace exceeding fruitful O how doth a Land encrease by peace and how do Wars whether civil or forraign waste and consume the same little things by concord wax great great things through discord come to nothing when there 's peace in a Town between the Pastor and People what good may be done what evil avoided where there is not neither can evil be suppressed nor good established A Town knit together in peace is like a faggot fast bound that cannot be bent but divided like the several sticks of the faggot which may easily be broken the like may be said of Husbands and Wives Masters and Servants Parents and Children A Kingdom City or house divided against it self cannot stand 5. If we live in peace we are fit to do good one to another else we can do no good but all evil 1. This condemns all contentious and quarrellous Spirits that regard not peace but their own wil are never wel but when they are contending are so far from seeking peace as they cannot keep it when they have it nor accept it when it s offered and so far from following it as they flye from it as those of whom the Psalmist complained Others regard it not as they ought will fall out and break the peace even for trifles offer the occasion of strife and harm their Neighbors both by words and deeds in goods and good name yea if the least wrong be done them they will hear of no reconciliation but break off all love quarrel go to Law c. Every place abounds with such These bewray themselves not to be led by Gods Spirit nor endued with the wisdom from above nay that they are carnal and filled with devilish and fleshy wisdom these either never pray or lose their labors for as good not pray at all as pray in wrath These in stead of good days here shall have vexation neither shall they hereafter inherit the Kingdom of Heaven but shall meet with indignation and wrath 2. This rebuketh those that live at peace but it s after this maner they will have peace with some but not with others whereas we ought to be at peace with all not with the poor onely but with the rich also nor with the good onely but with the bad also some there are that fail every of those ways as a number that will be at peace with the bad not with the good and have peace with the wicked in their wickedness which is indeed fearful yea buy peace with hard and ill conditions as consenting to evil or neglecting good Some that they may be counted peaceable men will not stir against any disorder woful peace let men give of their own right for peace but not of the Lords 3. This serves to comfort them that love peace and desire it with all their hearts and can be content to seek it in any honest and lawful way and that for conscience and that they may serve God the better and for that God requires the same in the mean time being careful to avoid wrangling and jarring c. assuredly such are at peace with God and howsoever the world deals with them enjoy the peace of a good conscience 4. Let this encourage us all to set more by peace then pearls to seek it diligently and to be content rather to lose any reasonable thing then this This is pleasing to God is also comely so shall our Prayers be accepted so shall we be strong to all good and against all evil so shall we see good days here and eternal peace with God hereafter To this end we must avoid all the enemies of peace and labor for the contraries as 1. Pride which breaks peace many ways as when men have not more honor then is indeed their due as Haman or when any is honored besides themselves as Saul when David was commended in the dance Pride also makes men think so highly of themselves and meanly of others as they will be ready to offer injury and yet think it small and if the least wrong be done them think it so heinous as no recompence can be made for it They must forsooth by no means be blamed in any thing else they swell break peace and part company this we must avoid and labor for humility which is contrary hereunto 2. Covetousness the covertous man is angry if he have not every good bargain or if the least trespass be done him If but a Goose of their neighbors grase in their ground O it s such a loss such a wrong that they must not put it up They will part with no piece of right for all peace 3. Frowardness For a froward man soweth strife we must labor for a meek and patient spirit 4. Talebearers A whisperer separateth chief friends They be the Devils Pedlers let them not open their packs nor unlade their wares in our ears thereby to infect our mindes He that listens to them shall never have peace The world is full of such yea such as on both sides are Tale carriers which with some few truths intermingle numbers of lyes they are the Devils seedsmen to sow strife If God pronounce the Peace-makers blessed then wo to those Make-bates of this number we are not to repute those which inform Parents and Masters of some abuses in their children and servants unknown unto them provided it be done in love and that for the redress of the
same 5. If we must labor to have peace with men then much more with God who is at enmity with us because of our sins and that through Christ alone who is our Advocate with him This will afford more true joy then the world either knoweth or can Till we procure this we can have no true peace with our neighbors no true peace of conscience Verse 12. For the eyes of the Lord are over the Righteous and his ears are open unto their prayers but the face of the Lord is against them that do evil THat those which perform the forementioned duties shall have long life and good days here and hereafter and that the contrary shall befal those that do not thus do our Apostle here proveth Such as thus do God will have a care of them and watch over them for good and for the others God will set himself against them where an Objection is prevented Oh might some say that such as live most harmlesly and do most good and be best disposed and love peace and quietness should of all others be most hated and lie open to manifest dangers and they that will scamble and shift for themselves by right or wrong not caring whom they wrong do yet wax great and prove rich in the world True saith the Apostle If peaceable and good men were here left to themselves they would be soon thrust to the walls and be as sheep among wolves ready to be spoiled but God doth not so leave them but hath a continual care over them to defend them from dangers as much as shall be fit for them and if they fall into any he is ready to hear their prayers and to help them and for the others they may prosper a while which yet some of them do not but it shall not always so continue God will set his face against them and his fury root them out By Eyes we are to understand the diligent and watchful care that the Lord hath over his people as the mother whose eye is over the yong childe that it take no hurt And by Ears is meant his great readiness to hear their Prayers and grant their requests By Face is meant sometimes his favor and love as in the Psalms sometimes his wrath and displeasure as here for a mans favor or displeasure is seen by his contenance Thus are other parts of man ascribed to the Lord as his Hand Right hand Arm c. Q. But why are these attributed to the Lord not being in him A. Because if the Lord should speak unto us weak men of himself and as he is in himself we were utterly unable to bear it but being willing that we should understand him he speaketh according to our capacity as the nurse to the childe Because we know not how one should see without eyes or watch over any for good therefore God ascribeth eyes to himself and because our power lieth in our right hand therefore doth he ascribe a right hand to himself the like may be said about his ears c. 1. This should greatly provoke us to the reading and exercising our selves in the Scriptures for that we may so do in them the Lord vouchsafed to stoop very low for our understanding If we do it not it must needs be great neglect and unthankfulness wherein notwithstanding too too many fail 2. Ministers whose office it is to teach the Lords people must be careful to frame themselves to their understanding and edifying and not to soar aloft thereby stirring up admiration in their people without profit If God stoop so low must any so far seek themselves as not to follow such a patern O it s a greater mercy to edifie and convert one soul then that a thousand should go away meerly commending them for learning and eloquence By Righteous we are not to understand such as be so in their own conceit but such as are in Gods account truly Righteous perfectly by imputation of Christs Righteousness and imperfectly by inherent here begun and increased but which shall hereafter be perfected Righteous I say 1. By imputation of Christs Righteousness to us by Faith For Christ which knew no sin became sin for us that we might be the Righteousness of God in him 2. By inherent Sanctification of the Spirit conveyed from Christ which though it be imperfect yet is of the better part of their Righteousness and the rather because they are desirous to do well and do it willingly but sin against their will as an heap of corn is so called though it be not without chaff 3. Because of their endeavor to be more and more Righteous as a yong Apprentice is called by the name of his Trade because of his endeavor and purpose though he can do but a little in it so that they which be such may be of good comfort notwithstanding their imperfections remaining God accounts them Righteous and holy persons howsoever the world esteems of them By them that do evil is not meant such as fall into sin through weakness and infirmity but such as give themselves thereto and make a trade thereof living and lying therein without repentance against such doth the Lord set himself The eyes of the Lord are over the Righteous That is God hath an especial care of his righteous servants he loveth them dearly and watcheth over them for their good They are his portion and inheritance they are his Spouse they are his children whose care exceeds both the fathers and the mothers when both these forsook David the Lord did not leave him Psal. 27. 