Selected quad for the lemma: death_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
death_n apostle_n die_v life_n 4,071 5 4.5667 4 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
A31952 Evidence for heaven containing infallible signs and reall demonstrations of our union with Christ and assurance of salvation : with an appendix of laying down certain rules to be observed for preserving our assurance once obtained / published by Ed. Calamy ... Calamy, Edmund, 1600-1666. 1657 (1657) Wing C240; ESTC R3864 140,854 252

There are 15 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

of all Saints he disclaimes all his own righteousnesses and accounts them as rotten raggs and abominable things in reference to Justification before God He forgets all that is behind if he cast up his parts his gifts and his graces he concludes Circumcision is nothing nor Vncircumcision is nothing his faith his love his repentance his obedience all put together nothing he brings in the totall summe in meer ciphers I am nothing yea worse then nothing saith this soul Can a man be profitable unto his Maker I am unprofitable to God and man When saw I thee a stranger and took thee in or naked and cloathed thee c. Wherefore is there a price in the hand of a fool saith this soul. 3. A man graciously poor or blessedly poor in spirit is a man of a contrite spirit a man that trembleth at the Word of the Lord To him will I look saith the Lord that is poor and of a contrite spirit and trembleth at my Word Isa. 66.2 In this Text poverty of spirit contrition and the effect of it tr●mbling at the Word of the Lord are joyned together as linkes of a Chain so as he that hath one of them hath all of them in some measure As for contrition it hath been already spoken of from Pag. 56. to Pag. 64. to which I refer the Reader 4. A man graciously poor in spirit as he sees a fullness of sinne and an emptiness of grace in himself and bewailes it so he sees a fullness of grace in Christ a fullness of mercy with God in Christ to pardon him and heal him to justifie him and sanctifie him and fill him with all grace and this is attended with some hopes to be made a partaker of it The truth of this is evident in the poor Publican He saw a fullness of sinne in himself and an emptiness of grace and he saw a fullness of mercy in God and merit in Christ to take away his sinne and garnish his soul with all grace and had some hopes to attain this otherwise he would never have gone to God for mercy A man graciously or evangelically poor in spirit hath some hope of obtaining mercy 5. And this makes him very industriously to seek after the Lord in a conscionable use of all those means which he hath appointed I will arise and go to my Father c. saith the poor Prodigal When once this poverty of Spirit had seized on his spirit he thought no labour too much to attain what he sought Draw me we will runne after thee saith the Spouse graciously poor in spirit Cant. 1.4 6. A man graciously poor in spirit esteems spirituall riches the best riches and for them he will with the Merchant-man give the best price for th●m he will part with all carnall things and count them but dung he doth hunger and thirst after righteousness more than after riches after the riches of grace more than after the riches of the world 7. A man graciously poor in spirit is a man of a humble spirit if God dispense his gifts liberally unto him or make greater discoveries of himself his mind and will unto him than he doth to others he will humbly and thankfully and really ascribe all the glory thereof unto the Lord and his free grace and say as Daniel As for me this is not conferred upon me for any Wisdome or goodness that I have more than other but of free grace for Christs sake bestowed upon me therefore to him be all the glory Who am I or what is there in me that God should shew such favour unto me above what he doth unto other This is vigor fit and ●●t fit to give the denomination of a man graciously poor in spirit 8. A man graciously poor in spirit is the contentedst man with his condition of all others I went out full but the Lord brought me home empty saith a soul gratiously poor in spirit and yet she was contented with her condition Shall we receive good at the hand of God and shall we not receive evill Shall the thing formed say to him that formed it Why hast thou made me thus It is the Lord let him do with we as seemeth good to him This is the lan●uage of soules graciously poor in spirit Such a soul lookes upon every thing as a mercy that is on this side Hell and how bad soev●r his condition be thinks it too good for him 9. A man graciously poor in spirit justif●es God in all his deali●gs even under his sadest providences and dispensations of Justice The Lord is righteous in all his Wayes saith this soul I am justly under this condemnation for I receive the due reward of my deeds for I have rebelled against his Commandmen●s c. 10. The soul gracio●sly poor in spirit gr●anes under that privy pride which he finds in himself as that which is the great burd●n on his spirit and that which he longs to be delivered from Oh wretched man that I ●m who shall deliver me and when shall I be delive●ed ●rom this corrupt nature of mine which exalts it s●lf against God and hinders the influence of his gr●ce in me These Appearances of gratious poverty of spirit may serve to dis●ry a soul graciously and blessedly poor in spirit Try thy spirit by them and if by what hath been said thou findest this Qualification in thy self in any measure bless God for it labour to grow in it and remember the words of our Lord Jesu Christ Blessed are the poor in spirit for theirs is the kingdome of Heaven Death to Sinne. Rom. 8.10 If Christ be in you the body is dead because of sinne But the Spirit is Life because of righteousness IN these words the Apostle lays down two great Characters of our Union with Christ or Christ resident in us The first this The body is dead because of sinne The second this The Spirit is Life because of righteousness Christ is in you saith the Apostle except ye be Reprobates 2 Cor. 13.5 If Christ be in you it will appear thus The body is dead because of sinne The Body here spoken of is not a body of flesh not a body Celestiall nor a body Terrestiall but a body Diabolicall a body of sin as the members mentioned Col. 3.5 demonstrate and likewise the language of the Apostle Rom. 7.24 where he calls corrupt nature the body and more plainly Rom. 6.6 stiles it The body of sinne Ephes. 4.22 The old man This is the body here meant The body of sinne is the depravedness and corruption of our whole nature by reason of which we are naturally averse to all good and prone to evill continually and so liable to all misery and therefore the Apostle calls it A body of death The body is alive in all those in whom Christ lives not but where Christ lives this body dies If Christ be in you the body is dead because of sinne c. Death to sinne is
double There is a death to the guilt of sinne And a death to the power reign and dominion of sinne Death to the guilt of sinne is a perfect fredome from all sinne by the death of Christ for our sinne thus all in whom Christ lives are dead to sinne totally We are dead to the guilt of sinne by the body of Christ who died for us The death of our dear Saviour hath purchased and perfected this death for us The bloud of Iesus Christ cleanseth us from all sinne 1 Joh. 1.7 From all sinne past present and to come He that is thus dead is freed from sinne as the Apostle speaks Rom. 6.7 Redeemed from all iniq●ity Tit. 2.14 And this is the great priveledge of all those in whom Christ lives of all the true member● of Jesus Christ Christ undertakes for them as Iudah did for Benjamin I will be s●rety for him of my hand shale thou require him if I bring him not unto thee and set him before thee then let me bear the blame for ever said Iudah to his father Gen. 43.9 Thus Christ undertakes for all his members for all his elect so as they may and ought to turn all charges brought against them over to Christ all inditements from God or Satan or conscience abused by Satan over to Christ their surety Who shall lay any thing to the charge of Gods elect saith the Apostle it is God that justifieth who is he t●at condemneth c. So may he that is thus dead to the guilt of sinne say What sinne is it that can condemne me that can b●ing in an in●ictment against me it is Christ that died it is Christ that died for me and by his death perfected this death for me I am now compleat in him in this resp●ct who is it or wh●t is it then that can lay any thing unto my cha●ge that can seperate me from the love of God in Christ Jesus Sin my worst enemy cannot do it for I am totally dead to the guilt of it by vertue of my Union with Christ Is Ch●ist be in y●u the bo●y is dead because of sinne perfectly ●ead to the guilt of sinne Though Just●fication acquits a sinner from all sinne in Gods determination yet is not his p●r●●n formally granted nor actually put in ex●●u●i●n un●●ll sued out and the tr●bute of ac●u●ll Repentance for k●own sinne is ●aid except in some cases viz. in case of the want of t●e use of 〈◊〉 as in children and dis●●●cted persons in whom conscience cannot do its ●●ffice be●●us● of debility in the under●●anding Thi● with submission to a better ju●gement I humbly conceive to be according to t●uth and no●e it to vindicate my s●l● and cau●ion the Reader concerning that Antinomi●● Tenet about Justification so common in these daies Thus is a true believer perfectly dead to the guilt of sinne by the death of Christ for his sinne But to the power dominion and being of sinne no child of Adam is totally dead in this life no not the best of the children of God but dying daily therefore saith the Apostle I die daily c. If any man thinks himself freed from sinne or perfectly dead to sinne in this sence He deceives himself and the truth is not in him 1 Joh. 1.8 For totally dead to sinne in this sence was never any sonne of man in this life but he that was the Sonne of God to wit Jesus Christ. Totally dead to the power and being of sinne is not he that is totally dead to the guilt of sinne untill this earthly house be quite pulled down and death that last debt and wages of sinne to the godly paid then and never till then is he in whom Christ lives totally freed from the power and being of sinne By the mercy of God death which was to man the wages and punishment of sinne is made unto all true believers the end of sinne the worker of death to wit sinne doth perish by its own workes sinne is slain and abolished by death Totall death to the power and being of finne is one great part of the privative gain which death brings to all that are in Christ to all that die in the Lord death the devorcer of soul and body brings perfect death to the power and being of sinne the enemy and burden of soul and body Perfectly dead to the power and being of sinne is no man here this death belongs to that other world But truly dead to the power and reign of sinne are all those here in whom Christ lives and this is that death which this Text points at If Christ be in you the body is dead because of sinne c. All in the state of nature are dead in sinne All in a state of grace are dead to sinne according to the meaning of this Text dead to sinne in a Gospel sence Death to the power and reign of finne is one part of the renovation of our natures consisting in that which the Scripture calls mortification by vertue of which the love of sinne and delight in sinne which is indeed the life of sinne is destroyed At this death the Apostle points Rom. 6 2. How shall we that are dead to sinne live any longer therein As if he had said How shall we that are dead to the guilt of sinne take pleasure in the filth of sinne or wallow in any sinne with delight It is impossible for death to the guilt of sin alwayes produceth death to the power and dominion of sinne If Christ be in you the body is dead because of sinne Is Christ be in you as a Iustifier he is in you as a Sanctifier also The body is dead because of sinne Christ and sinne may dwell in the same subject at the same time yea Christ may live where sinne doth dwell Christ liveth in me sinne dwelleth in me saith the Apostle but Christ and sinne cannot both live and reign together in the same subject at the same time Caesar and Pompey might better have lived and reigned togeher than Christ and sinne where either of these lives it reigns and both cannot reign together If Christ be in you the body is dead because of sinne This body to wit sinne whilest alive rules and reignes as a Husband as a Lord and Master and is obeyed freely and willingly with the consent of the whole will so much that phrase of the Apostle To whom ye yeeld your selves servants to obey doth imply But when Christ once espouseth a soul unto himself he divests this Lord of his power He puts this Husband to death and assumes all the rule and domination to himself And the soul thus espoused yeelds to obey him as her sovereign Lord and sole Commander We have no king but Caesar said the Iews So saith the soul dead to sinne I have no King but Christ I yeeld my self willingly to no other Therefore saith the Apostle If Christ be in you the body is
