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A09266 An introduction to the worthy receiving the sacrament of the Lords Supper by that late learned minister of Gods holy word, William Pemble ... ; published since his death by his friend. Pemble, William, 1592?-1623.; Capel, Richard, 1586-1656. 1633 (1633) STC 19580.5; ESTC S2842 67,079 98

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of the Lord unworthily most shamefully abusing that to profanenes and impiety which God hath appointed for the exercise and increase of holinesse and true devotion Hitherto of the Sinne it selfe how and by whom it is committed In the next place wee must consider of the quality of it T is very hainous and they that commit it are guilty of the body and bloud of the Lord. A very hard censure of a fault that seemes not to bee very great What to profane the Sacrament shall it bee counted murder and bloud-guiltinesse an abetting and consenting to the damnable fact of Iudas and the Iewes in crucifying the Lord of Life A very horrible offence But here not much out of the way let us learne one observation that may be of use to rectifie our judgements in this and other the like matters T is this The quality of Sinne is not to be measured by ours but by Gods Iudgement of it As the heavens are above the Earth so are my waies higher than your waies and my thoughts above your thoughts saith God Esay 55.8 T is true in all things and it holds in this also about the nature of si●ne God seeth not as man seeth he iudgeth not as man iudgeth T is as naturall to man to extenuate sinne as it is to sinne to make a small fault of a great and no fault of a little one Our love to the pleasure of sinne blindes our iudgement in discerning of its filthy nature Whence issued that notorious depravation of the Law of God by those favourable and flattering interpretations thereof which the Pharisees of old brought in and those of Rome still maintaine yea naturally every one of us allow them in our harts Alas what great harme can there be in 't to be rashly angry when a man 's urg●d to it to call our brother foole to looke on a woman with some ill desire and no more to sweare by Ierusalem by the Temple the Altar by ones Head this Hand this Light or such other little oathes these be small matters veniall sinnes and why should we bee so nice as not to thinke that the Pharisees were in the righ● leaving out such petty matters as not forbidden by the Law True most men would thinke so but our great and onely Doctor Christ Iesus whom wee ought to heare hath taught us another lesson not to iudge any thing a toy and trifle that breakes Gods Law and brings the soule in danger of hell fire See Matth 5. For a man whose calling requires it not to reprove his brother when hee sees him runne into an ill co●rse and by loving rebuke to reclaime him wo●ld be interpreted by most for a courtesie rather than an unkindnesse Why should he meddle and put his friend into melancholy provoke him to anger and dislike of him with many pretences See now what God iudges of this kinde-heartednesse he ca●ls it hatred of our brother in plaine tearmes Levit. 19.17 Thou shalt not hate thy brother in thy heart thou shalt in any wise rebuke thy neighbour and not suffer sinne upon him Saul had a faire excuse one would have thought the people must have a little content in the spoyle of the Amalekites and God must ●ave a sacrifice too if then something of the best bee spared from destruction will Samuel take it so hainously Yea that hee will and God also who by Samuel tells Saul that however he sleight the matter yet this his offence is Rebellion and that as bad as Witchcraft and that his transgr●ssion is Iniquity and Idolatry and that which will grieve Saul more than the losse of Gods favour he shall lose his Kingdome for it 1 Sam. 15. It s a small thing to eate an Apple true but t is a great matter to disobey God and if Adam transgresse though but in taking of an Apple he shall dye for it and all his posterity Nothing then is small whereupon depends the sanctity of Gods commandement and our obedience Now here you must remember that there 's a double reason why wee our selves are not equall judges of the nature and quality of sinne 1. Because we are the parties accused and impleaded as guilty of sin and therfore we cannot be equall arbitrators in our owne cause where love of sin and of our selves must needs make us partiall 2. Our judgement is not the rule of righteousnesse but only Gods will and Gods law Hee is Iudge and the only L●●-giver that must save or destroy acquit or condemne He is the person offended that only can without partiality interpret the quality of the offence Let this then bee a caution to make us looke about us and advise what we have to do when wee deale with sinne We know not what we goe about when we meddle with it it 's like entermedling with State businesses a small matter as a word misplaced a circumstance not observed throwes a man before hee is aware into a Premunire or Treason Power is in the hand of