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A20756 The conflict betvveene the flesh and the spirit. Or the last part of The Christian warfare wherein is described the nature of these combatants, the malice and power of the flesh and fleshly lusts, with the meanes whereby we may subdue and ouercome them. By Iohn Dovvname Batchelar in Diuinitie, and preacher of Gods Word.; Christian warfare. Part 4 Downame, John, d. 1652. 1618 (1618) STC 7139; ESTC S110219 333,184 430

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dangerous as those in bred enemies which we nourish in our owne bosomes who like secret traitors disarme vs of our chiefe weapons and munition when as we are assaulted with those professed enemies and lay vs open and naked to be spoiled by their inuasions and wounded by their blowes For so were we in our creation through Gods infinite goodnes furnished with such impenetrable Armour of innocencie and righteousnesse that Sathan with all his hellish armie could not hurt vs and therefore not being able to preuaile by force and violence hee entertained with our first parent● a treacherous parley wherein he perswaded them to put of their armes and to entertaine into their soules a troupe of his tentations which were no sooner entred but presently they vanquished all their forces ransackt their soules of all spirituall graces and brought them into ● miserable subiection through his hellish tyrannie And that he might the better keepe them in perpetuall obedience hee did not onely kill and spoile the naturall inhabitants Gods sauing graces but placed euen in the chiefe Castle of their soules a strong garrison of carnall corruptions and fleshly lusts which should reserue this like a conquered citie for his owne vse and as it were open the gates vnto him and his tentations when as he pleased to make an entrance §. Sect. 4. That Sathan and the world could not hurt vs were they not ayded by our owne flesh And this was the fountaine of all our miserie and the chiefe cause and meanes of Sathans tyrannous soueraigntie and of our base thraldome and slauerie yea this is the cause why he still preuaileth and holdeth vs captiue to doe his will For those forraigne forces led vnder the conduct of Sathan and the world could neuer vanquish vs vnlesse the flesh and the lusts thereof did betray vs into their hands their wisedome could not circumuent vs vnlesse these secret traytors gaue them continuall intelligence of all aduantages their malice and power could not hurt vs if they had not a strong partie to assist them in our owne bosomes who by their m●●●nous sedition and ciuill warres weaken vs and strengthen them neither could they euer conquer vs if these intestine rebels did not open the gates and let in the troupes of their tentations And therefore as I haue indeauoured to arme and strengthen the weake Christian against the forces of those forraigne enemies so it now remaineth that I should adde to the former this last part of the Christian warfare describing this conflict betweene the flesh and the spirit and teaching the Christian with what aydes and supplies he must support his weakenesse in these dangerous encounters how hee must keepe vnder these wicked traitors and so carry himselfe and menadge his weapons as that he may be assured to obtaine the victorie CHAP. II. Of the flesh and the diuers significations of it and what we are to vnderstand by it in the following discourse §. Sect. 1. That there is in a christian this fight betweene the flesh and spirit WHere first we will speake of the enemies which fight one against another in this Warfare and then of their conflict In the former wee will consider first what these enemies are and then how dangerous and pernicious vnto vs if they be not subdued kept in subiection to them which fight on our side against them The enemies which thus fight with one another are the Flesh and the Spirit with an innumerable armie of their motions and lusts Both which with all their forces dwell in euery true Christian making mutuall opposition the one nilling what the other willeth and hindring and destroying that which the other furthereth and aduanceth This plainely appeareth by the Scriptures which both discouer this hostile dissension and contrarie faction in the same man and the opposition and conflict which ariseth from their emnitie and cohabitation their natural diuision and locall vnion So the Apostle speaketh plainely of this conflict in all Christians Gal. 5. 17. Ioh. 3. 6. Gal. 5. 17. The flesh lusteth against the Spirit and the Spirit against the flesh and these are contrarie one to another and particularly in himselfe where he thus complaineth But I see another 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Rom. 7. 25. law in my members rebelling or warring against the law of my minde and bringing me into captiuitie to the law of sinne which is in my members And againe I my selfe in my minde serue the law of God but with my flesh the law of sinne And hence it is that the Apostle Peter exhorteth vs to fight valiantly against these lusts because they doe continually make warre against vs. Dearely beloued saith he I beseech you as strangers and pilgrims abstaine from fleshly lusts which 1. Pet. 2. 11. fight against the soule 1. Pet. 2. 11. §. Sect. 2. The divers significations of the word flesh taken for things materially subsisting Now that we may like Christs faithfull souldiers after a lawfull and laudable manner thus fight against them wee must in the first place labour to know what they are least we mistake our enemies for our friends to which end we are to vnderstand that the flesh is diuersly taken in the scriptures As to omit many acceptations of it which are farre off and nothing pertinent to our present purpose sometime it is taken for all mankinde In which sense it is said that all a Gen. 6. 12. flesh had corrupted his way vpon the earth that is all mankinde that all flesh is b Esa 40. 6. grasse that is all mankinde is fraile and momentany and that God would c Ioel 2. 28. poure out his spirit vpon all flesh that is vpon men of all sorts and conditions Sometimes it is taken for the whole man d 1. Pet. 3. 18. consisting of soule and body And thus our Sauiour Christ is said to haue beene put to death concerning the flesh that is his humane nature his body being seuered from his soule and his soule in his present sense and feeling from his God when as vpon the crosse hee bore his wrath for our sinnes and the Psalmist hauing said that he would not feare Psal 56. 4. what flesh could doe vnto him Psal 56. 4. expoundeth himselfe in the eleuenth verse In God saith he haue I put my trust I will not be affraide what man can doe vnto me Sometimes it is taken for the body of man alone consisting of many members And so the Apostle exhorteth vs to cleanse 2. Cor. 7. 1. our selues from all filthinesse of the flesh and of the spirit that is body and soule and the Psalmist saith that the enemies Psal 79. 2. of the Church had cruelly giuen the flesh of Gods Saints to the beasts of the earth that is the dead bodies of Gods seruants which also as he saith in the same place were giuen to be meate to the fowles of the heauen Sometime this word flesh signifieth the whole
adhering to all the parts and faculties of our soules and bodies vnmortified and vncrucified or that part of a Christian which is vnregenerate and continually fighteth and striueth against the spirit And this is the malicions enemie that assisteth Sathan and the world to worke our vtter ouerthrow vnto which the Scriptures haue giuen many names whereby the nature and qualities there of are implyed that we may the better know it and arme our selues to fight against it For it is called the a Rom. 6. 6. Ephes 4. 22. Col. 3. 9. old man not onely because in age and antiquitie it almost matcheth humane nature but rather to imply vnto vs that like those who by reason of their old age haue had much experience it is very subtle and politique and so full of sleights and stratagems that if wee be not exceeding wary and watchfull it will easily circumuent vs. It is called also the b 1. Cor. 2. 14. naturall man because this corruption ouerspreadeth the whole nature of all men who are vnregenerate for howsoeuer in the first creation we were good free from sinne yet after the fall of our first parents wee were so degenerate and infected in our natures with the poison of their corruption that it is as naturall familiar and easie to sin and offend God as for a man to eate drink and sleepe for a fish to swim a bird to flie or for a stone to descend downwards It is called the old Adam to leade vs vnto the fountaine from which it sprung that is not God who made all things good but our first parents who as they lost the image of God by their fall and were wholly corrupted in their owne natures so they deriued their corruption vnto all their posteritie and hauing first defiled themselues with this spirituall Leprosie did also infect therewith all that numerous of-spring which descended of them It is called the c 2. Cor. 9. 17. Rom. 8. 10. body because this corruption dwelleth in the bodie and exerciseth it selfe in it by it as by it instrument in the committing and perpetrating of all the workes of darknes and that we may the more clearely discerne what body the Apostle meaneth he calleth it the d Rom. 6. 6. body of sinne and the e Col. 2. 11. body of the sinnes of the flesh because the flesh by the bodie committeth all manner of sinne and wickednesse It is called the body of death because it is the cause of death and f Rom. 7. 24. condemnation in which sense Elizaus his Disciples said that death was in the pot that is deadly poysonous hearbs which would cause them to dye who had tasted of them It is called also g Rom. 7. 8. 11 sinne not onely because it selfe is sinne but also the roote and fountaine of all other wickednesse and the h Rom. 7. 17. sinne that dwelleth in vs because like the strong man it keepeth sure possession till a stronger commeth and dispossesseth it euen the Spirit of God dwelling in vs. It is called i Iam. 1. 13. 14. euill concupiscence because it filleth vs with sinfull lusts and maketh vs to to stand in opposition against the will of God desiring and willing that which he nilleth and condemneth It is called k Heb. 12. 1. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the sin which encloseth or besetteth vs about because this hellish Captaine with a whole armie of sinfull lusts enuiron vs on euery side so as wee cannot possibly of our selues escape out of their ambushments Finally it is called the law of sinne the l Rom. 7. 23. law of the members and the m Rom 8. 2. law of death because it is the rule of all the naturall mans actions guiding him into all wickednesse the commander of all his parts and members vnto whose iniunctions they doe like subiects yeeld free and willing obedience the which their seruice and subiection is in the end rewarded with euerlasting death of bodie and soule CHAP. III. What wee are to vnderstand by the Spirit in this discourse §. Sect. 1. That the word Spirit is diuersly taken in the Scriptures AND thus wee haue shewed what the flesh is which is one of the champions in this spirituall combate now wee are to consider of the other which is the Spirit and that wee may the more distinctly know what it is wee must vnderstand that the word Spirit is diuersly taken in the Scriptures and to omit many acceptations which are altogether impertinent to our present purpose we may obserue that it is sometimes taken generally for all spirituall and incorporeall substances and sometimes more specially for some one of them And thus it sometime signifieth the whole a Ioh. 4. 24. deitie and sometime euery one of the persons the Father the b Ioh. 6. 63. Sonne in respect of his diuine nature and the c 1. Ioh. 5. 6. 7. holy Ghost who hath this name of spirit after a vsuall and peculiar manner giuen vnto him But howsoeuer God and euery of these holy and diuine persons doe fight in vs and for vs against the flesh seeing it is their grace that supporteth vs and their strength whereby wee ouercome yet we are not to vnderstand by spirit in the following discourse this diuine nature who being omnipotent none is able to resist Sometime it signifieth the d Eccles 12. 7. Act. 7. 59. 2. Cor. 7. 1. soule of man euen as the flesh is taken for the bodie but these are not opposites and enemies but deare friends who so entirely loue that they feare nothing more then to be separated and to part company Sometime it signifieth that chiefe and excellent facultie of the soule called e 1. Cor. 2. 11. Rom. 12. 2. Luke 1. 47. reason and vnderstanding but neither can it here be taken in this sense because this spirit it selfe is corrupt and sinfull and this naturall reason and wisedome is enmitie against God and against this spirit whereof we speake which opposeth and fighteth against it as against his chiefest enemie Sometime it is taken for the vigour and efficacie of the vnderstanding and reason it selfe as where the Apostle exhorteth the Ephesians to be renued in the spirit of their minde Sometime by spirit we vnderstand the f Luke 1. 15. Gal. 3. 2. Act. 2. 18. gifts and graces of the spirit as Faith Loue Hope Ioy and the rest which being fruits of the Spirit do stand in opposition to the lusts of the flesh and in some sort doe fight against them they being contrarie the one to the other Finally the Spirit sometime signifieth a new qualitie of holinesse created and wrought in all the Elect by the Spirit of God whereby all the powers and faculties of his soule and body are renewed according to the image of God in wisedome holinesse and righteousnesse In which sense wee are to vnderstand it in this place §. Sect. 2. What wee are
ambushments and our friendes through their malice mustred against vs as though they were our enemies that so whileft we bend all our forces against them who oppose vs in this seeming hostilitie these may suddenly set vpon vs and assault vs at vnawares giuing vs deadly wounds when wee feare no danger For the plotting and contriuing of which stratagem they vse the vassals of Antichrist the cleargie of Rome as their chieftaines and especiall instruments who hiding our true enemy the corruption of nature which hath ouerspread all the powers and parts of our soules and bodies vnder the close couert of their cunning sophistrie doe in stead thereof offer to our view seeming foes of their owne fancying For by the flesh they would haue vs to vnderstand not the reliques of corruption which keepe their chiefe residence in the soule minde and will but the body it selfe and the flesh thereof and at most the inferiour bruite and sensitiue faculties of the soule and by the spirit they vnderstand the intellectuall faculties the minde reason and vnderstanding and so affirme this to be the fight betweene the flesh and the spirit when as the body and sensitiue parts doe rebell and stand in opposition against the vnderstanding reason and contrariwise when these striue to maintaine their regency by keeping them vnder and subduing them to their lawes and orders And although being sometime conuinced with the euidence of trueth they giue together with vs the same verduite affirming that not the body it selfe is meant by the flesh but the corruption of it that it is onely the instrument of the soule in wicked actions and the soule it selfe the chiefe cause of sinne and that the minde vnderstanding and reason are poysoned and tainted with naturall corruption yet by and by they are ready againe to make voyde their euidence and to reuerse this sentence and relapsing into their olde absurdity they either vnderstand grossely by the flesh the body alone or when they please to deale more liberally with vs they also grant that the Inferiour parts of the soule the animall and sensitiue faculties are thereby included and comprehended and so imagining that therefore our regeneration is in the Scriptures saide to be imperfect because howsoeuer the minde and vnderstanding are truely and perfectly regenerate yet the body remaineth in the state of corruption they here hence conclude that in the soule remaineth no part of this originall corruption but onely in the body All which doth euidently appeare not only by their grosse practise for if they did not imagine that the body were the chiefe cause of all sinne why doe they so miserably and superstitiously afflict it placing their mortification onely in a bodily exercise and corporall punishments and if they did not thinke that the soule and intellectuall faculties were pure and free from this corruption why doe they so much magnifie and extoll it ascribing all our fals and faylings either to the body alone or to the reaand mind only through the corruption and default therof §. Sect. 2. That the cheife Doctors of the Papists by flesh vnderstand the body But this also may appeare by their doctrine For not to produce many testimonies out of a multitude of Authours but onely to name two or three of the chiefe and most refined Thomas Aquinas himselfe howsoeuer sometime he agreeth with vs holding that the flesh is the a Aquin. in Rō 7. lect 4. corruption of nature and orginall sinne as appeareth in his readings vpon the Romanes yet in other places hee confoundeth the flesh b Aquin. in Eph 5. lect 9. and the body and maketh the body sinne and death and the naturall body to bee all one although in these places by body and flesh he vnderstandeth the vices and corruptions of them as he expoundeth himselfe in other c in Rom. 7. lect 4. et cap. 8. lect 2. places So likewise hee holdeth that by the spirit part regenerate or inerman we are to vnderstand the d ibidem minde and reason which as he saith is called the inner man because that is said to be man which is principall and chiefe in him And thus he opposeth the flesh and the heart or the minde and reason where speaking of the Apostles e in Rom. 7. lect 3. words I knowe that in me that is in my flesh there dwelleth no good thing he saith that this is not to be vnderstood of his reason for in me that is in my heart good dwelleth according to that Ephesians the 3. where the Apostle saith Eph. 3. 17. De perfect Amoris Dei Cap. 5. that Christ himself dwelleth in our harts by faith So also Lewis Granada a chiefe Doctor of their superstitious deuotion and mortification ioyning with the famous heathen Philosopher Mercurius Trismegistus inu●igheth against the body as though it alone were this corrupt flesh which is the author and fountaine of all our sinne and euill Vnlesse saith he O sonne thou hate thy body thou canst not loue thy selfe for it is impossible seriously to intend both vnto things mortall and diuine But first of all of necessitie thou must put of this garment which thou cariest about thee being the couering of ignorance the foundation of wickednesse the bond of corruption the darke vaile the liuing death the carcase of the senses the moouing sepulcher the household thiefe which hateth whilest it flattereth and enuieth whilest it hateth c. which speech of the heathen man he iudgeth so full of light and trueth that for it alone he well deserued the name of Mercurius Trismegistus the thrice great or excellent And in the same Chapter hauing demaunded how it can possibly be that any man can hate himselfe that is his owne body vnto which naturally he is so obliged in the bond of friendship that the Apostle saith No man yet euer hated his owne flesh but nourisheth and cherisheth it answereth that this is an argument properly of Eph. 5. flesh and blood and that Gods spirit and grace aske rather and with better reason how it can possible be that they should not hate it For wheras the most pernitious enemies vnto man are hell the diuel the world the flesh and sinne this last is the greatest but the next vnto it is our flesh which is the mother and seede of all sinne Thus also Bellarmine although in many places he speaketh as much for vs De paeniten lib 4. ca. 6. Tom. 3. in this question as we would haue him yet hee commendeth whipping and tormenting of the body as a worke satisfactory tending to the mortifying of the flesh alleadging for it these absurde and ridiculous reasons first the Apostles example who saith that he did chastise his body for so the vulgar lattine readeth it that so hee might bring it into subiection Whereby body he grossely vnderstandeth the very body of the Apostle whereas it heere rather signifieth the body of sinne and corruption which else where he
