Selected quad for the lemma: day_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
day_n fair_a night_n rain_n 5,430 5 10.9395 5 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A53085 The best acquaintance and highest honour of Christians, or, A discourse of acquaintance with God by Matthew Newcomen. Newcomen, Matthew, 1610?-1669. 1668 (1668) Wing N905; ESTC R32164 42,574 130

There is 1 snippet containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

providence is enough for the producing of the creatures into being but for the continuance of their being and for their operations there is required a continual efflux of providence so it is here Now when these influences of the Spirit are suspended and withdrawn the soul can neither keep up and carry on his acquaintance with God in a way of duty so as it should nor apprehend God communicating himself and Spirit to him so as it would and so cannot but from both conclude an interruption of that acquaintance and familiarity that hath been between God and it Now to those whose condition this is give me leave to propound First Some things by way of support and consolation Secondly Some things by way of counsel and direction And First By way of support and consolation several things I have to say The First is this That how sad and strange soever thy condition may seem to be thou art not the first nor art like to be the last of the Friends and Saints of God whose condition this hath been or may be Read but over the Book of the Psalms how often do you find there the Saints complaining of Gods hiding his face from them casting them out casting them off forsaking forgetting them shutting out their prayers and the like Now this may be some comfort to thee as it is to a man that is in a wilderness to find the tract and footsteps of men that have gone that way before him There are as Gerson observes three sorts of Christians Gerson de monte contemplat cap. 22. Some that are in a winter condition In winter you know the dayes are short and the nights are long and the dayes for the most part are cloudy and dark the Sun being obscured with many clouds and fogs there are sharp colds and great rains and now and then it may be a fair day but very rarely so some Christians they have short dayes and long nights short visits and long absence of God they have much darkness and little light Rara hora brevis mora Bernard much coldness and little heat in their spirits many showres of griefs and tears rarely now and then a gleam of comfort Other Christians saith he are as it were in the spring in primo vere In the Spring you know it is one day fair and clear another day cloudy and rainy but we see the Sun oftner in the Spring and the beams of it are more vigorous and warmthful than in the winter now these are such whom the Sun of righteousness doth more frequently visit than the former and sheds more warmthful and vigorous influences into their hearts and yet withdraws himself from them sometimes sometimes their Sun is under a cloud Ut modicum illum videant modicum non videant and they have their wet and sorrowful dayes and times too Others there are with whom it is Midsummer their Sun is seldom clouded but when it is it is more terrible there are greater tempests of thunder and lightning and rain many times in summer than in winter though not so constant rain These are the best and highest form of Christians who though they enjoy a more constant serenity and more constant peace and communion with God than the other yet now and then meet with more violent and strong temptations and deeper desertions than the former their temptations are very sharp but then they are short So that you see by this distribution there is no state of a Christian life on this side heaven exempted and priviledged from this hiding of Gods face and suspending the influences of his grace and love Whether then thou be in thy Winter or in thy Spring or in thy Summer clouds may come over thy soul that may hide the face of God from thee and intercept the influences of his Spirit and grace th s is common to Christians whatever degree of grace they have attained therefore say no more that never any was in such a condition as thou The Second thing I have to say to thee is this That the worst of thy condition is this It is a withdrawing not of the love of God from thee but of wonted expressions of his love it is but a withdrawing of the influence of his Spirit from thee not the presence of his Spirit from thee I say it is but a withdrawing of the manifestation of Gods love from thee God doth not look so kindly upon thee when thou comest to seek his face as he was wont to do God doth not speak so comfortably to thee he doth not speak so to thine heart when thou comest to hear his word as he was wont to do God doth not make thee so welcom to his table when thou comest there nor give thee such a double portion of the marrow and fatness of his Ordinances as he was wont to do I confess here is a great change in the outward carriage of God and a great abatement of the wonted expressions of his love but there is no change at all in the mind and will of God no abatement at all in the love of God which is as unchangeable as God himself David loved Absalom as dearly all that three years in which he would not endure him to come into his presence nor permit him to see his face as he did before in any time of his life though in wisdom he did conceal and smoother his love so God may conceal his love for a while but he loves thee still as well as ever He hath taken away the wonted influences of his Spirit from thee but his Spirit it self he hath not taken from thee Joh. 14.16 Christs prayer and ingagement is that the Spirit where once he is given shall abide for ever Therefore I say the influences of the Spirit may be suspended but the Spirit it self is not departed as it was with Eutychus when they thought he was dead his life saith Paul that is his Spirit his soul is in him and yet all the influences of his soul into his body either visible to others or sensible to himself were for the present suspended so is it here the visible sensible influences of the Spirit may be suspended but the Spirit is not departed the band of union is not dissolved Thirdly As it is the influence and not the presence of the Spirit that is withdrawn so it is not the total influence of the Spirit that is withdrawn from thee but only part of it all the influences of the Spirit are not withdrawn but only some of them For the influences of the Spirit are of two sorts Either such as are necessary to the being of a Christian in the state of grace and these are secret hidden and unsensible or else such as tend to the well and comfortable being of a Christian and these are evident and sensible as in the body there are some influences of the soul that are necessary to the animation and quickening of the