a King and t is hee must interpret how farre hee takes himselfe wronged by the attempt So in sinne when wee meddle with it wee meddle with God our chiefest Soveraigne Lord our allegiance to heaven is streight-waies called in question every offence in this case is Capitall and incurres the punishment of rebellion Wherefore it concernes us so to thinke of sinne as God speakes of it and in this point lesse than in any to leane unto our owne wisedome but to be rul'd by his All our Distinctions Extenuations Qualifications Rejections upon other good Intentions with a thousand such other shifts will vanish away into horror and utter confusion when God shall lay righteousnesse in the ballance and censure our sinnes according to his most impartiall and exact judgement Thus much I thought it not amisse to obserue by the way seeing the Apostle seemes to goe farre in censuring this sinne of unworthy communicating to be no lesse fault than guiltinesse of bloud that wee may not thinke the Spirit of God here speaks by an Hyperbole but that we may learne as here so in other things to bring ou● judgements to his and not to qualifie his by our Rhetoricall devices Wee must now proceede to enquire what the Apostle meanes when hee saith that such as eate and drinke unworthily are guilty of the body and bloud of the Lord. By the body and bloud of the Lord he meanes the Death of Christ Iesus whose body was crucified and his bloud shed by the Iewes But here the question is how such as profane the Sacrament are guilty of Christs death I answer Guiltinesse of a fault reacheth partly to the Actors partly to the Abettors of it such as give counsell and ayd to the doing or consent to it when t is done Those are the principall these the accessory and in all crimes that are capitall the same punishment is due unto both Now the Iewes were the principall actors and so in the first place guilty of
Christs death at whose hands his bloud innocently shed shall be required But others may be abettors of this their fact as both the posterity of the Iewes are unto this day who blaspheme his name and account him justly put to death by their fathers as a malefactor and deceiver for which cause they still feele the vengeance of God upon them according to their fathers curse His Bloud be upon us and our children and also many Christians are who professing the name of Christ yet deny the vertue of his death and suffering But is any Christian so wicked as to allow of that fact of the Iewes in crucifying Christ Yea that there is even all those that use this Sacrament of his body and bloud unworthily they allow it and by so doing are guilty of his death But how can this be so Thus He that profaneth and abuseth this holy Sacrament doth in a speciall manner offer contempt unto the body and bloud of Christ. Forasmuch as the Sacrament is appointed for this very end to bee a signe and visible representation of the death of Christ wherein his sufferings and the benefits of them unto us are in lively characters figured out before us and as by a seale confirmed unto our use and comfort Wherefore when this most solemne and holy commemoration of Christ crucified is celebrated in any other manner than what is agreeable to the dignity and greatnesse of so excellent a person so excellent a blessing as Christ crucified is unto us then however wee may thinke wee honour him by our outward service yet Christ takes himselfe to be dishonoured and his death despised Other waies there are whereby dishonour falls upon Christ as by disobedience to his Gospell despising of his Ministers c. but this is an immediate contempt of him when hee is dis-regarded in that very thing which sets forth his death and sufferings an indignity in this kinde is a villeny that 's offered properly and immediately to his sacred person and precious merits As in a like but much inferior case when the picture seale armes chaire of Estate of any King are violated the disgrace done to them redounds immediately to the contempt of the Kings person and the doer of it is punishable as if hee had attempted violence upon the King himselfe So hee that unworthily useth this Sacrament of Christs death must needs offer contempt to his death it selfe Now no man can in any sort dis-esteeme the death of Christ but he in part consents to the treasonable conspiracies and practices of Iudas and the Iewes in putting him to death as if it were a matter not ill done o● not so ill done as it was indeed Yea hee that sleightly passeth over the death of an innocent person making a small matter of it he either makes the innocent to be indeed nocent one that hath iustly deserved to be slaine who being slaine deserves so little regard or at least hee makes himselfe nocent breeding a iust suspicion that hee was or would have been consenting to that mans death You see then that it is no small matter to profane the Sacrament but a very hainous offence which brings us within the guilt of that horrible sinne of murdering the Lord of Life the thought whereof should make us to tremble