10. He causeth all creatures to do them good and serve their turns He appointeth the Angels to preserve them as Elisha destroy their enemies as it befel Senacheribs host bring them good tidings as to the Shepherds defend them c. The very Stars in their courses must fight for Israel the Hail-stones slay his enemies Frogs Lice Caterpillars c. plague the Egyptians for Pharaohs disobedience yea he will cause all things to go contrary to the course of nature rather then they shall miscarry the waters must divide themselves the Sun stand still and go backwards the stony rock yield water the fire must not hurt the three children nor the Lyons Daniel He that cared for man and provided all things necessary for him before he was is now no less careful for his reconciled ones his care is effectual continual he both preserves them from evil and provides for them good things the very hairs of their head are numbred and he that toucheth them toucheth the Apple of his eye How did he preserve Noah Lot Jacob Joseph Moses David Elijah Peter c. which of us also hath not escaped thousands of dangers through his eye over us But do not the righteous fall into many troubles as the examples of Abel Micaiah Jeremiah the Apostles and
all that are not as they should be whereas they should by a wise meek and moderate defence and kinde perswasions win credit to the truth which they defend and so do good they on the contrary cause them to speak evil and to think that it s but a preposterous hate and pride of heart in them so to speak and so do hurt Some sober Christians do much good and win on many that at first were opposite when they hear the wait of their reasons rather then the bigness of their words and seeing they do it in the fear of God and for conscience sake Some are not so milde as others but of an hotter nature this must in any wise be tempered with wisdom yet are not we to part from any part of the truth but to stick as close thereto as we may Verse 16. Having a good conscience that whereas they speak evil of you as of evil doers they may be ashamed that falsly accuse your good conversation in Christ. TO our constancy in the confession of our faith we must have a good conscience not so onely as it may be known to our selves but we must so walk that others even our adversaries may perceive the same that thereupon changing their mindes and being ashamed that they have spoken so evil of us they may cease to blame such as walk in so good a conversation as becometh the Servants of Christ Before I come to handle the points particularly laid down herein I will shew 1. What conscience is 2. The offices thereof 3. Resolve some questions about it and 4. Treat of the kindes thereof For the 1. Conscience is a faculty or power placed by God in the soul of a man which determineth of his thoughts desires words and deeds either with him or against him in the sight of God I say It s a faculty or power not a bare act for many actions are ascribed thereto as to accuse excuse comfort terrifie c. Placed by God for God being the creator of the soul he must accordingly be the creator of all the faculties of it In the soul called also the heart and the Spirit of a man Herein there be diverse faculties as the understanding whereby we conceive what is true and what is false what is good and what is evil the will whereby we will or nill choose or refuse any thing whereto are joyned the affections joy grief love hope fear c. and the memory whereby we hold fast things conceived or else call to minde and remember things past So also is conscience another faculty thereof whereby the soul reflects upon it self whereby I know that I do know such a thing that I think this or that that I affect or desire love or hate this or that for its one thing to know a thing think a thing remember a thing c. and another to know that I know it think it remember it Now in which part of the soul it hath its place as whether in the understanding or will or in every part of the soul I will not stand it s enough for us to know that there is such a faculty in mans soul. True it is it not only gives witness of all the faculties tels what I think desire affect c. but it useth and worketh upon all the faculties as the understanding for by it it directs and according to it it doth accuse so as if the judgement be well informed the conscience will give right witness if ignorant or ill informed then it gives wrong testimony So the memory accusing or excusing for things past so it worketh upon the will by provoking it to choose or refuse this or that so it worketh upon the affections raising up in us comfort and joy upon well doing fear and grief upon ill-doing Now though it have to do with all yet it may have its proper place in the understanding and minde according to the judgement of most Divines Of a man for no Creature on earth hath Conscience but man True the Angels are not without it the good having a good comfortable excusing joyful Conscience the evil a woful ill accusing and tormenting Conscience which is so much the worse for that they know so much and be so maliciously bent against it so that even when they be not in the place of torment but have leave to range the world yet they carry Hell with them even a tormenting Conscience whereof their trembling according to Saint James is an evident testimony But no other Creature hath it for having no Reason they have no Conscience therefore we say in our speech of a bad and unconscionable man he hath no more Conscience then a Dog or as much Conscience as an Horse whereby we mean none at all for these Creatures have none Man then hath a Conscience yea every man yet as the use of Reason may be lost by folly phrensie c. so the use of Conscience in such So by notorious wickedness a man may lose the use of his Conscience for a time whereupon we say of such a one he hath no Conscience yes every man hath a Conscience though as the use of Reason is taken from one deeply drunk so custom of sinning hath taken away use of Conscience so that it doth not admonish him before he do ill nor check and accuse him after or hath such an erronious judgement thinking good evil and evil good that he hath also an erronious Conscience But this benummed or beguiled Conscience will be awakened at one time or other in life or death or at the day of Judgement for no mans Conscience dyes but lives and shall meet him at the last day and though his sins be now as words written with the juyce of Lemmons nothing to be seen yet when their Conscience comes to the fire of Gods Judgements then every little dash idle words vain thoughts c. will be perceived Though men choak and smother Conscience though they strangle it or so drown it in their cups yet it will and doth abide still what made Joseph's Brethren troubled in Egypt but Conscience which told them of the sin committed by them twenty years before So Conscience told Pharaoh that he and his people were wicked which determined of his thoughts desires words and deeds or more briefly beareth witness either with us or against us in the sight of God It meddles not with other folks actions for that is science or knowledge but with our own and that is Conscience Conscience that is knowledge with another that is either another knowledge when I knowing any thing do know that I know it and so know my self and what is in me or another person that knows with me what I know and that as well as I or rather far better namely God who made the Conscience and will judge it and is privy to all that is in it for so is no other neither man nor Angel and accordingly the