condition Quest. But how shall I know whether my love to man be sound and such as demonstrates the holy Spirits saving habitation in me or not Answ. By considering 1 What sincere love to man is And 2 What the Appearances of it are Sincere Love to man demonstrating the holy Spirits saving habitation in the soul is a free affection of the soul delated on man for God and according to the rules of God given in the holy Scriptures And it is manifest thus it issueth out of the love of God and is carried to man for God for Gods sake as the Apostle plainly shews By this we know we love the children of God when we love God and keep his Commandements c. As if he had said By this we know that our love towards man is sound and such as demonstrates the holy Spirits saving habitation in us even by this that it issueth out of the love of God as the spring and fountain of it and is delated on man for Gods sake for so much that phrase keep his Commandements implies God commands us to love one another and to aim principally at his glory herein now when a man doth this when he makes Gods Commandement the efficient cause of his love towards his brother and Gods glory the finall cause of it then doth he love him for God for Gods sake A mans love to his brother then issues out of the love of God and the Commandement of God is the efficient cause of it when he loves him because God commands him so to do and out of love to God commanding A man then makes the glory of God the finall cause of his love towards his brother when he therefore delates his love upon him that he may acquire and gain honour to God and his Gospel which he hath called him to the profession of thereby and makes this his utmost scope and ultimate end in loving him Secondly That love to man which demonstrates the holy Spirits saving habitation in the soul is a love squared by and congruous to the rule of God to wit the holy Scriptures That love which is squared by and congruous to the rule of God is an universall love a love which extendeth it self to all the Saints yea to all men good and bad yea to very enemies because God requires this at our hands that we should love our enemies and in this respect I may call it a singular love It worketh no ill to any Deviseth not evill against any no thinketh no evill to any but good to all But is more abundant more tender and strong towards the godly then towards any other He that loveth him that begat loveth him also that is begotten of him saith the Apostle The words imply a speciall love or love after a speciall manner it is as if the Apostle had said He that loves God in sincerity loves the children of God after a speciall manner Love the Brotherhood saith the Apostle meaning after a speciall manner and this he doth that loves God sincerely his love in reference to them is a love of large extent it extendeth even unto loss of life in some cases As in case the honour of God may be advanced thereby or a publick good procured unto the brethren the Church of God thereby This I think is the Apostles meaning in the 1 Ioh. 3.16 If sincere love to God and man be in the heart of a man it will constrain him in such cases as these to deny himself unto the death to advance the honour of God and the Churches good it will make him preferre the Churches good before his own witness Aquila and Priscilla whose love to God and the Church constrained them to yeeld their own lives to preserve Paul's The like exm●ples we have in Moses and Paul whose love to God and the Church caused them to slight life and deny themselves to the death and beyond it too for the advancing of Gods glory and the Churches good Then again That love to man which is congruous to the rule of God is a love paralleling the love of Christ towards us for the kind of it Christ commands us To love one another as he hath loved us And he whose love is congruous to this rule doth this for kind though not for measure That love which is congruous to the rule of God and the love of Christ is a free-love He that loves his brother according to Christs rule and Christs example loves him freely It is a condescending love it will make a man condescend to men of low estate condescend to his brother that cannot come up to him by reason of his mean place education parts or gifts It is an establishing love a grace without which the heart of a man can never be established in grace as I gather from the language of the Apostle to the Thessalonians It is a reall love a love not terminated in words but manifested in deeds according to ability It is a uniting love it knits the hearts of Christians together as appears by the language of the Apostle Makes them of one heart and of one soul witness the Saints in the primitive Church It is a growing love and encreaseth still 1 Thes. 3.12 It is a covering grace it covereth all infirmities in the godly so farre forth as the glory of God may not be any way prejudiced but advanced thereby and forgiveth all trespasses done by the ungodly so farre forth likewise as may be gathered from the language of Solomon Love saith he covereth all sinne and the language of Peter Charity shall cover the multitude of sinnes In reference to the godly it is a love in the truth and for the truths sake as appeares by the language of S● Iohn concerning the elect Lady 2 Joh. 1.2 I then love my brother in the truth when the bond that links me and him together in a Christian conjunction is the true and constant profession of the truth I may then be said to love my brother for the truths sake when that grace and truth which is in him is the principall attractive of my love for that love which is delated on the godly by a godly heart hath grace for the principall attractive of it and not base by-respects and therefore continueth as long as grace lasteth though other motives to love fail and such occurrences fall out as usually extinguish a love led by by-respects therefore saith the Apostle of this love It never faileth it is still growing and encreasing in a state of imperfection and at length perfected in Heaven it never faileth It is a love that suffereth long is kind envieth not vaunteth not it self is not puffed up doth not behave it self unseemly seeketh not her own is not easily provoked it rejoyceth not in iniquity but rejoyceth in the truth it beareth all things
dead because of sinne That is the desire and bent of the soul which is naturally to sin and for sinne is turned from sinne and against sinne so that the body of sinne cannot without much reluctancy and opposition bear sway where Christ dwells 1. The body of sinne whilest alive makes a willing sinner but when dead a nilling sinner I do that which I would not saith the soul dead to sinne Rom. 7.16 The soul alive to sinne in sinning doth the evill which it would do but the soul dead to sinne in sinning doth the evill which it would not do 2. The soul alive to sinne allows it self in sinne in some sinne or other every soul in whom this body is alive allows it self But the soul dead to sinne allows not it self in any known sinne What I do I allow not saith a soul dead to sinne Rom. 7.15 I do this and I do that which I should not through humane frailty and the violence of temptation from without and from within or true necessity but I allow not what I do I do not resolve in cold bloud that thus and thus I will do but the quite contrary The soul that is truly dead to sinne allows not it self in any one known sinne The soul that is alive to sinne is in league with finne it makes leagues with sinne as the Israelites did with the inhabitants of Canaan there is no unregenerate person but he is in league with some sinne or other and though he lay some tribute upon his sinne or upon himself for his sinne yet he continues his league with sinne still and intends not the ruine of sinne nor the utter extirpation of sinne But the soul that is dead to sinne doth not make a league with any one sinne but his design is to ruine sinne all sinne he will not covenant to sinne as Iudas and the chief-Priests did but covenant against sinne as Iob did Iob. 3 1. ● This is the second Character of a foul dead to sinne As Saul should have dealt with Amalek so doth the soul dead to sinne deal with sinne it spa●es none it warrs against the whole body of death against every sinne 3. The soul alive to sinne in sinning doth the evill which he loves but the soul dead to sinne in sinning doth the evill which he hates What I hate that do I saith a soul dead to sinne Rom 7.15 The soul alive to sinne though he refrain from sinne yet he loves it still But the soul dead to sinne though he fall into sinne and be many times overpowred by sinne yet he doth not love sinne but hates it so farre forth as regenerate Object But conscience may here reply in some soul and say I cannot by this conclude that I am one dead to sinne but rather that I am one alive to sinne for I find much inclination in my will to sinne and much adhering in affections to sinne Answ. 1. If this alone were sufficient to give the denomination of a soul alive to sinne then no soul living in a body of flesh could conclude that he were truly dead to sinne for their is no soul inhabiting this earthly house no not the best alive but hath cause thus ●o complain 2. But secondly Every soul dead to sinne doth bear the image of a double person he beares the image of the first Adam and the image of the second Adam he is partly flesh and partly spirit and he is thus in every faculty of his soul there is flesh in every faculty of his soul sinne dwelling in every faculty this therefore doth not render the soul alive to sinne 3. Then thirdly Thou speakest in this as one seeking after a perfect death to the power and being of sinne in thy self But the Apostle in this Text points only at a true death to sinne and truly dead to sinne he may be and is to whom sinne is a burthen So much for ●●swet to this Objection 4. In the fourth place The body of sinne i● truly dead wastes and decayes there is a decaying in this body and a wasting away as in the natural body when once dead therefore saith the Apostle I die daily thereby implying that where there is a true death to sinne there is a true decaying of sinne Object But conscience in some may here reply again and say I cannot hence conclude that I am one truly dead to sinne but rather see cause to conclude on the contrary for I do not find that corruption doth decay and wast away in me but rather that it grows stronger and stronger Answ. Strong apprehensions of corruption are no argument of the strength of corruption at least if they be accompanied with loathing of them and warring against them in the strength of Christ but rather symptomes of a new Life This therefore should not cause any to conclude That there is no death to sinne in him but rather excite him to cleave closer to Christ who hath begun this death in him and will at the length perfect it 5. In the fifth place The soul that is truly dead to sinne is universally dead to sinne he is dead to every sinne and he is dead to sin in every faculty of his soul though but in part yet in every part of soul and body This and no less then this will serve to demonstrate a man truly dead to sinne in a Gospel-sence 6. Finally The soul that is truly dead to sinne is alive to righteousness the soul that is dead in sinne is alive to sinne and the soul that is dead to sinne is alive to righteousness If Christ be in you the body is dead because of sinne But the Spirit is Life because of righteousness This is the next thing to be spoken of and it is the second Character laid down by the Apostle to demonstrate Christ resident in us The Spirit is Life because of righteousness By Spirit in this Text is meant as I conceive the regenerate part of man and nothing else to wit that which is born of the-Spirit in this sence I take the word Spirit here because it is set in opposition to the forementioned body which body as is evident is the unregenerate part or old man So this word Spirit is used by the Apostle unto the Galathians The flesh lusteth against the Spirit and the Spirit against the flesh The regenerate part lusteth against the unregenerate So Christ useth the word Spirit Joh. 3.6 That which is born of the Spirit is Spirit but the Spirit is Life because of righteousness It is as if the Apostle had said If Christ be in you it will appear by this the Spirit is Life because of righteousness that is the regenerate man is alive because of righteousness he is alive because of a double righteousness or because of righteousnes in a double sence 1. He is alive because of the righteousness of Justification And 2. Because of the righteousness of Sanctification That man is truly and perfectly alive