and to detest both them that did it and our selves too if we be accessary to it This should make us very carefull and wary how wee approach unto the Table of the Lord seeing as the benefit is great if we rightly receive this holy Sacrament so the danger is as great if we receive it unworthily because thereby we become guilty of the death of Christ. I would I might perswade you seriously to thinke of this point much rashnesse and impiety in comming to the Sacrament would be prevented by this meanes if men would duely consider how fearefull a sinne they commit when they come unpreparedly and unreverently thereunto All the difficulty lies in this if they would but beleeve that this were such a fault indeed The Apostle we see is expresse Whosoever eateth unworthily is guilty c. but yet men can hardly assent to this What are they not baptized into the name of Christ are they not Christians professing the Gospell of Christ doe they not receive the Sacrament in honour of Christ and will yee yet iudge them such beasts and miscreants that they are consenting to the death of their Saviour They were not worthy to live an houre if they did beare an ill minde towards him they could wish him accursed whosoever loves not the Lord Iesus for themselves they love him and honour him in their hearts if any Iew or Turke should revile him they will fight and die for his sake yea if any affirme that they hate him they le spit in his face and have him by the eares Here now bee great words one would thinke and men that are thus resolved can wee judge them otherwise than the very friends of Christ Wee judge them not but let us heare what the Scripture saith He that eates c. unworthily is guilty c. Guilty hee is not but by consent consent hee would not unlesse he did despise and hate Christ this hee cannot doe and bee his friend yet this he may doe even then whilst he eats this Bread and drinks this Cup with a good meaning as he imagines in a honourable celebration of the memory of Christs death Wherefore that such men may not deceive themselves with vaine imaginations I will commend unto their observation one conclusion more that ariseth from these words and then I have done T is this Many that professe Christianity thinking that they love and honour Christ may yet hate him as much as the Iewes did that crucified him The point is cleere from the Apostles doctrine whereby we see that men may thinke to honour Christ by receiving the Sacrament of his body and bloud whilest yet at that very time they may so farre dishonour him as to bee accounted enemies and haters of him such as stand guilty before God of shedding the bloud of that his onely Sonne No Christian you may be sure would be so furiously mad to goe to the Sacrament with such an intent therein to professe his malice against Christ and bring upon himselfe the guilt of his bloud but see how bad t is to trust our own good meanings and how easily wee may commit a fault whilst we verily thinke we doe auoide it The heart of man is wicked many times making profession of love when t is full of secret enmity and hatred withall mans heart is so strangely deceitfull that it may sometimes hate where it directly intends to love The truth of this is certaine and of singular use in judging truely of our spirituall estate I will but briefly touch in so much as concernes our present purpose Exod. 20.5 God threatneth to punish Idolaters to the fourth generation Yea but why should God be angry with
wee diligently the quality of the punishment it selfe for the rule holds true very commonly that God punisheth men in the same kinde wherein they offend Whence it will be easie by the punishment to judge of the sinne If a Land be smitten with a famine of bread is it not because plenty hath bred luxury if with a famine of the Word was it not because it was entertained with disobedience and contempt if with poverty t is because riches bred vice if David defile his neighbours wife so shall Absolom deale with his owne concubines if hee murder Vriah so shall Absolom doe to Amnon and seeke to doe the same to his father Is a man vexed with disobedient children t is likely himselfe was so to his owne parents if friends be unfaithfull to thee hast not thou beene so to thine or hast thou not made flesh thine arme and put more trust in them than God Is disgrace fallen upon thee and wast thou not proud before Doe thy gifts of minde or body decay and is it not because thou art high minded unthankefull to God and scornefull of meaner men In short looke unto the punishment and consider it duely we shall commonly finde that in the same or some other kinde neerly proportionable as we have done in sinning so God hath done to us in punishing 3. Observe advisedly the inditements which at such a time thy conscience shall bring-in against thee Conscience is a faithfull Register and what ever drowsinesse may possesse it in times of peace yet so soone ●s its netled and stung with the feare of approaching judgement or the sense of present smart it growes very clamarous