Apostles Paul and John joyn both together Great is the force hereof as both being within us and so more able either to comfort or terrifie us then any other thing as the wind that gets within the earth shakes it most terribly and likewise so inseparable that a man cannot get from it 1. This sheweth plainly that there is a God who hath set Conscience on work thus to admonish warn comfort accuse terrifie c. Having done evil why should a mans Conscience accuse or terrifie him but that God hath ordained it should so do and accordingly it doth cite him before God and judge him before hand for not man or Angel can take the accusation of Conscience it bears record in the sight of God Why have the most unbridled despisers of God when any token of Gods wrath hath appeared run into holes and cellars under the ground yea and such wicked monsters after some foul offence though so secretly done as that they needed not to have been afraid of men yet been so much vexed and disquieted but that their Consciences informed them of God against whom they did sin and that his wisdom and knowledge did far surpass that of men or Angels as knowing not onely what is done and spoken in the world but what is in every mans heart 2. This confuteth those which affirm That we cannot be assured of our Salvation and why because we cannot know whether we believe or not c. But as we may know a Tree by the fruits so may we our Faith God gives us not grace that we should not know whether we have it or not wherefore serves Conscience but to witness what is in us Thus what Conscience is For the second The Offices of Conscience they are to bear witness and to give judgement First I say To bear witness and that 1. Of our thoughts whether they have been proud distrustful unclean wandering at the hearing of the Word or in Prayer worldly on the Lords day c. for the understanding hath two faculties one whereby it conceives or thinks this or that the other whereby it doubles upon it self and knows that it did think it The minde thinks a thought the Conscience goes beyond the minde and knows what the minde thinks so that if a man would hide his thoughts from God his Conscience can bear witness of them Thus it discovers the very bent and sway of our hearts 2. Of our will and affections whether the same be set on good or that which is evil 3. Of our speeches whether they be agreeable to Gods Word or not 4. Of our actions though never so secret Thus Davids Conscience told him that he had sinned in numbring the people but that he had not conspired against Saul howsoever he was by him persecuted so Jobs Conscience witnessed against him that he had spoken somewhat impatiently but for him that he had not eat his morsels alone c. 1. This setteth out the great mercy of God to man God hath not here left us alone but besides his Word and Ministers every man hath a keeper still going along with him who is to pry into our actions and to bear witness of them all and when we have done amiss to tell us secretly thereof that so we may ask pardon and amend and may not complain that we had none to tell us of our faults c. and that is our conscience Hereby such as belong unto God are stirred up to have recourse unto God for mercy and thereupon are pardoned after their conversion they are also hereby kept from many evils and through the checks of Conscience we are driven to repentance Happy are they that have tender Consciences and turn not the deaf ear thereto Doth our conscience tell us of any thing amiss if we do thereupon amend we make good use thereof but if we do not whereas it now speaks softly between it and us in our ear it will roar out one day when it will be heard whether we will or not namely Both at the hour of our death and on the day of Judgement Most men count their conscience a common Barretor one that troubles them as Ahab said Elias did Israel therefore is it just with God to give them benumb'd consciences that they go snorting to Hell 2. It setteth out the Equity and Justice of God that condemns no man till he hath given him both a law to guide him and a conscience to admonish him yea to accuse and condemn him When God judgeth every mans conscience shall justifie God for so doing when God shall awake the conscience then it will speak true give a righteous verdict and condemn the civilest for want of Faith in Christ and not performance of the duties of the first Table 3. It teacheth us to beware we sin not whether in thought word or deed either out of hope that none shall know it or that we shall scape for lack of witnesses or that we may alledge that we knew not that so and so to do were sins Thus we should but deceive our selves for there be witnesses enough thine own conscience is as a thousand and God as ten thousand Le ts do no other thing but that whereof we would hear again for conscience will bear witness do not we bless our selves for our sins done in secret as if none saw them or could witness any thing against us The bird in the breast knows and God knows hang down thine head then and ask mercy of God and confess thy self to him if not even thine own conscience may break it out in this world as Judas's in accusing himself whereas he was not taxed by others and many have confessed Murther Adultery Theft c. some with repentance others in hellish horror Do not any thing in hope of secrecy unless you can keep God and your consciences from being present neither be we careful for eye-witnesses of our well doing in the performance of duties It s enough if our conscience tells us we have done well yea if we be taxed for Hypocrites or otherwise be slandered its sufficient that God and our own conscience can bear witness of our sincerity and uprightness it s more then if every one should speak well of us excepting our own conscience Thus was Job thus Hezekiah comforted 2. To give judgement and that whether things be good or bad whether they be well done or ill done and this judgement is given either before our actions or after them before Conscience gives judgement thus it tells us what is good and what bad and not so barely but with some furtherance This is good therefore do it This is ill therefore do it not so Pilate knowing Christ to be innocent his conscience moved him to seek to loose him so Reuben when his brethren would have killed Joseph apprehending that to be ill and that from
conscience A. By no means a particular faith must be had for all our actions we must forbear a thing till we be perswaded and such ought to be born with that seek resolution A scruplous Conscience is when a man is inclined to think a thing lawful and yet hath some scruples and doubts by reason of many difficulties that he hath heard of which he knoweth not how to answer or resolve Here our rule is to labor to suppress all difficulties that make us doubt but if it cannot be done then its lawful to follow conscience notwithstanding those doubts and scruples as Deut. 13. when the people were setled in a true way of serving God if one should come and teach them a contrary way confirming the same by a sign this must needs breed some scruples in the peoples mindes nevertheless conscience enclining to the truth of the former Doctrine they are bound to stand to it Thus of these three Questions For the fourth There are good and bad consciences Mans conscience was onely good in the Creation since the fall all mens consciences are corrupted and perverted whereof some are renewed and sanctified from Heaven and so become good though not perfectly because of the remnants of corruption Whosoever is not sanctified hath an ill conscience of one kinde or other An evil conscience is either a still and quiet evil conscience or stirring either by accusing or excusing wrongfully for the true property of a good conscience is to excuse altogether for well-doing Now when the conscience is either num and dead and lies still or otherwise accuseth for sin or excuseth wrongfully this is an ill conscience Of a still quiet ill conscience there be three kindes namely sleepy secure and seared The first a sleepy drowsie conscience that lives and lies in many sins and yet accuseth not by reason of ignorance in the Word of God as the common sort neglect many a duty and commit many a sin that conscience never checks them for because they be ignorant of Gods Law for which another that knows the Law of God is humbled with them are omnia bene they hope to be saved by their good meaning and crying God mercy at last they are not troubled at wandring thoughts worldly talk on the Lords day to go to bed without prayer and the like They are like one that comes into a sluttish house in a dark night and sees nothing amiss but when the Sun shines perceives the foul corners yea the very moats that flye in the Sun-beams Some such have come under a lightsom Ministery and have wondred and been ashamed of themselves and have been humbled and converted Thus was it with Paul before and after his conversion The second A secure conscience that is stirred onely at foul and staring sins hates murther and fighting but in rash and unadvised anger is not moved at all is somewhat troubled at swearing by wounds and blood but makes nothing of By my faith truth this bread fire Sun that shines and the like such have wide throats that can swallow all small things So there are that make conscience of oppression cruelty in justice but none of neglecting the Word Sacraments and Prayer or prophaning the Lords-day which be greater then the former though they do not so think and partly the commonness of them makes their conscience not accuse in them or that they be never awakened for their sins till some great cross do befal them or after some rowsing Sermon then their consciences work therefore they cannot abide such Preaching though it were happy for them if they might hear such still till they were wearied out of themselves The third A benumbd brawny and seared conscience benumbd as a member in the dead Palsie brawny as a laboring mans hand seared as with an hot iron which is worst of all when men go on and make conscience of nothing but do what they list and their hearts scarce smite them being as Nabal like blocks and stones daring do any thing and committing most horrible foul sins and yet not being troubled thereat This comes by the custom of sin and refusing the checks of their conscience and Gods