forth to God in supplication and thanksgiving this is evident by Gal. 4.6 Rom. 8.15 26. The soul thus sealed by the Spirit of God longs after and delights in approaches to God and God approaches to it in all his holy Ordinances Let me see his countenance let me hear his voice saith the soul thus sealed for sweet is his countenance and his voice pleasant it delights to meditate on and walk with its God it doth not leave off duty but performs it more conscionably and spiritually In the fift place sound assurance produces fruitfullness the soul that is by the Spirit of God assured of the grace and favour of God towards it is usu●lly the fru●tfullest in righteousness as is ev●dent by the language of the Apostle Col. 1.6 After the Colossians knew the grace of God in truth they were more fruitfull in righteousness than ever Sound assurance of the love of God produces care and industry in the work and wayes of God as is evident by the language of the Apostle 2 Cor. 5.1 8. We know we are confident saith he of himself and other Believers and what follows Therefore we labour that whether present or absent we may be accepted of him ver 9. These mens assurance produced not carelesness and sloth but care and industry and it is the property of good assurance so to do This condemns that Popish Tenet That assurance of salvation is the destroyer of all piety and charity And it condemns that assurance that is fruitless or careless In the sixt place Sound assurance produces joy 1 Pet. 1.8 Faith of evidence and joy are inseperably united they are Twins born at once and if assurance die joy dies with it In whomsoever the Spirit of God is a Spirit of Confirmation he is a Spirit of Consolation the soul that is assured of the love of God towards it cannot but rejoyce in it spiritual Consolation doth not spring so naturally from any thing as it doth out of the witness of the Spirit joy may be I mean some kind of joy where assurance is wanting but assurance never goes without joy spirituall joy There is a generation as Solomon tels us which in the midst of laughter their heart is sad and there is a generation which in the midst of sadnesse their heart rejoyceth And those which are thus sealed by the holy Spirit of God are they such is the power of sound assurance that it will make I mean instrumentally the heart to joy whilst the outward man sorrows it will fill the heart with joy unspeakable and full of glory whilst the outward man is filled with shame and contempt yea sound assurance is for the most part then strongest and shews it self with most vigor and light somenesse within when the greatest damp of outward discomforts lye upon the person and the world most frowns upon him or persecutes him for his frowardnesse and faithfulnesse in the cause of God When Paul and Silas had much cause to sigh for their usage amongst men they then sang and rejoyced Act. 16.25 When the Apostles did suffer shame for Christ then did they most rejoyce Act. 5.41 When the People of God were spoiled of their goods and spoiled in their persons then did they rejoyce and whence sprang their joy in this disconsolate condition but from their assurance They took joyfully the spoiling of their goods knowing that they had in Heaven a better and induring substance Heb. 10.34 Assurance of Gods favour produceth joy according to its measure and degree assurance of hope produceth joy assurance of faith produceth more joy The riches of the full assurance of understanding most of all The joy that springs from assurance is a heart strengthening joy a life lenghtening joy and a joy that no man can take from us it is a soul inlarging a shame despising a God-glorifying a world-overcoming and a sin-overcoming grace In the seventh place Sound assurance produceth humility this seal of confirmation when set by the Spirit of God doth work the soul to more humility of mind then usually is in others The Apostle Paul is a notable instance hereof he was thus sealed by the holy Spirit of God when he said I am perswaded that neither Death nor Lfe Angels Principalities nor Powers nor any other thing shall be able to separate me from the Love of God which is in Christ Iesus our Lord and then did be serve the Lord with all humility of mind and with many tears as himself saith Act 20.19 Sound assurance is heart-humbling heart-molifying Sound assurance leaves not the soul without a holy jelousie of it self nor without a Christian watch This is evident in the Apostle Paul Rom. 8.38 39. compared with 1 Cor. 9.26 27. I am perswaded saith he that neither Dea●h nor Life nor any other Creature shall be able to separate me from the Love of God c. Yet was he not hereby taken off from but rather incited to a holy jealousie of and watchfulnesse over himself and all his wayes as appears by the forecited place Sound assurance and holy jealousie may well stand together and he whose assurance is void of holy jealousie and watchfulnesse hath great cause to be jealous of his assurance Sound assurance is not the destroyer but the Nurse of holy jealousie and watchfulnesse Neither is holy jealousie an enemy to but a preserver of sound assurance In the ninth place Sound assurance works the heart to more contempt of the world and the things of the world then others usually attain to and it doth mightily quicken and spur forward the soul to more holinesse hatred of sinne and zeal and courage in the cause of God Moses and Paul are pregnant examples of this of the effects of this seal in Moses we may read in Heb. 11. v. 24 25 26 27. Exod. 32.31 32 and in Paul Phil. 3. v. 7 to 15. Act. 20. v. 19 to 25. In the tenth place Sound assurance will bide the trial and it is willing to be tried it shuns not the light but comes to the light that its reality might be made manifest Sound assurance is not usually injoyed long without some buffetings of Satan the soul that is t●us sealed by the Spirit of God hath u●ually some thorne in the flesh some messenger or other of Satans to exercise it and humble it thus it was with the Apostle Paul when thus sealed by the holy Spirit of God as appears by 2 Cor. 12.7 and thus it is with other of the Children of God who are thus sealed by the Spirit of God as each mans experience will witnesse to this I set a probatum est Sound assurance of the Love of God makes the soul long for the full fruition of it this seal of the holy Spirit of God moves the soul nothing more to desire to be dissolved to be with God how long Lord saith this soul come Lord Iesus come quickly I have a desire to depart and to be with Christ
dwell in you But without Christ without Vnion with Christ there is no Salvation sor Man therefore it follows by necessary consequence That he that hath the Spirit of Christ dwelling in him according to the meaning of the Apostle in this text hath undoubtedly Union with Christ. Here note That the first and radicall Union between Christ and his Members is by conjunction This Union by Conjunction is a true and reall uniting of our persons bodies and souls to the Person of Christ God and Man To the Person of Christ as our Mediator And it is then effected when the Lord is joyned to the Soul and the Soul to the Lord so as they are made truly one This Union between Christ and his Members is made by the Spirit of God whose office it is to joyn Christ and his Members together it is the Spirit immediately on Christs part but the Spirit mediately on our part that makes this Union Christ by an actuall habitation of his Spirit in his Elect really joyns himself unto them and becoms truly one with them Christ by his Spirit works unfeigned faith in the hearts of his elect by which they habitually abide in him joyn themselves unto him and become truly one with him Christ and his Members thus joyned together are one by Conjunction To get assurance of thy Union with Christ then thou must of necessity begin here viz. with a diligent search whether thou art indued with the Spirit of Christ yea or nay and in searching after this take notice That the Spirit of God is said to be given Either Essentially or Virtually Essentially unto Christ onely virtually unto us So as when the Scripture speaks of giving the holy Spirit of God to man of the receiving of the Spirit by Man and of the dwelling of the holy Spirit in man In these texts and the like we are not to understand the essence of that Person in Trinity But the vertue efficacy and operation of that Person Secondly Note that the Spirit of God is virtually given unto man either as a qualifier only or as a sanctifier As a restrainer or as a renewer and that reception of the Spirit and dwelling of the Spirit which the Scripture makes an Argument of ou● Union with Christ is not that common efficacy and dwelling of the Spirit whereby he is a restrainer and qualifier onely But that speciall Efficacy and Virtue of the holy Spirit of God whereby he becometh a renewer and sanctifier of us To get assurance of the Union with Christ then thou must diligently and seriously examine thy self touching the spirituall virtue efficacy and operation of the holy Spirit of God in thy Soul manifested in and by those speciall graces which the holy Spirit of God works in the hearts of the Elect and of them onely thence called by Divines for distinction sake sa●ct●fying or renewing grace The Spirit of God as a sanctifier the world cannot receive as the Language of Christ intimates Ioh 14.17 Sanctifying or renewing grace Christ bestows upon his Spouse onely it is his love-token to her in her military life though Christ be liberall in bestowing gifts upon all sorts of people yet he keeps these Jewels for his Spouse and bestows them on her onely on whom he bestows himself well may they therefore serve to demonstrate our Union with Christ and the habitation of his ●pirit in us after a speciall manner wheresoever they are bestowed hence it is that this g●ace and glory are coupled together Psal. 84 11. Amongst those speciall graces which demonstr●●● the holy Spirits saving habitation in ●s the first which I will here speak of is Faith to wi● justifying Faith We having the ●ame Spirit of Faith we also believe saith the Apostle 2 Cor. 4.13 Hence it is evident that whosoever is indued with the holy Spirit of God savingly beleives he beleives with a justifying faith For as much as the Spirit works this true justifying faith in all those in whom he dwelleth savingly Therefore if thou wouldest get a true testimony of the holy Spirits dwelling in thee after a speciall and saving manner thou must diligently try and examine thy self whether thou hast this grace