and will give us information touching our estate both true enough and loud enough if wee list to heare and observe what it saith If a storm be toward the sea quickly foretokens it by its working and change of colour And in corrupt bodies the least alteration of the weather breeds a distemper in them So doe all outward change whether felt or feared worke strange alterations in the soule that 's tainted with the guilt of any foule transgressions Then be sinnes that were almost forgotten all mustered up together and brought to a fresh remembrance as if done but yesterday and if wee doe attentively marke what Conscience then pleads against us wee shall heare it ring in our eares such voices as these Loe seest thou not iudgement ready now to take hold on thee for such a sinne at such a time committed And thou beest remembred once thou committedst such a secret abomination now see God punisheth thee for it openly So many yeeres agoe such a villany was done by thee now at last God hath met with thee for it Admirable is the worke of Conscience in this regard and very remarkeable in the brethren of Ioseph They had sold their brother and cou●ened their father and all was husht up for a long time After they goe downe to Egypt they are roughly used there by their unknowne brother imprisoned as Spies no entreaties nor apologies will serve their turne Now their sinne revives and their brother Ioseph comes into their mindes they cannot keepe it in their traiterous and unmercifull usage of their poore brother swels in their consciences and bursts forth at their tongues they cannot take so much time as till they bee all in private but even in Iosephs presence they must out with it Wee have sinned against our brother c. therefore is this trouble come upon us Gen. 42.21 So Iob in his elder yeares when he fell into those great calamities though a holy and good man yet confesseth that he smarted for the sinnes of his youth Thou writest bitter things against mee and makest mee to possesse the sinnes of my youth saith hee Iob 13.26 Sinne may be soone committed but t is not so soone forgotten God remembers it and Conscience registers it and an hundred yeares after the fact done a man may heare on 't againe to his woe and griefe By these three directions well observed wee may speedily attaine the knowledge of our sinne for which at any time Gods punishing hand lies upon us that so knowing where the disease lyeth we may with speedy successe apply the medicine of Repentance and true Reformation And so much of this point I goe forward For this cause many are weake For the abuse of the Sacrament in not discerning the Lords Body God plagued them in their owne bodies with diseases and death Hence the conclusion is That The abuse of spirituall good things causeth losse of bodily and temporall good things This is agreeable to reason and equity That where the greater good is despised there men should bee punished with deprivation of that good which is lesse in worth but more in their esteeme to the end that by the want of this they might learne to have a better regard unto the other They that abuse spirituall good things will much more abuse corporall good things wherefore God at once both prevents their sinne in these by taking them away and also punisheth their sinne in those by such a deprivation of these Besides it is the nature of sinne as it infects the soule so it hurts the body and all externall good things Adams abuse of the forbidden fruit brought destruction upon his soule and death upon his body and a curse upon all ●he world which God had given him as his patrimony and inheritance· No lesse dangerous is the abuse of the commanded fruit that wee so call Iesus Christ the Tree of Life in the Sacrament They that eate it worthily feed therby both soule and body they t●at profanely use it bring destruction upon both Godlinesse sa●th the Apostle hath the promises of this life and that which is to come and therefore on the contrary Vngodlinesse hath the threatnings of both My sonne let thine heart keepe my commandements saith Salomon Prov. 3.1 If he doe it they shall bring him increase of daies prosperity favour in the sight of God and man health to his navell and marrow unto his bones with abundance unto his barnes and winepresses as it followes in the next verses of that Chapter So on the other side where God is disobeyed his Word and Ordinances despised there nothing thrives well neither for body nor name nor goods but sin like a blasting winde makes all to wither and fade away like a leafe This may lesson us two things 1. That if we would have our bodies and lives to be precious in Gods account we learn our selves to make precious account of his service and holy ordinances If wee contemne the sacred Body and Bloud of Christ and make no reckoning of his death it is but just with God to give up our vile and sinnefull bodies to bee as ●ung for the earth that sicknesse should consume us and the grave have dominion over us No marvell if we be left in bodily weaknesses when we labour not to feele the strengthening power and