giving them up to a reprobate minde and an hard heart to work wickedness and that with greediness great sins also lyen in without repentance do harden and benumb the conscience as a part of the body that is seared is past feeling They not onely doing against the light of Gods Word but even against the light of nature and their natural conscience God gives them over and so they go on in sin without sence of any thing The cause of these especially the two first is chiefly the want of a faithful Ministery for where this is though they be not converted yet they be convinced and sin not so quietly as others or if they live under such a faithful stirring Ministery and yet have drowsie and secure consciences it s because they come not to the Word or regard not what they hear or understand it not or sleep thereat But there are some more notorious which will not lightly abide a zealous or powerful Ministery but will get away from it else if they tarry through long contempt of the Word and hardening their hearts they grow past feeling having set down with themselves they will never be moved with whatsoever is said This is a great plague it takes from a man the onely means under God of his repentance he is as one under a grave stone that cannot rise These are lusty and merry they think their case happy they say Peace peace they thank God they were never troubled in conscience and marvel at them that be thinking them out of their wits or else that they have been some great offenders c. but they are troubled not because they be out of their wits but because they now begin to come into their right minde as it s said of the Prodigal They be troubled not because they be greater sinners then the others but because they see that the others see not which if they saw as it were happy for them if they did they would see cause enough to be wounded to the purpose But do they think their conscience will ever lie thus still No let them be assured God will set all in order before them and their benumb'd conscience will prove a raging conscience A Bankrupt makes a great shew at first afterward breaks and is arrested and imprisoned many make fair promises unto Delinquents that they will speak to the Judge for them c. but do indeed prove their chief adversaries such are the consciences of these men If it be once awakened and stirred it will roar as a Lyon and tear out their throats a sleepy conscience is like a starcht Ruff that stands up brave in fair weather but falls quite down in a storm The peace of such a conscience is naught it
that the other is better as having more comfort in themselves and being more fit to do good unto others and yet they may scape some checks the others may meet with as Peter yea God seems more to tender these then those as a Father having two Children both beloved of him the one sick the other in health is most careful of him that is sick that he may recover To have a tender conscience checking us for the least sin idle words vain thoughts and the like as Davids for curting off the lap of Sauls Garment is a singular blessing and therefore to obtain it we must both see the odiousness of sin judging aright thereof and must bring our hearts to mourn even for the smallest sins 1. Let every man examine himself whether he hath a good conscience or not whether art thou assured of the pardon of thy sins whether doth thine heart bear witness that thou hatest all sin and art truly desirous to please God in all things as well great as small secretly as openly at least in the deep sence of thy misery art thou wearied under it as an intollerable weight hearing of the onely remedy dost thou long after it above all the world art thou as willing to turn from sin as to have sin forgiven to take up his yoke as to be refreshed by him If not thy case is fearful What have we if we have not this It s our duty then to labor for it and not rest till we obtain it What may not incite us hereto It procures Joy Peace Comfort Boldness before God and men such are bold to pray unto God bold to crave others to pray for them It s comfortable in prosperity a sweet companion at home and abroad night and day it s a sweet companion in adversity like a good wife by her kindeness chearing her husband when he comes home who hath been much turmoild abroad another Simon to bear a piece of our cross yea in the greatest crosses this assureth us that yet God is our Father he visits us in love he will assist us and at last deliver us It s a Castle of comfort an armor of proof a continual feast an Heaven upon earth It makes a man embrace the flames kiss the stake and being in the fire accounts as if he were on a bed of Roses In death its comfortable when all things else forsake us then when our eyes are shut up yet through this we shall with Steven see Christ Jesus ready to receive us and shall say Lord now lettest thou thy servant depart in peace In the day of judgement it will make us lift up our heads with joy when we shall see our Savior Christ come to receive us into his heavenly kingdom O they that have a good conscience should make much of it as of their jewel and labor to keep it It may be easily lost and is hardly recovered as may be seen in David and Peter The first part of it namely The assurance of our Salvation is kept by daily renewing our Confessions Supplications and Thanksgivings To this end we must labor to know the will of God and daily to grow in knowledge by our diligent perusal of the Scriptures The 2 part of it namely our care to please God is kept maintained by a daily and constant resolution not to offend God and so we must both strive and watch against our frowardness worldly-mindedness c. and covenant and vow to do the will of God to the uttermost of our power Hereupon we must walk carefully as in the presence of God avoiding all occasions of sinning using all good means to keep us in a good course publiquely and privately being diligent and careful in our particular calling to the glory of God and good of our brethren 2. This reproveth those that having a good conscience fail as much in laboring to keep it as the World doth in not laboring to obtain it How do Christians go on carelesly without renewing their exercises of Faith and Repentance and so their assurance is to seek or else hold it at a venture and coldly our worst day in the week might be better then our Sabbath had we but the grace to use our time aright O how many are careless watch not give way to their lusts therefore fall into many evils and so wound their consciences very often which is dangerous A place often wounded or hurt will not at last be healed We dishonor God much disquiet our consciences give evil example to others by our frowardness impatience worldliness hard dealings c. Hence it cometh that the Word pincheth us evil tidings amaze us we are loath to dye and the day of Judgement is fearful to us 3. This may encourage and comfort those that have good consciences though they be timerous What God shews mercy even to men unworthy and though thy sins be many and great ye● hast thou to deal with him that 's able to pardon them Lose not that thou hast when we lose good consciences all Gods graces diminish and vanish away neither can we thrive any whit as is seen by daily experience But nothing can do us hurt as long as our consciences hold good then are we fit to live and fit to dye fit for the Word and Sacrament fit for death and judgement Thus of the kindes of conscience and so of conscience in general Having a good conscience c. Now of the Words in particular whereof I have laid down their coherence with the former and from whence may be noted That a godly conversation in all things is to be joyned to a bold and zealous profession of our Faith to our knowledge and profession gifts utterance and the like we must adde a good life these two be two Twins St. Paul often joyns them together neither must they be parted saying and doing the tongue and hand must accompany one another Reasons hereof may be these 1. God expecteth of us that where he reveals the knowledge of his will that we adde obedience or else we shall be beaten with more stripes Where God findes this he delights in it as in Abraham who is called The friend of God in David whom he calls A man according to his own heart so in Joh in Zachary and Elizabeth c. we finde the same commended The contrary God loaths as in his own people whom he did again and again advertise hereof 2. This will prove our profession sound and not hypocritical for hypocrites go a great way but its onely Faith that purifieth the heart and that our knowledge is not swimming in our brain but sound and saving knowledge purging both heart and life when we dare compact with any other and say Shew me thy Faith by thy works as I can 3. This not onely Gods children look for when we have got knowledge and come
