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A15601 An exposition of the Lords prayer. Delivered in two and twenty lectures, at the church of Lieth in Scotland; by Mr William Wischart parson of Restalrigg Wishart, William, parson of Restalrigg. 1633 (1633) STC 25866; ESTC S120196 157,088 602

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it for us hath set us free and this hee did in the fulnesse of time for when that fulnesse came God sent his owne Sonne made of woman and made under the law that delivered us that were under the law that wee might receive the adoption of sonnes For Gods sake therefore seeing whilst we were Captives hee hath done so much for our deliverance forget not the captivity of thy soule thy selfe and first when thou hearest it told thee in the word of God pittie it Secondly at all occasions offered not snatched knock at thy dore and goe in and visite it Thirdly when thou hast seene it cry with Israel to Rehoboam to make thy yoke lighter and in the end though thou cannot procure by thy selfe an absolute deliverance yet come to him that poured out his heart blood for thee runne and cry for thy deliverance and dissolution sigh and groane for it and in due time if thou faint not thou shalt bee heard in that which thou fearest These things being thus cleared to you the third thing that wee are to remarke in the words is our deliverance or release in this word Deliver now that wee may know this deliverance the better it shall not bee amisse to distinguish deliverance into three severall sorts First there is a deliverance à toto Secondly à tanto Thirdly à tali Our deliverance à toto is a perfect deliverance both from temptation to sinne practice of sinne and punishment for sinne A tante is not perfect but partiall from so much of temptation practise or punishment as God thinketh meete and expedient A tali is that whereby wee crave exemption and protection from sinnes of grievous qualities Such as we call presumptuous enormious heinous and crying sinnes And from such kinde of punishments as are not the testimonies of Gods love but rather the effects of his wrath and indignation Now seeing deliverance in effect and properly is an actuall release from evill what sort of deliverance do wee crave here is it that wee call â toto No no wee cannot expect a totall and perfect deliverance in this life for so long as this life lasteth wee can neither be totally free frō sinne nor from punishment notwithstanding because of this same possibility wee are bound to cry for our perfect deliverance by death Secondly as for that deliverance which is â tanto that is to say from so much as will make us slaves to sinne or punishment for this wee cry in these words and this deliverance we are commanded to desire and by this desire wee are distinguished frō the reprobate for whilst we are led captive to Sathan at his will sinne ruleth not though dwelleth in our mortall bodies And for the punishment the Lord hath promised not to tempt us above our power but so farre onely as wee may bee able to beare it Thirdly as for the deliverance à tali that is to say from blasphemous presumptuous and crying sinnes which are the effects of the wrath of God upon the children of disobedience from these and such as these we cry and must cry coutinually Lord deliver us from evill Vse Know further that whilst wee begge of God a deliverance from evill wee do not pray against all evill of sin and punishment but so much of punishment as wil or may overwhelme us and such sins as are raigning and crying in us shall one day cry against us to our perpetuall confusion One thing remaineth to wit who is our deliverer and that is neither man nor Angell but hee who is both God and man by nature and the great Arch-angell of the Covenant by office In whom three things are considerable His right and title to do it His wonderfull power in doing of it And lastly the exceeding benefit arising from it LECT 22. For thine is the kingdome c. VVHen I did first undertake the explication of this prayer I told you they did resemble a house or edifice For as in the Courts and Palaces of Princes there are first Courts and Porches serving for entrance into the royall presence Secondly there are roomes and places of rest Lastly posternes and passages of retiring serving both for pleasure necessity so is it in this building spirituall edifice of prayer For in it there are three distinct and severall stations A preface serving for the porch Sixe severall Petitions serving for roomes of court And finally a conclusion serving for a posterne or tarras from whence wee may in a view behold the glory and beauty of the whole palace Of the Preface and of the Petitions wee have spoken already according to the measure of grace given us from above It resteth now onely that in this Sermon we take a view of the conclusion and from it draw up the full and finall seale of all the prayer And from both their edification When I looke on the words I finde in them three things remarkable First their inference Secondly their tenor and scope and thirdly their seale The inference is in the word for the tenor is Thine is the kingdome power and glory for ever The seale in the word Amen Let us returne then to their inference in the word For. Here it is evident that this conclusion or last part of the prayer is knit and tyed to the former Petitions with a causall particle for For the better understanding whereof let us know that against the necessity and use of this prayer prescribed unto us an objection might bee moved by the weaknesse and infirmity of man For let us looke on the best of the children of God when hee censureth and examineth his owne soule and paralleleth his practise with the desire of these petitions and wee shall finde that