of faith true justifying faith wrought in thee or not If thou hast this grace of justifying faith thou hast that which is an infallible Character and a reall testimony of the holy Spirits saving habitation and operation in thee of thy Union with Christ and eternal salvation by him as the Apostle intimates 1 Iohn 5.10 where he saith he that believeth in the Son of God hath the witnesse in himself The truth of this assertion will more clearly and fully appear by that which follows This faith is a speciall work of the Spirit of God in man as appears by the language of the Apostle Eph. 1.19 20. Where the Apostle speaks of it as a work of Gods Almighty Power No less then that which he wrought in Christ when he raised him from the dead and set him at his own right hand in Glory And in that it accompanieth predestination and is a grace proper and peculiar unto the elect as appears by 2 Thes. 2.13 compared with Tit. 1.1 He that with this saith beleiveth in Christ eateth the Flesh of Christ and drinketh his Blood and Christ saith He that eateth my Flesh and drinketh my Blood dwelleth in me and I in him John 6.56 And hath he not then Union with Christ surely yes for he lives in Christ and Christ in him Really Spiritually he is one with Christ and Christ with him Of this faith Christ affirmeth that it is accompanied with salvation Iohn 3.36 He that believeth on the Son hath Everlasting life and John 6.54 He saith wheso eateth my Flesh and drinketh my Blood hath Eternall Life He that believ●th on me hath Everlasting Life Joh. 6.47 This faith is called an evidence Heb. 11.1 the evidence of things not seen And true it is that this faith alwayes is an evidence though it do not alwayes give evidence to the subject in which it is beleeve and be saved are coupled together Luk. 8.12 Finally unto this faith is annexed in Scripture many special and absolute promises of salvation the Scripture faith that whosoever beleiveth in Christ shall not be ashamed Rom. 10.11 Beleive in the Lord I●sus Christ and thou shalt be saved Act. 1● 31 Christ saith He that believeth in me though he were dead yet shall he live Joh. 11.25 He that liveth and believeth in me shall never die ver 26. He shall never dye eternally He that eateth me shall live by me He that eateth of this bread shall live for ever Joh. 6.57 58. Verily verily I say unto you He that heareth my word and beleiveth in him that sent me shall not come into condemnation but is passed from death unto life Joh. 5.24 By all which it is evident that justifying faith for of that these texts speak is a sure earnest of our
the 1 chap. 27. and that which is spoken of believers in the primitive Church Act. 2.44 45.4.34 This Faith makes a man very industrious in labouring to keep a good conscience in all things and to walk inoffensively towards God and towards man in all things as appears in the Apostle Paul Paul having made a confession of faith and hope towards God Act. 24.14 15. in the 16. ver of the same chap. he declares how his faith did operate And herein do I exercise my self to have alwayes a conscience void of offence towards God and towards Man And this Language of his doth plainly evidence That it is the property of a true faith thus to operate All these are real testimonies that true justifying Faith is no Idle Faith but operative and working It worketh by love This the Scripture a●firmeth Gal. 5.6 Neither Circumcision nor Vncircumcision availeth any thing but faith which worketh by love thence it is evident that true faith worketh by love And this is indeed the great distinguishing Character of it it worketh by love to God and the things of God and by love to man for Gods sake A true believer works all his works in love to God and Christ His whole labour in point of obedience is a labour of love he sees an unfathomed depth of Divine love declared toward him by God in Christ and this constrains him to love God in Christ again and out of love unto him that dyed for him to give up himself unto him and lay out himself for him The love of Christ constraineth me saith a true believer 2 Cor. 5.14 15. He is holy and blamelesse before him in love Ephes 1.4 My soule hath kept thy Commandements and I love them exceedingly saith a true believer Ps. 119.167 This Faith is alwayes accompanied with true repentance He that truely believes unfaignedly repents This is evident by the language of the Prophet Zach. 12.10 This Faith is alwayes accompanied with new obedience This Faith is a holy Faith it 's so called Iud v. 20. and it makes the subject holy in which it is inwardly outwardly universally holy though not perfectly holy in this life This Faith is a World-contemning and World over-coming Faith it contemns the World both in the good and evill of it as appears in Moses Heb. 11.24 to 28. I● overcometh the world as saith the Scripture This is the victory that overcometh the world even your faith Who is he that overcometh the world but he that believeth c. 1 John 5.4 5. I may add to this and say It is a flesh-over-coming and a Devill-overcoming faith for howsoever a true beleever be many times put to the worse for a time and foiled by one or other of these enemies yet in the end he overcometh them all and is more then a Conqueror through Christ that strengtheneth him and overcometh for him This Faith is a heart humbling Faith it is the property of this Faith to make an humble heart as the Language of Christ Iohn 5.44 intimates How can ye believe saith he which seek honour one of a another A true beleever eyes God in all gifts and in all blessings Spirituall and Temporall and ascribes all unto free grace He and he only labours for and learnes of Christ heart-humility and groans under the sense of the want of it and hence it is evident that true Justifying Faith is heart-humbling Faith This Faith is a God-glorifying Faith it makes a man preferre God above himself and his glory above all things respecting not himself willing to deny himself unto the death to advance the honour of God and humbly to submit to the Will of the Lord in every thing as appears in Abraham Iob Eli David Paul and many other true beleevers Abraham was by this faith transported so far above himself that he willingly offered up his dear Isaac to advance the honour of God when he tryed him Iob was by this faith brought humbly and patiently to submit to the Will of the Lord in every thing as one desirous to advance his Name Ely was by this faith brought sweetly and humbly to submit to the good pleasure of the Lord When Samuel told him what evill the Lord would bring upon him and his house he meekly replies as one d●sierous to advance God in all It is the Lord let him do what seemeth him good It is as if he had said let him do with me or to me what he will so he may have glory by it I am content David did the like 2 Sam 15.26 But above all the Apostle Paul is a notable example of this who was by this faith carried so farre above himself that he cared not what betided ●im sink or swim so Christ might be magnified thereby bonds and afflictions and death were nothing to him to undergo so Christ might have honour thereby Nay he would rather lose his eternall Crown then eclyps the honour of Christ as his Language Act. 20.23 24.21 13. does plainly evidence his resolution That Christ should be magnified in him whatever he underw●nt Phil. 1.20 Rom. 9.3 It is the property of a true faith to preferre God above all but an evidence of a strong faith thus to preferre God above all This Faith is a growing Faith True Faith how weak soever or how strong soever is alwayes accompanied with cordial desires and real indeavours to grow and increase and bring forth more fruit as the language of beleevers shews Lord increase our Faith said the Disciples to Christ Lord I beleeve help thou my unbeliefe saith another beleever I count not my self to have apprehended but this one thing I do forgetting those things which are behind and reaching forth to those things which are before I press toward the mark saith a third Phil. 3.13 14. By all w●ich it is evident That true Faith is growing Faith A true beleever never thinks he hath Faith enough but still prayes for and labours after increase This Faith is a supporting Faith It is a Faith which a Christian may and must live by in all conditions as appears H●b 2.4 The just shall live by his Faith He that hath this Faith we speak of shall live by it in prosperity and in adversity in life and in death Finally this Faith is permanent and persevering it holds out unto the death it is never totally lost a true beleever as he lives in the faith so he dyes in the faith the Apostle speaking of true beleevers saith These all died in the Faith Heb. 11.13 And true it is That a true beleever alwayes dyes in the Faith in the Faith of adherence if not of evidence this is vigour fit and but fit to give the denomination of a true beleever we are made partakers of the Holy Ghost if we hold the beginning of our co●fidence stedfast unto the end saith the text Heb. 3.14 These words plainly evidence that justifying faith is persevering faith it
holds out unto the death and ends in fruition it can never be totally nor finally lost and this indeed is it's distinguishing property and it is the property of every renewing grace every renewing grace holds out unto the end that grace which weares the the Crown of Glory is persevereing Revel 2.10 It is not alwayes so in appearance but in truth A true beleever may at sometimes and in some cases seem both to himself and to others to have loft his faith and his other graces as many examples in Scripture shew but yet as Ieb speaks The root of the matter is within him still Truth of grace in the inward parts and it abideth there However a true beleever may and sometimes doth for a time lose the comfort of his grace and the fight of his grace and the power of acting of his grace yet he hath this priviledg above all formalists he never totally loseth the habit of any renewing grace these gifts of God are without repentance Wouldest thou then know whether thy faith be sound and saving and such as consequently demonstrates the holy Spirits saving habitation in thy soule try and examine thy saith by these properties and Scripture-Characters of a true jus●ifying faith and if it hold correspondency with them know for thy comfort that it is such as really demonstrates the holy Spirits saving habitation and special operat●on in t●y soul thy Union with Christ a●d e●ernal salvation by him whatsoever Satan or thine own conscience abused by Satan may at any time hereafter say to the contrary and give the Lord the praise The end of thy faith shall be the salvation of thy Soul as the Scripture speaks 1 Pet. 1.9 LOVE ANother grace demonstrating the holy Spirits saving habitation in us is Love to wit sincere Love God is Love and where God dwelleth by his Spirit he worketh Love to wit sincere Love to God and sincere love to man for Gods sake And this Love is a speciall work and fruit of the holy Spirit of God in man as appears by the language of the Apostle My little Children let us not love in word or in tongue but in deed and in truth And hereby we know that we are of the truth and shall assure our hearts before him and Gal 5. ●2 it is said The fruit of the Spirit is Love More particularly That sincere Love to God is a special work of the Spirit of God and such as accompanies salvation is evident by the great good that this grace is attended with both here and hereafter here all things how bad soever in themselves work together for good unto them that love God Rom. 8.28 And many promises of temporall and eternall good are made unto this grace Psal. 91.14 15 16. A Crown of Life is promised unto it Iam 1.12.25 Much good attendeth this grace here but as it is written Eye hath not seen nor eare heard neither have entred into the heart of man the things which God hath prepared for them that love him 1 Cor. 2.9 Such is the happiness joy and glory which God hath prepared for them that love him that it cannot enter into us till we shall enter into it It must therefore needs be a special work of the Spirit of God in us and a sure pledg of salvation He that sincerely