Law to bring them to the Sacrament One would thinke that mens consciences should herein be a Law unto themselves and that there were no necessity to have a Statute for hungry men to eate or for sicke folke to take physicke But here is the intolerable infidelity and irreligion of our times did not feare of Law and shame of the world prevaile more with many than any benefit which they perceiue is to be gottē by frequenting the Sacrament they that now come but seldome would come never they have no appetite to this spirituall bread their taste cannot rellish this Angels food and thence the Table of the Lord is contemptible in their eyes and their very soule loatheth this bread of heaven I confesse indeed that persecution is a sharpe spurre to put men on upon the diligent practice of all religious duties and so it was in the Primitive Church that the bitternesse of afflictions gave a sweeter relish to religion Neverthelesse they must needes be ill nurtured that will doe nothing without beating and very strange it is that men should constantly wait upon the service of God when paine and disgrace terrifie them from it and then fal off to neglect it when honour peace and liberty invite them to it And what my brethren had the bloud of Christ a fresher taste in these first ages after it was newly shed had his sacrificed body a more fragrant smell inviting the Saints like birds of prey to flye from far with maruellous swiftnesse unto this dead but yet all-quickning carkasse Hath it now through tract of time lost that swetnesse wherwith hertofore it cheared both God and Man No t is we have lost our senses our faith our zeale our love Christs bloud like the Manna in the Ark putrifies not but endureth for ever to feed us also in these last ages of the world unto everlasting life That fountain which was opened in his side runs yet afresh hath an everlasting vertue to cleanse us from the leprosie of sinne and to coole the heate of a weary soule inflamed with sin and the fire of Gods wrath only if we can be sensible of our thirst and that our hearts can pant after these waterbrooks running amaine unto them for refreshing when wee are furiously chased by our iniquities following us at the heeles Wherfore my beloved brethren let us be admonished henceforward to make conscience of frequenting the Lords Table so often as by fit opportunity wee may enjoy the benefit therof lest our lazie sloathfulnesse be at last punished for a profane contempt of the precious bloud of our Lord Iesus Christ. This be spoken of the first duety in comming to the Sacrament the next followes touching that which is to bee done about the celebration of it Now this is in general A soleme commemoration of the death of Christ expressed in those words Doe this in remembrance of me and in those Yee shew forth the Lords death till he come Which words doe summarily declare what was the end and intent of Christ in instituting this Sacrament and what is the duty which he requires of euery Christian in the solemnizing thereof namely That therin we should make a perpetuall commemoration of his death and passion unto the end of the world till hee come againe to iudgement Now this remembrance of the death of Christ in the Sacrament is to be taken in a double sense 1. In opposition to the outward Elements and Ceremonies in this Sacrament 2. In relation to those spirituall graces of the soule which are to bee exercised in this commemoration In the former must be shewed upon what our hearts thoughts must be fixed in the holy Sacrament namely not on the Elements and actions of the Sacrament but on Christ and his benefits all the desires of our soules must be towards him and to the remembrance of his Name In the latter it will appeare how in what manner our soules must be fixed on Christ namely not in a bare historicall remembrance of his sufferings but in a powerfull and gracious feeling of the vertue of his death working life and holinesse in our soules Of these two points in order and of the first briefly which is this That our thoughts are not to dwel upon the outward elements and actions of the Sacrament but from them to bee raised up to the meditation of Christs sufferings and the benefits we obtaine thereby Doe this in remembrance of mee saith Christ i. e. of my death and your redemption by it not Do this for it own sake looking no further than what is visible to your eies in the outward solemnity Never was any Ceremony legall Euangelicall appointed for its own worth as if either God were pleased or mans soul● edified in grace by such carnall observations For God is a Spirit and will alwayes be worshipped in spirit and truth and mans soule is a Spirit of a pure and immortal substance which cannot bee nourishd and maintained in life and strength by any outward fading thing or action but only by that which is proportionable to its owne celestiall and spiritual quality Now this alone is the grace and favour of God the treasurie and store-house wherof is the person of