hee shall come farre short of that which is required of him For when wee looke on the three first Petitions which concerne God the honour of his name the advancement of his kingdome and the obedience of his will who is able to give that due obedience thereunto which is required of him Not one for God himselfe hath thus complained against man The Lord looked downe from heaven and beheld the actions of men to see if there were any that would seeke after him and do good and hee could finde none no not one Against this it is that the Prophets complained in the name of God and for his sake Who hath beleeved our report and to whom is the arme of God revedled Finally it is against disobedience and rebellion that the Saints of God have so deeoply sighed and groaned for their deliverance David could say Alas I have dwelt toe long in the valley of Mesech and tents of Kedar And the Apostle Paul could say Miserable man that I am who shall d●…ver mee from this body of death Againe if from these wee shall withdraw our eyes to consider that Petition wherein wee crave for our selves the release of our temporall casamities How many have called upon the Lord and have not
will not suffer mee to paint them out to the life yea I know how many large volumes have beene published already on this subject by worthy and learned men only by the by as it were and in so farre as the vvords here shall offer us occasion I will point at them and from their weake considerations speake some words of comfort and instruction to your soules It is certaine that the chiefe and arch enemy of mans salvation is Sathan the devill who hath beene a lyer to man and a murtherer of man from the beginning But because he is a spirit therefore invisible that man cannot know him whilst hee fights with him he suborneth two souldiers against man the world from without man the flesh the lusts thereof within man that man having fightings within terrors without may fall and never rise againe But that I may make you senfible of these his assaults and temptations know that whilst I speak of the world I do not understand this great and majesticke frame of the world composed of these foure elements fire aire earth and water for by these man is not tempted all and every one of these Sathan hath imployed to punish man for sin but by none of these hath hee at any time tempted man for sinne But by the world I understand the children of disobedience and wicked ones that are in the vvorld and that not simply or absolutely as they are flesh of our flesh and bone of our bones but conditionally and as they are either cloathed with prosperity and wealth or else as they are stripped naked in the day of their want and misery And that the wicked of the world are called of God the world it is cleare out of that prayer of our Saviour Christ whilst hee saith I pray not for the world but for those whom thou hast given mee out of the world Now these as they stand either invested or cloathed with prosperity or stripped naked with calamity and want do prove a stumbling blocke and snare or temptation to the children of God For in the day of their prosperity by their carnall joy wherewith they are overjoyed in their pleasures by their carnall security whereby they cry peace to themselves when God mindeth them no peace and by their proud trampling upon the weake and despising of them that want what do they but invite us to runne with them in the excesse of their riot and by their temporall felicities labour to draw away if it were possible the very elect of God from the search and purchase of that felicity which is immortall and undefiled Againe in the day of their adversity what do they but cry to us with Iobs wife Curse God and die With Iehoram I will wait no longer on the Lords leisure And with Israel in the wildernesse Would God wee had dyed by the flesh pots of Egypt But brethren vvith these things let us not be moved let neither the prosperity of the vvicked draw thee to a carnall rejoycing or love of the vvorld for the prosperity of the vvicked is but like cracking of thornes under a pot nor let the calamity of the godly vvho suffer justly for their sinnes dravv thee to apostacie and back-sliding from the faith for it is better to suffer affliction with the children of God then to enjoy the perishing pleasures of sinne for a season Heb. 11. And it is more honourable for us to imbrace the Crosse of Jesus Christ then all the treasures of a corrupt and perishing Egypt Againe Sathan in the second place hireth our flesh to fight against us and here by the word flesh I do not understand this body of ours alone which is composed of flesh blood but also that naturall corruption which we have drawne from the loynes of our first parents who have infected us both soule and body and dwelling in us fighteth desperately and maliciously against us This corruption the Scripture expresseth by many names and titles as The old man The old Adam The naturall man The law of our members and The lusts of the flesh which fight against the soule Thus wee see that the flesh is also our enemy and so much the more odious by how much it is traiterous For of it wee may say what David said in Psalm 41. My familiar friend whom I trusted and hee that lay in my bosome and did eate bread with mee hath lifted up his heele against mee To this Iudas who betrayeth us wee may justly say It were good for thee thou hadst never bin borne To this Dalilah wee may say If thou hadst not plowed with my heyfer thou couldst not have read my riddle To this wife of Iob wee may say Thou speakest like a foolish woman And lastly to this unadvised counseller wee may justly say Get thee behinde mee Sathan for thou knowest not the things that are of God but the things that are of man Now wouldst thou know O man