spirit saith he seruing the flesh is not vnfitly called fleshly so the flesh seruing August de ciuit dei lib. 13. c. 20. the spirit is fitly called spirituall not because it is turned into spirit but because by an admirable facilitie and readinesse to obey it is subiected to the gouernment and rule of the spirit §. Sect. 4 The second Obiection grounded ●n 1. Cor. 9. 27. The second reason obiected is grounded vpon the Apostles words 1. Cor. 9. 27. But I keepe vnder or as the vulgar Latine hath it chastise my body least by any meanes when I my selfe haue preached to others I my selfe should bee a cast-away Where the Apostle maketh the body as they thinke 1 Cor. 9. 27. the enemy against which he fighteth and the chiefe obiect of mortification To which I answere first that we doe not deny but that the body is corrupted as well as the soule Rom. 7. 23. and that sin holdeth part of his residence euen in our earthly members in which regard this naturall corruption is to be subdued euen in the body by those exercises of mortification which the Scriptures haue prescribed as fastings watchings laborious exercises in the duties of Christianitie and of our spirituall callings And to this hee exhorteth vs. Col. 3. 5. Mortifie therefore your members which are vpon Col. 3. 5. the earth whereby he meaneth those sinnes which dwell in our earthly members to wit fornication vncleannesse inordinate affection euill concupiscence as hee expoundeth himselfe in the next words But all this doth not exempt the soule from being the seate also of naturall corruption yea euen the chiefe palace where sinne dwelleth Secondly I answere that by body in this place is not meant the substance Rom. 7. 14. of the flesh but the whole corrupt man or part vnregenerate both soule and body In which sense the Apostle elsewhere calleth himselfe carnall extending this fleshly corruption to his whole person euen as by members wee are to vnderstand those speciall sinnes which dwel in the members as the Apostle in that place of the Collosians explaineth it And this he calleth this a Rom. 7. 23. 24. body of sinne the law of sin which was in his members and the body of death and saith that the old man is b Rom. 6. 6. crucified with Christ that the body of sinne might be destroyed and that in Christ we are circumcised with circumcision made without hands in putting off the body of the sinnes of the flesh And finally that if Christ bee in vs c Col. 2. 11. 6. namely by his spirit the body is dead because of sinne but the spirit is life because of righteousnesse where by death of the body we are to vnderstand the mortification of the flesh in respect of sinne as appeareth by the Antithesis whereby d Rom. 8. 10. wee are to vnderstand the quickening of the inner man to newnesse and holinesse of life § Sect. 5. The third obiection grounded ●n the ap●st wordes Rom. 12. 6. Thirdly they obiect the words of the Apostle Rom. 12. 6. Let not sinne raigne in your mortall body from whence they conclude that the seate of sinne is in the body and not in the soule and reason To which the answere is easie namely that by the name of body here we are not simply to vnderstand the body alone but by a Synechdoche of the part for the whole the person of man consisting of soule and body And this is vsuall in the Scriptures by one part to signifie the whole person and as by the body to include the soule so in other places by the soule to include the bodie As the soule that sinneth shall die and all the soules that came with Iacob into Egypt which came out of his loynes were Ezech. 18. 4. Gen. 46. 26. threescore and sixe And thus Ambrose expoundeth this place The Apostle saith he calling it mortall body vnderstandeth Mortale ergo corpus dice●s totum homi●ē significauit Ambro ●n hu●c locum the whole man because they who obey sinne are called mortall For the soule saith he that sinneth shall die that is the whole man for none shall bee iudged without their bodies And that the Apostle by naming the body did not exclude the soule it appeareth in the next words that you should obey it in the lusts thereof whereby he sheweth that sinne is not onely in the body but first and principally in the powers and faculties of the soule 〈…〉 Fourthly it is obiected that the chiefe poyson of corruption is in the sensitiue and inferiour faculties seeing experience teacheth vs that the minde reason and vnderstanding is infected by them and so blinded and mis 〈…〉 sion and carnall concupiscence that men giue t 〈…〉 ouer to all sensualitie and become like vnto 〈…〉 which I answere that indeede the poyson of 〈…〉 ceedingly taynted the concupiscence appetite affections and all the sensitiue faculties and that they beeing infected doe infuse their poyson into the superiour faculties and like filthy sinkes of sinne doe send vp noysome sents into the vpper parts the minde and reason for the obiects moue the senses and the sense the will and vnderstanding and it is true that in this little common wealth of man the lusts and passions like rebels rise against reason their king and soueraigne Finally wee deny not but that the minde is drawne to thinke on that euill which the heart affecteth and is corrupted by giuing way to these sinfull lusts and by plotting deuising the meanes whereby they may be satisfied but yet all this proueth not that the fountaine of corruption is in the body and sensitiue parts for the poyson is first sent from the minde to the heart which being infected and corrupted returnes it backe againe to the minde euen as the liuer sendeth grosse blacke blood to the spleen which regurgitating and ouerflowing sends it backe againe to the liuer and so the fountaine of blood being corrupted it corrupteth the whole body Neither doeth this intestine rebellion arise first from the inferiour and subiect parts but from the sinfull corruption of their superiours whereby they are misgouerned either through loose negligence or desperate malitiousnesse for why doeth the heart affect that which is euill but because the minde esteemeth it the iudgement approueth it the will chooseth it if not simply yet as it is bayted with some worldly profit preferment or voluptuous pleasure But it may be further vrged that there are many who haue great knowledge and deepe iudgements that notwithstanding are much corrupted in their hearts passions and affections To which I answere that though they haue some knowledge yet not sauing knowledge and though they haue great illumination yet no spirituall wisedome and prudence to apply this light after an holy maner to particular actions For this christian prudence in doing any thing first propoundeth the end of the action which moueth vs to
to bee consumed with the fire of his displeasure Now what a fearefull condition is this to be at emnitie mortall opposition and in hostile tearmes against God himselfe For as the Apostle saith doe we prouoke God vnto anger Are 1 Cor. 10. 22. we stronger then he Can it be well with the earthen pitcher when it dasheth it selfe against the strong rorke Or can the seely Mouse escape destruction when he prouoketh and encountreth the fierce Lyon And how much more may they bee assured of vtter ruine and destruction who are at emnity with God himselfe who is not onely able to arme all the creatures against them but with a word of his mouth to cast them into hell § Sect 11. That the flesh is the cause of all our punishments Finally as the flesh is the cause of all sinne so also of all punishment and therefore because it were infinite to stand vpon the particular euils and mischiefes which this malicious enemy causes vnto vs looke how many plagues and punishments are inflicted vpon mankinde either in state or name soule or body and impute them all to the flesh as the fountaine of these bitter waters from which they spring and flowe And yet all these beeing put together are not comparable to those fearefull punishments which it causeth to carnall men in the life to come For it excludeth them out of Gods kingdome and cutteth off all hope of hauing any part in the heauenly inheritance For they that are in the flesh are vnregenerate and vnsanctified and without holinesse they can neuer see God and out of this heauenly citie are excluded dogges and sorcerers and whore mongers and Heb. 12. 14. murtherers and idolaters and whosoeuer loueth and maketh a lye And more plainely the Apostle hauing reckoned vp Apoc. 22. 15. the fruits of the flesh directly affirmeth that they who doe Gal. 5. 21. such things shall not inherite the kingdome of God And lastly the maliciousnesse of this wicked enemy and the sinfull lusts thereof herein appeareth in that nothing will satisfie them but our death and destruction For they are those mortall weapons which kill and murther vs and the edge and point of them is not onely directed against the body but against our soules which are much more precious And this argument the Apostle vseth to perswade vs to shun and auoide them Dearely beloued saith hee I beseech you as strangers and pilgrims abstaine from fleshly lusts which warre against the soule The end of which warre is not onely to get 1 Pet. 2. 11. the victory and to keepe vs in subiection but to cast all that are conquered into the prison of hell and to plunge them into euerlasting condemnation of body and soule So the Apostle saith that when we were in the flesh the motions of sins which were by the Law did work in our members to bring forth Rom. 7. 5. Rom. 8. 6. 13. fruit vnto death that to bee carnally minded is death and yet more plainly that if we liue after the flesh we shall die that he who soweth to the flesh shall of the flesh reape corruption whereby is meant eternall death and destruction as appeareth by the antithesis following but he that soweth to the spirit shall of the spirit reape life euerlasting And the Apostle Gal. 6. 8. Peter likewise telleth vs that the Lord reserueth the vniust vnto the day of iudgemen to be punished but chiefely them that 2 Pet. 2. 10. walke after the flesh in the lust of vncleannesse §. Sect. 12. That the malice of the flesh is the more dangerous because it is masked vnder the coulor of friendshippe Now this malitiousnes of the flesh is so much the more dangerous because it is masked disguised vnder the colour coue●ture of the nearest friendship for whilest in outward shewe it seemeth a nearer friend then a kinsman or dearest brother and like another selfe appeareth most carefull of aduancing our present and future good it doeth most malitiously vndermine our safetie and betraieth vs into the hands of our professed enemies neither can Sathan and the world be more ready to besiege and assault vs with the forces and troupes of their temptations then the flesh to yeelde vs into their handes by giuing free entrance to these assaylants Yea it doth not onely open the gates of our soules to let in these mortal enemies but being entred it ioineth with them assisteth these hellish forces with a strong army of carnall lustes and sighteth against our soules robbing and ransacking them of all spirituall graces and wounding them euen to the death with the wounds of sinne if they were not recured with the precious balsum of Christs blood So that we haue iust cause to complaine with our Sauior that it is not a stranger or professed enemy but a wicked Disciple and false Iudas that continually followeth vs waiting all opportunities whereby he may betray vs and that he who eateth bread with vs hath lift vp his heele against vs. And as Dauid complaineth of Achitophel It is not a professed foe that doeth vs this mischiefe but it is thou a man mine equall my guide and Iohn 13. 18. Psal 55. 13. 14. mine acquaintance our councellour and companion that walketh with vs to the house of God It is one who was borne and bred liueth and dyeth eateth drinketh sleepeth walketh and talketh with vs which notwithstanding watcheth all occasions of bringing vs to destruction for like tinder receiuing the sparkes of Sathans temptations it nourisheth and encreaseth them till at length our soules be inflamed with a world of wickednesse Whereby it appeareth that the flesh with the lustes thereof are enemies aboue all others most daungerous and pernitious for being secret traytors they are much more malicious then professed enemies malice and hatred being of such a nature that the more they are smothered and concealed the more they are inwardly increased and inraged They haue also the fittest opportunities to worke our ouerthrowe in that lying and liuing with vs they can easily take the best aduantages and then set vpon vs when as wee are most weake or secure and least prouided to make resistance Moreouer being secret traytors they are so much the more able to doe vs mischiefe because suspecting no hurt from them wee doe not arme our selues against them nor fortifie our soules against their assaults whereof it commeth to passe that wee are often ouercome and led captiue vnto sinne before we discouered the enemy or did discerne that we were encountred Finally they fight with vs not by marching against vs in the open field but out of secret ambushments when we feare no danger and so oftentimes put vs to flight before wee haue any time to recollect and marshall in order the forces of our minde or to make any head against their fury Now what can bee more dangerous then to haue alwayes in our company such a treacherous
his spirituall graces in vs by sending to them daily new ●i●es and ●●esh supplyes that so in the end wee may obtaine the victorie § Sect 6. That the might of our enemies 〈…〉 discourage 〈…〉 couragious Neither should the power of these spirituall enemies daunt and discourage vs an● so make vs cowardly to she or yeeld our selues as slaues vnto them because being so much too strong for vs there is no hope of with standing their fury or obtaining victory But let vs still remember that we fight the Lords battailes and therefore he being on our side we are sure if we wil but fight to obtaine the victory in the end Let vs remember that our Graund Captaine IESVS CHRIST hath by his death ouercome sinne and led it captiue vpon his crosse triumphing gloriously ouer it together with the rest of our spirituall enemies so as none of them shall bee able to hurt vs. With which meditation the Apostle comforted and incouraged himselfe in his tedious conflict with the flesh for hauing pitifully complained and cryed out Wretched man that I am who shall deliuer me from the body of this death He presently 2 Sam. 2● 9. addeth I thanke God through Iesus Christ our Lord By whom alone hee had obtained strength whereby hee was able to stand in the fight and was assured in the end to get the victory Yea let vs call to minde that hee by his spirit hath applyed vnto vs the vertue ●f his death whereby he hath giuen vnto our flesh such a deadly wound that it shall neuer recouer o● it but languish in a continuall consumption vntill by our death it be fully abolished And therefore when wee like weake and white-liuered souldiers are tyred in the fight let vs flye to the standerd and fight vnder the shield of Christ our Sauiour vvho is our true Eleazar the comfort of God and so mighty and omnipotent that hee is able to vanquish and ouercome all our enemies alone onely he would haue vs to fight with him in the battaile that so we might also accompany him in his glorious triumph Let vs remember that though our spirituall part be but the first fruits yet it is an earnest of the whole haruest though it be but small in quantitie yet it is full of vertue and vigour the God of life giuing life vnto it and like a little quintescence which is stronger in operation by that vertue which it receiueth from the fire of Gods Spirit then a great quantitie of common waters Whereas contrariwise the flesh though it be much greater and stronger yet being deputed to mortification and hauing receiued a fatall blowe of vvhich it daily languisheth and decayeth it is a gyant indeede in strength and bignesse but yet such an one as being in a deadly consumption pin●th away by little and little till it be vvholly abolished And on the other side the spirit as a child in age statute yet is in a continuall growth vntill it come to mans estate and a perfect age in Iesus Christ CHAP. X. Of the Policie of the Flesh and that it is more dangerous and pernicious then it power and strength § Sect 1. 〈…〉 IT now remaineth in the next place hauing seene the power of the Flesh that wee also consider of the policie of this enemy The vvhich as it is great in it selfe so also most dangerous and pernicious vnto vs. For howsoeuer the strength of the flesh be very great yet the policy thereof doth farre exceede it for being not a possessed enemy but a secret traytor it is more exercised in cunning vndermining of our safety with subtle sleights and pollitique stratagems then in assaulting vs after an open and hostile manner with strength and violence Hence it is that the Lord telleth vs by the Prophet that the heart whereby he vnderstandeth the soule of man or that part of the soule which remaineth vnregenerate is deceitfull aboue all things and so desperately wicked in this depth of fraude that none can Ier. 17. 10. know it but the Lord who is omniscient and knoweth all things For howsoeuer Sathan the old Serpent in respect of his naturall abilities and long experience may be more cunning and politique in himselfe yet his deceit is not so great in abusing and wronging vs as is the deceipt of our owne flesh For this being a part of our selues yea of euery power facultie and member of our soules and bodies it is of the priuy counsell of all our thoughts and knowing our most hidden imaginations and secret intentions it can take aduantage of them to worke our owne ouerthrow where as Sathan being ignorant of them cannot by all his craft and subtiltie so much endamage vs. And in this respect Sathan cannot deceiue vs vnlesse our owne flesh assisting him doe first deceiue vs whereof it is that our Sauiour being pure from all fleshly corruption and most free from this carnall guile could not possibly be deceiued vvith Sathans pollicies and most subtle stratagems Whereas on the other side our owne flesh can easily abuse and cozen vs though it haue no helpe at all from the arch-enemy of our saluation And hereof it is that the flesh in the Scriptures is called the old man to note vnto vs that as men in this age grow by their long experience very pollitique and vnlesse they be sanctified with Gods grace and holy Spirit very subtill craftie and full of fraude so the flesh exceedeth and aboundeth in fraude and treacherie § Sect. 2. Of the strength of the flesh being considered in it selfe Rom. 8. 7. Now this fraude and policy of the flesh as it is most malicious in it selfe so it is most pernicious vnto vs. The former appeareth in that it taketh part with sathan the wicked one against God himselfe the chiefe goodnes for so the Apostle telleth vs that the wisedome of the flesh is emnitie against God And that this policy is most pernicious vnto vs it is manifest first because it often preuaileth and much deceiueth vs as the Apostle out of his owne experience complaineth Rom. 7. 11. Sinne taking occasion by the commandement deceiued me In which regard that may iustly be Rom. 7. 11. said vnto vs vvhich the Prophet speaketh in another case Trust ye not in a friend put ye not confidence in a guide keepe the doores of thy mouth from her that lyeth in thy bosome For so often and commonly are we hereby deceiued and abused that wee haue iust cause to subscribe to the wise mans saying He that trusteth in his owne heart is a foole Secondly the perniciousnesse of this policy vnto vs hereby appeareth Pro. 28. 26. in that it tendeth vnto no lesse hurt then our death and vtter destruction for so the Apostle telleth vs that the wisedome Rom. 8. 6. of the flesh is death and therefore he ioyneth these two together that sinne or his sinfull corruption deceiued slew Rom. 7. 11. him because
suffer the pricke in the flesh to molest the Apostle and the messenger of Sathan to buffet him notwithstanding he so earnestly prayed to be deliuered from 2 Cor. 12. 9. them that the al-sufficiency of his grace assisting him might appeare and his power might bee gloriously manifested in his vveakenesse and infirmitie Secondly God is more glorified when as vvee seeing the strength of our flesh and naturall corruptions and our frailtie and vveakenesse vvants and many infirmities of our spirituall part are moued hereby to attribute the vvhole glory and prayse of our saluation to the alone mercy of God both in respect of the beginning and persecting thereof and vtterly denying our selues and our owne righteousnesse doe wholly rest and rely vpon the perfect and al-sufficient righteousnesse and obedience of his sonne Iesus Christ where as if there were in vs perfection in holinesse vvee vvould hardly acknowledge the Lord to be all in all in the worke of our saluation but would bee ready to attribute something vnto our selues Thirdly the wisedome and power of God is more manifested and glorified when as he doth his great works by contrary meanes and causes which in their owne nature would rather hinder them And therefore hee will haue vs Ioh. 9. 41. 1 Cor. 3. 18. Apoc. 3. 18. 2 Cor. 12. 9. blinde that we may see foolish that we may become wise poore that he may inrich vs weake that we may be strong imperfect in our graces that wee may bee endued with more perfection and finally will haue vs passe by the gates of hell that we may come to a greater measure of heauenly happinesse It were not so much if the Lord should perfectly sanctifie vs and presently giue vs eternall glory but to giue this blessednesse to vs who haue so many wants and corruptions yea to make our imperfections to serue as meanes for the increasing of our happinesse this doeth exceedingly magnifie his power and wisedome Fourthly we are hereby made more thankefull vnto the Lord and more chearefull in singing to his praise when wee are supported and saued notwithstanding our imperfections then if hee should indue vs at the first with all perfection For the more sensible wee are of Gods benefits the better wee esteeme them and so consequently receiue them with greater thankfulnesse but the more wee haue found the want of them and how little we haue deserued them the more sensibly doe we apprehend their excellency when wee enioy them the more wee haue groaned and laboured vnder the burthen of our infirmities and corruptions the more weereioyce when wee a 〈…〉 ed from them and our restoring out of a state of in perfection vnto perfection is much more acceptable then if we 〈◊〉 alwayes beene preserued in it Euen as i● giues vs more contentment hauing beene poore to be made then to bee borne rich to enioy our libertie after thraldome the● if we had neuer beene embondaged and makes vs more thank full to our benefactors when as by them vve haue beene adopted then vvhen vve haue beene borne to a goodly inheritāce And so in the like case we are more thankefull vnto God for freeing vs from our sinfull corruptions by litle and litle then if at the first he had made vs pure and perfect and for giuing vs victory ouer the flesh after a painefull and doubtfull conflict then if vvee had neuer beene assaulted but had alwayes enioyed a secure peace And this vve may see in the example of the Apostle who hauing through the violence of the flesh beene led captiue vnto sinne and thereby forced lamentably to cry out O wretched man that I am who shall deliuer me from the body of Rom. 7. 24. 25. this death doeth presently in the sense of Gods mercy which had deliuered him burst forth into thankful prayses I thanke God through Iesus Christ my Lord. Lastly hereby vve more glorifie God when we are assured by our growth in sanctification and in all sauing graces of the spirit by vvhich vve are inabled to resist the flesh and the lusts thereof that they are the free guifts of God and that hee beginneth continueth and increaseth them in vs vvhich if they vvere alwayes from the beginning perfect in vs vve would thinke them to be some naturall faculties and abilities and not giuen vs of God And these are the reasons vvhich doe chiefely respect the glory of God §. Sect. 3. That this conflict ●● profitable for the faithfull to traine them vp in humility Secondly the Lord suffereth the flesh still to dwell in vs and daily to assault vs because it is profitable for our owne good and the furthering and assuring of our heauenly happinesse First because it is a notable meanes to traine vs vp in humilitie vvhich is a grace most acceptable vnto God and to subdue our pride and all vaine-glorious conceipt vvhich aboue all other vices is most odious and hatefull vvhen as vvee see and consider vvhat a miserable vastation and spoyle of all those graces and excellent endowments which we had by creation sinne hath made in vs how it hath poysoned corrupted and disabled all the powers and faculties of our soules and bodies how it hath made vs vnfit for any good thing and prone vnto all euill and that these staines and blots of sinfull corruption doe in a great part remaine in vs after our regeneration so assaulting vs with all malice and furie darkening our vnderstandings wounding our consciences peruerting our wils hardening our hearts and corrupting and disordering all our affections that were wee not continually assisted and vpheld by the spirituall grace of the Almightie God we should sinke and fall in the conflict and bee made an easie pray to our malitious enemies this may well subdue our loftie and proude conceipts and make vs pull downe with shame our peacockes plumes when as wee looke to the foule feete of our filthy corruptions see the ruines remaining of Gods goodly building and how all our naturall forces doe quite faile vs and forsake vs when as we most relye on them yea when as wee see euen after regeneration such reliques of corruption and rebellion remaining in vs that did not the Lord cōtinually send vnto vs fresh aides of renewed graces we were not able to stand nor maintaine the fight against ou● carnall corruptions In consideration whereof wee are iustly moued to humble our selues and to giue all glory vnto God who worketh in vs the will and the deede and not onely beginneth but continueth and perfecteth the worke of our saluation and finally to acknowledge that what grace or spirituall strength we haue more then others we 1 Cor. ● 7. haue it from God and not from our selues and therefore that wee haue no cause to boast of it seeing it is receiued but must returne God the glory of his owne guifts And thus doth the Lord in his infinite power and wisdome turne euill into good and like the most skilfull Physition