our ever-blessed Mediator Iesus Christ unto whom the ancient church was directed in all Leviticall observations to whom these Evangelicall Sacraments doe still direct us Wherefore you are againe to be admonished those especially of the younger sort That they do attentively observe what that thing is whereabouts all their meditations are to be employed in this sacred businesse Remember that here Christ crucified is all in al in every element in every action When thou seest the Bread and Wine separated by consecration unto this holy use thinke on Christ ordained and fore-appointed by the Father from everlasting unto the accomplishment of our redemption by his bloud-shedding When thou seest the Bread broken and the Wine powred forth thinke on Christ torne and rent in his precious body with stripes and wounds pained even to the death in his most holy soule full of the wrath of God indignation of the Almighty by whom he was smitten for thy sinnes and plagued for thy transgressions When the Minister offers to thee the bread wine think on Christ given unto thee of God freely and giving himselfe unto thee if thou wilt receive him When thou receivest and eatest these elements think on Christ that living Bread that gives life unto thy soule and by his merits preserves it from eternall death Knit thy heart unto him by the band of an holy faith throw thy selfe into his armes stretched out on the Crosse to embrace thee wash thy soule in his bloud that thou maist bee cleane hide thy selfe in the holes and clefts of this rocke from the stormy tempest of Gods wrath that i● m●y not touch thee put thine hands and thy fingers in his side and the pr●nt of the nailes and cry out with that
they will not learne their duety in this or any other part of Gods worship It must needs much affect the heart of any one that is Christianly disposed with sorrow indignation ●o see those that professe themselves the servants of Christ know as little of him as those that are his open enemis Barbarians and Turkes know the name of Christ and so doe these but for their duety in the worship and obedience they both know much alike This and more might be said were it not in this place where knowledge doth abound Neverthelesse to deale plainely let no man flatter himselfe nor another Let us bee well advised that none of us be ignorant amongst so plentifull so easie means of knowledge A great fault it is in any in us much greater who if wee bee not better than others are and therefore worse because we ought to be better Vbi sublimior praerogativa maior est culpa saith Salvian and hee gives a good reason of it because Praeter eam deformitatem quam vitium in se habit ipso sublimitatis nomine notatur Ignorance in matter of Religion is of it selfe a notable deformity in every one that calls himselfe Christian but in the learned their profession makes it much more visible and odious Those that be free from this fault are also free from touch of this reproofe but if any may iustly blame himselfe for being ignorant of this duety let me bespeak him in Salvians words Non à mea sibi hoc lingua dici aestimet sed á conscientia sua T is not I but his owne conscience that reproves him And let such a one carry hence this lesson to his study That he that 's ignorant must needs bee wicked even because he is ignorant nor is it possible but hee shall faile in his duety whatever he goe about For the Sacrament t is plaine an ignorant receiver is an unworthy receiver because as the Apostle speakes afterwards verse 29 Hee discerneth not the Lords body he knowes not what ends and uses are to be made of this holy Sacrament We must know that we now have no altars to the unknown God no worship of a knowne God in an unknowne manner wee must understand both whom and how we worship else our service of him is not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a reasonable service as the Apostle would have it Rom. 12.1 but a blinde ayme and brutish devotion 2. The Superstitious who use the Sacrament quite in another fashion other intents than Christ ever appointed it In this kinde those of the Romish Church have intolerably perverted this holy Institution of Christ both Priest and People There 's scarce left any shadow at all of the first Institution all 's perverted and corrupted with fond and impious abuses Never was there any device more blasphemous and more ridiculous too than that abomination of the Masse Wherein wee have a Supper for the living turned into a sacrifice for quicke and dead a Minister into a sacrificing Priest a Table into an Altar Bread and Wine into very flesh bloud and bones eating of bread into devouring of a living man a cup of wine turned to a draught of mans bloud the remembrance of Christs death into adoration of the outward elements all the simplicity of Sacramentall Actions metamorphosed into strange gesticulations crouching ducking crossing over the bread the wine the Priest the people whispering murmuring washing shifting from place to place from this to that side dipping the bread in the wine