why thou shouldst so encounter thy flesh I answer because it is thy deadly enemy and that in three respects In respect of malice of power and policy In respect of malice for it is written In mee that is in my flesh there dwelieth no good Rom. 7.18 Now that wherein there is no good must of necessity bee exceedingly malicious and fully replenished with evill Tucaro saith a Father cunctis virtutibus denudata es ideo diceris caro a carendo quia cares omni bono And would you have a true anatomy of the flesh looke to St Paul Rom. 3. Her eyes are full of adultery her throat an open sepulcher her mouth the mouth of deceit the poyson of aspes is under her lips her feet are swift to shed blood destruction and calamity are in her wayes and the way of the Lord shee hath not knowne Secondly the flesh is a powerfull enemy both in respect of the unregenerate and also in respect of the regenerate In the unregenerate it is a mighty King in the regenerate it is a cruell tyrant In the unregenerate I say it is a mighty king for as a King in his kingdome swayes the scepter enacteth lawes forceth obedience and subdueth rebells So is it in the unregenerate man sinne beareth dominion giveth a law to the members and leadeth all the affections captive to disobedience And from this it is that the Apostle exhorteth us not to suffer sinne to raigne in our mortall bodies And as the flesh is a King in the unregenerate so in the regenerate it is a cruell tyrant for howsoever by the grace of God in Jesus Christ wee are set free from the law of Sinne and of death yet so long as wee dwell in the body it dwelleth in us and both tormenteth us with the torture of a wounded conscience for sinne past with continuall molestation to sinne in time to come So that the best of Gods Saints have deeply sighed and groaned under the yoke and bondage thereof David could say I dwell too long in
in Essence although distinguished in Persons in the world nothing but union the heavens giving light the clouds giving raine the fire giving heate the windes giving breath and refreshment after the world what shall bee but union Gather my Saints together from the foure Corners of the world that there may bee but one shepheard and one sheepfold and that may be over all and in all yet because this doth not satisfie the question let us see where in our union with Christ doth consist I answere our union with him standeth manifest in foure things 1. We have an union with him which giveth us love 2. By his union wee have Sympathie 3. By his union we have influence 4. By his union wee have a share and fellowship in riches I have said that by his union we have love as the husband hath with the wife wee have sympathie as the members have with the head we have influence and sappe as the Branches have from the root finally and we have a share in riches three wayes an union in his Essence an union in his Office and an union in his vertues In his essence for he that was God became man that man might become the sonne of God In his office for in him wee are made to the Father Kings Priests and Prophets In his vertues for hee of God was made to us wisedome righteousnesse sanctification and redemption But that the words may be a little more cleare let me tell you that the word Our looks with a threefold aspect for our eyes are sometimes exercised per visionem reflexam sometimes per visionem collateralem and sometimes per visionem transcendentem Our reflected looke beholdeth our selves and therefore wee say Ours by application for it is but a cold and miserable comfort to say ours when we have no private application like Thomas The collaterall looke lookes on our brethren either à dextris in the sonnes of Gods love dealing with them in faith hope and charity or à sinistris in the children of disobedience pulling them out of the fire or heaping coales of fire on their heads The transcendent look lookes on God himselfe who in Christ Iesus is become our father and wee his sonnes Whilst wee looke to the words with a reflected contemplation we are taught humility for we make great reckoning of our parentage if it hath pleased God to distinguish us in any degree from beyond our brethren Oh but how foolish is our rejoycing for there is nothing in nature that respecteth greatnesse but man not our bitth not our sife not our sicknesse not our death not our grave nothing in grace respects greatnesse but man not the preaching of the Word for wee all doe heare not our effectuall calling for there are the things that are not preferred to the things that are not our administration of the Sacraments for by water we are baptized and by a sacramentall bread wee are fed nothing in glory for if this be a true position that we must reape according to that which wee have sowne then he who soweth sparingly shall reape sparingly and hee who soweth in plenty shall reape in joy 2. Whilst we looke on our brethren visione collaterali if they bee of the houshold of faith I meane the Church and the members therof see that thou rejoyce with them that rejoyce and weepe with them that mourne and remember thē that are in bonds as if we our selves were afflicted in the body but especially and above al to mourne for the divisions of Ioseph If they bee from without brethren I meane by nature and not by grace let us pity their misery with patience waite for their returne and in sincerity pray for their cōversion for howsoever it be not as yet seene to the world that God is become their father in Christ Iesus yet how soon it may be we know not for the time is at hand wherin all Israel must be Israel Whilst we thinke therefore that wee stand let us take heed that we fall not and let us pray for their restitution for we know not when wee our selves shall also be tempted 3 Lastly whilst we