loves God hath that in him which is a sure argument that he is greatly beloved of God I love them that love me saith Christ We love him because he first loved us saith the Apostle And must not that needs be a special work of the Spirit of G●d in man which strongly argues the special Love of God towards man surely yes But sincere Love to God strongly argu●s special Love in God towards him that hath it therefore sincere Love to God must needs be a speciall work of the Spirit of God in whomsoever it is That sincere Love to man for Gods sake is a speciall work of the Spirit of God in man is evident by that which follows Sincere love to man for Gods sake in whomsoever it is is a real testimony of his Union with Christ Regeneration and New-birth and that he is indeed a true Disciple of Jesus Christ as these Scriptures following plainly evidence This is his Commandement that we beleeve in the Name of his Son Iesus Christ and love one another as he gave us Commandement and he that keepeth his Commandement dwelleth in him and he in him He that dwelleth in love dwellth in God and God in him If we love one another God dwelleth in us and his Love is perfected in us c. These Texts cleerly demonstrate this Love to be a real testimony of Union with Christ Love is of God and every one that loveth is born of God We know that we are passed from death unto life because we love the Brethren saith the Apostle And these Texts plainly evidence this love to be a true testimony of our Regeneration and New birth Love one another saith Christ as I have loved you meaning for the kind of Love By this shall all men know that you are my Disciples if you have love one towards another These Texts plainly demonstrate this Love we speak of to be a true Character of a true Disciple of Jesus Christ And must not that needs be a special work of the Spirit of God in man and a true testimony of his saving habitation in us which is a real testimony of our Union with Christ and Renovation by him and dependance on him Surely yes But sincere Love to man for Gods sake is eminently all this therefore this Love must needs be a special work of the Spirit of God and a sure testimony of his saving habitation in whomsoever it is Sincere Love is a grace without which all profession of Religion is but guilded Hypocrisie where Love is God dwels but where it is not the Devil dwels the more Love the more like to God the less of it the more like the Devil Wofull experience shews That those men which have great parts and gifts and little or no Love shew more of the Devils nature then of Gods and act more like the Devil then God where they have power Love is the sweetest flower in all the garden of God but it is a flower which the Devil cannot indure the smell of because he is not capable of it and knows that where Love dwels he must vanish and therefore it is his main design to destroy Love if possible in all sorts and sects and to root it up and banish it from the hearts of all men The Devil is well content that men should pray preach read hear Sermons and make a faire shew outwardly provided this spring not from Love nor tendeth not to the increase of Love to God nor man but if he see Love be the root and fruit of mens services then he goes cunningly and Serpent-like to
and ye shall be my People Jer. 31.33 What doth the Lord require herein on our part but to take him for our God and yield up our selves unto him as his People to apply Christ unto our selves and our selves unto Christ as aforesaid This is the Obedience of faith this is Evangelical Obedience the Obedience which the Gospel cals for and which it only accepts What shall we do that we might work the Works of God said some to Christ Ioh. 6.28 Christ replyes ver 29. This is the work of God that ye believe on him whom he hath sent In these few words is comprehended the whole work of Obedience the whole work assigned us by God This is the Work of God c. It is as if Christ had said you naturally seek Heaven by works but altogether mistake that work of works which is only acceptable and effectual to attain its end Beleeve on him whom he hath sent Beleeve on him who hath fulfilled the Law for us and will fulfill the Law in us This is the work of God assigned to us and a work which God worketh in us and this is unto flesh and blood of all works the hardest Here note these Corollaries Corol. 1. That the Obedience of Faith is of all works the most difficult unto flesh and blood this requires a man to deny himself totally which flesh and blood will rather deny God himself then do We rejoyce in Christ Iesus and have no confidence in the flesh c. 2. Our Souls naturally had rather dye and put off their immortality and everlasting being then put on the Lord Jesus Christ. They will not come to me 3. We all naturally dote upon works and say as the young man in the Gospel that came to Christ What shall I do that I may inherit eternall life But the work of works Beleeve in the Lord Iesus Christ we are of all other the farthest from till the Spirit of God work in us These from our Saviours mouth I have deducted This is the Work of God that ye beleeve in him whom he hath sent 4. Man naturally is so proud That he will not seek after God saith the Psalmist that is God in Christ for no otherwise can God be approached unto He thinks himself rich and to need nothing and knows not that he is poor and blind and miserable wretched and naked and therefore scornes to seek to God in Christ for wealth He will rather make a covering of Figg-Leaves than of Christs righteousnesse rather cover himself with rotten raggs than be beholding to Christ for his robe 5. Man regenerated so far forth as carnal is very unwilling to be beholding to Christ wholly for all the good he stands in need of hence it is that many regenerate persons will rest on promises no further than they can find themselves to obey precepts weary themselves out with labouring to fulfil the Law and never study the Obedience of Faith which is to renounce all that we can do To put no confidence in the flesh but rest only on what Christ hath done and suffered for us beleeving that every promise shall be made good to us so farre forth as may be good for us for Christ's sake This is to apply Christ unto our selves And our selves unto Christ According unto all his precepts This is the latter clause in the description of Evangelicall Obedience A Christian by the Obedience of faith Opens the everlasting doors to the King of Glory to come in and take possession and rule all in his heart and in his life He resigns up all to be ordered by him who so loved him that he gave himself for him so that not he but Christ liveth ruleth and ordereth all Every thought is yielded up unto the Obedience of Christ with desire that he will bring it into subjection 2 Cor. 10.5 Faith doth both receive and give it is faith that applies Christ to the man and the man to Christ as appears by Ioh. 1.12 compared with 2 Cor. 8.5 Faith makes him ours who makes all happiness ours Faith makes him ours in whom we are compleat and generates Love in our souls to him that hath loved us and given himself for us and this love constrains us to live not unto our selves but unto him which dyed for us and rose again 2 Cor. 5.14 15. and this is that Obedience which the Gospel cals for and which only it accepts and this if fincere and cordial is very acceptable with God though many wayes deficient It is the Gospel and the Gospel only that cals for this Obedience the Law doth not require us to apply our selves unto Christ no more than it doth require us to apply Christ unto our selves but barely saith Do this and live Transgrefse this and dye The Gospel doth not barely call for this Obedience of Faith but promises to give it and works the heart unto it yea freely gives it us as a gift They shall looke on him whom they have pierced c. Zach. 12.10 I will put my Spirit within you and cause you to walk in my Statutes saith the Lord c. Ezek. 36.27 To you it is given in the behalf of Christ not only to beleeve on him but also to suffer for his sake saith the Apostle Phil. 1.29 These things premised I proceed to the tryal of Obedience and for the more perspicuity propound this Question Quest. How may I discern whether my Obedience be sincere and cordiall Obedience yea or nay Answ. Thou mayest discern it by the efficient cause by the final cause and by the properties of cordial Obedience The efficient cause of cordial Obedience is the Love of God the final cause thereof is the Glory of God 1. The efficient cause of cordial Obedience is the Love of God cordial Obedience springs out of Love to God and he that cordially obeys the Will of God obeys it in Love to God not slavish feare nor self love nor vain glory But Lo●e to God is that which leades him to obey the Will of God Therefore saith the Apostle The Love of Christ constraineth us 2 Cor. 5.14 Here note these two things 1. That whatsoever a man doth in way of Obedience to the Will of God be the action never so good or glorious in it self is no wayes acceptable unto God except it spring from Love a pregnant proof of this we have 1 Cor. 13.1 2 3. where the Apostle shews at large That all Obedience without Love comes to just nothing all parts and gifts all Faith and Obedience though it be to the death and the cruellest death that possibly may be without faith working by Love without Obedience springing from Love comes to just nothing at length It profiteth me nothing saith the Apostle On the other hand though we can do but little for God if that little we do issue out of Love to God it is very pleasing to and acceptable with God who looks more on our affection than our
long description of a new Creature to seven particulars and speak of them particularly what God hath been pleased to impart unto me that if ever God in his providence should any wayes bring this Manuscript to publique view it may be helpful to some poor souls this way First A new Creature is one in whom Iesus Christ the new man is formed to wit truly formed the truth of this is evident by the language of the Apostle Gal. 4.19 My little Children saith he of whom I travell in birth again untill Christ he formed in you c. which words do clearly and strongly prove That when Christ is formed in the Creature the Creature is then new and not before it is then a new Creature and not till then it is then born again born of God and new indeed Regeneration may well be called a forming of Christ in us for it formes Christ in the understanding in the will in the affections in the conscience in all the faculties of the soul in all the parts and members of the body in the whole man in the whole life and conversation Here note two or three things First That God forms Christ in the whole man where he forms him truly God forms Christ in the whole man by conforming the whole man to Christ. 