and vntill he apply the vertue of this victory vnto vs and by his powerful spirit which is infinitely stronger then all men and Angels doe vanquish this mighty tyrant giue him a deadly wound of which he continually languisheth and deposing him from his regency doe set vp in our hearts the gracious and glorious kingdome of our blessed Sauiour So that we may conclude this In Iohan. lib. 3. cap. 34. point with the saying of Cyrill The voluptuous lustes of the flesh without doubt are of mightie power by which the mindes of men are wholly diuerted from all honestie and goodnesse § Sect. 2 Of the strength of the flesh being considered in it selfe But least those who are regenerate should contemne this enemy as being weake and impotent because it is in part mortified the strength thereof abated by vertue of Gods spirit dwelling in them let vs in the next place know that though it bee not in them so puissant and powerfull as in those who remaine in their naturall corruption yet it is exceeding strong and mighty whether wee consider it simply in it selfe as it worketh and rebelleth in those who are sanctified or compare it with the spirituall and regenerate part The former is notably set downe by the Apostle in his owne person in the seauenth chapter of the Epistle to the Romanes where he sheweth that this corrupt and sinfull flesh is so farre off from any conformity to the lawe that taking occasion by the commaundement it wrought in him all maner of concupiscence and so abused the lawe which was purposely giuen to restraine him from sinne and to subdue and mortifie his corruptions as a meanes to giue strength life and vigour vnto it Whereby the lawe which was ordained to life became to be vnto death Further shewing vers 8. the power of his fleshly corruption he saith that it tooke occasion by the commaundement to deceiue and slay him working vers 9. death vnto him by that which is good that it ouercame him vers 10. and like a slaue sold him vnder sinne that it made him to doe that which he allowed not to omit the good which he affected and vers 11. commit the euill which he hated that though he were delighted vers 12. in the lawe of God and desired to obey it yet euill was present with bim That though he constantly resolued to serue vers 13. God yet the flesh like a strong rebell making warre against vers 14. him did often foyle and ouercome him and carried him into captiuitie to the lawe of sinne Yea of such force and might did this holy Apostle find the flesh in him that it forced him to crye out wretched man that I am who shall deliuer mee from the body of this death So else where he telleth vs that Gal. 5. 17. the flesh is not so subdued but that it continually maketh warre against the part regenerate and standeth in such strong opposition against it that the godly cannot doe the good they would With whom the Apostle Peter agreeing telleth 1 Pet. 2. 11. vs that the fleshly lustes doe fight against our soules Finally as it hindreth vs often times from yeelding any obedience to the law and enforceth vs to transgresse it so when we doe performe any duties which it requireth it so defileth and staineth them that we haue iust cause to acknowledge with the Prophet that our best righteousnesse is but like a polluted Esa 64. 6. cloath Now this strength of the flesh vnlesse it be wounded subdued and kept vnder by Gods spirit is alwayes in it full vigour yea in daily growth notwithstanding all naturall meanes which can be vsed For the decay of nature it selfe doeth not make it decay but euen in sicknesse it retaineth health and vigour and when through olde age the body is weake and decrepite it continueth firme and strong § Sect 3. That the flesh it mightie being considered comparatiuely with the spirit So also if wee compare it with the spirituall part the flesh is much greater and stronger and therefore would easily ouercome it and quench al Gods graces in vs if God should leaue vs to our selues to be supported and defended by the strength which we haue receiued and not continually send vs new supplies and vphold vs with the power of his owne spirit For the Apostle telleth vs that in this life we haue receiued but first fruits of the spirit which is but an handfull Rom. 8. 23. in comparison of the haruest the whole croppe of grace being reserued till we shall receiue with it the fullnes of glory And in regard that the flesh in quantiiy did so much exceede the spirit he sticketh not to say that the Corinthyans though sanctified in Christ Iesus and called to be saints were carnall and but babes in Christ yea hauing himselfe 1 Cor. 1. 2. chap. 1. 2. receiued such a great measure of grace he notwithstanding in the sight and sence of his great corruption acknowlegeth Rom. 7. 14. that he was carnall and sould vnder sinne Hereof it is that Diuines compare the flesh to the great gyant Goliah and the spirit to little Dauid and not vnfitly for as Dauid was farre vnequall to the mightie Gyant and therefore preuayled not against him by his owne strength but by the power of God assisting him in whose name he came against him so by the same meanes only the spirit getteth victorie ouer the flesh God giuing it strength to ouercome because it fighteth his owne battayles §. Sect. 4. Of the multitude of ●● fleshly lust Finally vnto the strength of our enemie we may adde their multitude for though they be one in name to note that they are all of the like sinfull nature and as one combined in malice to worke our destruction so are they many in number euen whole legions of vnlawfull lusts which continually multiply themselues by begetting a new offspring after the ould are killed and subdued Wherof it is that the apostle Peter willeth vs to abstaine from fleshly lusts which fight against the soule speaking plurally of them as being many euen a whole army which maketh warre against vs. § Sect. 5. That the power of our enemies 〈…〉 vs t● shake of all securitie The consideration wherof should moue vs to shake of all securitie arising from contempt of our enemies and seeing they are so mightie in strength and many in number let vs vse so much the more care dilligence and vigilance to defend our selues against their furie buckling vnto our selues the whole armour of God and vsing all meanes both for the vveakning of our enemies and the nourishing and strengthening of Gods graces in vs. Especially let vs call vpon God the Lord of boasts desiring him by our feruent prayers that he vvill by his spirit abate the power of the flesh the sinfull lusts thereof and re inforce and strengthen the armie of
blocks in his way and often trippeth at his heeles to make him stumble fal though it cannot quench and extinguish his desire to serue and please God yet it much abateth the heate and feruour of his zeale and though it cannot quite crush and sincke him yet it will so shrewdly bowe and buckle him together that hee is ready to complaine with Dauid that he is crooked Psal 38. 6. and bowed downe greatly and therefore goeth mourning all the day long The consideration whereof should moue euery Christian to bee humbled in the sight of his owne frailtie wants and imperfections to deny himselfe and his owne righteousnesse that hee may wholly rest vpon the perfect and al-sufficient righteousnesse and obedience of Iesus Christ for his iust●fication and to ascribe vnto God the whole glory and praise of his saluation For the minde will heart and affections which are the causes and fountaines from which all our workes doe spring being in part regenerate and in part vnregenerate partly spirituall and Esa 64. 6. partly carnall all our workes and actions which proceede and spring from them must needes bee of the like nature 1. Cor 10. 12. Phil. 2. 12. So also it should moue vs to worke out our saluation with feare and trembling and whilest wee stand to take heede of falling seeing we are so full of frailty and are so much weakened vnto all good actions through the malignitie and continuall opposition of our sinnefull flesh This should make vs to keepe a narrowe watch ouer our hearts that they be not hardened through the deceitfulnesse of sinne and to Prou. 4. 24. Heb 3. 13. 32. 13. lift vp the hands which hang downe and the feeble knees and to make straight pathes for our feete least that which is lame be turned out of the way as the Apostle exhorteth It should cause vs to mourne and grone in the sight and sense of our carnall corruption hindering vs in all good actions and leading vs captiue vnto sinne and to cry out with the Apostle wretched man that I am who shall deliuer me from the body of this death Finally it should moue vs to poure forth Rom. 7. 23. daily vnto God most feruent and effectual prayers desiring Pro. 4. 23. Heb. 3. 13. him to annoynt our stiffe limbes with the oyle of his spirit and to enlarge our hearts that we may runne more chearefully and swiftly in the way of his Commaundements to Heb. 12. 13. strengthen vs daily with his might and to send continually into vs fresh aydes of his sanctifying graces whereby wee may be inabled to withstād the cōtinual assaults of the flesh to subdue and mortifie it with the lustes thereof that it may not be able to resist the good motions of his spirit and hinder our Christian course in the way of godlinesse and in his good time wholly to abolish this our enemy and to giue vnto vs a full a finall victory ouer it in Iesus Christ CHAP. VIII Of the subiect of this Conflict betweene the flesh and the spirit § Sect. 1. There can be no conflict in them that are perfectly sanctified THe next point to be considered in this conflict betweene the flesh and the spirit is the subiect of it where and in whom it is fought The which is such persons as are regenerate and the faithfull onely whilest they liue in the world for in them onely is the cause of this conflict which is the cohabitation of these enemies which assault and resist one another Neither can there be any such combate in the glorified Saints because they are perfectly sanctified and haue no reliques of the flesh or sinnefull corruption remaining in them and consequently no enemy to oppose and resist the spirit For whereas it may bee obiected that there was a conflict in our Sauiour who was perfectly holy when being in his agony hee prayed to haue the cup passe from him and then submitted his will to his fathers Not my will but thine be done To this I answere that this Mat. 26. 42. was not the conflict berweene the flesh and the spirit but as the Schoolemen speake betweene two willes in Christ the superiour and the inferiour or the will of reason and the will of sensuality the one being the will of the flesh or naturall appetite and concupiscence the other the will Ioh. 1. 13. of the man or the reasonable creature as the Apostle Iohn seemeth to distinguish them Thus the Disciples hauing long watched by their inferiour will and sensuall appetite desired sleepe But the will of reason should haue ouerruled this and therefore because it did not our Sauiour reproueth them Could you not watch with me one hower So Mat. 26. 42. a man may by his inferiour will desire to eate and drinke and in his superiour will may desire rather to abstaine that it may be conformable to Gods reuealed will requiring that wee should humble our selues by fasting and prayer So when death approacheth a man may in his inferiour will and naturall appetite desire to liue and yet in his reasonable will submit himselfe to Gods good pleasure Yea desire in many respects to be dissolued and to be with Christ And thus our Sauiour being man and in all things like vnto vs sinne onely excepted desired that the cuppe of his passion might passe from him in his inferiour will and naturall appetite which shunneth death and seeketh the preseruation of it selfe but in his reasonable will considering the ende why he came into the world which was by his death to glorifie God in perfecting the worke of our redemption he ouerruled the naturall appetite did wholly submit himselfe to the wil of his father Neither is the sensuall will sinnefull vnlawfull when it is subiected to the reasonable but whē it goeth about of a subiect to become a Soueraigne and to resist and ouerrule that vnto which it should yeeld obedience Euen as it is no fault in a subiect to desire that his owne will in things lawfull or indifferent may be done so that when hearing the contrary pleasure of his Prince he doe not rebell against it but is content willingly to submit himselfe vnto it Or if wee would haue this strife and conflict to be in the same will of Christ wee may say that it was a combate not betweene grace and corruption but betweene diuers desires in the same will which may lawfully be in a man if they be grounded on diuers respects as a man may at the same time lawfully desire to liue that hee may glorifie God or to dye that hee may cease to sinne be glorified by him he may desire to eate for the refreshing of nature and the repelling of the paine of hunger and to fast that he may be fitted the better for some religious exercise And so our Sauiour desired to haue the cuppe passe from him hauing respect to the preseruation of his nature
and at the same time was willing to die that he might yeelde obedience to his fathers will and perfect the worke of our redemption and yet as one saith Vtrobique Christus neutrobique peccatum Christ in both but sinne in neither § Sect. 2. That this conflict is not in the vnregenerate Secondly this conflict is not at all in those who are vnregenerate and vnsanctified for in these one of the combatants which is the spirit is wanting they are wholy ruled by the flesh vnder their chiefe cōmander Sathan whose kingdom is not deuided in the carnall man but he quietly raigneth without any resistance and possesseth all in peace Neither is there in him any power of opposition for he is not onely sicke but starke dead in trespasses and sinnes and Eph. 2. 1. there is not any sparke of spirituall life and grace which is wholly from the spirit according to that of the Apostle to be carnally minded is death but to bee spiritually minded is 2. Cor. 4. 4. Eph. 2. 2. life and peace Sathans throne is set vp in them and hee raigneth not onely like a King but also like a God in the children of vnbeliefe hauing not onely their bodies and outward man but euen their hearts soules their wils and affections at his commaund so as they are neither able nor willing to make any resistance but yeeld vnto him chearful obedience The flesh as Sathans Vice-roy also ruleth in them and they willingly obey it in the lustes thereof It raigneth in their mortall bodies as the Apostle speaketh yea in the most excellent parts of their soules the minde Rom. 6. 12. and vnderstanding for their wisedome is earthly carnall Iam. 3. 15. and diuellish standing in direct emnitie against God being in the flesh they doe only mind the things of the flesh Rom. 8. 7 and therefore the Apostle ioyneth both these together as Eph. 2. 3. being all one fulfilling the desires of the flesh and of the minde And as they are wholly flesh so all their actions are fleshly Ioh. 3. 6. and carnall for as our Sauiour saith that which i● borne of Rom. 7. 5. the flesh is flesh and as the Apostle telleth vs when wee were in the flesh the motions of sinnes which were by the lawe did Rom. 6 17. 19. worke in our members to bring forth fruite vnto death and being the seruants of sinne they yeelded their members as seruants to vncleannesse and to iniquitie vnto iniquitie And therefore in those who are meerely naturall and vnregenerate there can be no such conflict because they are onely flesh and no spirit neither can it rightly be saide as Augustine affirmeth August Contra Iulian pelagian l. 6. cap. 11. Tit. 7. Col. 1136. that the spirit of any man can lust against his flesh vnlesse the spirit of Christ doe dwell in him § Sect. 3. That the conflict that is in the regenerate that which is in the vnregenerate differ much and first in their grounds causes from which they arise Howbeit we are to knowe that there is euen in the carnall man another fight and skirmish which hauing some seeming shewe and similitude of the spirituall conflict is by worldly and ciuill men mistaken for it in which respect it wil not be amisse to distinguish them one from another First then they differ in their ground and cause from which they arise for whereas as hath beene shewed the spirituall conflict ariseth from the grace of regeneration and sanctification whereby the gifts and graces of Gods spirit being infused into all our powers and faculties doe make warre against our carnall corruptions and fleshly lusts the conflict which is in the vnregenerate ariseth from those reliques of Gods image defaced in vs opposing the image of Sathan and our sinnefull corruption For the minde retaineth some small sparkes of the light of nature and certaine common notions which receiue some litle strength and luster from the view and study in the booke of the creatures and yet a larger increase of illumination from the word of God which illighteneth the minde euen of a meere naturall man with speculatiue and litterall knowledge whereby hee is in some sortenabled to discerne betweene good and euill trueth and falsehood right and wrong With which light of the vnderstanding the conscience being directed it retaineth also a power to excuse vs when we doe well and to accuse condemne terrifie and torment vs when we doe euill So the Apostle saith that the Gentiles who had not the lawe did shewe the worke of the lawe Rom. 2 15. written in their hearts their conscience also bearing witnes and their thoughts the meane while accusing or else excusing one another The will likewise retaineth a kinde of freedome not onely about things materially euill but also such as are natural ciuill meerely morall though herein also it be very weake corrupt and defectiue And these reliques are common to all men and in some are much encreased and rise to a farre higher pitch and degree by the common guifts of the spirit and meere ciuill graces which in a farre greater measure are conferred vpon some men then vpon others But there being mingled in all these faculties a sea of corruption with some small droppes of those created reliques ioyned with a world of wickednesse in the inferiour and sensuall faculties of the soule and many of these carnal corruptions being in their speciall kindes contrary one to another although they generally agree in being all sinfull and euill from hence ariseth this warre and discord betweene them like vnto theeues and robbers who all agree together in robbing and spoyling of a true man but fall out among themselues when they come to deuide the prey Thus the vnderstanding by the light of nature or common grace discerning in particular actions what is good to be embraced and what is euil to be shunned informeth the conscience accordingly and leaueth it to it● censure and determination either to approue vs for the doing of good forsaking of euil or to condemne vs for the doing of euill and neglecting of good Vpon which censure sometimes the will is excited and moued to embrace that which the conscience alloweth to refuse that which it condemneth sometime being transported by it owne sinnefull corruption and sometime ouerswayed with the violence of the inferiour will carnall appetite and vnruly passions it harkeneth vnto them and stoppeth the eares to reason and conscience For example the vnderstanding discerning that it is grounded on reason and equirie that we should serue God who created vs doeth continually preserue vs according to that of the Apostle For we are his Eph. 2. 10. workmāship created in Christ Iesus vnto good works which God hath before ordained that we should walke in them propoundeth this to the conscience that by the law of creation we are all bound to serue him the which
of his regeneration fighteth against the flesh the world and the diuel without any pressing by the conscience or inticement and enforcing by the terrours of the lawe denouncing punishment if hee goe not on this Warfare onely out of his loue and obedience towards God and his owns inclination carying him against these enemies as it were by a naturall antipathy and inward contrariety as the fire striueth against the water health against sickenesse or life against death § Sect. 7. The fourth difference is in their contrarie effectes The fourth difference betweene the combate of the spirit and the flesh in the regenerate and betweene the reason and will the conscience and affections in the vnregenerate is in their contrary effects for by the conflict betweene the flesh and the spirit our faith is confirmed in the assurance of our regeneration seeing the spirit of God which is one of the combattants dwelleth in vs of Gods loue and fauour seeing hee hath chosen vs for his souldiars to fight his battailes and of our owne saluation seeing Gods spirit fighting in and for vs we are assured of victory for who can withstand his power or resist his will and of the crowne of victory euerlasting glory promised by trueth it selfe to all those who ouercome But contrariwise from the conflict of cōscience in the vnregenerate where in oftentimes the worser part preuaileth ariseth doubting and incredulity terrours feares and vtter despaire in the apprehension of Gods wrath and those dreadfull punishments which sinne hath deserued Secondly from the combate of the flesh and spirit vnsained repentance is begunne or renewed and encreased in those who are regenerate for there is a change in them principally in their wils hearts and affection whereby in all things they oppose the flesh hating that which it loueth and louing that which it hateth willing what it nilleth and nilling that which it willeth vpon which followeth the purifying of the heart and the purging of it from all sinfull corruptions the hating and forsaking of all sinne and a hearty desire and earnest endeauour to serue the Lord in holinesse and newnes of life and not onely a reformation in part but totall obedience in all our affections and actions in the renouncing of all sin and the embracing of al good duties in the whole course of our liues But there is no such change following the conflict betweene the conscience and affections reason and will onely there may bee some pange of sorrowe and shedding of teares caused not by the loue of God or hatred of sinne but by the apprehension and expectation of deserued punishments There may be also some confession and acknowledgement of sinne whilest they are vpon the racke of conscience and are terrified with the feare and apprehension or pinched with the present sense and smart of punishment and some promise or it may be purposes of leauing and forsaking their wicked courses as wee see in the example of Pharaob who whilest the hand of God was vpon himselfe and his people confessed his sinne and promised amendment And finally they may out of this serude feare leaue the most of their sinnes and outwardly reforme themselues and conforme their practise in many things to Mark 6. 20. such obedience and to the performance of so many good duties that they may thinke themselues and perswade others that they are notable conuerts as we may see in the example of Herod and yet for all this there is in them no sound repentance no change of nature no purging and remouing but onely a temporary restraining of their corruptions wrought in them not by grace and the spirit but by other corruptions of a different nature namely seruile feare and terrour of conscience As hereby it plainely appeareth in that when as they are taken from the racke and secured ●n their conceipt from the feeling of further punishment they returne againe to their wicked courses and become more obdurate and rebellious then they were before or if there is any shewe of some amendment yet it is not a through reformation or a purging of the heart from all the filth of sinne such as followeth the conflict of the spirit and the flesh but a reducing of the vnregenerate man from extreamitie to some medioctitie from being a Publican and notorious sinner to be a Pharisee Hypocrite or at the best a meere ciuill man conformable to the politique lawes in the state and no opposer to outward discipline and order in the Church And this also is the worke of naturall reason which perswadeth them to this information for worldly respects whereas the other is the worke of the spirit which in loue and obedience to God beginneth and continueth this amendment in them the fruite and benefite whereof redoundeth chiefely to the preseruation of humaine societie the good of common wealthes in the maintayning of externall discipline which could not stand against the rage and fury of tumultuous passions and affections were it not that their strength is abated their violence restrained by the conflict of conscience whereas the fruits of the combate betweene the spirit the flesh are much better namely the aduancement of Gods glory by our worshipping seruing him in spirit truth the strengthening increasing of our faith the inward purging and purifying of the heart and conscience from the hidden and secrete corruption of all sinne humiliation in this life and glorification in the life to come for all that thus fight shall surely ouercome and receiue for th●● reward the crown of victory euerlasting blessednes Thirdly the warre betweene the spirit and the flesh causeth vnto vs the most secure peace euen peace with God when as be comming his souldia●s we fight vnder his standard against his and out enemies peace betweene the faculties of our soules when as the inferiour faculties are in quiet subiection to the superiour the affections harkening vnto and obeying the conscrence the will yeelding voluntary obedience to reason as Gods viceroy and all to God as their supreame soueraigne It bringeth also with it vnspeakeable comfort spirituall reioycing and ioy in the holy Ghost because it assureth vs of Gods loue and gracious assistance of a full and finall victory ouer all our enemies and the crowne of victory euerlasting glory but the conflict of conscience in the vnregenerate causeth continuall garboyles hot dissension tyranny in the superiour faculties ruling onely by seruile feare and rebellion in the inferiour when as they haue power to breake the yoke of gouernment horrour and anguish of minde disconsolate sorrow and hellish dispaire when the affrighted conscience beareth sway or the mad and tumultuous ioy of frantique men when the wilde affections and disordred passions by gagging and silencing the conscience doe get the vpper hand the which oftentimes lasting no longer then a blaze of thornes doth leaue behinde it redoubled griefe and desperate despaire Finally the conflict betweene the spirit and the flesh maketh the