are fellows to the Saints Prophets and Apostles the honor is great the cause is good how base or grievous soever the punishment be Both John the Baptist and Barabbas were imprisoned Achan and Steven stoned and Witches and Martyrs be burnt the cause was not the same and in the cause the shame lies If a Christian as Paul be a prisoner and have chains on him and being demanded why he came there and is there so used if he can truly say It s neither for Treason nor Fellony I thank God but for preaching the truth of God to the world then it s well yea this will quiet his conscience when he knows its Gods cause who will take care of him strengthen him and receive him to glory If the will of God be so Here 's the other Reason We must be patient and comfortable in suffering for well-doing for its Gods will it should be so Here note that No affliction or persecution comes to us but by the will of God Whatsoever was done to our Savior Christ was done by Gods determinate counsel not an hair falls from our heads without our heavenly Father Christ foretold Peter of his bands before they came and so Agabus forewarned Paul of his which sheweth that they came by the will of God Obj. How can this be by the will of God seeing its a wicked thing and displeasing to God that his servants should be persecuted for well doing and he hath both forbid it and will punish the same Answ. As it comes from the Devil and persecutors it s a sin and they do wickedly and it s forbid but God hath an hand in it so far forth as it is good and he that brought light out of darkness can and doth bring good out of the evil of the wicked They intend evil but God good as in Jobs losses so in crucifying Christ Judas the High Priests the Jews Soldiers and Pilate did evil yet all this was by the will of God even so far forth as it was the mean of our Salvation and thereupon Peter that gave counsel against it was rebuked sharply so in the affliction of Gods children by the ungodly the devil and they of spite punish them for their goodness and to discourage them quite but God wills this for many good reasons as to try his that they which be approved might be known and to exercise and try their faith and patience and shew that they serve not in shew and for wages to confirm the truth not for it self for their sakes which are weak ones and to leave the others inexcusable to manifest the wickedness of the wicked and make way for the manifestation of the glory of Gods justice in plaguing them as the glory of God is made manifest by the constant and patient suffering of the Righteous which they could never have done of themselves 1. Here 's a comfort to Gods servants that we are not left here to the will of the Devil and wicked men to do what they list against us O no they are set their bounds beyond which they cannot pass The Devils could not enter into the Swine without permission nor go one whit further with Job then God gave Commission A Sparrow falls not to the ground without his providence and we are of more value then they The Lord appoints out our troubles and measures them they shall not be as little as we would for then should they be too little our tender nature loathing troubles and being unwilling to undergo the same nor so great as our adversaries would for then would they be too great but as God will The wicked are but the Lords drudges to scour us and make us bright They are his Landresses to wash us white not so little as we should be never the better nor so much as should rend the Lords linen 2. When we be ill dealt with in word or deed by the men of the world we should sit down quietly and bear it It s the will of God it should be so and he doth all things in infinite wisdom and lovingly for the good of his accordingly when Paul would needs go to Jerusalem where he was to be in great danger his friends said The will of the Lord be done thou mayest say If the Lord hath sent this to try me I pray God strengthen me if to chasten and purge me then to awaken me out of security and love of the world I thank God for it if he will any way have glory by me I am glad blessed be God it s his will I am content to wait upon him not but that we may with our Savior and the Apostle Paul plead our innocency as also use lawful means for our freedom if God see it good 3. But yet let the wicked think never the better of themselves nor look ever the more to be freed from punishment because its Gods will for they do it to no such end and therefore he will cast the rod into the fire when he hath chastened his children as he did by Ashur and the enemies he used to punish his people Did Judas or the Priests and Jews aym at the Salvation of the world in Christs death Nothing less Covetousness drave on the one malice the other If God brought good out of it what thanks to them He is to be praised for his goodness they to be plagued for their sin 4. We must not bring trouble upon our selves for in that we can have no comfort but if God bring us into it we may comfortably look up to him Vers. 18. For Christ also hath once suffered for sins the just for the unjust that he might bring us to God being put to death in the flesh but quickened by the Spirit ANother Reason to perswade to couragious suffering for righteousness sake from the example of Christ Christ suffered therefore need not we shrink or think much He that was just yea that just one therefore much more may we that be sinners and by infinite degrees deserve more grievous things then we suffer He for the unjust for us wretches and to take away our sins and reconcile us to God therefore ought we to bear somewhat for his cause that is most just and hath done so much for us Speak we first of the words briefly as they are the reason of the point in hand and then more particularly and largely of the matter contained therein namely The Sufferings Death and Resurrection of Christ. Christ suffered Suffered every way in Body Minde Name at the hands of men wretched and base persons misused him railed at him slandered him spit on him smote him scourged him crucified him between two Thieves c. Now The servant is not greater then the master If they misused Christ so what may we look for In thy sufferings help thy self with this meditation Christ Jesus suffered and what am I to him
they are so toiled by the world that they sleep thereat or if they do hearken they do but mock at least go not away much the better their mindes being all the while ranging and they hearing onely as one in a dream Hereby also they neglect prayer and are either kept from the Sacrament or come prophanely hereby also do they infinitely break the Sabbath as in buying selling riding talking of worldly matters c. Thus also many Parents through niggardliness spoil their children for want of education Migistrates take bribes to prevent Justice Ministers ingross livings people pull away their Ministers maintenance servants deceive their Masters Princes pole their Subjects and Subjects withdraw their taxes and dues from them Through this many lose their lives as Naboth There 's much contention both within doors and without for trifles so many women prostitute themselves and their husbands wink thereat because of advantage and many to avoid charge which as they think would come by marriage live in uncleanness From hence also what cousenages and deceivings do arise in buying selling letting hiring borrowing lending partnership c. what simony sacriledge bribery usury c how also are lyes multiplyed hereby and how many Tale-carriers are there meerly for this respect yea there 's no villany in this world so odious to God and man which through covetousness men will not commit and therefore it was no wonder that David prayed that his heart might not be enclined hereto O what a folly and madness is it for men to seek so greedily after these things which yet oftentimes are the further from them but admit thou obtainest them are they able to purchase for thee a pardon of thy sins Can they pacifie Gods wrath Can they prolong thy days one hour Doth thy Salvation stand in these mayest thou not soon be deprived thereof Shalt thou tarry long with them Is there not vexation in them If thou shouldest long enjoy them yet having no grace in thy heart no assurance of Gods favor no hope of a better life wo unto thee and yet this is the state of thousands They only minde earthly things having no regard of Heavenly or Spiritual Grace and so living here basely for a while without enjoying the benefit of that they have they are at the length snatched away and then the world strives for their goods and the Devil for their souls As an Ass that caries Plate all day at night is turn'd into a foul stable or bare Pasture to nob on Thistles and that with a galled back so are they turn'd out with a galled and guilty conscience and a soul laden with innumerable sins and so sink down to Hell there to be for ever and ever Art thou guilty hereof Repent endeavor to see thy folly confess cry to God make restitution of that which thou hast taken unjustly seek for pardon for grace for sanctification O that it might be said to thee as to Zacheus This day is salvation come to thy house Art thou free of this poyson beware thou beest not tainted herewith of all evils its the most dangerous and damnable and most hardly rooted out Esteem of these things as they ought but chiefly labor for your part in those true riches which shall never be taken away It s the fault of Christians that they seek the world too eagerly and neglect many good duties for it run into unwarrantable courses are unquiet contentious c. whereby they make themselves and their Profession to be ill spoken of O how ill doth this beseem Christians which have God to be their Father and Heaven for their inheritance and portion Fye upon it Is this to behave our selves Pilgrim-like we should carry our selves so moderately in these things that