look on the words with a transcendent speculation let us know aright from whom by whom we have the liberty of this prerogative viz. in Christ Jesus And let us labour to become his fellow brethren that God may be our father in him for having him wee have all things and without him wee have nothing for all things are ours whilst wee are Christs for Christ is Gods I have heard talking of fraternity the rejoycing of the begging Friers is vaine they are fratres mendicantes the rejoycing of the Jesuites is vaine they are Fratres societatis Iesu an arrogant fraternity the rejoycing of the Chymeck or judiciall Astrologues is vaine they are Fratres roseae-crucis a foolish fraternity for they evanish in the vanity of their imaginations No no there is no fraternity in the world answerable to a Christian fraternity wherein God doth become our father for so wee have hope against all the feares of the naturall man such as want sicknesse death judgement hell and Sathan Which art in Heaven Having spoke of our familiarity and assured welcome that God is a father and of our interest in him and by him to the world to the Church and to our selves Let us now see what dwelling places hee hath Heaven For understanding hereof learne to know that man may be described by many things and God but by a few Forma figura tocus stirps nomen patria tempus are incident to the description of man but not to the description of God hee hath no form nor figure for he is invisible place cannot circūscribe him for hee is infinite progenie he hath not for he is not begotten nor time cannot measure him for hee is eternall onely by two things is he knowne to us by his name and by his habitation by his name he is our father by his habitation he is in heaven But let us remarke yet further I pray you Our Redeemer pointing out unto us his father in termes of familiarity and appropriation before that hee tell us where his habitation is he telleth us his essence and what he is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 hee was hee is and hee is to come before time in time after time yesterday to day and for ever he was to Abraham before Abraham was I was he is to Moses I am that I am hee is to come Iohn in the Revelation Behold I come quickly Vse Is hee the selfe same without alteration or shadow of change yea and that three manner of wayes Objectively subjectively and effectively Objectively in his word for heaven and earth shall passe away but one jot of his word shall not fall to the ground Subjectively in his operation making governing and judging the world Effectively in his mercie yesterday to the fathers to day to our selves
commeth out of the mouth of God And Beza taking the word litterally out of the Greeke for that Bread which is able to adde to our substance So that the true and native signification and sense of this petition is this Lord give us the supplement of our necessities both for matter and for manner For matter our bodies are earthly and drawing neere to the earth stand in need of daily support support us therefore daily with Bread And for manner because little will content nature suppose our desires bee extravagant give us that which may refresh nature and maintaine this our natural life For if wee get food and rayment we ought therewith to bee content Now this being the interpretation of the word the uses arising therefrom are worthy of our remarke also Vse The uses that are drawne from the consideration of the words are two-fold viz. For rebuke and for instruction It serveth for rebuke to the Church of Rome whose schollers I meane the Rhemists following St. Hierome in his interpretation have interpreted the word and hold fast for it that the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 doth onely signifie supersubstantialis or supersubstantiall bread But I would enquire of them to what use this obsolete and obscure word should be used amongst them Are not the words of greatest familiarity of greatest force also Yes surely For God who had sundry times and in divers manners made himselfe knowne unto the world of old by his Prophets and Patriarkes under types shadowes figures and tropes he hath now in the end of time made himselfe manifest to the world in Jesus Christ his Son who was the image of the invisible God and the ingraven forme and character of his person and that in such a plenty and purity of revelation that none can bee excused by reason of ignorance for If our Gospell bee hidde it is hidde to them that perish in whom the God of this world hath blinded the eyes of their mindes So seeing then even there where people sate in darknesse and in the shadow of death if God have made a true light to our eyes why should they bee termes of ambiguity and phrases of darknesse to obscure and eclipse the light and sun-shine of Gods truth by keeping up from the people the word of God and giving them the service of God in a strange tongue I know wherefore this can serve but for one or two causes either that they may shew themselves heires to the Scribes and Pharisees whose chaires they claime For they locked up the key of knowledge they neither entered into the Kingdome of God themselves neither would they suffer others to enter Even such are the followers of the Church of Rome at this day they sit as they alledge in the chaire of Moses and Peter but with any of Moses traditions or of Peter his sanctions they will not trouble so much as their little finger and fearing least any should enter into the Kingdome of God to their greater crimination too like blinde guides they keepe their people in blindnesse and by the obscurity of words so eclipse and obscure the truth that unawares Millions of soules are by them ledde captive unto distruction Vse Neither doe they in this alone expresse themselves