That this spirituall conflict is in all the regenerate that are of yeares WEe haue shewed that the conflict betweene the flesh and the spirit is onely in the regenerate and how it differeth from that conflict of conscience which is oftentimes in many of the wicked now let vs consider whether that combate be in all the regenerate Secondly whether it be in all in the same maner and measure Thirdly how wee may knowe whether this conflict be in vs or no. And lastly if it bee when it beginneth and how long this conflict i● to continue Concerning the first we are to knowe that this conflict betweene the flesh and spirit is in all the regenerate who haue receiued spirituall illumination and haue the vse of their reason and vnderstanding being possessed of Gods sanctifying graces not onely in their habites but also in their actes and opperations not in the faculties alone but also in their functions and exercises For as long as these cursed corruptions like the Cananite in the land doe coinhabite with vs they will continually be a● scourges Iosu 23. 13. to our fides and thornes in our eyes and still there will bee warre betweene vs whilest they labour to hold their possession and wee endeauour to roote them out And howsoeuer our chiefe Commaunder may sometime sound a retraite and giue vs some intermissions for the renewing of our forces and recouery of our breath yet vtter dismissions we shall not haue from this warlicke seruice till hauing like our head and Sauiour by death ouercome all our enemies we shall receiue the crowne of victory and for euer triumphantly reioyce in the security of our peace § Sect 2. What wee are to thinke of Infants and Ideotts But whereas I say that this conflict is in all the regenerate who haue the vse of reason and vnderstanding I doe from among them exempt such infants and ideots as want the vse of reason and yet belong to Gods election in whom God worketh for their iustification sanctification and saluation after an extraordinary secrete and wonderfull maner applying Christ vnto them his righteousnesse obedience and the vertue of his death and resurrection by his holy spirit who al-sufficiently supplieth vnto them the defect of all inferiour istruments and meanes and here by purgeth and cleanseth them from the guilt punishment and corruption of all their sinnes Now in these there cannot actually bee this conflict betweene the spirit 〈…〉 flesh because they haue not the actes and operations o● spirituall graces but onely the seedes of them which though they may haue their potentiall inclinations to this conflict yet no present actuall exercise and voluntary imployment of them in this spirituall warrefare Although it may bee thus much may be granted that seeing by their regeneration there is a change in their nature by which they are spiritually renewed in all their powers and faculties there may be in them all an auersenesse in their renewed nature to their olde corruptions as it were by an holy instinct and disposition wrought in them by Gods spirit although there be no discourse of reason or vse of vnderstanding euen as wee see by naturall antipathy fire and water light and darkenesse contending and striuing against one another though they haue no will or reason to stirre them vnto the fight For though as we haue shewed the conflict of conscience ariseth out of logicall disputes and the discourse of reason and vnderstanding and therefore can onely be in them who haue the vse of these yet this combate of the spirit springing from another fountaine euen the change of an nature through spirituall regeneration there may in that sense which I haue shewed euen in children and ideots bee some kinde of conflict betweene the spirit and the flesh the seede of grace and of corruption striuing against one another All which is to be vnderstood not of all infants belonging to Gods Election but onely of those which dye in their infancy who hauing much to bee done for the quicke perfecting of that great worke of their saluation whilest they are going that short passage betweene the wombe and their heauenly inheritance God to manifest his infinite wisedome power and goodnesse doeth thus worke in them after a wonderfull and extraordinary maner And as for these who liue to riper age and vntill they haue the vse of reason and vnderstanding they haue not this conflict in them before their regeneration and conuersion because then onely the spirit and in sanctifying graces doe begin to dwell in them and to make warre against their carnall corruptions § Sect. 3 That this conflict is not in al the regenerate in like manner and measure As touching the second point we are to know that the conflict betweene the spirit and the flesh is not in all the regenerate after the same maner nor in the same measure but diuersly as it pleaseth the Lord to glorifie himselfe in the manifestation of his wisedome goodnesse and omnipotencie either by giuing vnto his seruants a great measure of strength and spirituall grace by which they obtaine an easie victorie wherein the bounty of his goodnes clearely shineth or a lesse and scanter proportion by which notwithstanding they are inabled as certainely though not so speedily to ouercome hereby magnifying the all-sufficiencie of his power which more manifestly appeareth in our 2 Cor. 12. 9. greater weakenesse For according as the measure of our spirituall strength and riches of Gods grace as also of carnall corruption differ in respect of their diuers proportions such is the difference in this Christian combate betweene one faithfull man and another For some receiue but a small measure of spirituall illumination the least degrees of faith confidence loue and other spirituall graces and these through their weakenesse commonly make weake assaults against the flesh and fleshly lusts and as weakely withstand their encounters whereof it commeth to passe that they stand in the battaile with much faintnesse and frailetie and receiue many wounds foyles and fals before they obtaine the victory Though the Lord performing euen to these his gracious promises doth not suffer them to be tempted aboue their power but either assisteth them by his owne might or fitteth them with slight tentations according to their weakenesse Sometimes there is in the regenerate lesse reformation of their corrupt natures by the restraining grace of God and the common gifts of the spirit by reason whereof the flesh is of greater strength and the corruptions thereof are much more malignant raging and violent in all the faculties of their soules especially in their wils passions and affections So that though they haue a great measure of strength and spirituall grace yet they cannot with any ease or in short time get the vpper hand but there is much strugling and wrastling sharpe and fierce assaults on both sides as is betweene mighty enemies equally matched and sometimes the one sometimes the other preuaileth and woundeth
chearefull readinesse to suffer any thing which it pleaseth God to cal him vnto for his sake vntill at last it come to that plerophory and full perswasion of Gods vnchangeable loue and our Election Rom. 8. 38. 39. 1 Ioh. 4. 18. Adoption and Saluation which was in the Apostle Paule who was fully perswaded that nothing in the world was 1. Pet. 1. 8. Rom. 5. 3. able to seperate betweene Gods loue and him And this is accompanied with such peace of conscience as passeth all vnderstanding For when we are assured that wee haue the remission of our sinnes and are quite freed from them both in respect of their guilt and punishment then the terrours and feares which did accompany them are taken away and both Sathan and our owne consciences which did continually accuse vs are put to silence so as they can no longer affright vs nor disturbe our peace From whence springeth spirituall ioy vnspeakeable and glorious whereby we reioyce not onely in the fruition of Gods benefits but also in afflictions and tribulations as the Apostle witnesseth when as we see our selues freed out of the hands of all our spirituall enemies the wrath of God the curse of the lawe death hell and condemnation and now brought into an happy and blessed estate of grace and saluation in and by Iesus Christ and and his benefits apprehended and applied by faith Which effects who so finde thus wrought in them they may be assured that they haue the spirit which is the cause and authour by which they are wrought euen as the light bringeth vs the Sunne the streames to the fountaine and the branches and fruite vnto the roote from which they flow and spring § Sect. 7 The differences betweene a iustifying faith and the faith of presumptuous ciuill worldlings Yea but hypocrites and vnregenerate men doe boast most of their faith and assurance of saluation and therefore they also may haue the spirit or else this faith is no infallible signe of it To which I answere that they haue no true faith but as it were in a dreame and dotage they delude themselues by mistaking their carnall and secure presumption for a liuely and iustifying faith But how shall we discerne the one from the other seeing they seeme to haue oftentimes as strong confidence assurance of their saluation as the best Christians I answere that though there be betweene them some seeming similitude yet there is as great difference as betweene pure gold a rotten post guilded ouer For first true faith is grounded on the Scriptures the word of God but presumption hath no ground but an idle conceipt arising cut of pride and selfe-loue True faith alwayes followeth vnfained humiliation in the sight and sense of our sinne and misery whereas the presumptuous man was neuer humbled but hath a proude conceipt of his owne righteousnesse and worthinesse Faith followeth illumination and knowledge and first we must know God and his Christ before we can truely beleeue in them but presumption riseth commonly out of ignorance and the more destitute the woldly man is of the knowledge of God and his wayes the more bold and confident hee is in his perswasion True faith is ioyned with all other graces as loue zeale of Gods glory humilitie patience and obedience manifesting it selfe by the fruites that it bringeth foorth in good workes But presumption is seuered from them all and goeth alone without any such company and attendants True faith is not discerned before sound conuersion and then it beginneth in some small and weake degrees but presumption is borne and bred with vs and in an instant commeth to its full strength which maketh the secure worldling to bragge that he hath alwayes beleeued and is so strong in faith that he neuer doubted of his saluation True faith is not attained vnto without great difficulty it being no lesse a worke to beleeue the Gospell then to fulfill the Lawe but presumption voluntarily creepeth into our hearts and the lesse paines wee take in the vse of Gods holy ordinances the more easily it entreth and the stronger it waxeth Faith is alwayes assaulted with doubting and the one being a fruite of the spirit the other of the flesh there is a great and continuall conflict betweene them but presumption is bold and confident and he who is possessed of it professeth that hee neuer doubted of his saluation neither feeleth he any conflict in him because he is wholly carnall and corruption warreth not against corruption but onely runneth out of one extreame into another for when the secure worldling being by some meanes awakened out of his lethargy ceaseth to presume then he beginneth to despaire Faith purifieth the heart and worketh by loue and is neuer seuered from vnfained repentance but presumption nourisheth and increaseth all sinfull corruptions and they who most presume are most destitute of all true loue towards God and their neighbours And howsoeuer they leaue some grosse sinnes forworldly respects yet they repent of none there being no charge in their affections but onely in their actions yea in this respect also they nourish many sins in their bosomes which they thinke most sweete and aduantageable and will by no meanes be perswaded to part with them Faith vniteth and applieth Christ vnto the beleeuer for all vses for which God gaue him that is as well for sanctification as for iustification and saluation and applieth the vertue of his precious Rom. 12. 1. blood for the taking and purging away of the pollution and corruption of sinne as well as the guilt and punishment and as it taketh hold of Christ to make him ours so it giueth and offereth our soules and bodies vnto Christ that we may become his and be wholly deuoted and dedicated to his worship and seruice but presumption onely apprehendeth Christ for the remission of sinne and the obtaining of euerlasting life and not for the mortification of sinne by vertue of his death nor spirituall quickening and renewing by power of his resurrection and so also it is onely a receiuer but no giuer it taketh all in shewe which Christ offereth but it will in loue of thankefulnesse returne nothing vnto him againe Faith finding it owne weakenes and the sharpe encounters of doubting and incredulity laboureth earnestly in the vse of all good meanes whereby it may bee more and more encreased and confirmed as hearing the word receiuing the Sacrament reacing prayer meditation and such like but presumption finding no such assaults securely neglecteth all these helpes feeling it selfe then the strongest when it is most destitute of them Finally true faith endureth in the day of fiery tryall and temptation and euen when God seemeth to frowne to withdrawe outward testimonies of his loue and in stead of them sendeth afflictions and crosses then the beleeuer with Abraham hopeth aboue hope and beleeueth against beliefe it Rom. 4. 18. Iob. 13. 15. 19. 25. pearceth through all these cloudes of
spirit as our Sauiour speaketh conuinceth vs of sin shewing vnto vs both the hainousnesse of our sinnes together with their multitude and also the grieuous and endlesse punishments Ioh. 16. 8. which they haue deserued And this it doth commonly at the first in a more generall and confused maner amazing and astonishing vs with terrours and feares horrours of minde and panges of conscience when as wee see the huge masse or mountaine of our manifold and grieuous sinnes as it were in the whole lumpe and the wrath of God the curse of the Law the plagues and punishments of this life and the life to come which we haue by them deseruedly and in respect of our owne meanes ineuitably drawne vpon vs and afterwards more particularly and distinctly it setteth our sinnes in order before vs and especially presenteth to our viewe those sinnes which wee are most guiltie off and by which wee haue most dishonoured God and wounded our owne consciences By all which it worketh in vs that which we call penitence contrition and humiliation whereby we are cast downe vnder the heauie waight of our sinnes and lye grieuing and groning vnder them as it were vnder an intollerable burthē finding no rest or comfort in our selues or in any worldly things besides And thus the spirit by the law as it were with an yron hammer battereth and bruiseth our hard and stony hearts in pieces that he may mixe with them beeing made contrite Ier. 4. 3. the oyle of his spirituall graces and vseth it like a plow to breake vp as it were these clunge stiffe and fallow grounds that being thus prepared he may sow in them these holy seedes For when hee hath thus cast vs downe and throughly humbled vs then he raiseth vs vp againe by reuealing vnto vs the mysterie of saluation the mercies of God and merits of Christ offered vnto all who will receiue them by saith And then as hath beene shewed it worketh in vs an hungring desire after Christ and his righteousnesse and a carefull earnest and constant endeauour in the vse of all good meanes as the hearing of the word prayer and the rest whereby wee may be made partakers of them The which by his inward and secret operation he so blesseth and sanctifieth vnto vs that they become effectuall to worke in vs a liuely faith whereby wee lay hold vpon Christ and his benefits and so are assured of the mercie of God and the remission and pardon of all our sinnes of Gods grace in this life and eternall glory in the life to come § Sect. 3 That faith is the cause and foundation of our repentance And thus being possessed by faith of all these inestimable benefits our hearts are rauished with the apprehension of the infinite loue of God and our Sauiour Christ and inflamed with vnsained loue towards them againe which faith thus working by loue doth cause a change and alteration which is called repentance beginning in the minde and heart and so proceeding to the outward parts and actions and worketh in vs a godly sorrow because by our sinnes we haue so much offended and displeased so gracious a God and good a father a true hatred of those sinnes and corruptions which wee haue either formerly committed or which yet adhere and cleaue vnto vs and a settled resolution and constant purpose to mortifie and subdue leaue and forsake them for the time to come and to serue the Lord in holinesse and newnesse of life All which wee doe not out of seruile feare but out of child-like loue and affection which maketh vs willing and desirous by our new obedience to please and glorifie our heauenly father not for feare of condemnation but because through the mercies of God and merits of Christ we are assured that we shall neuer be condemned Where by the way we may note a notable difference betweene that sorrow for sinne which the spirit worketh in the regenerate and that which is in carnall men For though these may sorrow and grieue after they haue sinned yet it is not for sinne it selfe the remembrance whereof is pleasant vnto them but for the punishments which they either presently feele or feare and expect in time to come where as the sorrow of Gods children is a floud or streame that springeth from faith and loue making vs to bewaile our sinnes because we haue offended and dishonoured so good a God who hath freed vs from the guilt and punishment of them by giuing his onely Sonne to death as the price of our redemption § Sect 4. That the spirit dwelling in vs purgeth vs from our naturall corruptions So that if the Spirit of God dwell in vs then hath it wrought in vs this worke of repentance in all the parts thereof and hath made in vs an happy and blessed change from euill to good from sinne to holinesse and from corruption to grace For as in nature corruption goeth before generation the abolishing of the old forme before the bringing in of the new so before wee can bee spiritually renewed the old man must bee killed and crucified and then the new man will bee quickned and reuiued sinne and corruption is purged away and then holinesse and righteousnesse is wrought in vs. First then in effecting this worke of repentance the Spirit of God dwelling in vs purgeth and purifyeth vs from all our sinfull corruptions in all the parts of our soules and bodies by applying vnto vs the efficacie and power of Christ Iesus his death which mortifith and crucifieth them in vs so as they doe no longer raigne in our mortall bodies as in time past As for example it causeth the scales of ignorance to fall from the eyes of our minde it freeth in some measure our iudgements from errour our imaginations from vanitie our consciences from dead workes our hearts from hardnesse our wils from peruersenesse and rebellion our affections from corruption and disorder and all the members of our bodies from the seruitude of sinne All which are the proper and peculiar workes of the spirit and the fruits of our regeneration and n●w birth according to that of the Apostle Whosoeuer is borne of God doth not commit sin for his seede remaineth in him and he cannot sinne because he is 1 Ioh. 3. 9. borne of God § Sect 6. That the spirit is knowne to be in vs by his quickning of vs in the inner man Yea but in the regenerate also there may seeme to bee some mortification some mourning for sinne some leauing and forsaking of it As we see in Herod who heard Iohn the Baptist gladly and did many things according to his instructions In Simon Magus who for a time left his forcerie beleeued and was baptized In Ahab who humbled himselfe before God wearing sackcloth and going mournfully In Iudas Demas Ananias and Sapphira with many such like and how then may we discerne the one from the other I answere that though there be some seeming
