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A13554 The progresse of saints to full holinesse described in sundry apostolicall aphorismes, or short precepts tending to sanctification, with a sweete and divine prayer to attaine the practise of those holy precepts / by Thomas Taylor ... Taylor, Thomas, 1576-1632. 1630 (1630) STC 23850; ESTC S1019 235,792 462

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against the teacher which is an usuall bait of Satan to make all good things carelesly rejected Micaiah for this was turned out of dores as no fit Counsellor for King Ahab So the itching eare which is still desirous of novelties as the young man having heard the olde commandements would still heare more new And a tediousnesse in hearing the same things often which the Apostle calls a safe thing The latter are 1. Hardnesse of heart cast as much seede as you will among stones and cover them therewith no fruite followes for the stones hinder the rooting as we see in Pharaoh Mollifie the heart throughly and the word wil abide in it 2. Cares of the world which are as thornes to choake it All seede sowne among thornes getteth no strength but perisheth The Pharisies mocked Christ in his doctrine because they were covetous Luke 16.14.3 Voluptuous living makes men heare onely for fashion and to be like those widdowes which are ever learning but never come to the knowledge of the truth 2 Tim. 3. or at least not to joyne vertue to their knowledge as the intemperate patient that heares the physitian but will not follow him II. Provide and furnish the soule with helpes to hold that which is good These helpes respect 1. Intention 2. Attention 3. Retention First the Intention must must bee cleane and sincere we must not heare for envie as the Pharisies and Iewes in Paules time nor for newes as the Athenians nor for gaine or curiosity as Felix but to receive as babes the sincere milke of the word to grow in grace thereby 1 Pet. 2.2 This intention shall be the better furthered by premeditation of the force use and efficacy of the word that it is the power of God to salvation the incorrupt seede the word of life the instrument of faith the sword of the spirit the bread and water that preserveth eternall life Secondly Attention must be used Acts 8.6 the people of Samaria gave heede to the things that Philip spake This attention is a keeping of the heart and affections to the word deliuered Acts 16.14 when Paul preached Lydia attended and the Lord opened her heart When Christ preached all the peoples eyes were fastened upon him Luke 4. Attention is the doore by which the word enters It is much furthered by a due estimation of the word Thy word saith David is wonderfull therefore my soule keepeth it Men will attend to their learned counsell when their free-hold is in question so here conceive aright of the word as a matter of life and death a matter that concernes thy inheritance in heaven thou wilt carefully attend it Thirdly Retention must follow In the body there are two nutritive powers one Attractive to draw meate into the stomacke the other Retentive to hold it there till it be turned into nourishment so in the soule And if the former draw too little the latter holds little and so the body pines and if the former draw too much that the body is not able to hold it the body pines still So here the soule must be still drawing but it must also forcibly holde it till the soule be refreshed Now this Retentive faculty is strengthened by 4. meanes 1. Meditation cleane beasts chew the cud Deut. 11 2. Consider the workes of the Lord Psal. 1.1 Meditate in his Law both day and night The acts of God must be in the mouthes of them that feare him Psal. 149. and 39.3 while David mused his heart was warmed Phil. 4.8 whatsoever things are honest just and pure thinke on those things men have therefore evill thoughts because they nourish not the good 2. Conference which is a whetting of holy lessons both on our selves and others Deut. 11. the Iewes are commanded to conferre of the word early and late Acts 17. The Bereans are commended for comparing the Apostles doctrine with Scripture 3. A full purpose of heart to practise good things Psal. 119.106 I have sworne to keepe thy law and 50.16 Why takest thou my word into thy mouth and hatest to be reformed 4. Fervent and constant prayer which is the key of knowledge gets the hearing eare and the soft heart it is a key to open the coffers of God out of which we may take those treasures which are not from our selves but from above our reach III. Chuse sure and safe places to hold good things in First in memory we must remember good things we heare Deut. 4.9 Take heed to thy selfe and keepe thy soule diligently that thou forget not the things thine eyes have seene Psal. 119.16 I will not forget thy word and ver 93. I will never forget thy precepts because by them thou hast quickened me Secondly keep them in the faith of thy heart else all is unprofitable Heb. 4.2 for that onely gives them rooting in our hearts Col. 2.7 Prov. 4.21 Keepe them in the midst of thy heart then shall they be as alight in the lanthorne shining through every part of thy life This was the coffer that Abraham locked up the promises of God in and held them fast without reasoning though it was difficult and seemed impossible Rom. 4.20 and David Psal. 119.11 I have hid thy word in my heart Thirdly keepe it in the affections of thy soule love earnestly the word of God and all good things for the things that wee like not or affect not we care not for keeping The great commandement is to love the Lord with all thy heart And every Christian ought to appeale to the Lord himselfe as Peter to Christ Lord thou knowest that I love thee Iohn 21.16 And the tryall of our love to him is to keepe his commandements chap. 14.15 Fourthly keepe them in the practise of thy life and whole conversation 1. By professing good things as Christ himselfe professed a good profession before Pontius Pilate 2. By promoting all good causes to thy utmost power 3. By maintaining and defending all good things and causes 4. By suffering for good things and every way giving testimony and setting seale to them if neede be with thy dearest heart blood IV. If we would hold good things let us furnish and arme our selves against theeves and robbers 1. Our owne carelesnesse Many times we care not to understand the things of God vanity of minde worldly lusts and desire of riches partly take up the roome partly choake good things so as they are neither received nor held But if we understand not let us not be ashamed to enquire and seeke out till wee doe understand 2. Satans slynesse who steales the word and good purposes out of mens mens hearts strangely even while they looke on and consent Doe as Abraham who drave away the birds that troubled him in sacrificing Gen. 15.11 so doe thou drive away these ravenous birds that are sent by Satan 3. Temptation and persecution Much ground keeps the seede till the heate of persecution comes and in persecution falls away and