to build the sepulchers of their fathers the Scribes and Pharisees But what is more they really doe expresse themselves to be the sonnes of their Father the divell who knowing assuredly that nothing in the world can bee so forcible to extract a blessing from the hands of God as Prayer Nor any thing so strong and powerfull to binde up the hands of God from correcting and judging us as is the frequent and familiar confabulation and Prayers of his Saints Hee therefore labours to withdraw men altogether from prayer or else if he cannot get their mouthes stopped but that they must pray then hee will have them praying in an unknowne tongue that their table may be turned to a snare and their prayers to sinne It is a wonder to see what folly is amongst them they will not go out of doores without a crosse about their neckes as if it were an Antidote against whatsoever danger either spirituall or temporall And yet there is none sheweth himselfe a greater enemy of the Crosse of Christ For howsoever in word they confesse him yet in their idolatrous practise they deny him and having a name that they are living in effect they are dead Yet this is not all such an overruling power and soveraignty hath the Prince of darknesse got on them that when their conscience is opened to see their sin and their affections lead them to God to deprecate the remission of their sinne hee tongue-tyeth them that they cannot speake to God And if they speak at all it is but a rapsody of idle words numbred out upon their Beades as if God delighted in much babling or Sathan could bee conjured with tale and number only of Pater nosters But foole that thou maist know that God is a Spirit and will bee worshipped in spirit and truth If thy service be spirituall and sincere though weake yet it is welcome For the bruised reed hee will not breake and the smoaking flaxe bee will not quench But if thou dally with him in a Tautalogie of unknowne words all is in vaine because hee will cast backe the dust of thy sacrifice in thy face for praying to him with thy tongue when thy understanding is without fruit Againe as it serveth for rebuke of the Church of Rome so it serveth also for instruction to us of the true and pure Church and that in these three respects First in the matter of our true understanding Secondly in the matter of our true content And thirdly in the matter of our true desire I say first that in this word we have a lesson given us to enforme our understanding For whilst wee goe to God and seeke of him Daily Bread wee cannot but instruct our selves in the sense of our daily want Who is hee that hath a house and a daily raine drop in it but will goe to the Slater and make him repaire it Who is hee which hath a ship which is leaking but will goe to the carpenter and have it repaired both with timber and calfatting Or hee that hath a wounded body who will not goe to the Physitian and daily dresse his wound and binde it up againe till it bee cured It is even so with us in the matter of our spirituall wants Wee dwell here in Tabernacles and houses of clay This day there is a droppe in the roofe to morrow a balke of our timber is cracked and the third day there is a crevis in the wall To whom shall wee goe but to the Master of the worke and that daily that by our daily necessities wee may daily have our recourse to him and in our daily approaches confesse and acknowledge his daily providence Wee are also Mariners and wee are wounded men Who shall make
promulgated wee shall finde it that it is onely to the elect vessels of mercy and to the children of Gods free love whereas to the reprobate men and Angels there is neither promise nor hope of pardon left For their judgement is sealed and their condemnation sleepes not Againe as to Jesus Christ the mediator of the new covenant a free pardon hee obtained not he paid the utmost farthing that was requisite for the satisfaction of the justice of God onely to man and the elect amongst the sonnes of men hath God voluntarily and freely forgiven the burthen and the debt of sinne And I call this a voluntary and free forgivenesse for three respects In respect of God the Father in respect of God the Sonne and in respect of God the Holy Ghost For I say first in respect of God the Father for hee who said In the day that thou shalt eate thou shalt surely die said also the seed of the woman shall tread downe the head of the serpent And againe God so loved the world that hee sent his owne Sonne to the death of the Crosse that whosoever beleeveth in him should not perish but have eternall life It is free also in respect of God the Sonne for hee as willingly and freely assented to the great worke of mans redemption howsoever the way was sharpe and thorny as the Father was willing in his eternall wisedome to propose it And therefore it is written of him that he laid his life down and tooke it up againe hee laid it downe for none could take it from him and hee tooke it up againe for it was impossible that hee could bee holden of the sorrows of the grave Lastly the pardon and remission of our sinnes is free in respect of God the Holy Ghost for willingly and freely without any merit on our part he commeth downe and dwelleth in our soules illuminates our understanding rectifieth our will sanctifieth our affections makes intercession for us with sighs and groanes that cannot be expressed and keepes us by the power of his grace through faith to eternall salvation for it is written Because wee are sonnes God hath sent the Spirit of his Son into our hearts whereby we cry Abba Father And againe because wee of our selves know neither how to pray nor what to pray the spirit helpeth our infirmities and maketh intercession for us with sighs that cannot bee expressed And also it is written That as