first this sobernesse of minde maketh vs contented with that measure of earthly blessings which wee enioy as being that portion which God hath allotted vnto vs and not so much as to desire any more but when the Lord offereth it vnto vs by honest and lawfull meanes Contrarie wherevnto are the desires and indeauours of worldly men who when they haue little murmure and repine against Gods prouidence and are ready vpon all occasions to vse vnlawfull meanes for the bettering of their earthly estate and when they haue much and more then enough are not contented and satisfied with their aboundance but still abour after more carking and caring as though they were in want and biting at euery baite which promiseth gaine although the hooke of sinne be hid vnder it Secondly from contentation springeth thankefulnesse whereby we ascribe all wee haue receiued vnto God as being his gifts and hauing nothing else to returne doe render vnto him praise and thanksgiuing Whereas contrariwise those who are wicked and vnregenerate howsoeuer they reioyce in the fruit o● of his temporall benefits yet not in him for they doe not giue vnto him the glory of his owne gifts but rather glory in themselues and sacrifice as the Prophet speaketh vnto their Hab. 1. 16. owne nets and kisse their hands as though by their owne wisedome and prouidence industry and painefull indeauours they had made themselues owners of al these things whereby they are moued to an high and proud conceipt of their excellencie and sufficiencie and in comparison of themselue● to contemne all others So in the second place this sobrietie of minde appeareth in the right vse of spirituall graces For the spirituall man looking vpon them as the gifts of God and beholding them as the first fruits of the spirit which are not perfect but only begun and seeing the many faylings defects wants and weakenesses which are in them and the strong corruptions which are mixed with them he resteth not contented and satisfied with the portion which he hath receiued but like a new borne babe hungreth and thirsteth after the sincere milke of the word that 1 Pet. 2. 1. 2. he may grow vp thereby and still inlargeth his desires and striueth indeauoureth in the vse of al good meanes wherby hee may attaine vnto more and more perfection in the meane time waiting vpon the Lord with faith and hope meekenes and patience for his blessing vpon these meanes whereby they may become effectuall and profitable for the ends for which they vse them As we see in Dauid who expected and waited for the Lord more then they who watch for Psal 130. 6. the mourning and as the eyes of seruants looke to the hands of their maisters and of the maiden vnto the hand of her mistresse Psal 123. 2. so his eyes waited vpon the Lord his God vntill hee had mercie vpon him But yet the faithfull doe not so looke after more increase of spirituall graces as that they forget to bee thankefull vnto God for that measure which they haue alreadie receiued but considering that they are no naturall endowments but Gods free and gracious gifts which of meere loue he hath granted vnto them without any their deserts denying them to many others which are by nature as good as they this maketh them not onely for the present to inioy the graces they haue receiued with contentation and much comfort and spirituall reioycing but also to leade and magnifie Gods mercie and goodnes towards them and to render vnto him all thankes and praise for his gracious gifts CHAP. XIII Of the euent and successe of the fight betweene the Flesh and the Spirit § Sect. 1 Of the foyles which the spirit receyueth in this conflict THE last thing to be considered in this conflict betweene the spirit and the flesh is the euent and successe of the fight betweene them which is two-fold the first whereof is the repuses and foyles which the spirit receiueth and suffereth through the malice and furie of the flesh the second is the victory and triumph of the spirit ouer it the first being temporarie and lasting onely for a time the other permanent and euerlasting Concerning the former the spirit is often foyled in this combat when as by the subtiltie or violence of the flesh it is hindred in the course of godlinesse and allured or forcibly drawne to the committing of sinne Of which the Apostle complaineth I see saith he another law in my members warring against the law of my minde and bringing me into captiuitie to the law of Rom 7. 21. 22. sinne which is in my members And againe I finde then a law that when I would doe good euill is present with me The which happeneth either through the weakenesse of the spirit or want of watchfulnesse and spiritual care to keep the whole armour of God fast buckled vnto vs. Of which foyles there follow two notable effects the first is vnfained and bitter griefe and sorrow for our slips and fals the other an earnest and feruent desire to rise againe to be deliuered from the bondage of the flesh and hauing regained the victory to subdue and keepe it vnder for the time to come Of the former we haue an example in the Church which finding her failings and fals into sinne pittifully complaineth and cryeth out vnto God for helpe O Lord why hast thou made vs to erre from thy wayes And hardened our heart from thy feare Returne for thy seruants sake the tribes of thine inheritance Esa 63. 17 Wherein we may obserue an apparant difference betweene the fals of the faithfull and the vnregenerate For whereas these being fallen willingly doe liue and lye in their sinnes with pleasure and delight The godly beeing surprized at vnawares or being ouercome through their frailetie and weakenesse and the violence of tentation doe mourne and grieue for their sinne and labour to rise out of it by vnfained repentance and whereas they yeeld vnto it voluntary and cheerefull obedience as vnto their lawfull King and soueraigne the other being held vnder a forcible and tyrannicall subiection doe bewayle their thraldome and are neuer at rest till they haue found out some meanes to be deliuered out of it § Sect. 2. That from the foyles of the spirit arise earnest desires to be freed from the slauerie of sinne Rom. 7. 24. And from hence arise vehement and earnest desires to be freed from the slauery of sinne like that of the holy Apostles O wretched man that I am who shall deliuer me from the body of this death And to serue the Lord in the duties of holinesse and righteousnesse For as the needle in the dyall which is touched with a loadstone may by a forcible motion turne wind too and fro but wil neuer stand fixed and stedfast till it bend vnto it owne proper point so the heart of the regenerate touched with Gods holy spirit howsoeuer through the violence of
flesh but onely in regard of their actions and operations which for a time through the strength and violence of corruption may bee hindred intermitted yea in outward appearance wholly annihilated and abolished But wee must take heede that wee doe not ascribe the permanency and growth of these sauing graces to any propertie or excellency which they haue in themselues as though they were able in their owne vertue and strength to withstand all temptations and to continue and increase in their perfection For if Adam in the state of innocency could not thus stand in the strength of his graces which were farre more perfect and excellent then any meere man euer since the fall attained vnto then how much lesse can we whose graces are Math. 12. 20. 17. 20. mingled with imperfections and stained with corruptions especially the weakest of Gods children whose faith is like the smoking flax and bruised reede which in their owne nature are soone quenched and easily broken or like the graine of mustard-seede which is as our Sauiour speaketh the least of all other but yet euen of their first and smallest seedes of graces it may bee as truely saide as of the strongest that they are not no not in respect of their degree abated and impaired for then being already the least degree if they should fall from that they should come to nothing but that in the middest of the temptations of Sathan and their owne flesh they still growe from one degree to another vnto a perfect age in Christ euen as the little infant thriueth as certainly in the naturall growth notwithstanding his weakenesse and all outward lets and impediments to childhood and youth as the youth doeth to ripe and perfect age But this our standing and thriuing in the state of sauing graces is to be ascribed to the power and promises of God to our vnion with Christ from whom wee receiue liuely sap and iuice by which we are nourished in all grace and goodnesse and to the continuall and gracious assistance of our good God who strengtheneth and supporteth vs against all the power of hell § Sect 11. An obiection against the former doctrin answered But some will say that this doctrine is lyable to much abuse seeing many will take occasion hereby to become presumptuous and secure because being as they suppose indued with these graces which are essentiall to a Christian they shall neuer loose them no not so much as in some degrees but euen when they sinne their graces are in the spirituall growth vnto perfection To which I answere that so is the doctrine of iustification through Gods free grace by faith yea of Gods mercy redemption by Christ and all the promises of the Gospell For where as the Apostle taught that where sinne abounded grace abounded much more Rom. 3. 7. 8. 6. 1. Rom. 1. 16. 2 Cor. 2. 16. some were ready to say Let vs sin thē that grace may abound and when with best caution we deliuer the truth wee shall finde that that which to some will be the strong power of God to saluation will bee to others a stumbling blocke of offence to others foolishnesse and that the same Word of God wil be as to the elect the sauour of life vnto life so to the wicked and reprobate the sauour of death to their deeper condemnation But it is not possible that any sound Christian who is indued with these graces in truth should thus abuse that which hath beene said to securitie and presumption for though the spirit of God fighting in them against the flesh cannot be ouercome yet may it be shrewdly shaken and foyled in the conflict though wee cannot loose these fundamentall vertues neither in whole nor in part yet through our negligence vnworthinesse and corruption they may bee suspended by God from their functions and operations and all their sweet fruits and effects the peace of conscience assurance of Gods loue and ioy in the holy Ghost may bee taken from them which is their chiefe comfort and the very life of their life without which it is but a continuall torment and painefull agony of bitter death they may loose the sense and feeling of all these graces themselues and be brought into such an apolepticall fit that no life of grace will appeare in them either to themselues or others In which estate there can be to them nothing but horrour and vexation of spirit and out of which they cannot recouer but with great difficultie and appearance of danger For before they can purchase their former peace they must passe through the painefull purgatorie of bitter repentance shed from their eyes many a salt and brinish teare if not from their hearts drops of bloud they must send forth many a deepe sigh and bitter grone haue outwardly leane bodies and pale visages and inwardly afflicted mindes and many a pinch and pange in their wounded conscience and the longer that they lye securely snorting in their sinnes without bringing forth the timely fruit of repentance the liker it is to be the Hedgehogs birth which the longer it is deferred the more dangerous and painefull it alwaies proueth For if we be presumptuous children the Lord like a wise father will make vs drinke so deepe of the cup of his wrath and feele the waight of his heauy hand that after we haue tasted of this bitter potion we will euer after be more carefull of preseruing our health that wee may not be forced againe to take such physick and hauing felt his strength we will neuer willingly neglect any meanes of maintaining Esa 27 5. peace with him as the Prophet speaketh Which who so well 1 Cor. 10. 12. Phil. 2. 13. considereth he will worke out his saluation with feare and trembling and whilest he thinketh that hee standeth hee will take heede of falling Hee will giue kinde entertainment to the good spirit of God auoiding all things which might vexe and grieue it he will earnestly vse all meanes whereby the graces thereof may be increased and diligently auoide the contrarie meanes whereby they might bee weakened and impaired hee will keepe a narrow watch ouer all his waies and buckle close vnto him the whole Christian armour whereby he may be able to stand in the day of tentation he will labour and striue with all diligence to make his calling and election sure and couragiously resist all the encounters of his spirituall enemies and knowing that he standeth more firmely in the power of Gods promises then in his owne strength hee will oftentimes lay claime and challenge to them by feruent prayer crying out with Dauid O Lord remember the promise made to thy seruant wherein thou hast caused me to trust Psal 419. 49. § Sect. 12. Of the assured victorie which the spirit obtaineth ouer the flesh in this conflict The second thing to bee considered in the successe of this conflict is the assured victorie which the Spirit alwaies obtaineth ouer
calleth the body of death and by chastizing whipping whereas the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifyeth to suppresse or keepe vnder And although hee granteth that the Apostle heere vseth a borrowed speech from those who according to ancient custome fought for a maistery and saith that he did euill intreate and keepe vnder his body like those champions who either with their sistes or with bags of sand did beate and bruise their aduersarie till they were blacke and blewe yet he saith and onely saith it without any shewe of reason that it is very probable that Paul vsed to whip his owne body both because the Greeke word signifieth so much which is vtterly false and because this kind of punishment was vsuall among the ancients which also wee must take vpon his word seeing he neither alleadgeth nor in trueth is able to alleadge any authoritie for it His other arguments to commend whipping and afflicting of the body are the Publicans smiting of his breast whereby hee shewed the compunction of his heart in his humiliation and penitent confession of his sinnes some testimonies of Hierome which speake of fasting sackcloath and beating of the breast Gods approouing and commaunding the paying of voluntary vowes the which he childishly restraineth Numb 30. to fastings and other afflictions of the body and among the rest to whipping though there be no collour for it in the place which he alledgeth And finally he produceth the example of Iohn the Baptist whose garment was Cammels hayre his meate locusts his bed as he saith but proueth not the ground his house the desart All which reasons and examples being farre vnfitting the wit of such a subtill sophister and in trueth nothing to the purpose I will passe ouer supposing that the bare repeating of them is a sufficient confutation and that like abortiue birthes they will presently dye as soone as they come to light § Sect. 3. That the papistes in their purest doctrine vnderstand by the flesh our bodies the inferiour sensitiue faculties only And thus doe they as it were in their dreame or dotage by the flesh vnderstand the body alone but when they are most awake and in the best strength of their memory and vnderstanding they doe by the flesh vnderstand the inferiour parts of the soule the sensitiue faculties the appetite and imagination as they are corrupted which also according to the doctrine of the last councell of Trent they hold not to be sinne but onely the punishment of it though the Apostle maketh the flesh not onely to be the cause of all other sinne but also with a certaine emphasis calleth it sinne it Rom. 7. 17. selfe So on the other side by the spirit they vnderstand the superior part of the soule the reason vnderstanding and wil which they magnifie and extoll as though it were free in it selfe from al corruption the cause of all good a professed enemy to the flesh fighting against it continually with all the lusts thereof And thus Thomas Aquinas saith that the flesh is said to fight against the spirit in as much as the sensitiue appetite Aquin in Rom. 7. lect 3. tendeth to the contrary of that which reason desireth according to that of the Apostle Gal. 5. the flesh lusteth against the spirit So Lewis de Granada saith that there are in our soule two principall parts which of Diuines are called the superiour and inferiour parts And that in the superiour L. Gren●t de perfect amo●is Dei cap. 7. which is called the spirit and the minde is the will and vnderstanding which ruleth the will and is as it were it eye and guide In the inferiour is the sensitiue appetite with the imagination which also is the eye of the appetite of which it is moued and these parts he maketh to be as it were two common wealthes in man the one of beastes the other of Dulcis precator lib. 1. par 2. Cap. 19. Angels That he calleth else where the flesh concupiscence sensualitie or the sensitiue appetite whence all the perturbations of the minde doe arise as it is corrupt and made inordinate through sinne And in the same place hee compareth the superiour part to a wife of so great beautie nobilitie and wisedome as is possibly incident to that sex making the man happy who is married vnto her and the inferiour part he compareth to a seruant a witch and sorceresse vpon whose loue this man is so besotted that putting away his wife hee maketh himselfe a pray to his slaue c. §. Sect. 4. That the practise of popish mortification plainely sheweth that by the flesh they vnderstand the body onely their mortification being nothing else but a bodily exercise And this is their purest conceit concerning the flesh and the spirit which being wholly corrupt how great is the corruption For in their practise they manifestly shewe that by the flesh they vnderstand the body seeing for the mortification thereof they appoint onely bodily exercises which tend to the vexing tormenting and weakening thereof as penance pilgrimages watchings whippings rough cloathing hard lodging and such like supposing that they fight against the flesh when they make warre against their owne bodies by afflicting and punishing it Wherein that I may not seeme to slaunder them I will insert an history of Memor lib. 2 in tract de satisfact Cap. 1. monkish mortification as it is recorded by their famous S. Clematus in his Booke called the Ladder of Paradise and in the fifth staffe of his ladder Which story for the worthinesse of it is related by Lewis of Granada in his Booke intitled the memoriall of a Christian life as a perfect patterne of mortification and is most vnfaithfully translated into english by one Hopkins a Priest for the practise and exercise of the english Catholickes And not to alter his methode though most confused because it is well enough sorted and suited to the matter nor to tire the reader with viewing ouer euery particular in that heape of trash briefely he telleth vs that himselfe comming into a much admired monastery he saw among the Monkes in their practise of penitence such wonderfull things as the eye of the negligent hath not seene the eare of the slothfull hath not heard neither hath entred into the heart of the dull and sluggish To wit such things and wordes as might ouercome with violence even God himselfe and such fashions and endeauours as would speedily encline him to shewe mercy For saith he I sawe some of the penitents stand abroad in the open ayre watching there whole nights vntill the morning neuer mouing their feete out of the same place and when they were grieuously vexed with drowsinesse comming vpon them they offered force to nature and would not take any rest but reuiled themselues and with disgraces and contumelies offered against their owne persons they rowsed vp their spirits Others I sawe standing in prayer and hauing their handes bound