we may make the world see and say we have riches that they know not of as our Savior said He had meat his Disciples knew not of we must labor to grow in grace and covet the best things For the second part of sobriety which is in the use of riches when we have them it hath relation either to our minde when we esteem of them or our practice when we employ them as God requires 1. We must esteem of them but as they are and not set our mindes overdeeply on them as if the having of them were our happiness the want of them our utter misery Neither must we think the more highly of our selves because of them for goodness is that onely which makes us of account with God and good men when we go down to the grave we be all fellows nor ought we to trust in them as though they could be a Castle and Tower against whatsoever may come upon us Plague War Famine c. This is the common sin of the world yea even Gods Servants may partly perceive that their hearts rise as their wealth encreaseth O its hard for a man to keep down his heart that it swell not Nor must we be excessively loath to part with them when God sees it good nor cast down when we have any loss as if we had lost happiness O how many are thus grieved which were never grieved for their sins nor wept for fear of Gods wrath and condemnation we should grieve indeed for our sins or if we do not feel Gods favor or observe any decay in our love to God and goodness but not as worldly losses especially enjoying Gods favor and having through Christ an assured hope of a better life 2. We must employ them as God requires and that both on our selves and others our selves and ours For he that provides not for himself and his family is worse then an infidel and Solomon saith It s a good and comely thing for a man to take part of that God hath given him Jacob after he had served Laban many years began at the length to think of his own house But what base misers are they that cannot afford themselves or theirs necessaries in food and raiment They are diseased with an evil sickness They are Thieves to their backs bellies families neither are those prodigal rioters in a better case which waste and consume all in sports company keeping and belly-cheer they rob their wives their children their friends the poor and usually dye in the Goal leaving their children to misery Others as upon the worship and service of God and maintainance of the Gospel and Ministers thereof for the good of our own souls So upon the King and Commonwealth under whom we enjoy Peace and the Gospel as also upon the Poor especially the Saints See Deut. 15. 10. Psal. 37. 25 26. Psal. 112. Prov. 11. 23. Matth. 5. Luke 14. Heb. 13. And this we must do not onely of our superfluity but in some cases even of our necessity of our very Lands we are not Lords of our goods but Stewards for which we must be countable to our master This rebuketh those
to believe the truth and be bolder to defend it Again if we look to the state of the Church and faithful Servants of God in former ages we need not think it strange for its the way that they have all gone Abel Isaac Jacob the Prophets Christ his Apostles the Primitive Church thousands under the Roman Emperors not a few even in this our Land in the Reign of Queen Mary c. Indeed the Devil is ready to make us believe that our case is worse then any bodies and that there were never any as we which is that he may make us murmure and drive us to desparation or to flinch whereas its a very lye for we are in no such case but the Saints of God have been in as bad in the same in worse This duly considered will be a means that afflictions shall be better born Which is to try you Here 's the Reason of the Exhortation The end of persecution is not to destroy the good but to make them better as the gold is tryed by the fire afflictions persecution chiefly are sent to try what we be and in what state not but that God knows it already but he would have us also and others to know to our comfort or humbling They are of great use As 1. To try whether we have any truth of grace in us whether we be any thing or nothing sound or hollow true friends or hypocrites such as are built on the rock or sand Many that now think well of themselves will never be able to stand and many mean in their own and others eyes would hold out A man is never tryed till adversity comes as a Soldier is in the Battel a Marriner in a Storm a Friend in time of need Who would have thought the seed in the stony ground would have flincht few so good as they in most Parishes If these would not abide what shall we think of most amongst us persecution as the fan of one heap makes two and as the fire separateth the gold from the dross Labor then for a true faith of the right stamp who knows but that God will send a tryal let 's labor to be so provided as we may be good wheat to abide by it and not chaff that will flie away that we may be gold fit to be Vessels for the Lords use not dross to be burnt up with unquenchable fire Onely true believers will hold out all others will flinch le ts now look to our selves lest we making a fair house not onely in the sand it fall and our fall be great and we having begun a piece of work leave it in the mid way to our perpetual shame But they that are proved to be sound and to have true Faith it s a great Comfort and Crown to them Who would not have his Sword or Gun tryed ere he went to the field A little tryed Faith is better then much tryed Gold then much Faith in mens tongues and conceits 2. To try what measure of grace we have whether as much or more or less then we thought for some over-prize themselves and some do on the contrary Who would have thought Peter had been so weak after such bold protestation Who would have thought Abrahams Faith so great as it was or Jobs both Faith and Patience Though the Lord would kill him yet would he wait on him What do thine afflictions bewray If more grace then thou thoughtst be thankful if less be humbled and apply thy self to the means more carefully 3. To purge purifie and refine that measure of true grace that 's in us In the days of Peace and Prosperity the best men are subject to gather soil as standing waters putrifie bodies without exercise prove full of gross humors In prosperity we gather pride security teachiness self-love too much love of the world these God purgeth away that our Faith and Grace may shew themselves in their bright colours as the Vine having the superfluous branches cut off proves the more fruitful Never do Christians shine so bright as in affliction or presently after it But rejoyce Here 's the second Exhortation We must be so far from thinking it strange when we are persecuted as that we are then to rejoyce But how can this be will some say To rejoyce in mockings imprisonments cold irons tortures c. seems impossible and the rather for that no affliction for the present is joyous but tedious To the flesh these things be tedious yet there is cause to make us rejoyce in them Though a natural man cannot do this as being impossible to flesh and blood yet grace and a good measure of faith and an heart mortified to the world and taken up with the desire of a better life will do the same A man may both grieve and yet rejoyce in the same thing in diverse respects as them that saw the Temple re-edified some wept namely the ancient men some again rejoyced namely the yong men the one because it was no better the other because it was as it was both which might have been in either of them As a man may be glad that he hath a childe departed in a godly maner and yet grieve at the loss of his childe so if at the fall of a Scaffold where many lost their lives we have had a childe that broke his Arm we are sorry at that but glad that he scaped with his life Thus the Apostles rejoyced thus Paul and Silas thus the Thessalonians thus the Christian Hebrews thus the Martyrs throughout all ages Such a thing is Faith it s not a Conceit but that that makes things absent so present as that we can be content to endure present pain for joy to come and to lose things present for happiness hereafter Thus have many of Gods Servants done so that God requires nothing of us but that he hath enabled many to do yea ordinary Christians like our selves nay not a few even of the weaker Sex 1. This rebuketh the woful unbelief and hypocrisie of most of the world which though they profess the Word in prosperity yet in adversity they shift for themselvs make friendship with the world and will suffer nothing for Christs sake or his Religion they are ashamed of Christ here of them will he be ashamed hereafter now saving their lives with an ill Conscience they shall lose life eternal 2. It rebuketh even the Servants of God who are so loath to suffer or abide any hardness We can hardly abide a frown of our Superior or an hard word or a railing speech but we are cast down and disquieted about it yea many pull in their heads and step back and think it s not good to be forward and so come to Jesus by night How will we suffer imprisonment and loss of all we have how endure the fire and especially with joy This is too much tenderness it