2. When every faculty of the soul is in its scope and bent for Christ then is Christ formed in the soul when every facultie of the soul and member of the body is bent for Christ then is Christ formed in the whole man 3. When a mans will desire aim and indeavour is to square his whole life by the Word of God as his rule then is Christ formed in his Conversation then is he a new Creature in Gods account who measures man more by his will and affection then his action as appears by 2 Cor. 8.12 compared with Prov. 23.26 Wouldest thou then know whether thou art a new Creature yea or nay consider then whether Christ be formed in thee ●o wit truly formed yea or nay ask thy soul the question that Saul asked the wi●ch What form is he of said he What sawest ●hou so do thou ask thy soul What form art thou of O my soul Whose image dost thou beare Christ's or Satans If Christ's truly though weakly this argues thy state good thy Creation ●tw this demonstrates thee a Creature new a new Creature Then again say as he What seest thou What seest thou O my soul in thy self What light what darknesse if nothing but darknesse what darknesse is it affected darknesse or afflicting darknesse if afflicting darknesse this speaks the Creature new If thou descriest light in thy understanding Consider then how it operates how it regulates how it transforms 1. Consider how that light which thou hast be it more or lesse doth operate whether it puffeth up or casteth down thy soul whether it lifteth up thy soul in praise or in pride whether it give glory to God or self renewing light is humbling God glorifying the more Iob saw of God the more he abhorred himself the more a new Creature knows God and himself the more he loaths himself and admires his God and desires to advance him Consider what affection sutable to its notion that light which thou hast produceth in thee what love to God and the things of God what love to man for God what hatred of sinne what joy in the Lord what desire to injoy the Lord in all and above all things what comfortable hope of increase of grace and glory what trust in God and desire to do for God and be with God it generates in thee Consider what power of godlinesse thy light produceth in thee what self-discovery what self-denyall it hath begotten in thee especially touching thy predominate sinne what contempt of the world in the good and evill of it what conscience of sinne of duty and the manner of it what conjunction of duties of the second Table with the duties of the first Table what contentation with thy state what watchfulnesse over thy heart and all the out-goings of it what willingnesse to take Christ with the Cross what desire and indeavour to help others what hunger and thirst after all those means which God hath appointed for the increase of it and all grace in us what fruitfullness in righteousness c. Saving illumination produceth fruitfulnesse Secondly Consider how that light which thou hast doth regulate and reform thee consider how it regulates thy judgment thy will and affections how it reforms thy life and all thy actions and conforms them to the Word and Will of Christ Consider what death to sinne what life to righteousnesse it produceth in thee what through reformation it hath begotten in thee renewing light is reforming light universally reforming inwardly reforming and perseveringly reforming Thirdly Consider how that light which thou hast transforms thee Consider what transformation it makes in thee Renewing light is transforming light Light from the sanctifying Spirit of Christ transforms into the Image of Christ Christ truly formed in the understanding speaks the man transformed by the renewing of his mind as is evident by the Language of the Apostle Rom. 12.2 Be you transformed by the renewing of your mind c. Consider how that light which thou hast elevateth and raiseth thy soul from Earth to Heaven and if thou findest that the light that is in thy understanding do thus operate thus regulate and thus transform truly though weakly be it more or lesse know it lively demonstrates Christ formed in thy understanding thy light renewing light and thee a Creature new Of Christ formed in the other faculties of the soul to wit Will and Affection and in life and conversation more shall be spoken in due place For the present note this As Christ the new Man is more or lesse formed in the Creature so the Creature is more or lesse new When Christ shall be perfectly formed in the Crea●ure then and never till then the Creature shall be perfectly new according to degrees Thus far of the first appearance of a new Creature he is one in whose understanding Christ is formed 2. The second appearance of a new Creature which I mean to insist on is this He is one that hath a new heart this conclusion I deduct from the Language of the Lord Ezek. 36.26 where the Lord speaking of making the Creature new begins at the heart A new heart will I give you and a new spirit will I put within you saith the Lord c. Satan doth his best works without but God and Nature do their first works within Nature begins its work within as Philosophers and Anatomists conceive In natural generation the heart lives and brain parts which have in them the begining of motion are the first in being though not the first in appearing nor the first perfected say they So in spiritual generation to wit regeneration where
Creature and a meer naturalist For although there may be and oftentimes is a contradiction and combate in an unregenerate person between severall and distinct faculties of the soul the appetite against reason the will or affections against conscience yet there never is a contradiction in the same faculty of the soul in an unregenerate person neither indeed can there be for there is nothing in it to oppose This combate is peculiar to a new Creature where there is flesh and spirit in the same faculty and what the one chuseth the other refuseth it may therefore well be a Christians touch-stone to try himself by There is yet another way whereby a man may be said to commit sinne which is far more dangerous than the former yea remedilesse and that is when a man doth wilfully and obstinately oppose that which the Word of God and the Spirit of God doth throughly convince his conscience is the Truth and ought to be followed out of meer malice scorn and contempt and this is that which I think this Text points at chiefly but thus a Child of God a member of Christ a new Creature cannot commit sinne because his seed remaineth in him as the Apostle here speaks He that thus commiteth sin is of the Divell and sealed by him to Hels eternity 1 Ioh. 3.8 ch 5.16 Mat. 12.32 In the fifth place a new Creature is one that groans under the remainder of the old man in him to wit the naturall propensity which he finds in himself to all evill the inticing tempter of corrupt nature which makes him a verse to all good and prone to all evill as that which spoiles all his good dutyes as that which is his greatest burden bewailes it as that alone which makes his condition wretched and miserable longs earnestly for a total deliverance from this burden of corrupt nature prayes earnestly for strength against all the inticings thereof and rests of Christ by Faith in the use of all lawfull meanes by him appointed for a total deliverance at length and strength against all the inticings thereof until total delivera●ce be granted all which is evident in Paul Rom. 7. And truly I never yet found any burden like this burden though I have born many this burden alone had not Christ borne the heavior end of it had sunk my soul in despaire or driven it upon desperate attempts the time hath been when to have been freed from the power of natural corruption My soul hath chosen death rather than life and longed for d●ath more then for hid treasures as Iob speaks yea when it would have joyed in that which nature abhors an untimely death by the hand of man would have infinitely more joyed me than the acquiring of the whole earth with all it affords only for the freeing of my soul from the power of corrupt nature which was so potent that my unbeleeving heart did often conclude That I should one time or other fall by it and by it be undone to all eternity yet the Lord was my stay and prevented what I much feared and out of this deep the Lord at length delivered me to the glory of Christ my keeper and deliverer and the incouragement of others in the like case I speak this much more I could speake on this subject experimentally but I forbeare In the sixt place a new Creature is one that minds the things of the Spirit is led by the Spirit and walks after the Spirit These expressions tend all to one and the same end namely to denominate a new Creature therefore I put them together A new Creature is one that minds the things of the Spirit so saith the text Rom. 8.5 They that are after the sl●sh do mind the things of the flesh but they that are after the Spirit the things of the Spirit As carnall hearts mind carnall things so spirituall hearts mind spirituall things a new Creature minds the things of the Spirit after the rule of the Spirit the Word of God He minds the things of the Spirit in the first place he minds them savourly chiefly and principally more than the things of the flesh and declares it by following after them industriously The apprehension of the love and favour of God and that which leades thereunto to wit the pure Ordinances of God are the only jewels which he esteems and follows after and for the acquiring and retaining of these he will part with all the good of the world and count it but dung as is evident in the parable of the merchant-man who sould all to buy the pearl A new Creature his great care desire and indeavour is to be more new O that I were more dead to sinne more alive to righteousnesse that I were lesse in the flesh more in the spirit lesse in my self more in Christ saith a new Creature And these are the things which he minds and follows after He is led by the Spirit of God so saith the Apostle Rom. 8.14 As many as are led by the Spirit of God they are the Sons of God This language plainly shews who are the Adopted Sonnes of God and so consequently who are new Creatures for to be such a Sonne of God as this Text speaks of and to be a new Creature is all one in effect and he that is such is led by the Spirit of God That is his mark set by the holy Ghost by the hand of the Apostle The Spirit of God may be said to lead man two manner of wayes more generally or more specially as a qualifier only or as a sanctifier and that leading of the Spirit which denominates our son ship or the Creature new is not the more generall but the more speciall leading of the Spirit to wit the Spirit leading as a sanctifier as an inward sanctifier as well as an outward A man may then be faid to be led by the Spirit of God according to the meaning of this Text as I humbly conceive when h● by a speciall work of the Spirit of God upon his soul is inabled voluntarily and cordially to resign up himself in all things to be guided by the Spirit of God and cordially and couragiously to decline all other leaders contrary unto this 1. He that is thus led by the Spirit of God is not under the Law saith the Apostle Gal. 5.18 If ye be led by the Spirit ye are not under the Law by Law in this Text some Divines take to be meant the moral Law and so taking it conclude That he that is led by the Spirit is freed from the curse of the moral Law which is very true of this mind was Mr Perkins others by Law here understand the domineering power of corrupt nature that which the Apostle cals The Law of sinne Rom. 7 25. of this mind was Luther Law thus taken the conclusion is That he that is led by the Spirit of God is not under the domineering reigning power of sinne