behind their backes like malefactors they inclined their pale faces towards the ground crying out that they were vnworthy to looke vnto heauen Neither did they presume in their orizons to say any thing to Almightie God by reason of the fearefull doubting of their thoughts and consciences but onely offered their silent soules and their mute mindes vnto God being full of darkenesse and desperation I saw others sitting on the pauement couered with sack-cloth and ashes which hid their faces betweene their knees beating their foreheads against the earth Others I saw who in respect of their habite cogitations and actions seemed out of their wits whose mindes were so stupified with excessiue sorrowing that they stood like copper images compassed about with darkenesse and made insensible as it were for all vitall actions Others humbly desired of God to be heere vexed and tormented that there they might haue mercy and many afflicted and cast downe through a burthened conscience saide that it should well satisfie them to bee freed from hell torments though they should neuer attaine vnto the ioyes of Gods kingdome and that it was sufficient if they were freed from Gods great and terrible commination and those vnknown hidden and hellish paines neither durst they desire to be deliuered from punishments altogether In others I sawe Dauids words effected indeed men possessed with sorrows made crooked to the ende of their liues going mournfully all their dayes and casting out noy some smels out of the putrified parts of their bodies who liued without all care of their flesh forgot to eate their bread mingling their drinke with groanes and their bread with ashes There you might see their burned tongues like wearied dogs hanging out of their mouthes Some among them tormented themselues in the scorching heate of the Sunne others contrariwise afflicted themselues with extreame cold Some tasting a little water that they might not be parched with thirst so contented themselues without drinking more others eating a small bit of bread would cast away the rest affirming that they were vnworthy to feed on the meat which belonged to reasonable men because they had caried themselues vnreasonably like vnto beastes Some amongst them excited others saying let vs runne brethren and not obey this filthy and wicked flesh but let vs kill it as it hath first killed vs. And thus saith hee these blessed penitents behaued themselues Their knees with their continuall praying were growne hard their eyes fayling and ouerwearied were sunke deepe into their heads the haire of their browes and eyelids being fallen away and lost their cheekes seemed burnt with the heate of their scalding teares their faces so withered pale and deformed that they differed not from dead men Their breastes were made sore with their blowes and being blacke and blew with bruises they did spit blood what vse had they of any bed what cared they for cleane and whole cloathing All there were torne filthy and full of lice And in a word what is their affliction who are possessed with a Diuell in comparison of these what the bitter vexation of those who mourne for their departed friends what their sorrow who liue in banishment what the punishments of cruell parricides surely the paines and torments which all these vnwillingly suffer are nothing beeing compared with their voluntary penance And not content with punishments inflicted by themselues they would intreat their great iudge and gouernor of their Monastery who was a very Angell amongst men that hee would put irons and chaines about their neckes and hands and fasten their feete in the stockes not suffering them to come out till they were to bee buried Ye● indeede they would not so much as haue any buriall Neither will I hide their wonderfull charitie towards God and the penitence of these blessed men For beeing to dye and to become citizens of that heauenly Citie they would with earnest prayers adiure their Abbot that he● would not vouchsafe them humaine buriall but like brute creatures cast them either into the riuers or into the open fields to be deuoured of beasts which sometimes hee also did being ouercome with their importunate requests But what was the qualitie of their place and habitation Surely it was very darke vnhandsome stinking foule and filthy so as it might fitly be called a prison for condemned persons and the very sight thereof might well be a mistresse of perfect paenitence and mourning Yea they were not contented with those torments which could be inflicted by men but as hee further saith they desired of God with many grones and great lamentation that they might be taken away by the Diuell or fall into some grieuous diseases or loose their eyes and so become a miserable spectacle vnto all men that so by these present paines they might escape future punishments Now if wee would know the fruit of all their labours and what inward peace and security they had by these outward torments and vexation this also in that worthy Story is made knowne vnto vs namely that as they passed their dolefull dayes in these selfe-deuised tortures and torments of body so at the day of death they were no lesse vexed with terrors of conscience affrighting feares and dreadfull doubtings as in truth what other can be expected from them who by their superstitious deuises haue robbed God of the glory of his free grace in our saluation derogated from the all-sufficiencie of Christ Iesus our alone Sauiour his merits and obedience and in a great part arrogated the praise of the remission of their sinnes and attaining vnto euerlasting life to their owne penance and satisfactions §. Sect. 5. That the Popish Doctors are iustly to be taxed for teaching the former doctrine and the superstitious people for putting it in practise Now by this which hath been saide it appeareth what the Church of Rome and her adherents conceiue and hold concerning the flesh in respect both of their doctrine and their practise Wherein they are iustly to bee taxed first of vntruth and falsehood in that they doe herein teach grosse errours which are directly contrary to the whole course of Scriptures as it shall God willing afterwards plainely appeare Secondly of damnable pride and that first in this respect that they afflict and torture their bodies by their voluntary penance for meere ostentation to be seene and praised of men for else to what ende serue their going barefoote on their pilgrimages and their whipping of themselues in the open streetes of all which their torments if any pittying them more then they doe themselues would haue them c●sed and freed the best way were to follow the aduice of Plato who seeing men take compassion on the proude Cynick Deogenes because he voluntarily stood in a great storme of raine told them that the onely way to rid him out of that misery was to withdraw themselues and to let none remaine to looke vpon him for there would surely but fewe bee caried about in this pageant of penance
soule and not to the bodie It is called the euill which encloseth vs namely all the whole man body and soule and finally it is called the law of sinne and law of death and lawes are giuen by the chiefe commaunder and supreame soueraigne which as all confesse is not the body but the soule and herein the reason and vnderstanding Secondly the actions Reason 2 which are attributed to the flesh doe proue this for it is said to couet desire or lust Gal. 5. 17. which is an act of the soule and not of the body and therefore Chrysostome Gal. 5. 17 Non hic carnē apellat corpus alioquin quomodo concupiscit quandoquidem concupiscentia non ca●n● est sed animae Chrysost in Gal. 5. concludeth that the Apostle meaneth not the body but the soule for otherwise saith he how can the flesh be said to lust seeing lusting belongeth not to the body but the soule for the bodie is to be reckoned among those things which are moued and not which moue as being not ●ragent but a patient Thirdly the sinnes which are attributed to the flesh shew plainely that wee are thereby to vnderstand the corruption of the soule as well as of the body So the Apostle reckoning vp Reason 3 diuers fruits of the flesh nameth not onely Adultery vncleannesse Cal. 5. 9. 20. murthers drunkennesse and such like But also Idolatrie Witchcraft Heresie which are the sinnes of soule and minde and not properly and immediately of the body And this Austine obserued Who knoweth not saith he that Idol-seruice emnitie contention aemulation stomaching August de ciuit Dei lib. 14 cap. 2. dissension heresie enuy are rather the vices of the mind then of the flesh seeing it may be that for idolatrie or some errour of heresie a man may abstaine from the pleasures of the flesh Where further it is to bee noted that these workes of the flesh are not onely in the wicked and vnregenerate but also in the godly and sanctified in respect of their flesh or part vnregenerate for of such the Apostle speaketh seeing they onely are exercised in the spirituall conflict and they and none but they haue the spirit in them lusting against the flesh §. Sect. 4. Reason 4. Original corruption hath ouerspread the whole man body and soule Fourthly the corruption of originall sinne which in the man regenerate is all one with the flesh hath ouerspread not the body alone but also the whole man body soule for the image of God was thereby defaced which principally consisted in wisdome originall righteousnes and holines and these were cheifely and immeadiately seated not in the body but in the soule and in this regard the whole man the soule as well as the body needed to be washed in the blood of Christ and in the lauer of regeneration because all his powers and parts were defiled and corrupted The which will better appeare if wee consider of some particulars For in the minde and vnderstanding are seated as in their proper place the sinnes of ignorance not onely in the vnregenerate according to that of the Apostle the naturall 1 Cor. 2. 14. man perceiueth not the things which are of the Spirit of God for they are foolishnesse vnto him neither can bee know them because they are spiritually discerued but also the reliques therof remaine in the regenerate for we know but in part and we see but as through a glasse darkely in which regard Christ telleth 1 Cor. 13 38. Peter that flesh and bloud had not reuealed vnto him that our Sauiour was the Sonne of God meaning by flesh and bloud humaine reason and vnderstanding And vnto this we may adde the sinnes of infidelity and doubting errours and heresies In the conscience also there is stupiditie and terrours whereby it is either asleepe and obserueth not our actions to approue that which is good and to accuse vs for euill or being awakened doth with horrible fury pursue and terrifie vs admitting of no pacification In the cogitation and imagination vanity and much wickednesse according to that Gen. 6. 5. Where it is said that God saw that Gen. 6. 5. 2 Cor. 3. 5. euery imagination of the thoughts of mans heart were onely euill continually Finally in the will remaineth much auersnesse to good and pronenesse to euill great rebellion and stubbornnesse against God whereby we resist his holy Ier. 17. 10. wil. in respect wherof the Prophet saith that the heart of man is wicked aboue all things and the Apostle telleth vs that in our wils there is no inclination vnto any thing which is good vnlesse God first worketh it in vs. By all which it appeareth that by the flesh we are to vnderstand the corruption Philip. 2. 12. Bernard de Aduentu domini Serm. 5. of soule body according to that of Bernard As saith he the old Adam was spread ouer the whole man and professed him wholly so now let Christ haue all who hath created all and redeemed all and will also glorifie all §. Sect. 5. Reason 5. Because the Body and spirit are not enemies but louing friends Fiftly the Flesh and the Spirit are as the Apostle telleth vs contrarie one to the other and like mortall enemies in hostile manner they fight together seeking one anothers ruine and destruction but such emnitie is not betweene the soule Gal. 5. 17. and body for then they would seeke one anothers ouerthrow whereas contrariwise they mutually loue and cherish the one the other and are much grieued when they must part asunder so the Apostle telleth vs that no man Eph. 5. 28. 29. euer yet hated his owne flesh but nourisheth it and cherisheth it euen as the Lord the Church and in this regard hee willeth the husband to loue his wife as his owne body And this argument Chrysostome vseth Whereas saith hee the Apostle telleth vs that the flesh lusteth against the spirit he speaketh of a Chrysost in Gal. 5. twofold knowledge whereof the one is contrary to the other to wit not the soule and body but vertue and maliciousnesse for if they should be so opposed they would destroy one another as water fire and light darknesse c. Now whereas the opposition and fight is not betweene the body and the soule but the flesh and the Spirit hereof it will clearely follow that wee are not by flesh to vnderstand the substance of the body but the quality of corruption in soule and body for these enemies are of like nature and therefore as by the spirit we vnderstand not the substance or essence of the holy spirit but a created qualitie of holinesse and righteousnesse in the whole man so contrariwise wee are by the flesh to vnderstand not our bodily substance but the sinfull quality of corruption which hath defiled soule and body § Sect. 6. The sixt reason taken from the wordes of the Apostle Rom. 7. 18. Sixtly the Apostle saith that in him
or but very lightly For the defeating of which deceipt let vs know that the least sinne that is in it owne nature offendeth the infinite Maiesty of God prouoketh his fierce wrath subiecteth vs to the curse of the Law and maketh Gal 3. 19 vs liable to eternall death and condemnation For the guilt of sinne is to be measured not onely by the act but also by the obiect and therefore seeing the obiect is the infinite Maiestie of God who is offended by the least sinne ●t becommeth after a sort of infinite guile and so delerueth infinite punishment The which answerably should bee inflicted vpon him who least offendeth if Christ by bearing his small as well as his great sinnes in his body vpon the crosse had not freed him from it And therefore let vs thinke no sinne small which prouoketh God vnto anger and offendeth his infinite Maiestie let vs thinke no sinne in it owne nature sleight and veniall which plungeth a man into euerlasting death condemnation and which can no otherwise bee purged away and pardoned but by the precious bloud of Iesus Christ Secondly let vs know that there are no sinnes small vnto them who thinke them so for sinne is not to be measured so much by the matter and act of it as by the forme and maliciousnesse of it in which respect willing entertainment giuen to any finne maketh it to become wilfull and presuming that we may liue in it because it is but a little one maketh it to be a sinne of presumption and so exceeding great and worthy of the greatest punishment as wee see in the example of him who would needs gather stickes on the Sabbath because he presumed that this was a small and tolerable breach of Leuit. 24. 10. Gods commaundement To this purpose tendeth the speech of our Sauiour that hee who neglecteth and breaketh the least of Gods commandements and teacheth men so he shall be the least that is none at all in the kingdome of heauen Ma● 5. 19. Thirdly euen our least sinnes if God should let vs feele the weight of them would be an intolerable burthen and so sting our conscience that we should neuer rest as the experience of many afflicted in minde doth plainely manifest and therefore let vs thinke no sinne light which with the weight thereof if it should lye vpon vs would crush and presse vs into hell Fourthly let vs know that there is no lesse danger in small sins then in those which are great and hainous first because as these exceed them in their qualitie or quantitie so they exceede these in number as being common and ordinarie Now as the ship will bee sunke as well by many small holes if they be not stopped as at a great leake and may be ouerburthened and perish as well by a multitude o● small pibbles as by a few milstones so may our soules sinke and perish if they bee surcharged with a multitude of lesser sinnes as well as with haynous sinnes being rarely committed Secondly because small sinnes are commonly accompanied with impenitency securitie and hardnes of hart and men not regarding them doe like and liue in them without desire of amendment whereas those which are haynous making deepe wounds and gashes in the heart and conscience doe cause men to be more sensible of them and more earnest in looking after the core as we may see in the example of the Pharises and publicans now our other sinnes though neuer so damnable yet will not condemne vs if they be not ioyned with impenitencie and contrariwise the most veniall sinne wil proue vnpardonable if we liue and dye in it without repentance Whereof it is that our Sauiour telleth the Pharises that Publicanes and sinners should goe to heauen before them For as small sparkes of fire lighting in combustible matter wil if they be not quenched burne a whole Citie and contrariwise a great flame doth little hurt if it be speedily put out so if the least sparkes of sinne bee nourished with the oyle o● securitie it will proue dangerous and damnable whereas though it be a great flame of wickednes it will not doe that hurt if wee soone extinguish and quench it with the teares of repentance Lastly let vs know that the allurements which the flesh vseth to make vs liue in small sinnes without repentance are vaine and friuolous For if wee doe not desire and indeauour to be Saints on earth we shall neuer become Saints in heauen if we doe not labour to shake off dayly our imperfections and to grow vnto more perfection in this life wee shall neuer attaine vnto it in the life to come if we doe not seeke to be pure in heart we shall neuer be blessed in the vision of God If we be not precise and conscionable in flying Mat. 5. 8. the least sinnes we shall surely become secure and presumptuons Moreouer let vs remember that the least sins are not fraileties and infirmities if we liue in them securely and wilfully as contrariwise the greatest may deserue this name if we commit them suddenly and rise out of them speedily Euen as a man may be said to fall through weakenesse and infirmitie into a deepe gulfe when as slipping at vnawares he vseth all his indeauour to recouer himselfe and on the other side it is not weakenesse but wilfulnesse if he fall but into a shallow ditch if hee will not labour to get out againe but lyeth grouelling in the water vntill he be drowned Let vs know that though in many things wee sinne all yet they who belong to God doe not make a trade of wilfull sinning and being sometime ouertaken they are not at rest till they haue risen again by vnfained repentance and though there be none so iust who sinneth not yet all who will be saued must be so iust as not to suffer it to raigne in them And finally that though the best of the Saints Patriarches and Apostles had their infirmities yet none of them could euer be found that nourished defended and continued in them wittingly and willingly after their iudgements haue beene rightly informed and their consciences conuinced And therefore the examples of their slips will not countenance our wilfull sinnes no not our least infirmities yea rather it will make vs the more vnexcusable if seeing them fall as it were before vs we doe not looke the better to our footing § Sect 3. The third pollicie to tell vs that if we commit lesser sins they will preserue vs from greater Thirdly the flesh dealeth most deceiptfully with vs whilest it perswadeth and inticeth vs to entertaine some smaller and lesser sinnes promising that it will rest contented with them and craue no more and so these lesser sinnes shall serue as preseruatiues to keepe vs from those which are great and hainous and these small allowances being giuen to these sauadge beasts our sensuall and vnruly lusts shall keepe them in quiet which if they be too much restrained
time present For whilest it is called to day and Psal 95. 7. 2 Cor. 6 2. the Lord calleth vpon vs to performe holy duties it is the acceptable time and day of saluation which being once past will neuer returne againe That those duties which are first in excellency should be first also in time and that no wise man putteth off matters of greatest waight but giueth them prioritie and precedencie both in respect of time and place Let vs remember that our liues are short and momentanie and that it were but all too little though they should be wholly spent in Gods seruice and that this short time is so vncertaine that we haue no assurance of liuing another day or houre in regard whereof it is great madnesse to put off those duties for the doing whereof we chiefely came into the world and vpon the performance of them our saluation dependeth and to prefer before them trifles which for the present are of small value and will not profit vs any whit at the day of death and iudgement That we cannot by our owne naturall strength doe any good dutie but as we are assisted by Gods Spirit and that if we from day to day quench the good motions therof and will not open when he knocketh so hard and often at the dore of our hearts we shall moue him to depart from vs leaue vs to our impenitencie securitie and hardnes of heart Finally let vs know that if it be now troublesome and tedious to performe holy duties and vertuous actions how much more will it be so when our vices are growne habituall and by long custome are turned into another nature Furthermore whereas the flesh pretendeth many occasions of present distraction and multitude of businesse and telleth vs that we may more conueniently performe Christian duties and betake our selues to a godly life when these troubles are a little ouer as for example that we may better serue God when as we haue setled our worldly estate and are freed from distractions which for want hereof doe now disturbe vs when we haue gotten such a summe of money such a farme or Lordship attained to such honour and preferment or haue had the fruition of this or that pleasure vpon which we haue set our hearts let vs know that all these are but friuolous excuses like vnto theirs who being inuited to the marriage supper of the Kings Sonne Mat. 22. refused to come which will in no case be accepted of God as sufficient when he calleth vs to account seeing they only discouer our doting loue on worldly vanities and our vtter neglect of spirituall and heauenly things Let vs consider that it is a great indignitie to consecrate vnto the world our chiefe strength and prime seruice and to destinate vnto God the after leauings of which also we are vncertaine whether we shall performe them or no that it is great folly and want of iudgement to prouide first temporarie necessaries yea superfluities for our bodies and leane to a second vncertaine care the eternall saluation of our soules That we haue no assurance to liue till we haue attained earthly things and afterwards to prouide for heauenly and therefore if we thinke heauen better then earth and those euerlasting ioyes better then these momentany trifles it were our wisedome to preferre and seeke them in the first place seeing we cannot be assured of them both and leauing of which Martha to be incumbred with worldly businesse to choose with Mary the better part For though many things might be conuenient and worth Luk. 10 41. our seeking if we had a lease of life and leysure inough to looke after them yet this one thing is necessary that by fearing and seruing the Lord which was the maine end for which we came into the world we may glorifie him and so gather assurance of our owne saluation § Sect. 4. The fourth policie of the flesh in mouing vs to rest in faire promises and faint purposes Fourthly when a● the flesh cannot intice to vse meere dela es and doe iust nothing then it will perswade vs to rest in that which is as good as nothing namely fayre promises and faint and false purposes and resolutions that we will become new men out of hand Especially if we haue our desire in some things which we presently hope for as deliuerance from some affliction freedome from some danger or recouery from some sicknes But when we haue gone thus farre there it maketh vs to stay by offering vnto vs if we will continue in our old courses some accesse of worldly wealth or the fruition of sinfull pleasures and hauing preuailed so much with vs it stayeth not here but maketh vs soone after more carnall and wicked more slothfull and negligent in the performance of all good duties then euer we were before With which deceipt if we would not be ouertaken let vs know that it were better not to promise at all then hauing promised not to performe and pay for what is this to mocke God who will not be mocked What is it but to dally and to play childes play with him seeking to please him with complementall promises and fayre words That the Lord is not pleased by our making vowes and promises if wee doe not also pay them seeing we doe hereby but multiply our sinnes adding to our former euill courses couenant-breaking and falsifying of our promises euen with God himselfe Finally that we doe but quench the good motions of the Spirit when as we doe not nourish and cherish those good purposes and resolutions which he suggesteth vnto vs but suffer our selues to be carried away by the contrary motions of our sinfull corruption And therefore the Psalmist biddeth vs vow and pay vnto the Lord our God the which the Prophet Esay maketh a note of the Psal 76. 11. Pro. 20. 25. Esa 19. 21. faithfull and the contrary by the wise man is said to be a property of a foole When saith he thou vowest a vow vnto God deferre not to pay it for hee hath no pleasure in fooles Eccl. 5. 4. pay that which thou hast vowed § Sect. 5. The fift policy is to withdraw vs from more excellent duties by occasion of doing of some lesser good But if it cannot by all the former deuises and deceipts perswade vs to neglect such duties as are truely good then will it by the occasion of doing some lesser good withdraw vs from that which is greater and more excellent in which regard that good which is of a meane and inferiour nature becommeth vnto vs euill because it is abused by our flesh to shoulder and thrust out that which is of greater worth and waight And thus it perswadeth men to reade the Scriptures at home on the Lords day and in the meane time to neglect the publique assemblies the ministerie of the word and Prayer with the congregation yea sometime to pray priuately in the Church or to