hee hath begotten us to a lively hope by the resurrection of Iesus Christ from the death to an inheritance which is immortall and undefiled that withers not away but is reserved for us in the heavens So also he keeps us by the power of the Spirit through faith to eternall salvation Vse Now having thus cleared the meaning of the word it rests that wee make use of it for our instructions and the uses that arise from it are two the one serveth for rebuke the other for comfort the rebuke falleth on the Church of Rome the comfort shall returne to us and to every soule in whom the grace of God dwelleth The rebuke that ariseth to the Church of Rome is this in these words wee are commanded to crave pardon for our debts in the plurall number and indefinitely now wee know this to bee true that those Propositions which are indefinite are universall in correspondence Whilst then wee crave pardon and forgivenesse of our debts wee universally begge mercy and pardon for all our sinnes for both originall and actuall sins For our sinnes of infirmity and our sins of presumption for sinfull omissions and commissions for the sinfull thoughts of our heart and words of our mouth and actions of our conversation Now in respect of all these wee have need to draw neere unto God and to say Forgive What meane those Doctors of the Romish Church to teach that there is a sort of sinne which in it selfe and of it selfe is veniall and that some onely are mortall but it is cleare out of the word of God that there is not any sin which is not mortall for every sinne is a breach of the law and every sinne and transgression shall receive a just recompence of reward Hee that sinneth without the law shall perish without the law and hee that sinneth under the law shall bee judged by the law and againe The wages of sinne is death I graunt indeed if wee looke to that excellent price that was given for our sinnes no sinnes are mortall for such is the worth and excellencie of that blood of Jesus which speaketh better things then the blood of Abell that whosoever shall have part in it shall stand without spot or blemish before the presence of the glory of God with joy and whosoever shall have but a drop of it to sprinkle on the posts of the doore of his soule the destroying Angell shall not come neere him but though his sinnes were as red as scarlet yet by vertue of his blood they shall bee as white as snow But on the other part if thou shalt looke upon thy sinne in its owne nature and because of thy esteeme and account of it it seeme veniall to thee wilt thou therefore say that it is veniall in it selfe O foole that thou art thou deceives thy owne soule The smallest coyne and the basest bullion that beareth the Kings stampe on it is as currant as the richest and purest gold that is seaven times tryed in the fire and to counterfeit that coyne is as reall treason as hee that either adulterates or falsifies the purest coyne It is so with us in our debts to God the meanest offence wee can commit is as culpable of judgement as those that are of greater nature for wee must not judge of our sinnes according to the quantity number or quality but chiefly according to the person and Majestie against whom they are committed Is not hee as great a theefe that robs the cottage of the poore as hee that robs the Palace of the Prince yes surely and greater for the Prin●e hath wherewithall to repaire his losse but the poore hath not Tell mee I pray you is there any sinne in the world smaller then the point of a thorne no surely yet the meanest thorne that was in the crowne of Christ drew blood of him The thornes that were in that crown were thy sinnes it was thy sinnes that drew blood of him and peirced his heart while there came blood and water out of it gushing and yet vaine man that thou art thou wilt say they are veniall how canst thou call that veniall and of no weight which was rated at so great a value as the sufferings of the Sonne of God the least drop of whose blood was of more worth then all the worme-eaten children of men on the earth Looke never therefore O man upon ●hy sinne in the judgement and with the eyes of nature that is but a false prospective and deceiving glasse looke on it as it lay on the backe
the valley of Meseck and in tents of Kedar And the Apostle Saint Paul could say O miserable man that I am who shall deliver mee from this body of death Finally the flesh is an enemy exceedingly politique for howsoever the power of the flesh be great yet the policie thereof is greater because it is not a publique enemy but a home-bred and domestique traitor therfore by the subtile sleight cunning undermining thereof many times we fall and are overthrowne From hence it is that the Prophet Ieremy forewarneth us of the policy thereof whilst hee saith The heart of man is desperately wicked and deceitfull above all things none can know it but the Lord that made it Wouldst thou know and try this O man go home to thy heart and see how it dealeth with thee The world is a great temptation and a great tempter Sathan also hath many temptations and is an arch tempter but what can the temptations of the world do to thee or what can all the temptations of the devill do against thee except thy owne heart and thy owne flesh deceive and betray thee for as Sathan said to Christ Cast thy selfe downe c. and as Iohn said to Iesabel Who is there on our side c. so doth Sathan say to man whilst by the flesh hee tempteth him except wee cast our selves downe except the flesh be on his side within us neither prosperity nor adversity famine nor nakednesse life nor death can ever prejudice us But if in these baits hee can hire our owne flesh against us wee are easily overcome and like another Aza hyring a Benhadad against us Israel getteth the foile and