nature but of the holy Spirit Hence I conceive a man may then be said to walk in and after the Spirit when he walks not after the flesh as the Apostle speaks but after the rules of the Spirit given in the Word of God and according to the motions dictates and guidance of the Spirit which are never contrary unto but agreeable with the Word of God when he doth not voluntarily and approvedly obey the dictates of corrupt nature but the Word and Spirit of God when he doth walk according to the rule of the written Word at lest in his aim desire and endeavour Here note two or three things He that is thus led by the Spirit of God walks after the Spirit more strongly or mor● weakly as he is more or lesse new He walks after the Spirit more swiftly or more slowly as Chris● by his Spirit draws him more strongly or mor● weakly some Christ by his Spirit draws more strongly and they run after him as the Church speaks Cant. 1.4 They follow their leader vigorously unweariedly wit● delight others he draws more weakly 〈◊〉 they walk more slowly after him according to the different dispensations of the Spirit of God so doth man move more strongly or more weakly more swiftly or more slowly in the wayes of God Then again note this Man at his best estate here follows his leader walks after the Spirit but as a blind lame impotent Creature if at one time he runs after his leader and follows him vigorously at another time he is weary and walks slowly now he stumbles and anon fals and were it not that his leader is very able wise and watchfull he would give over quite and fall irrecoverably 12. In the next place A man that is thus led by the Spirit of God is a curagious and resolute opposer of all leaders contrary unto this leader if the World tempt and strive to be his leader he opposes that if the flesh tempt and strive to be his leader he opposes that if the Divell tempt and strive to be his leader he resisteth him and all this he doth in the strength of the Spirit of God whom he hath chosen for his leader all this is evident in Paul a man led by the Spirit of God after a special manner his courage and resolution was such that he maintained a constant warre with these three enemies on this ground that they would have been his leader they had led him before would have led him again but this he had rather dye then yield to when once led by the Spirit as his own testimony in divers places proves He that thus doth may be and sometimes is led captive by some one or other of these enemies This the Apostle Paul sadly complains of as an experimented truth Rom. 7.23 13. Finally he whom the Spirit of God thus leads he leads so long as he needeth leading He will lead us over death unto glory Psal. 48.14 compared with Psal. 73.24 He whom the Spirit of God once leads as a sanctifier he never totally nor finally gives over leading but leads him through grace unto glory Lay all these things together and consider whether it be thus with thy selfe yea or nay and if upon a true tryal thou findest it thus with thee conclude thou mayst safely That thou art one led by the Spirit of God after a special manner and so consequently a sonne of God by Adoption an heir of Heaven a new Creature The seventh and last appearance of a new Creature which I will mention here is thi● he is one that is joyned to the Lord Jesus Chr●i● and one spiri● with him That he is one joyned to the Lord Jesus Christ is evident from the words of this Text If any man be in Christ he is a new Creature Here it is granted That a new Creature is in Christ E●go it must needs then be granted That he is joyned to Christ for to be in a thing is more then to be joyned to it and the greater doth necessarily comprehend the lesser but according to the meaning of the Apostle here these expressions of being in Christ and being joyned to Christ I conceive comes all to one That he that is thus united to Christ is one Spirit with Christ is evident by the Language of the Apostle 1 Cor. 6.17 He that is joyned to the Lord is one spirit In these few words we have a compleat description of a new Creature in his conjunction with Christ and in his conformity to Christ in his Union with Christ and Communion with him of this Union with Christ what it is and how effected the Reader may see more in Pag. 2 3. this only I will add here and so proceed That the joyning to the Lord here spoken of is not a bare joyning in nature only by Christ's participation of our humane nature neither is it a joyning in glory but it is a joyning to the Lord in grace A new Creature is one then that is joyned to the Lord in grace And he that is thus joyned to the Lord is one Spirit that is he is one Spirit with the Lord Jesus Christ he is one with Christ in every thing one with Christ in affection one with him in action one with him in function one with him in life and conversation Christ is formed in him in all these and he thereby made one spirit with Christ. 1. He is one with Christ in affection Christ is formed there he loves what Christ loves and hates what Christ hates Christ loves righteousnesse and hates iniquity all iniquity Heb. 1.9 and so doth he that is joyned united and married to the Lord and so become a new Creature He loves righteousnesse and hates iniquity as truly though not so strongly as Christ doth as the Language of such an one declares Psalm 119. verse 127 128. 2. He is one with Christ in action Christ is formed there he walks by the same Rule he obeys the same Law that Christ doth to wit the Will of the Father the rule of Christ's action was the Will of his Father I saith he came down from Heaven not to do mine own Will but the Will of him that sent me Joh. 6.38 I seek not mine own Will but the Will of the Father which hath sent me Joh. 5.30 My meat is to do the Will of him that sent me and finish his Work Joh. 4.34 Not as I will but as thou wilt Mat. 26.39 Christ and a new Creature walk by one and the same rule the head doth not walk one way and the members another the head doth not walk ●y one rule and the members by another but both by one and the same rule to one and the same end to wit the glory of the same God Christ's Rule was the Will of the Father Christ's ultimate end of all his actions was the glory of the Father and he that is joyned to the Lord Jesus Christ is one
condition truely I know no rule in Scripture more infallible than this in this Text He that is joyned to the Lord is one spirit Consider what hath been said on this Text Consider what Spirit Christ was of and then examine thy self whether thou art one Spirit with him Consider whether the spirit that is in thee do truly answer to the Life to the Spirit of Christ if so know that it argues thy state good thy Creation new Christ and thee truely one Object But I find so much Hypocrisie so much pride so much hardnesse of heart and unholinesse in my self may a poor soul say here that I cannot hence conclude that I am one joyned to the Lord and one Spirit with him but rather that I am joyned to the Devill and one Spirit with him I cannot hence conclude that I am a new Creature but rather that I am in the state of nature still Answ. This Text doth not say that he that is joyned to the Lord is totally freed from these corruptions but that He is one Spirit he is one Spirit with the Lord Iesus Christ he is one with him in Spirit And this a man may be said to be when he hath these Divine qualifications of spirit forementioned truely wrought in him though weakly and imperfectly and much flesh much corruption remaining in him This must be granted otherwayes no man in this life could be said to be joyned to the Lord and one Spirit with him 2. But secondly A true sense of these corruptions accompanied with a loathing of them and warring against them in faith is so farre from rendering thee such as the Objection speaks of that it strongly argues the clean contrary to wit That thou art indeed joyned to the Lord and one Spirit with him that thou art incorporate into Christ and made new by him For it is from Christ and that new quality of grace which he hath infused into thy soul that this sense of corruption and antipathy springs hence it is that corrupt nature becomes a burden on the spirit naturally it is not so The Apostle Paul when joyned to the Lord and one Spirit with him when ingrafted into Christ and made new by ●im then and never till then did he groan under this burden then and not before did he complain of this body of death and the motions of lusts that warre in our members Wouldest thou then know from Scripture-grounds what thy condition is Whether Christ be in thee and thou in Christ go through what hath been said on these two Texts If Christ be in you the body is dead because of sinne c. and this we are now upon If any man be in Christ he is a new Creature Consider whether thou art become dead to sinne alive to righteousnesse a new Creature Consider whether Christ be formed in thee whether thou hast a new heart whether thou livest in Christ as a branch in the vine and bringest forth fruit in him whether thou art one that doth not commit sinne in a Scripture sense Whether thou art one that groans under the remainder of the old man in thee as thy greatest burden Whether thou art one that minds the things of the Spirit that art led by the Spirit and walks after the Spirit Finally whether thou art one Spirit with the Lord Iesus Christ and if upon a true tryall of thy self thou findest by what hath been said that it is thus with thy self conclude thou maist safely as I conceive to thy comfort with the Church in the Canticles My well-beloved is mine and I am his That thy estate is good thy interest in Christ true and real and thy Title to Heaven such as no enemy whatsoever no not Satan nor sinne shall be able to deprive thee of it whatever Satan or thy own conscience abused by Satan may say to thē contrary Fatherly Chastisements Heb. 12.6 Whom the Lord loveth he chasteneth and scourgeth every sonne whom he receiveth IN these words the Apostle fetcheth an argument of Divine and Fatherly Love from a Rod and concludes sonneship by adoption from Chastisement Whom the Lord loveth he chasteneth and scourgeth every sonne whom he receiveth The Position of the Apostle is confirmed by a plurality of witnesses both Solomon and Christ concurre with Paul herein Whom the Lord loveth he correcteth even as a father the son in whom he delighteth saith Solomon Prov. 3.12 As many as I love I rebuke and chasten saith Christ Rev. 3.19 The truth of this position hath been experimented by a cloud of witnesses by all the Sonnes and Daughters of God that have gone before us unto Glory and will be by all that shall follow after us and therefore needs not much proving The Apostle tells us That through many afflictions we must enter into the Kingdom of God And in ver 8. of this Chap. saith that if ye be without Chastisement whereof all are partakers then are ye Bastards and not Sonnes Immunity from correction is rather a Character of a Bastard than of an Adopted Son of God it is rather a note of an Ismael than of an Isaac it is rather the mark of a Goate than of a Sheep it is rather a demonstrator of a child of this world than of a Disciple of Christ for the Crosse is a reculicen which all Christs Disciples must weare as he himself tels us In a word it is rather a badge of an heire of Hell than of an heire of Heaven of a reprobate rather than an elect and adopted Child of God for Chastisement is the universal lot of all Gods Children as this Text tels us Whom the Lord loveth he Chastiseth yea scourgeth The most people in the world fetch their evidence of Gods Love from Gods liberall dispensations of his gifts either natural or supernatural eternal or internal transient gifts I have this gift liberally dispensed to me of God saith one and I have that gift liberally dispensed to me of God saith another I have health saith one and I have wealth saith another I have no changes but constant prosperity through my pollicy in winding with the times I have esteem in the world and successe in every thing I go about ortake in hand therefore doubtlesse God loves me Ergo. Another looks higher than this and saith I have natural parts and supernatural gifts liberally dispensed to me of God above what many others have I have wit and understanding c. more than many others I have knowledg and I have utterance and herein excell many I have esteem among the Godly wise and a name to live I have a form of Godlinesse and a shadow of every grace of the Spirit many Talents in my hand and hence conclude God doubtlesse loves me whoever he hates Ergo. But neither of these argue well for their sonneship nor their eternal estate for no where doth the Scripture make any of these signs of Gods special love or our adoption It is evident by Scripture That a