reade some good booke that so they may neglect to ioyne with the rest of Gods people with vnanimitie and vniformitie in the publique seruice of God thus it moueth men to prefer the outward rest of the Sabbath before the workes of necessitie or mercy which God requireth as speciall parts of the sanctification of it as helping the distressed visiting the sicke indeauouring to preuent some great and emminent daunger either to our neighbours or our selues the which was the sinne of the hypocriticall Pharises which our Sauiour so sharpely reprehendeth teaching them and vs that the Lord preferred mercy before sacrifice and such was Martha Mat. 9. 13. her sinne in neglecting Christs Sermon the foode of her soule that she might minister vnto him foode for his body For the preuenting of which deceipt we must labour to haue our iudgements rightly informed out of Gods word Luke 10. ●0 not onely in the knowledge of that which is good and to be embraced of vs but also in what degree of goodnesse euery Christian duty is that euery thing in due order may be esteemed chosen and practised by vs the highest degrees before the meane and the meane before that which is inferiour vnto it The duties which we owe vnto God in the same ranke and degree before those which wee owe to our neighbour the ende dutie and seruice it selfe before the meanes whereby we are enabled thereunto As for example the obedience and seasonable practise of the things we knowe before hearing and reading which are the meanes of knowledge when as of necessitie the one must giue place to the other And the loue and true seruice of God before the loue which we owe to our neighbours when as they will not stand to geather And finally honest recreations which are the meanes whereby we may be the better Dut. 13. 1. 2. fitted for the workes of our callings must giue places vnto duties them selues which they inable vs vnto § Sect 6. The sixt policie is to moue vs to performe good duties vnseasonably Like vnto this is an other deceipt of the flesh whereby it moueth vs to doe that good which wee resolue to doe vnseasonably and to our great hinderance in our course of godlines as when to distract vs in prayer it putteth into our mindes good meditations and profitable instructions which we haue formerly heard and learned or to hinder vs from hearing the word it causeth vs to thinke of some dutie or worke of mercy which is not pertinent to the present purpose or to keepe vs from sanctifying the Sabbaoth and consecrating it wholly as an holy rest vnto God it moueth vs to thinke vpon the duties of our particular callings and of prouiding for our children and familes Now the meanes to frustrate this pollicy is wisely to discerne it and to obserue and set a watch ouer our hearts that they may seriously and onely intend the well performing of those duties about which we are employed that so wee may doe them with all our might for as the prouerbe is hee that huntetb after two hares at once shall catch neither and as nature intendeth not many things at once so neither doeth grace because the vertue and powers either of body or minde being distracted by diuers obiects doe like the riuer diuided into many streames but weakely performe their functions and operations and being vnited are much more strong and actiue And not vnlike to the former is that other deceipt wherby it moueth vs to neglect the doing of some present good vpon the pretence of doing some other and greater good afterwards whereby it not onely defeateth our present good purpose but commonly doth also wirhdraw vs from doing that future good for the performance whereof the other was neglected And thus when wee are purposed to pray vnto God it perswadeth vs to delayes vnder this colour that we may afterwards performe this duty more effectually when wee are not so dull and heauy so troubled with distractions nor so assaulted with temptations And thus generally it diswadeth vs from performing any seruice vnto God pretending that wee may haue afterwards better meanes and fitter opportunitie and so may doe it in such manner as may bee more acceptable vnto God And thus also it moueth vs to neglect the workes of mercy all our life long pretending that we may doe them much more amply and liberally by our last will which taketh not effect till after death For the defeating of which pollicy let vs knowe that we cannot performe seruice vnto God till hee calleth and enableth vs by his spirit thereunto and that we are called when the Lord offers meanes and opportunitie which if we neglect we knowe not whether hee will afterwards honour vs so much as to appoint vs to these holy seruices which we haue carelesly causlesly omitted Let vs remember that the time present is ours therfore at our pleasure to be vsed for al good purposes but the time to come is out of our reach and we knowe not whether we shall catch hold of it yea or no. That it is better to doe a certaine good though not so great and excellent then to neglect it in hope of doing that which is vncertaine though in it owne nature more eminent and commendable Finally consider that if we vse well the time present for doing God that seruice which we are able he will with the inlarging of our desires inlarge also our meanes and opportunity of doing greater good in the time to come CHAP. XVII Of he pollicies which the flesh vseth to inturrupt vs in the doing of good duties and to alienate our hearts from them § Sect. 1. How the flesh interroseth when we are exercised in doing good duties ANd thus the flesh hindereth vs from the performance of all good duties In the performance of them it dealeth also no lesse deceiptfully and that either to inturrupt and distract vs that wee may doe them onely formally and to no purpose or else so to corrupt and poyson our best graces and most vertuous actions that they may become vnprofitable yea hurtfull vnto vs. For the former when we endeauour to seeke the Lord in his holy ordinances and set our selues to performe the pious duties of his seruice if it cannot by the former deceipts wholly hinder vs from doing of them it will like Dauids false friend accompany vs to the house of God as though it likewise were delighted in these holy exercises but to no other ende but that it may frustrate and defeate our holy desires For when we labour to heare Gods word to call vpon his name or singe his praises this sinne that hangeth on vs and presseth vs downe doeth either make vs dull and drowsie lumpish and heauy so that we cannot attend these holy exercises with any chearefulnesse and alacritie of spirit but offer vnto God dead and carrion-like sacrifices which hauing no heart nor life in them are loathsome vnto
I haue finished my course I haue kept the faith henceforth is laide vp for mee a crowne of righteousnesse 2 Tim. 4. 8. § Sect. 9. T●●● conflict is suitable for the time and place wherein wee liue Lastly as it is profitable that these reliques of sin should remaine in vs and also sutable and seasonable to the time and place wherein we liue For it is appointed by God that we should not in this life attaine vnto perfection but that we should onely labour after it and attaine vnto it in the life to come that we should whilest we be heere be in our nonage and come to our perfect age in Christ and our heauenly inheritance after wee are dissolued and bee with Christ This world is appointed for our painfull pilgrimage wherein we must toyle and trauell indure many miseries and be indaungered to the malice and furious assaults of our spirituall enemies and it is not seasonable to expect our rest and ioyes vntill we be ariued saufe in our owne countrey Finally it is appoynted of God to the place of our warrfare and therefore we must not looke to haue our enemies quite expelled or vanquished but here wee must fight dayly and approue our faith and Christian valure to our cheif soueraigne and then afterwardes when by death we haue gotten a full and finall conquest we shall be crowned with the crowne of victory Finally it is not Gods pleasure that wee should in this life attaine to our full stature and perfect measure of sanctification and holinesse but that wee should bee still growing from one measure of grace to another and by peecemeale consume the body of sinne which hindreth our growth vntill by death it be sully abolished CHAP. III. Of the formall and essentiall causes of this conflict § Sect. 1. That there was no conflict in man in the time of innocencie WEe haue shewed the chiefe efficient causes of this conflict let vs now consider of those causes which are formall and essentiall and because contraries are best illustrated by their contraries as heate by colde darknes by light and the miseries of a daungerous warre by the blessings and benefits of an happy peace let vs consider that wee may reduce this discourse ab ouo euen the first principles and grounds how that there was a time when this conflict and ciuil broyles were not to be found in the little world of man The which was two-fold the one was that truely golden age in which man created according to Gods own image liued in the state of innocency when as there was a blessed peace and heauenly harmony betweene the body and soule and all the faculties powers and parts of them both For the vnderstanding being inlightened from God with heauenly wisedome did both knowe and obserue the lawe of nature written in the heart the which serued as a iust rule whereby it was directed in the knowledge of good and euill trueth and falsehood right and wrong Wherein the iudgement being throughly informed the minde gaue vnto the will true euidence and information concerning all things presented vnto it the which it readily receiued cheerefully embracing what it approued and refusing and auoyding what it disalowed The affections also quietly and ioyfully obeyed reason as their Lord and Soueraigne like souldiars following their Captaine and as blinde men doe their guides and the body was both a fit and ready instrument vnto the soule for the executing of all good designes and in all things like a faithfull seruant was ready at commaund And thus whilest the vnderstanding and reason placed as Gods vice-ioy in vs obeyed him as the supreame Soueraigne the will was also ruled by reason and the affections with all the parts of the body were subiect vnto them both and all conspiring and agreeing together made a sweete harmony and like louing and wel-agreeing subiects in a well ruled common-wealth they all stood firme in their vnited forces § Sect 2. How the causes and occasions of this conflict were begun in vs. But when Sathan the arch-enemy of mankinde and chiefe authour of all discord and dissention saw and seeing enuied our happy estate and condition hee plotted all meanes whereby he might worke our ruine And perceiuing that though our estate were strong yet it was mutable wee being left of God to our owne free will either to stand or fall to retaine the good or to choose the euill he mustreth together all his forces and layeth siedge to this wel-walled and strong manred Citie against which hee could no more preuaile then the Grecians at the siedge of Troy by powerfull violence and fierce assault till with his Sinon-like or rather serpentine subtilties he had perswaded vs vnder shewe of loue and peace to put of our armour of created graces and to pull downe with our owne hands the walles of our defence And then seeing vs thus weakened and disarmed and yet lying in the drunken and drowsie sleepe of retchlesse securitie he entreth in vpon vs accompanied with a crewe of hellish souldiars the first and chiefe whereof were disobedience vnbeliefe in God and credulitie to the Diuell damnable pride enuie discontent aspiring ambition and vnthankefulnesse All which being let in by that breach which our free will abusing it libertie had made in our soules presently they all fell to burning sacking and spoyling vs of all Gods rich graces our created wisedome and holinesse and surprised all our strong holds making themselues conquerours of all our powers and parts and euery one of this hellish crewe and sinnefull vices chusing for their dwelling and possession those places and parts which they thought most fitting for them As for example ignorance errour curiositie and many thousands of sinfull vices choosing for their dwelling and possession those places and parts which they thought most fitting for them As for example ignorance errour curiosity and many thousands of sinnefull imaginations like the Iebuzites surprize and keepe the chiefe tower of the minde worldlinesse and prophanesse subdue and hold reason in subiection peruersnesse and rebellion surprize the will but in the heart there are encamped as it were in the chiefe market place of the citie such a multitude of our hellish enemies as cannot either be named or numbred euen many legions of vnlawfull lustes infidelitie wicked hopes hellish dispaire hatred of God loue of the world pride disobedience deceipt cruelty ambition couetousnesse voluptuousnesse with the rest All which with innumerable others of this hellish army being entred did not vtterly race downe this goodly built Citie but onely killing and casting out Gods graces which were the naturall inhabitants they kept their holds and places for their owne vse and dwelling Neither were the substance of the soule or body or the essentials the powers parts and faculties of them lost annihilated or vtterly destroyed by the fall of our first parents although their energy and vertue was greatly impaired their edge blunted and vigour deaded but onely
those excellent qualities and rich ornaments of heauenly wisedome holinesse and righteousnesse wherewith they were beautified after Gods owne image were quite taken away The which being as it were the strong garrison which kept the Citie were no sooner expelled but the sinnefull lusts triumphing in their victory held all vnder their subiection to the diuels vse as their chiefe Soueraigne § Sect. 3. No conflict betweene the Flesh and the Spirit in the state of corruption Now there was not in eitheir of these estates this combate and conflict in vs betweene the flesh and the spirit whereof we intreate not in the state of innocency for then was there in vs a sweete harmony and consent betweene all our powers and parts of soule and body and there being no sinfull lust or vnruly passion in vs but a great multitude of well-agreeing graces wee enioyed a blessed peace Nor in the state of corruption was there any such conflict because the strong man Sathan possessing all all that hee possessed was in peace onely as it happeneth often among soldiars of the same band who striue one with another about the booty and prey there was some contention betweene the will and the conscience and betweene one vnruly passion and another but it was onely like those hot contentions betweene the Iesuits and the Priests who much disagreeing about profit and soueraigntie one with another yet all agreed and ioyned together as one man like true vassals to doe all seruice to their Lord God the Pope yea as it may probably be suspected euen their quarrels and contentions were part of his seruice and in their disagreeing they yeelded obedience to their holy father for so in like manner in the hottest contention betweene our sinnefull lusts they yeelded their obedience to the diuell as their chiefe soueraigne who if he sawe by this strife any disaduantage arising to his hellish kingdome through this hot contention was both able and ready to accord their differences as the Pope did those betweene the Priests and Iesuites and so to ioyne them together like friends in doing him seruice §. Sect. 4. The peace of the vnregenerate more pernicious then the most daungerous warre But this hellish peace was ten thousand times more dangerous pernitious to our poore soules and bodies then the most cruell and perillous war to the weakest enemy and so much the rather because we had no apprehensiō of the danger nor feeling of our own misery Because we were borne the bondslaues of the diuell and so still brought vp in doing him seruice in the vnfruitfull workes of darkenesse for which wee had onely the present pay of worldly vanities though when wee had laboured most in his toylesome workes we were oftentimes cozened of our wages Herein like vnto the Israelits vnder the Egyptian Pharaoh who when they were best vsed had but their onions garlicke and flesh pottes wherby onely they were but better enabled to doe their drudgery and worke in their bricke-kils and somtime in stead of these poore comforts they had for all their labour sore beatings and cruell blowes and yet being bred in this seruitude and knowing no better they rather chuse to returne vnto it againe then to take any paines in going to the land of promise So and much worse was our miserable bondage to the Pharaoh of hell for at the best we had for all our drudgery but the stincking garlicke and onyons of worldly vanitie which he gaue not for loue to vs but in loue to himselfe giuing vs this food as the rider giueth prouender to his horse that wee might bee the more hartened to doe him seruice And out of his hellish hatred and cruelty towards vs he often withheld from those who did him most faithfull seruice this pay of earthly prosperitie and in stead thereof afflicted and misused them with the blowes and stripes of misery and afflictioon Neuerthelesse being borne and inured to this hellish thraldome such was the height of our misery wee desired still to liue and dye in it taking our whole delight and placing our chiefe happinesse in pleasing our tyrannicall maister by seruing him in the workes of darkenesse and doing all abhominable wickednesse although wee were sure after that wee had beene toyled in his seruice and scorched in his bricke-killes we should for the accomplishment of our reward be cast into the fire of hell § Sect 5. Gods infinite loue in sending his only soone to redeeme vs made wa● for this spirituall conflict But when we were in this desperate condition and now come to this height of misery that we desired still to liue in it and like the Israelits with Moses would haue beene angry with any who should haue offered vnto vs meanes of deliuerance because not onely our other parts and faculties but also our willes and hearts our loue and liking with all other our affections were enthralled in this seruice and voluntarily leauing their Lord and creatour wholly adhaered to Sathan and delighted to doe his will euen then our gracious God infinite in all mercy and goodnesse of his meere grace and free good will sent his onely sonne into world to redeeme vs with his precious death to vanquish and subdue all the enemies of our saluation and to set vs at liberty who were embondaged and were so in loue with our thraldome that wee did not so much as desire to bee freed from it Who hauing thus paide the price of our redemption and prouided a soueraigne salue for all our sores of sinne doeth not so leaue vs for then wee should haue ben neuer the better but applyeth the power and efficacy of his merits vnto vs and as it were with his owne hand ●ayeth the plaister vpon our mortall wounds whilest by his word made effectuall by his spirit he maketh knowne vnto vs this excellent worke of our redemption and the promises of grace and saluation made to all beleeuing and repentant sinners by which he begetteth this faith in vs wherewith as with an hand we lay hold on and apply vnto vs his righteousnesse death and obedience for our iustification and redemption and so in respect of right we are freed from our sinnes so as they cannot condemne vs because God in Christ hath forgiuen them and also from the tyranny and thraldome of Sathan death hell and condemnation Rom. 8. 1. 3● so as they shal be neuer able to hurt vs or lay any thing to our charge And not resting here our powerfull Sauiour sendeth his spirit with many legions of his graces into our hearts who pul vs out of the dominion of sinne and Sathan so as they cannot rule and raigne in vs as in times past regenerate and purifie vs from the filth and corruption of sin by power of the same death which deliuered vs from the guilt and punishment due vnto it and enable vs to serue God in newnesse of life by applying likewise vnto vs the vertue of his