not be dismaid but bear these things patiently yea joyfully for should we not rejoyce in that that makes us blessed If therefore we shrink at the least of these things and pull in our heads where 's our faith labor that if we should be mockt and railed on it may not be for nothing but for true grace faith wrought in us by the Word c. If we have these things no matter though we have some mocks withal 2. See that wicked persecuters make Gods Servants happy yea more happy then they should be so that in seeking their hurt they do them good many ways They purge and try them make them the more dear to God and set the greater Crown upon their heads what a priviledge have the Servants of God that all things even their persecuters should work together for their good It s not so with others yet are not we to thank the wicked for this who intend no such thing The Caldeans and Sabeans were an occasion that Job had twice as much goods given him as he had before but no thank to them for they took from him what they could It s God who blesseth the more those whom the wicked curse 5. That the judgement of the world is contrary to Gods They think not any blessedness to be in being railed on for Christs sake but that blessedness stands in Health Wealth Honor favor of Princes c. Alas poor vanishing vanities to be lost every day but blessedness is in being a Christian and suffering for the same Gods thoughts are not as mans The blinde world cannot judge of colours and Carnal men savor not of things Spiritual 1. Therefore look that we never esteem nor be carried with the judgement of the world no not of the wise men of the world which is a crooked rule to go by They say it s not good to be too forward is matters of Religion but go so far as they may come back when they will and save themselves from danger and have two strings to their bow but let us know this to be cursed policy this amity with the world to be enmity with God 2. If we think troubles for a good conscience base vile and accursed and so shun them though with an ill conscience we are then of the world and either wholly carnal or in great part Shall we account that cursed which the Lord calls blessed True we must not bring troubles on our selves nor desire persecution yet if God call us to them we must not count them base but glorious not cursed but blessed So if we think basely of them that suffer or are in persecution and shun them then are we carnal and of the world nay we ought to esteem highly of them and think them glorious persons because they be honored of God and greatly graced of him For the Spirit of glory and of God resteth upon you He proves what he affirmed If ye suffer for Christs sake it s an argument ye have the Spirit of God in you which is a glorious Spirit and makes you glorious notwithstanding the ignominy and reproach the world casts upon you as though you were of all others the vilest whereupon you must needs be blessed which Spirit is on their part ill spoken of but on yours that suffer is glorified So that as the Spirit makes you glorious you glorifie it by your constant and joyful suffering Hence Note 1. That to suffer for Christs sake is a sign that we have the Spirit of God in us for 1. The world would not hate us except they saw some work of Gods Spirit in us for if we lived after the maner of the world they would let us alone 2. Such have the Spirit of Adoption assuring them of Gods love of pardon and Salvation which makes them willing to suffer 3. It s the Spirit that comforts and heartens to such weighty things flesh and blood will endure nothing for Religion neither can it but through the Spirit we are enabled Steven a comfortable Martyr Why It s said He was full of the Holy Ghost It was by the Spirit of God onely that the Martyrs endured so constantly not a few of them being weak sick tender feeble of nature and fearful It was of the Spirit that Mr. Glover spake when he came to the Stake to be burnt He is come Austin he is come having been very heavy and comfortless the night before In ill I confess some may be as stiff as the best can be in the truth but they cannot suffer so joyfully as the Servants of God for it s through the Spirit of God that they suffer 1. Therefore if we have had or finde any power to endure persecution we may know that we have Gods Spirit and thereupon ought to be both thankful and joyful 2. As we would suffer with comfort and joy let us labor for the Spirit and for a greater measure thereof daily 3. As for those that neither can nor will endure any thing it s a sign they are carnal and without the Spirit And indeed none can suffer much or joyfully but such as have the Spirit and therefore so few having the Spirit there would be but a few to stand for the truth if there should come a time of tryal 2. That such as are endued with Gods Spirit be blessed for such as have and are led by the Spirit of God they are the Sons of God and they yea they onely which be sanctified here shall be glorified hereafter The Spirit is given to the Elect not to the world it s the earnest of our salvation and seals us up to the day of Redemption Again such are freed from the bondage of sin to serve God such also have God abiding in them yea and hereby the Word the Sacraments Prayer Afflictions all things are profitable to us Hereby we are enabled to every duty and armed against temptations 1. This may comfort those that can prove they have the Spirit of God in them they are comforted sanctified and guided thereby This is the earnest and pledge of eternal life they are blessed though but mean they may come into Gods presence boldly they shall want nothing that is good 2. It may be a terror to those that live after the flesh They have no mark whereby to free them from being reprobates for if any man have not the Spirit of Christ the same is none of his Christ never dyed for such they are yet under the bondage of sin 3. This should teach us having the Spirit to beware of doing any thing whereby to grieve or weary such a guest sin is a filthy thing and that wherewithal the Spirit cannot away yea to use all means to cherish it daily suffering our selves to be guided thereby as that which will not be there where it may not rule 3. That the Spirit is glorious in it self and makes them
pass to it at death so shall they have no stop at the day of judgement Among earthly Judges when a cause hath gone current on a mans side a great while yet at last either by corruption of Jury or Judge or by some evidence come to light not seen before all may be dasht and turn'd the other way It shall not be so at Gods judgement seat there will be question made of the damnation of some but no question made of the salvation of any of the godly But the difficulty is in this life it s an hard thing for a man to get to heaven called therefore a Straight gate and Narrow way a hard thing to come to be a Christian a converted person and an hard thing to continue therein and grow forward God hath much ado to bring us to grace and then much ado to hold us therein as he had a great deal ado to get his people out of Egypt and into Canaan sometimes themselves by murmuring lingering c. and sometimes others as Pharaoh the Red-sea c. proving hinderances thereto so hath he to get one of us out of the bondage of the Devil out of the Egypt of sin The Devil holds the world hinders yea our own wretched nature is not willing to come out What a stir hath he how many Sermons Threatnings Promises secret gripes of Conscience Warnings of the Spirit purposes to come out and yet keep in still ere we will yield yea how is God fain almost to pull us out by some crosses or sharp afflictions as the Angels pulled Lot out of Sodom how hardly are we throughly humbled for our sins when cast down how hardly comforted when we have got it how hardly do we keep it what a stir with our hearts to leave our old courses and take new and when we have begun yet what ado to hold out what revolting and backsliding hearts have we ready to wax cold and to linger after our old lusts so hard it is to do any good duty well The Devil like Pharaoh pursueth us and labors by all means possible to hinder us from all good altogether or from the right performance of it so also to draw us to all evil Then the world like Pharaohs Soldiers labors to hinder us by their ill example by ill counsel by vails of profits and pleasures and if these not by reproaches and troubles that it will raise up Our own Nature is worst of all as having a lingering after our old sins as the Israelites after the fleshy pots of Egypt sometimes we think like them we shall never hold out there be such lets in the way high walls and Anakims c. so that we get forward hardly as a man that were to go up a steep hill and had three great weights hung at his back so that we have such continual need of the Word Sacraments Prayer Meditation Conference Watchfulness that unless hereby we wax cold and grow out of order nay notwithstanding all these yet what ado to keep our hearts and lives in order and our selves within compass but we slip and stumble and grieve and up again and down again yea if the Lord to all these means should not adde some one or other affliction it would be yet more hard The Lord is fain to pull us with that strong cord also and this is chiefly meant here they are scarcely saved even because they are forced to be brought through many troubles so that as a man that is to climb such a steep hill as he cannot fasten his feet but is fain to get Daggers in his hands and sticking them into the ground c. may be said hardly to get up and as when two Armies