mingling the wine with water lifting up the bread over the Priests head keeping it like a Bee in a boxe carrying in procession bringing it to sicke mens bed-sides to keepe thence evill spirits carrying it into the field in warre to defend from gunshot with a world of other ceremonies trinkets and fopperies deuised without any ground in Scripture or reason as may be seene in their bookes and practice By this meanes they have turned the Sacrament into a Stage-play or Masking shew where the poore people are spectators only understanding nothing at all but feeding their eyes by gazing upon the outside of empty ceremonies and idolatrous pompe It is a thing somewhat admirable to consider whence and how so great impiety should spring from so plaine an Institution as this of the Sacrament is and how in course of time it should so farre degenerate into such a strange mixture of foolery and iniquity but as in Gentilisme the divell having drawn men from the knowledge of one pure invisible God he easily puld them into infinite errors both to frame unto themselves many gods and to conceive most absurd opinions of them so here having once perverted the simplicity and sanctity of Christs institution he hath by degrees every age adding some new tricke or other brought it at last unto that Masse of Idolatrous abominations which Gentilisme it selfe cou●d hardly equall and Christianity but that it sees now come to passe could never have suspected the possibility of it Wee are highly to praise Almighty God that hath delivered us and this whole land from so great a corruption and that we have the Sacraments celebrated in our Churches in that pure simplicity of substance and that reverend decency of ceremonies as is agreeable to Christ his first Institution Neverthelesse we ought yet to be admonished that even we take heed of superstition that in our secret thoughts we incline not too much unto that conceit of Opus operatum Let none think the the bare outward actions and elements are able to sanctifie him or that he is the better for them and the ground he treads on for that day that if he goe fasting he hath the more if having eaten before hee hath the lesse benefit or that even the very receiving of the elements is of great vertue to a sicke man I confesse t is so to him and all others if with a pure heart and faith unfained it be rightly received onely this would be looked unto that Protestants in profession be not Papists in some part in their opinion conceiving too highly of the outward worke taking little heed to the inward vertue Against the superstitious use of this and all other parts of Gods service let us remember that rule of Christ In vaine they worship mee teachi●g for d●ctrines mens traditions If Scribes and Pharisees Papist o● Protestant deprave Gods ordinances or make new of their owne teaching them for doctrines whereby and wherein to worship and please God Wee speake not now of lawfull ceremonies that touch not the substance of Gods worship in so doing they teach an error and worship God in vaine 3. The Vnreformed who haply know what belongs to the Sacrament and use it not with any superstitious conceit but yet they use it without any amendment and reformation of life This kinde of profanation is of all most to be feared amongst us where knowledge of the nature of the Sacrament takes away all superstitious opinion in the use
question Yea or Nay Whence it will be easie to give a true censure of our spirituall estate how matters goe with us in regard of grace or corruption This is in few words selfe-examination the necessity of which duety will appeare unto you by consideration of a double consequent that followes one upon the neglect the other upon the practice thereof 1. The neglect of this Christian duety breeds ignorance of a mans spirituall estate a fault very easie to be run into but be yee assured of very great danger to those that take no notice of it in themselves T is true that mans heart is deceitfull above all things and t is very difficult to know it thoroughly besides that love of sinne and selfe-love makes us unwilling to see our own foule corruptions or to enquire after such vertues and graces as we know the want of them would but grieve us and we suppose withall that if we had them they would be but a burthen to us Wherefore we are apt to cast a vaile upon our understanding and take up our rest in an ignorant perswasion that all is well with us because wee list not to know what wee want Which resolution how dangerous it is will soone appeare to any that can understand what mischiefes these are namely hardnesse of heart presumptuous boldnesse in sinning continuall danger to fall from bad to worse and a fearefull preparation for all future terrors There is no Milstone or Adamant so unyeelding to the stroke of the hammer as is that heart which hath once for all taken up this conclusion All is wel with me Counsel him admonish him threaten him out of the Word Lapidi dixeris in another sense he heares you not you may hold your selfe quiet hee is