the best treasures of Gods house are but a prey to him Vse Thus having deciphered our inbred enemy it becommeth us carefully to watch over it for the spirit may well bee ready but the flesh is weake Let us therefore deale with this our domesticall adversary as the citizens of a besieged city do with their inbred traitors if any city were besieged with forraigne forces and they knew that they harboured a traitor within their bosome they would give no rest to their eye-lids nor slumber to their eyes till they should apprehend disarme condemne and put him to death So is it with us our citadell the soule is besieged by a fierce and for raigne enemy wee have a traitor lurking in our bosome our owne flesh Let us therefore with all speed rise up against it disarme it by fasting and prayer let us beate it downe and bring it in subjection and let us mortifie the lusts thereof by the spirit and wee shall be sure that God shall shortly tread it under foot and give us the victory for it is written The elder shall serve the younger The last enemy we have to fight against is the Devill a chiefe and arch enemy for he goeth about cōtinually seeking how hee may devour us No time can free us from his temptation the morning the noonetide of the day or the midnight of darknes No place not the throne of judgment nor the street of our trade nor the cabinet where wee rest No person also is free from him he spared not the first Adam nor did hee spare the second Adam How are the sonnes of the first Adam according to the flesh and the sonnes of the second Adam according to the spirit free from his assaults No surely wee may not nor cannot be free from them But wouldst thou know O man the manner of his fight Know that the temptations of Sathan have three gradations even the same which every voluntary action of man whether good or bad hath in it For in the soule of man there are 3 faculties one sensitive another appetitive the third locomotive And the actions of these three faculties are accordingly three sense appetite motion For first a man sees or heares an object presented to his eyes or eares the sense representeth the object to our appetite or delight the delight or will either imbraceth or refuseth the object and this wee call the motion Now as it is in every action so is it in the temptations of Sathan for first hee bewitcheth the sense secondly hee inflameth the appetite and thirdly hee procureth the action Would wee have this made more cleare I will Looke on David when hee fell in adultery how playd Sathan the souldier with him Hee first fascined or bewitched his sense for it is written Hee saw a woman washing her selfe and the woman was beautifull Secondly inflamed his delight for it is written Hee sent messengers and enquired after the woman and shee came in unto him Thirdly by both of these and from both of these hee procureth and propagateth the action for it is written And hee lay with her Againe if this one example sufficeth not behold another When the woman saw that the fruit was pleasant to the eyes and a tree to bee desired to make one wise shee tooke of the fruit and did eate Behold here also a third It is confessed by Achan when hee saw amongst the spoyles a goodly Babilonish garment and a wedge of gold of fifty shickles then I coveted them and tooke them These three then sense desire and motion as they are in every action so they are in every temptation For Sathan in his temptations first besiegeth our senses and seeing they are the gates of the soule these being opened hee windes himselfe into our delight and appetite and being there shall wee thinke that he who hath taken paines to gather so many stickes together will not take paines to blow a fire to warme himselfe No no hee is an angell of darknesse but there hee transformeth himselfe into an angell of light there he speaketh evill of Good and good of evill and there hee putteth bitter for sweete and sweet for sowre Last of all when by the abuse of our senses hee hath captivated our affections thinkest thou that hee will leave that fire which hee hath blown so much untill it burn No no I tell thee he will not leave it till it burst forth in a flame and till thou burne in the midst of it Will the husbandman when hee casteth his seede in the ground fall too and plow up the ground againe without hope of harvest No surely in patience hee will wait for it and first let it come to a blade then to a stalke then to an eare then to be ripened and last of all hee cutteth it downe and bringeth it into his barne I will assure thee it is so with Sathan for though hee bee not a husbandman yet hee is an envious man and whilst the husbandman sleepeth hee soweth tares amongst the wheat And though he seeme to mis-know it yet is not he carelesse of it but by all meanes hee watereth it with the stolne waters of pleasure untill hee bring it to harvest and maturity Hee can say to the young man Rejoyce O yong man in thy youth and let thy heart cheere thee