fight for a Town one while one part prevails another while the other at last the better side prevails but notwithout much pains many wounds shrewd blows and continual labor we may say They got the Town hardly the like may be said in this particular Who knoweth not the truth hereof in his own experience how hardly canst thou be humbled how hardly drawn to renounce thy lusts how art thou fain to wrestle before thou canst do any good what continual need hast thou of prayer good company c. yea who knowing any thing seeth not he hath need of his crosses and that it was good for him that he was afflicted 1. This crosseth the most gross and yet most common conceit of the world that its an easie matter to be saved that there 's no need of such preciseness but that if men mean well God will be content and though one have lived badly yet at what time soever they repent for which a quarter of an hour is enough it shall be well with them and hence it is that the Word and our Preaching is of such small account and that so few take any pains to be saved but take pains for the belly and back and to grow rich c. Ignorant persons look not out but content themselves with a blinde good meaning without any part of a good life so prophane persons so worldlings so civil ones Though the Scripture requires us to labor strive give all diligence study seek yet will not they take any pains nay not onely so but they laugh and gibe at them that labor herein as fools or idle persons What art thou woful wretch that darest cross the Lord so directly He saith It s a strait way and few finde it and to this end bids Strive Thou sayest it s no such matter If it were as thou dotest Christ might not onely have spared those speeches but indeed the whole Scriptures for what use of any but to bid people live as they list and at last cry God mercy and all is well No God must make new Scriptures and chalk a new way to Heaven ere ever thou shalt finde that thou lookest for But what art thou that neither wiltst take pains to save thine own soul nor canst be content that others should Dost thou think that they be idle persons that take pains to hear the word O they could follow the world and that too hard but that they know one thing is needful Could they not sit at home in their chairs or keep their beds as well as rise and toil c. but that they know that they cannot so get Heaven but that they have need to use all means and that little enough though thou seest no such thing Indeed to lead a careless life to do good if it come in the way and if ill come in the way to be as fit for that c. a few Sermons and little hearing may serve for such a life but this is not the way to get Heaven If ever thou wouldst be saved thou must change thy minde and practice and believe the Scriptures that its a strait way and accordingly bend thy self to begin to take pains to see and confess thy sins to labor for faith to turn
on work thereto And its Gods Ordinance that they that preach the Gospel should be maintained thereby yea if a man had maintenance of his own he were not bound in these days and among an able people to preach of his own cost but might expect the recompence of his labors and ye● do not this duty for filthy lucre 1. This rebuketh those that heap living upon living that they may live wealthily and at ease doing little of the work and taking small care of their calling 2. Those which do no good in their places who yet are very cunning to gather in their commodities and to make as much of their peoples as they can but follow Farming and Lawing as if they were meer Farmers Grasiers or Atturneys they eat the fat and cloath themselves with the fleece but do not at all regard their peoples good 3. Such vagabond and vagrant rogues that go up and down with a set Sermon or two which they have got by heart and coming into by places offer themselves to Preach falling in the end of their Sermons to make known their necessities by reason of great losses as by fire or the like all being notorious lyes These be notorious rogues fitter for the Whipping-post then any place else O but you disgrace that calling No I speak against these scabs and scurfs that disgrace it for some of those were never in the Ministery but boldly have taken this course without calling or warrant some it may be have been in the Ministery but for their base and detestable behavior have been cast out and now take this course Those are notorious drunkards Gamesters Whoremasters as hath been proved 4. Such as desire to preach at many Funerals and there for a little see set their tongues and consciences to sale in saying they care not what sometimes without sometimes against their knowledge 5. Such as having a great man in their Parish dare not displease him by preaching the truth but double and faulter serving their turn for advantage O that we would set Gods glory and our peoples good before our eyes as the mark whereat we are to aym covetousness is a base sin in any but chiefly in a Minister How shall he teach others to depend on God or teach the Doctrine of Gods providence that is himself perplexed with worldly cares how can he preach against covetousness in others who is himself covetous 6. For People they must not reverence and make much of their Ministers for filthy lucre and because they let them good peny-worths but for their Office Gifts and Care Note we further that As we are to do good duties after a right maner as in hearing with an honest heart praying with lifting up pure hands without wrath or doubting receiving the Sacrament after due preparation c. else how glorious soever the outside be they are abomination in Gods sight and encrease our condemnation So we must particularly do the same with a willing heart so were the offerings of the people towards the building of the Tabernacle and Temple All our duties to God his Ministers the poor all works of mercy c. must be thus done Again that no man ought to do the duties of his calling or go to his work meerly for gain so that if it were not for it he would not follow his calling These be servants and drudges to Mammon so do Heathens and Turks but Christians ought to go to their work because God hath so appointed and for the good of the Church and Commonwealth his gain must come in on the by as it shall please God to send it but we ought to follow our calling as the means God hath appointed to keep us from idleness and to humble us thereby and we might be instruments of the common good No doubt most men offend God greatly this way yea good Christians go not to their work in Faith as they ought nor so single-heartedly as they should but are carried along by profit therefore some when they cannot encrease as they have and would then give over their callings and live idelly of the sweat of other mens brows by Usury c. most never regard the common good but their own private advantage Filthy lucre Not that all gain for so lucre signifieth is evil or filthy yet so he calls gain to shew us that most of the gain of the world is filthy gain though to the most of the world all is fish that comes to net and gotten by hook or crook right or wrong is cleanly enough though never so filthy Indeed hungry dogs will eat dirty things and draff is good enough for swine we must learn to keep our selves clear of filthy lucre What is filthy lucre whatsoever is got basely by the neglecting any good duty towards God our souls our families our brethren is filthy gain So whatsoever is gotten by any unlawful means gain gotten by the breach of any of Gods commandments as by society and conversing familiarly with Idolaters against the second Commandment so all gain gotten by oaths charms c. all gain gotten by travel or working or bargaining on the Lords day all gain gotten by defrauding the Prince of his Taxes and Customs or Ministers of their Tythes and Dues all gain accrewing by oppression withholding Corn from the poor upon forfeitures c. all gain gotten by Whoredom on the womans part or on the mans by winking thereat so all of gain gotten by any kinde of fraud or deceit as by bribery gaming and the like So by selling things not useful as Cards and Dice or things not sellable as Church livings or things naught or mixt or at unreasonable rates or by false weights and measures so in buying taking hold of the necessity of a poor man so in borrowing not paying whereof those subtile and wicked bankrupts are guilty which break to enrich themselves so lending upon usury to the poor especially letting rackt Rents so in doing work but not truly or not at all and yet taking the wages whereof many Ministers are guilty so in not paying wages whereof not a few rich are guilty so in Partnership all unjust and unright gain by secret fraud or open violence so all gain by lying and dissembling and falshood the common course of gaining in the world so of Lawyers pleading and setting a face upon bad and foul unjust matters for their fees c. Do we examine our gain which we have had If it be filthy lucre confess repent and cry to God for mercy and restore else look for Gods vengeance God will pursue it in themselves and curse it that it will not abide to their posterity and besides they shall have no part with God And then what shall it have profited them to have won the world with the loss of their souls yea the time will come either in the torment of their conscience