well and warme what doe you disquieting him Discover unto him the danger of such courses as hee followes that if he continue therein hee runnes upon his owne eternall ruine and destruction you move him not a jot except it be to choler in which for your courtesie he 'le returne such an answer as this Sir shift for your selfe care not for mee I trust to doe well enough for all that you say to the contrary and so hee goes on presumptuously till at last he perish in his great folly Besides such a carelesse regard of ones spirituall estate throwes a man every moment upon a thousand unexpected dangers Hee that knowes not how bad he is assuredly he cannot tell how bad he shall be We walke among snares and temptations are laid for us which way soever wee turne our selves about to prevent these there needs great wisedome and watchfulnesse hee that hath neither can hee hope to escape taking When the prudent are oftentimes caught what shall become of rash and heedlesse adventurers Surely experience tells us what is the issue of such wretchlesse and ill-advised men when God in his righteous judgement shall suffer them to fall upon some fearfull temptations that fit their secret but to themselves unknowne corruptions they take fire at the first stroake and breake out into those vile impieties when even themselves aforetime could not thinke of without detestation But yet there 's a misery worse than all this when once God shall awake such a sleepy conscience and teare off that covering wherewith sloath and security had ●●uffled and over-spread it When by some notable judgment fallen on a man God shall quicken in him the remembrance of his former iniquities or when sicknesse shall seaze on him summoning him to death and death to judgement when hee shall see his sinnes set in order before him and large rolles of inditement written against him within and without full of sinnes and woes thinke you not that a man hath then rewarded evill unto his soule by plunging himselfe into those perplexities which watchfulnesse in time would have prevented Oh what a maze is such a man in who hath so many reckonings to be made up when new and old must be reckoned for at once when so many thousand thousand debts are to be cleared whereof there is not so much as one poore farthing discharged Had it not beene wisedome to have lookt into these things betimes againe and againe to have set all reckonings to right to have gotten the debt-booke crossed the obligation cancelled and a discharge sealed up unto our consciences in the bloud of Iesus Christ This had beene a safe course and not like desperate Bankrouts to let all things runne at adventure Then might one have rejoyced in sicknesse and triumpht in death being delivered from all those terrors which utterly overwhelme those carelesse persons who in their dayes of peace and health never remembred God or themselves This and more also if more can be is the danger of this duetie of examination neglected the benefit that comes by the 2. Practice of it is on the contrary a distinct and cleare knowledge of our spirituall estate By this proofe and examination of our selves we shall know plainly whether we be in the Faith whether Christ be in us yea or no whether we be dead in sinne or alive to righteousnesse wee shall see what graces we have what we want what corruption we have overcome what doe yet overcome us what godly duties we practise what we omit where wee doe well where wee faile This will discover unto the whole temper of our soules what evil affection is strongest in us in what thing we are aptest to sinne that so wee may be the more ●eedfull to prevent a danger againe what graces are weakest in us what most usefull for us that so we may get these and strengthen those This particular distinct knowledge of our selves will bring forth these three blessed effects 1. Wakefulnesse and tendernesse of Conscience Hee that is thoroughly acquainted with the state of his body tha● knowes what dish is hurtfull what healthfull to him he t●at hath found what the danger of a surfeit is will be you may be sure wary of his diet and course of living Nature learnes us this care over a crazie body and grace will teach as much watchfulnesse over a sinfull soule Hee that hath taken thorough notice of the great distempers of his heart how quickly enticed by every temptation to practise any evill to neglect any good duties Hee that hath found how ougly and fearefull the face of sinne is when it is presented in its true shape stripped of all its lying pleasures or profits and accompanied onely with Gods hatred and curse He that hath found what it is to venter upon sinne with the losse of Gods favour the joy of the holy Ghost the peace and sweetest repose of a good conscience blame him not my Brethren if hee be affraid of sinne Doe not censure him for foolishly precise if hee often aske and inquire and doubt in many particulars of his practice not daring to hazzard himselfe where haply hee sees others goe on confidently Nay blessed is this tempter of the heart