some men into temptation and out again and others he leadeth not onely in Temptation but also leaveth them in it To this I answer Tu homo à me petis causam ego quoque homo sum sed audiamus ambo Apostolum dicentem O home tu quis es melior est fidelis ignorantia quam temeraria scientia Quaere merito non invenies nisi poenam O altitudo Petrus negat latro credit O altitudo tu disputa ego credam tu ratiocinare ego mirabor sed cave ne dum doctores quaeras presumptores invenias August de verb. Apost Serm. 20. So then the answer is full Even so O Father because it hath so pleased thee For hee hath mercy on whom hee will have mercy and whom hee will he hardeneth LECTIO 21. But deliver us from evill VVEe have already spoken of the first part of this Petition which was deprecatory wee come now to speake of the second part which is supplicatory and contained in these words But deliver c. For explication whereof there are foure things considerable 1. Our captivity 2. Who and how are they captives 3. The deliverance or release 4. The deliverer or redeemer Our captivity is evill The captives are imported in the word us the release in the word deliver the deliverer must bee understood God the Father the Sonne and the holy Ghost Before wee enter into the delineation of the first to wit our captivity it is requisite that wee looke a little on the tye by which these words are knit to the former And for clearing hereof wee must know that as it is in the matter of physick or military art so it is in the spirituall diseafes or conflicts of the soule True physicke hath two parts the one is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the other 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the first preserveth our health by good dyet and so preventeth our diseases before they come the other by medicine expelleth and purgeth away diseases after they be come It is so in the diseases of the soule The preventing grace of God leadeth us not into temptation The fellow-working or second grace delivereth us from evill Againe as it is in the discipline of warre here on earth so it must bee with the soule In a battell and conflict on earth our Generall and Leader must first be carefull that wee fall not before our enemy And secondly if we fall and be taken captive it is his part to bee carefull to pay our ransome and deliver us from the captivity and tyranny of our enemie It is so with us also in the spirituall fight and conflicts of the soule Our leader should not onely be carefull that wee get not the foile but also if wee bee put to the rowte and taken captives of our enemies it becommeth him to be carefull to redeeme and ransome us out of the hands of all those to whom wee were prisoners and captives I hope now by these two similitudes you understand the conjunction and tye that is betwixt this part of the Petition and the former For if we shall looke upon our selves as being sick and diseased in soule two things are requisite for our health and cure First our physician should prescribe us a dyet whereby our disease may bee prevented This is done and prescribed in the words Lead us not into temptation The other thing which the Doctor of our soules oweth us is medicine potions plaisters and purgations to cure us of the sicknesse we are falne in and this he promiseth to do unto us whilst he delivereth us from all evill Againe wilt thou looke on thy selfe as a souldier in the field of Jesus fighting against the spirituill enemies of thy soule thy leader Christ Jesus promiseth thee two things First that though thou stumble before the enemy yet thou shalt not fall This hee promiseth in these words Leadus not c. Secondly he promiseth that if at any time thou fall and get the foile and be taken captive and prisoner yet he will not let thee dye in prison no hee will redeeme thee and ere any of thine enemies sinne death or condemnation tryumph over thee he will lay his owne life downe for thee and his heart blood as a ransome for thy deliverance and this hee promiseth in these words But deliver us from evill Vse Now from this in a word it is evident that man by nature is a wofull and dolorous creature sicke and diseased dead in sinnes and trespasses and so much the more heavily sicke and desperately diseased that hee militateth against his physician yet the reason is hee feeleth not the soare and like one transported in the fury of his passion hee cannot tell where his paine holds him But here is the riches of the mercy of our God and physician hee preventeth us with his cure and not onely that but also prescribeth helpes against our recidivations and relapses This the woman of Samaria felt when shee knew not the grace of God nor who it was spake to her by seeking a drinke of pure water he prevented her and gave her a drinke of the well of the water of life Thus he prevented the man at the poole of Bethesda Thus hee prevented us all in the loines of our first parent Adam where art thou And againe when our father was an Amorite and out mother an Hetyte when our haire was not cut nor our nailes pared when wee were wallowing in our blood and were neither washed with water nor softened with oyle hee came by and preventing us with his love said to us live and made us live and only because of his word commanding us to live and therefore wee lived Seeing then whilst wee are sicke and diseased in soule hee preventeth us with his unexpected cure seeing also whilst wee are taken prisoners hee preventeth us with our undeserved ransome what are wee that wee should either proudly reject or faithlesly distrust the Ocean of his goodnesse There bee some I know that hearing of this preventing grace will proudly lay this conclusion that they will continue still in sin that grace may abound But knowest not thou O vaine man that the long suffering patience of God should lead thee to repentance and that if thou tread the blood of the covenant under thy feet that blood which speaketh better things then the blood of Abel to the righteous shall speak judgemēt to thee even a judgement intolerable incurable Know again thou that art weake in faith that that sicknesse and disease cannot befall thy soule that should make thee distrust the Physician whose love hath prevented thee with an unexpected cure Whilst hee was in our flesh hee quickned three sorts of dead the Centurians daughter the widows sonne and Lazarus three dayes dead and all to make thee strong in faith Why wrongest thou him first in his justice by sinning against him and next in his mercy by distrusting his goodnesse No no beleeve him under hope and aganst