Christ the faithfull are sure to obtaine the victory yet not all at once for there are two principall degrees of it the first in this life in which this conquest ouer the flesh is but inch cure and begunne the carnall lusts thereof not being wholly abolished but onely in part and in some degrees mortified to which purpose one saith that these vnlawfull motions of the flesh can not be taken from vs as long as wee carry this body of flesh about Grego in 1 Reg lib. 5. Cap. 11. vs the violence onely of mouing may be abated Neither can we wholly hinder it but that the law of the flesh will moue the members but yet we may take from the flesh the violence of it motion By reason whereof the conflict betweene these enemies continueth because these cursed Cananites are not quite rooted out but remaine still in the land not onely in our first conuersion when as wee are but babes in Christ but euen throughout the whole course of our liues But still for the most part the end and issue of it is the victorie of the spirit ouer the flesh although it bee obtained with many foyles in the fight And how soeuer the spirituall man may haue such mists of ignorance cast before the eyes that he sometime erreth though he may be sometimes allured with the baytes of worldly vanities to turne aside out of the right path sometimes may be thrust out of it through afflictions and the violence of tentations yet his generall course whereof he hath resolued and wherein he hath constantly set himselfe is the great Kings highway of holinesse and righteousnesse out of which if at any time hee hath erred he returneth into it againe and trauelleth in it with more then wonted diligence whereof it is that the Apostle maketh it a signe of these who are in Christ Iesus that they walke not after the flesh but after the spirit whereby Rom. 8 1. is meant that whatsoeuer their particular slips or errors may be yet it is an infallible marke of a sound Christian that hee generally and for the most part constantly holdeth on in his Christian course of holinesse and righteousnesse notwithstanding all the encounters of his spirituall enemies and the manifold blockes which they cast in the way § Sect. 15 Of the second degree of victorie at the hower of death But yet whilest wee continue in this life the victory is neither gotten nor held without a conflict wherein the spirit is often foyled and so thrust on with a kinde of violence into sinfull courses and interrupted and hindered in it holy indeauours that the spirituall man is forced to complaine often with the Apostle that he omitteth the good he would and doth the euill which hee would not and that there is a law in his members warring against the law of his minds and bringing him into captiuitie to the law of sinne But Rom. 7. 19. 23. in the end of this life we shall obtaine a full and perfect victory ouer the flesh and the lusts thereof which shall not onely be mortified and kept from raigning but also wholly abolished and rooted out so as it shall haue no residence or being in vs for then we shal triumph ouer all our enemies and so trample them vnder feete that they shall neuer bee able to rise againe and disturbe our peace and then there shall be no place or time for fighting but for receiuing the crowne of victory and the enioying of euerlasting peace and with it glory immortalitie and endlesse happinesse in Gods kingdome According to that of the Apostle I haue 1 Tim. 4 8. fought a good fight I haue finished my course I haue kept the faith henceforth is laid vp for mee a crowne of righteousnes which the Lord the righteous iudge shall giue mee at that day And the promise of our Sauiour To him that ouercommeth will I grant to sit with me in my throne euen as I also Apoc. 3. 21. ouercame and am set downe with my Father in his Throne CHAP. XIIII Of the reasons which may encourage vs to this conflict against the flesh The first reason because it is the will of God that we should fight against it AND thus haue we shewed both the nature of this enemy the flesh and of the conflict betweene it and the spirit now wee are to speake of the meanes whereby we may obtaine the victory in this combate vnto which there are two things required First a due preparation to the fight and secondly a wise and valourous cariage and behauiour in the conflict it selfe Vnto the former also two things are required First a serious consideration of those reasons and arguments which may put courage into vs make vs resolute valourous in assaulting this enemy Secondly a right vse of certaine meanes whereby we may be enabled to ouercome The reasons which may incourage vs to set vpon this enemy are many first because it is the will of our graund Captaine the Lord of Hosts that wee should encounter this enemy vnto which he doth no lesse often and earnestly presse vs to yeelde our obedience by his expresse commandements then that we should make daily warre against the world and the diuell As first that we should depose it from the thorne of regency let not sin raign in your mortal body that you should obey it in the lusts Rom. 6. 12. thereof That we should giue it no satisfaction or contente walke in the spirit and yee shall not fulfill the lust of the flesh Yea rather that we should vtterly renounce it for the grace Gal. 5. 16 of God which bringeth saluation teacheth vs that wee should deny these worldly lustes and that wee should liue soberly and Tit. 2. 11. 22 righteously and godly in this present world So the Apostle Eph. 4. 22. from God requireth that we should put of concerning the former conuersation the olde man which is corrupt according Col. 3. 5. to the deceitfull lusts yea that we should mortifie these earthly members and doe our best not onely to subdue them but to put them to death yea to a shamefull death crucifying the flesh with the affections and lusts as the Apostle speaketh Gal. 5. 2● The which commaundement hath a grieuous comination and gratious promise annexed whereby we are prouoked and encouraged to yeelde our obedience vnto them namely that if we liue after the flesh we shall dye but if through the spirit we doe mortifie the deedes of this body of sinne wee shall liue That is either dye temporally and eternally or liue the life of grace heere and of glory in the life to come Rom. 8. 13. § Sect. 2. The second reason is the necessitie of this conflict Pro. 29. 21. Secondly let the necessity of this fight animate and encourage vs to enter into it seeing we can haue no peace or truce with our sinnefull flesh but vpon
most woefull and miserable conditions if wee doe not fight against it it will fight against and ouercome vs if we delicately bring vp this slaue from his youth hee will not onely be as a son but as a tyrannous Lord and maister at the length if wee hold it not strictly vnder in base subiection it will leade vs captiue vnto sinne and inthrall both our soules and bodies in most wretched bondage so that much better it were for vs to be miserable Galley-slaues to the merciles Turkes then to be held in this cruell bondage although a generous and noble death were much to bee preferred to either of them Better it were with the Prodigall sonne to become swineheards and feede filthy hogges then to become seruants and slaues to these sensuall and more filthy lustes which make vs to take delight in nothing but in wallowing in the myre and sinke of sinne Now how vnworthy is it our beeing and breeding that wee who were by our creation the sonnes and children of the glorious creatour of heauen and earth should by yeelding our selues to our carnall and sinful lusts become slaues to such cruel tyrants who will make vs imploy our bodies minds which were created for the seruice of the great God in the miserable Maior sum et ad maiora genitus quam vt mancipium sim mei corporis Seneca bondage of sinne and Sathan The heathen man could say that hee was more noble and borne to more excellent ends then that he should become a slaue to his owne body and should not we who far exceede him in spirituall nobilitie as hauing God for our father and Iesus Cbrist for our elder brother fight rather in this warfare vnto blood and death then to become captiues thrals to a far worse master euen the body of sin and death which dwelleth in our members But as the flesh is hatefull for it base and carnall tyranny so is it in respect of the pollution and filthinesse thereof most odious and loathsome for there is no filthy sincke no stincking carrion to be compared vnto it Now which of vs as one saith especially ennobled by birth and liberally Bernard lib. de dilig Deum brought vp that being clothed with loathsome ragges spawled on with filthy spittle and in most beastly maner defiled with noysome excrements and filth that would not exceedingly loath and abhorre them hastily strippe them off and with indignation cast them away And therefore he who findeth not his garment but himselfe within vnder his garment to bee such an one it becommeth him to grieue so much the more and to be astonished in his mind because he beareth and is faine to carry about with him that which being much more neare is also much more loathsome abhominable § Sect. 3. The 3 reason taken from ●●e manifold euills which a●c●●ent vnto vs by the flesh Thirdly let the manifold euils which are done vnto vs by the flesh make vs to vndertake this combate against this malitious and pestilent enemy with all courage and resolution For it is more mischieuous vnto vs then the diuell himselfe who as hath beene shewed could neuer hurt vs if we were not first betrayed by this inbred enemy Yea it is worse then hell and damnation as being the cause of them both and without it hell were no hell neither could condemnation fosten vpon vs vnlesse wee walked after these carnall lustes It is the roote of all sinne and the wel-head and fountaine of all other wickednesse from which idolatry blasphemy murther adultry and all impietie and vnrighteousnesse growe and spring Consequently it is such an enemy as maketh God himselfe our enemy exposing vs to the hot flames of his fiery wrath and would innumerable times cast vs headlong into the euerlasting torments of hell fire if the infinite mercies of God did not stay vs in the way It is the prouoker and inticer to all wickednesse and all the outrages and horrible crimes which are committed in the world may challenge the flesh as their chiefe cause and authour From it came Caines murther Lots incest Dauids adultry the malice of the Iewes and Priestes which moued them to slander apprehend accuse condemne whip crowne with thornes and crucifie the Lord of life It was it that pearced our Sauiours hands and feete that thrust the speare into his side that made him to bee in that agony and perplexity in the garden and vpon the crosse and which moueth men daily to crucifie him afresh and to trample his precious blood vnder their filthy feete as though it were an vnholy thing and can wee finde in our hearts to haue any peace or truce with such a malitious enemy to our blessed Sauiour And shall wee not rather with implacable anger and constant resolution assault persue wound and kill it which offred all these indignities to our dearest Lord Moreouer as it is the cause of all sinne so also of all punishment in this life of all our miseries of sicknesse and diseases of the body trouble of conscience and terrours of minde of pouertie and penury in estate losse of our good names shame and reproach and all other the deserued punishments of sinne and for conclusion of all of death in the ende of our liues and of euerlasting condemnation and destruction in the world to come For if we liue after the flesh wee shall dye the death of body and soule and not onely bee depriued of Gods fauour of the eternall fruition of his heauenly kingdome and those vnspeakeable ioyes which shal neuer haue ende but for euer bee plunged into the lake of perdition whereas is weeping and gnashing of teeth Now what can iustly more incense our anger to take sharpe reuenge vpon such an enemy then to consider that it is vnto vs the authour of all mischiefe and plungeth vs into all euill both of sinne and punishment § Sect 4. The 4 reason is taken from the assurance of victorie Lastly let this encourage vs to the fight in that if wee make warre against our flesh and the lustes thereof wee shall be sure to obtaine the victory and not onely ouercome them but with them the world the diuell and all other enemies of our saluation To which purpose Augustine Ibi ergo vincuntur enimicae nobis invisibiles potestates vbi vincūtur invisibiles cupiditates etc. August de Agon Christ lib. cap. 2. Tom. 3. col 762. excellently speaketh There saith he the inuisible powers which are at enmitie with vs are ouercome where the inuisible lusts are conquered and subdued And therefore we who ouercome the desires of worldly things in our selues it is necessary that we should also ouercome him who by these desires raigneth in man c. For within vs we ouercome those who assault vs without whilest we ouercome our lustes by which they raigne and rule in vs as on the other side those whom they find like vnto themselues them they drawe with
hiding from our sight his fatherly countenance and the bright beames of his fauourable countenance in the apprehension whereof the life of our life consisteth and depriueth vs of the peace of conscience and ioy in the holy Ghost by which wee are in the spirituall man made strong and couragious in the day of tentation after that wee haue receiued wounds of the flesh in the spirituall fight it hindreth their cure and causeth them to fester and ranckle and to growe euery day more dangerous and incurable then other And after wee haue beene allured to drinke the sweet poisons of the fleshes bewitching cup this impanitencie doth cause vs to retayne them in the stomacke vntill working they doe make vs sicke vnto death where as they would not be hurtfull and pernicious if as soone as they were swallowed they vvere cast vp againe by vnfained repentance The fourth sin that weakeneth the spirit is carnall security and hardnes of heart whereby wee blesse our selues when our estate is dangerous and haue no sense and feeling neither of Gods mercie and loue nor of his anger and displeasure by the one whereof the spirit is strengthened vnto Gods seruice and by the other preserued from sinning against him So also the strength of the spirit is by this carnall securitie much impayred because it maketh vs to put the euill day far from vs and vtterly to neglect our spirituall enemies as though we had a secure peace and all cause of danger were farre remoued it causeth vs to neglect our Christian watch and so to lye open to the malicious and secret assaults of our spirituall enemies and to neglect the meanes of our safety and defence our spirituall foode and prouision our weapons and munition our fortifications and all other prepararations which should be any meanes of defence in the day of battell whereby the spiritual part is betrayed suddenly surprized before it expecteth any danger The last speciall sin wherby the spirit is weakened and all the good motions thereof quenched is the loue of the world which like birdlime so besmeareth the spirituall part and the wings of the soule that it cannot flee aloft but is intangled and catched fixed and fastened to the earth and worldly vanities More especially the loue of honours and the glory of the world doth make the spirituall man slacke and sluggish in the pursuite of eternall glory and heauenly happinesse The loue of riches hindreth him from seeking with all earnestnesse spirituall graces and those incomparable treasures which are laide vp for vs in Gods Kingdome it choaketh the seede of the Word so as it cannot take roote and beare fruit frustrateth all the good motions of the spirit so as they cannot take effect it exposeth vs to many tentations and snares and causeth vs to fall into many foolish hurtfull lusts which drowne men in destruction and perdition And so also the loue of earthly pleasures doth much enfeeble 1 Tim. 6. 9. 10 the spirituall part in the pursuit of those eternall pleasures and fulnesse of ioy which are at Gods right hand for euermore and as they weaken the body and effeminate the minde so as they are made vnfit euen for any warlike imployments in the world so much more doe they disable the soule and spirit for this warfare against the enemies of our saluation For when the flesh is pampered with these carnall delights the soule is starued and pined when it is distended and growne fat grosse with gluttony and belly-cheare the spirit is made leane and infeebled when it reuelleth in fleshly ioy the regenerate part droopeth and mourneth beeing spoyled and robbed of the ioyes of the holy Ghost When it is filled and euen glutted with excesse the spirit is straitened of roome and hath no place where it may reside and therefore the Apostle requireth first emptinesse of wine and then that wee should be filled Eph. 5. 18. with the spirit to note vnto vs that fulnesse of both will not stand together § Sect. 2. We must not prouide for the spirit poyson instead of holesome foode nor carnall weapons instead of spirituall A second meanes of weakening and disabling the spirit which is to be auoided respecteth our prouision which we are to make for the armie of Gods graces as first that we doe not prouide for their nourishment poyson in steade of holesome foode as for example in stead of the pure word of God the spirituall Manna the sincere milke of the Gospell and Sacraments instituted by our Sauiour Christ humane traditions and inuentions will-worship and our owne superstitious deuotions which haue no ground or warrant out of the scriptures nor scarce any resemblance of that holy and holesome foode which is by God appointed for our nourishment Of which meate the more liberally we feede the more leane and lanke we waxe in our spirituall strength and stature the more feeble and faint we growe in all sauing graces because howsoeuer it be sweet to our naturall and carnall appetite yet it is of a quite contrarie qualitie to the spirit and the graces and gifts thereof and it is no better then the Diuels most artificiall poysons which cause them that taste and feede of them to waste and weare away in a continuall consumption of all pietie and true godlinesse Secondly we must beware that we doe not prouide for this spiritual Warfare carnall weapons and munition For as the Apostle saith the weapons of our warfare 2 Cor. 10. 4. are not carnall but sutable vnto the Spirit it selfe and mighty through God to the pulling downe of strong holds As for example we must not fight against the flesh with fleshly anger and carnall reuenge for here especially the saying Iam. 1. 20. of the Apostle is verified The wrath of man worketh not the righteousnesse of God we must not fight against and indeauour to subdue it with spirituall watchings as resting in the deed done and not destinating it to a superiour end namely in the imploying of our time in prayer with it Watch and pray and the watching ouer our hearts that wee doe not sinne rather then ouer our eyes that we doe not sleep Wee must not seeke to subdue it by popish fasting which is nothing else but like all other their deuotions a bodily exercise consisting in their superstitious abstinence from certaine meates contrary to the Word of God which calleth it a doctrine of Diuels and teacheth vs that all the creatures 1 Tim. 4. 1. 3. 1 of God are cleane if they be sanctified by the Word and Prayer and allowing the vse of all the daintiest fish and delicatest wines and fruits which pamper the flesh more then the moderate vse of ordinarie dyet But as occasion serueth we must vse totall abstinence when we would tame the flesh and humble our selues before God yet not like them resting in the deede done much lesse esteeming it satisfactorie and meritorious but onely vsing it as
the flesh and strength of Sathans tentations it may be auerted from God and turne this way and that way after the vanities of the world and the deceitfull pleasures of sinne yet it neuer resteth till it be againe returned and inclined towards him from whom it had first motion and being It may be whilest the storme of tentation lasteth the spirit may be hid like the sunne vnder a thicke cloud or a ship couered ouer with the waues but afterwards the beames and beauty of it will burst through and dispell these foggie mists and like a goodly ship it will againe aduance it selfe and appeare vnder full sayles speedily hasting towards the holy land And finally though these carnall lusts like those cursed Amalekites may on a sodaine make inroades waste spoile sack burne leade captiue and carry away a great bootie for some small way yet the spirit like Dauid being excited by Gods Oracle will rise vp pursue these enemies obtaine victory and vindicate and recouer all out of their hands Where againe we haue a notable difference between the regenerate and the vnregenerate For whereas they being ruled by a free and generous spirit doe after their foyles earnestly desire and labour to re-gaine their libertie and repaire and increase their strength that giuing a new on set they may put their enemies to flight and obtaine victorie the other being of a slauish disposition after they are once subdued doe contentedly liue in the bondage of sinne neuer labouring or endeauouring to come out of it and better their estate Or if there be in them any struggling at all it is onely out of seruile feare and terrours of conscience arising from expectation of deserued punishment which as hath beene shewed may make some assaults against the will and affections and yet neither part be more sanctified or lesse corrupted then the other but like the good Witch which vndoeth that which the bad Witch hath done they remaine both euill and the limmes of Sathan agreeing well enough in their common designes of wickednesse and impietie § Sect. 3 Secondly an indeauor in the vse of all good meanes to be preserued from such foyles for the time to come But it is not thus with the man regenerate who after his foyles receiued from the flesh not onely earnestly desireth and indeauoureth to recouer himselfe from the captiuitie of sinne but hauing obtained his desire vseth all good meanes whereby hee may for the time to come be preserued from being againe surprised by the like stratagems and assaults To which purpose hee doth first keepe a narrow watch ouer all his wayes and especially ouer his owne heart wherein the flesh hideth it chiefe ambushments not easily and suddenly yeelding to the satisfying of euery desire of profit and delight but first trying and examining them by the rule of Gods Word whether they are to be lawfully imbraced as Gods blessings or to be reiected seeing they cannot be compassed without sinne Secondly he wil be most carefull to comfort and strengthen the spirituall part to keepe the armour of God fast buckled on him to be alwaies well prouided furnished with weapons and munition before the time of conflict or rather because this conflict with the flesh is continuall he will take care that he may neuer be found vnprouided Finally hee will shew the like care in weakening and disabling his enemie the flesh by withdrawing from it the chiefe weapons and munition whereby it hath formerly preuailed and will studiously indeauour to be so furnished at all points that he may be able to incounter it in the open field or to defeate the pollitique stratagems and escape the secret ambushments which it layeth to intrap him Thirdly the regenerate man after his fals will more zealously hate his sinnes and especially those wherewith he hath beene ouertaken then euer hee did before and in this detestation will auoide and flee from it yea the oftner hee hath fallen into it the more his hatred increaseth against it as against his greatest enemie from whom hee hath receiued most wrong and damage Euen as a man most feareth and shunneth that sicknesse which hath most vexed him abhorreth that meate whereon hee hath dangerously surfetted and most hateth that serpent the venome and poison of vvhose sting hath most afflicted and tormented him Lastly after his foyles and fals hee will carefully performe all holy duties which are contrarie to his former sinnes as if hee hee haue fallen by couetousnesse he will being risen exercise himselfe in bounty and liberalitie if by pride hee will abase himselfe in all humblenesse and meekenes of spirit if by surfetting and excesse in meates and drinkes hee will practise moderation in dyet and oftentimes fasting and totall abstinence Yea the regenerate man after his relapses into the ague fits of sinne will much increase and thriue in his spirituall stature beeing much more feruent and zealous in all holy and Christian duties then hee vvas before redeeming his lost time by future diligence and running after hee is risen vp so much the more swiftly by how much hee findeth himselfe hindered in his spirituall race by his slippes and fals §. Sect 4. How farre the flesh may preuaile against the spirit 1 common graces may be lost for a time But here a waightie question may fitly and seasonably be moued and determined namely how farre the flesh in this conflict may preuaile against the spirit and whether it may by the furious assaults thereof be not onely foiled but for a time quite ouercome not onely cooled but vtterly quenched lost extinguished For the resoluing of which doubt wee must first distinguish betweene the gifts of the spirit and the persons in whom they are The gifts may bee considered both in their kinde and in their qualitie Concerning the former the gifts and graces of the spirit are either common to the regenerate and vnregenerate or proper and peculiar to the faithfull and elect The common graces are especially those Morall vertues of wisedome ciuill honestie fortitude temperance patience and such like which may not only be lost extinguished in worldly ciuil men but also in the faithfull because they are not essentiall to a Christian but rather ornaments then parts of the spiritual man And this Dauid may be a foole in seeming so and be spiritually mad whilest he counterfetteth naturall madnes thus hee was dishonest in his dealing with Bethsheba and much more with Vriah his faithfull seruant and both vniust and vngratefull in that vnrighteous sentence for Ziba against Mephibosheth the innocent distressed sonne of his dearest Ionathan Thus Noah made a temporarie for feiture of his temperance Lot of his chastitie Ieremy and Ionah Rom. 11. 29. Ioh. 10. 18. of their patience and many other of Gods best seruants of the like graces But as for those sanctifying and sauing graces proper and peculiar to the faithfull which are so essentiall vnto a Christian that without them hee ceaseth