a grace which keeps a man quiet within when all things are troublous and very unquiet without it is a grace which possesses a man of himself when dispossessed of all earthly comforts it is a speciall work of the Spirit of God in the soul enabling a man not stupidly but quietly to bear whatsoever God lays upon him without feeling murmuring or repining against God or man in heart or in tongue or fainting under his chastising hand When it is thus with a sufferer for Christ then may he be said to suffer according to the will of Christ in this particular to wit patiently 4. Christ requires joy in sufferers for his will Count it all joy when you fall into divers temptations Rejoyce and be exceeding glad saith Christ. Rejoyce in that day and leap for joy It is divine joy or the joy of grace that Christ here calls for in sufferers for his will it is that joy which Nehemiah calls The joy of the Lord. And this is a holy passion of the soul issuing out of the apprehension of what Christ hath done for it and will do for it reviving elevating and strengthening the soul and carrying it above it self It is a wing grace which whiles the soul is actually possessed of is thereby carried above it self above the world and above Satan Faith and joy are the two wings of the soul which bear it up both in doing and suffering If either of these be c●ipt the soul is much hindered thereby and exposed to many dangers Joy as all other graces of the Spirit hath different degrees in different times and subjects and is usually greatest in the greatest sufferers and sufferings for Christ. When a man is spoiled in his estate spoiled in his good name spoiled in his body or any thing respecting the preservation or felicity of this life for his faithfullness to the word and will of Christ and yet with the good Prophet Rejoyces in the Lord and joys in the God of his salvation then may he be said to suffer joyfully then may he be said to suffer according to the will of Christ in this particular 5. Christ in his Word calls for courage in sufferers for his will the will of Christ is that he that suffers for a good cause should not be ashamed of his cause nor of his sufferings If any man suffer as a Christian let him not be ashamed Be not thou ashamed of the testimony of the Lord nor of me his prisoner saith Paul to Timothy The will of Christ is That he that suffers for his will should not be afraid If ye suffer for righteousness sake happy are ye and be not afraid of their terrour nor be troubled Fear them not saith Christ thrice in one Chapter Fear no● them that kill the body but are not able to kill the soul Phil. 1.28 Christ compares his Church to a company of horses in Pharaohs Chariots which in all probability were the best in Egypt and like to the war-horse which the Lord describes to Iob Job 39. very couragious in the hottest battell Christ by this metaphor hints unto us That his will is that we should be very bold and couragious in whatsoever we do or suffer for his sake and that he expects it at our hands his will is that we should be like a company of horses in Pharaohs Chariots full of spirits and courage in doing and suffering and not like a company of Jades in a Dung-Cart spiritless and unfit to bear any thing for his sake It is Christian-courage that Christ requires in sufferers for his will Christian courage is a grace of the ●pirit whereby a man resolves through the help and assistance of Jesus Christ to cleave close to his word and will and boldly to stand for it mauger all opposition and chuses rather to suffer any thing than omit any thing or commit any thing that should derogate from the honour of Christ. A man doth then declare Christian courage when he is not ashamed nor afraid to own a good cause or appear in it because of suffering when he can suffer for the Gospel or any Ordinance of God and truly say with the Apostle Though I suffer these things neverthel●ss I am not ashamed I am not ashamed of the Gospel of Christ nor of the cause of God And when with the three Children he slights the torment and the tormentor resolving in the strength of Christ to do his duty whatsoever he suffer for it and to cleave close to the word and will of Christ whether deliverance or no deliverance arise here when he is more afraid to displease God than man when he is more afraid of losing things spiritual and eternal than of losing things temporal when he chooses to suffer rather than sinne when he endureth the Cross and despiseth the shame when he refuseth base deliverance and yeeldeth his body rather than his cause his cause being good into a Tyrants hand When a sufferer for a good cause doth thus declare his courage he declares it in a high degree and suffers according to the will of Christ in this particular 6. Christ in his Word requires perseverance unto the end in suffering for his will and it is unto the persevering sufferer that this great reward of reigning with Christ is promised Be thou faithfull unto the death and I will give thee the Crown of life He that shall endure unto the end the same shall be saved Christian perseverance is a conftant holding out in the Truth to the last breath in the belief love profession and practice of the Truth And this he may be said to do that doth never totally nor finally apostatize from the Truth once received It is possible for one that perseveres in suffering at some time and in some kind and measure to desist from his former forwardness through strong temptations and humane frailty witness Peter who through fear denied his Master and forsware him and yet did after suffer for him 7. The will of Christ is That he that suffers for his will wrongfully should do it for conscience sake For conscience towards God conscience of his duty should be the principall motive inducing him to suffer I do not say the only but the principall motive A man may then be said to suffer for conscience towards God when conscience of his duty is the thing that puts him upon suffering when he to avoid sinne or performe duty exposes himself to suffering when he out of scruple in conscience of the lawfullness or unlawfullness of a thing commanded or forbidden by Authority refuseth it and chooses rather to suffer in his outward man than to baffle his conscience or displease God by rebelling against lawfull Authority which is Gods Ordinance He that doth thus suffer doth suffer for conscience towards God and according to the will of Christ in this particular 8.
thy assurance pray for the increase of it urge God with that general promise Mat. 25.29 for the obtaining of this particular blessing of increase of assurance Thus much for answer to the foresaid query viz what we must do to increase our assurance and better our evidence I return now to the work in hand which is to propound more rules to be observed by those who having attained some good evidence for Heaven desire to retain it I have already propounded eight rules I come new to the ninth 9. If thou wouldst still retain thy assurance then labour to keep a holy jealousie over thy self and over all thy performances and wayes holy jealousie is no destroyer but a nourisher and strengthener of good assurance 10. If thou wouldest still injoy thy evidence then labour to profit by all Gods chastisements God many times deserts his People and hides his face from them because they do not profit by lesser Chastisements he useth greater rods because lesser will not serve the turn Labour therefore to discern Gods design in every stroke of his and to answer Gods ends in every correction 11. In the next place If thou wouldest still injoy thy assurance then call thy selfe often to account and when thou espiest any failings in thy selfe speedily humble thy self before the Lord for them renew Faith and Repentance seek pardon and reconciliation apply the Blood of Christ for thy cure let not Conscience lye under the guilt of any known sinne unrepented of If our hearts condemne us not then have we confid●nce towards God 1 John 3.21 Labour therefore so to try judge and condemn thy selfe that thy heart may not condemne thee Labour so to act Repentance upon every occasion that conscience may not find any guilt unrepented of to charge thee with Labour to prevent conscience herein by doing that thy self now that it would do hereafter by being such a self condemning sinner that thou maiest avoid a self-condemning conscience He that is not a self condemning sinner here shall be sure of a self condemning Conscience hereafter Therefore O Christians Iudg your selves that you be not judged of the Lord condemn your selves that you be not condemned of conscience at least not justly 12. L●t your Conversation be such as becometh the Gospell of Christ in simplicity and godly sincerity This was ground of confidence and rejoycing to the Apostles 2 Cor. 1.12 it may be so to thee nay it will be so to thee whiles conscience speaks truth 13. Cast thy self wholly upon the merit of Christ for righteousnesse to justifie thy person before God 14. Stand fast in the Lord labour to keep the faith Paul saith I have kept the faith and hence infers Henceforth there is laid up for me a crown of righteousness 2 Tim. 4.7 8. 15. Then again If thou wouldest keep thy Evidence hold fast not only the faith but also the profession of thy faith without wavering as the Author to the Hebrews exhorts all Christians to do Heb. 10.23 16. In the next place If thou wouldest still retain thy assurance then pray for the continuance of it and live for the continuance of it follow the counsell of Christ to his Disciples watch and pray that ye enter not into Temptation 17. Remember that the foundation of God standeth sure and his gifts of saving grace are without repentance and his love towards his is an everlasting love 18. Finally if thou wouldest still retain thy Evidence for Heaven and secure it from danger from Satan and all his devices then intrust Jesus Christ with it who purchased it for thee he and he only is able to secure it Thus much for the rules to be observed by every one that having attained some good Evidence for Heaven desire to preserve and retain it Now the Lord of his infinite mercy in Christ inable me so to follow these rules and all the rules of his holy Word that I may never know experimentally what a deserted condition is but still enjoy the light of his countenance and the sence of his Love and in death triumph over death in assurance of life and happinesse that shall never end that Christ may be magnified in me both in Life and in Death and of me through all eternity Amen Amen FINIS Courteous Reader these Books following are Print● or sold by Simon Miller at the Star in St. Pauls Church-yard Small Folio THe Civil Wars of Spain in the Reign of Charles the fifth Emperor of Germany and King of that Nation wherein our late unhappy differences are paralleled in many particulars A general History of Scotland from the year 767. to the death of King Iames containing the principal Revolutions and transactions of Church and State with politicall obseruations and reflections upon the same by David Hume of Godscroft The History of this Iron Age. Doctor Lightfoot his Harmony on the New Testament In Qarto Large Barklay his Argenis Translated by Sir Robert le Grise Knight Quarto Small Abraham's faith or the good old Religion proving the Doctrine of the Church of England to be the only true faith of Gods Elect By I. Nicholson Minister of the Gospell The Anatomy of Mortallity by George Stroad Aynsworth on the Camicles Paul Bayn his Diocesans Trial. Gralle against Appolonius A Treatise of Civil Pollicy being a clear decision of 4● queries concerning prerogative right and priviledg in reference to the supreme Prince and the people By Samuel Rutherford professor of Divinity of St Andrews in Scotland Politick and Military observations of Civill and Military Government containing the birth increase decay of Monarchies the cartiage of Princes and Magistrates Mr. Tinchin his meritorious price of mans redemption cleared A●●rology Theologized shewing what nature and influence the Stars and Planets have over men and how the same may be diverted and avoided The Harmony of Confessions 4o. Octavo Florus Anglicus with Cuts The reconciler of the Bible wherein above 2000 seeming contradictions are fully and plainly reconciled A view of the Jewish Religion 〈◊〉 their Rites Customes and ●●●emonies Ed. VVaterhouse Esq his dis●●rse of piety and charity A view and defence of the Re●ormation of the Church of England very usefull in these times Mr. Peter du Moulin his Antidote against Popery published on purpose to prevent the delusions of the Priests and Jesuites who are now very busie amongst us Herberts Devotions or a Companion for a Christian containing Meditations and Prayers usefull upon all occasions Mr. Knowles his Rudiment of the Hebrew Tongue A Book of scheams or figures of Heaven ready set for every foure minutes of times and very ●seful for all Astrologers Florus Anglicus or an exact Hi●tory of England from the reign of V●illiam the Conqueror to the death of the late King Lingua or the combate of the Tongue and the five Senses for superiority a serious Comedy The Spirits Touchstone being a clear discovery how a man may certainly know whether he be truly taught by the Spirit of