and holy things adde prayer to keepe them in temper 2 Chron. 18.29 Fourthly The memory must be made and kept unblameable And that is two wayes 1. When we keepe in fresh memory our sinnes and declinings so farre as to be humbled for them A corrupt memory is the corruption of the whole man Deut. 9.7 Remember and forget not how thou provokedst the Lord to anger in the wildernesse The memory is Gods register and officer and though now there be none in office yet in the day of Christ it will bring forth the records which seemed to be lost a prelude and taste whereof wee see in such as are distressed in conscience 2. When we keepe good lessons in our memory Rev. 3.3 Remember how thou hast received and heard and hold fast and repent II. Directions to keepe the soule unblamable Every man may holde himselfe bound in conscience and charged by God with the safe custody of his owne soule under God Deut. 4.9 Take heede to thy selfe and keepe thy soule diligently A man would be loath to forfeit a joynt of his body by heedlesnesse how carefully doe men looke to their eyes heads hands and every member and the least part of the body and yet more carefully to the whole body and this nature teacheth every man But is not the soule that better part that calls for so much more care and circumspection and this grace teacheth us to keepe our soule above all for if a man lose his soule what recompence shall he give for it Now because that in the soule is included 1. the heart 2. the will 3. our affections all these faculties in the soule must be kept safe as the soule it selfe and layes upon us a necessity to watch them narrowly First for the keeping of thy heart the precept is ●eep thy heart with al diligence for thence issueth life or death the chiefe part of the body is heart the fountaine of life and the chiefe care is to keepe that sound so the soule the heart desires and choyces are to be chiefly intended for thence are the issues of life or death And indeed according to the well tending or neglect hereof the constant course of holinesse is either furthered or hindered Besides nature in the framing of mans body begins with the heart and the liver and other inward vitalls and comes last to the face and other outward parts teaching us the method in grace where to begin our frame keepe the heart well and unblameable and all will be well And for this end observe some rules Fist therefore if thou wilt keepe thy heart unblameable thou must keepe it humble it must be an humble and contrite heart that God will not reject and a broken heart is a sacrifice of Gods delight the soundnesse of the heart is the through breaking of it the plow of the law must rend up the fallowes of our hearts and fit it for seede this must helpe both the rotting and rooting of the weedes Ier. 4.4 This is called a melted heart in Iosiah for as golde can never be approoved and purified before it be melted no more can the heart till it be a melted heart It is called the circumcision of the heart with circumcision not made with hands Col. 2.11 wherein the foreskinne of the heart is removed sinfull flesh and beloved lusts are wounded the party put to paine and made sore as the Sichemites in parting with a peece of his owne flesh This exercise of painefull mortification of sinne is the entrance into possession of a good heart and the grounds of all soundnesse in religion whereas they onely prove unsound and rumous in religion who never were soundly humbled nor traded in selfe-deniall as that building when the foolish builder would not be at paine to diggge deepe whereby to lay a firme and sure foundation Secondly then see thy heart be not onely an humble heart but a cleane heart Blessed are the pure in heart Matth. 5. striving after inward purity as well as outward For these an hypocrite can resist an hypocrite can wash the outside and may seeme to others to be pure and blamelesse But an heart desirous to free it selfe from blame deadly hates naturall pollutions filthinesse of heart vile thoughts and lusts and because it cannot be cleane without faith which is an inward purifier it labours for the increase of faith in the meanes to apprehend Christs merits and holinesse And because the word is a meanes of purifying and cleansing the heart as Psal. 119.9 and Christ saith they are all cleane by the word he will shew himselfe in embracing the word in heeding of it and framing himselfe according to the rules of it and apply his heart unto it And because a fusty vessell is not fit for sweete waters he will still and still be cleansing his heart that it may be capable of the word And because by nature the heart is foule and doth every day contract some filthinesse wash it with the blood of Christ and get neare unto Christ to have part in his holinesse and get the beesome of the Law to sweepe it daily and by the exercise of repentance and mortification daily part with the uncleannesse of flesh and spirit Thirdly see it be a single and sincere heart called a true heart Heb. 10.22 Let us draw neere to God with a true heart void of guile of deceit of dissimulation with such an heart as Nathaniels was commended by Christ a true Israelite in whom was no guile This is the heart of Gods delight 1 Chron. 29.17 Now you shall know the singlenesse of it 1. By this it is not one heart in one estate in one company and another in another but the same in sicknesse and health on the Saboth and on the weeke day the same in tryall as in peace but if there be any difference a single heart will be better in a bad age and most carefull among a most carelesse generation true grace is like light it shines brightest in the darkest roome and like fire hottest in the coldest and sharpest weather 2. You shall know a good heart by this it cares rather to bee good than seeme so it is more carefull to have grace than seeme to have it it doth not onely abstaine from evill but abhorre it Rom. 12.9 True godlinesse and soundnesse of heart consists in the power of godlinesse it doth not onely forbeare the sinne it loved but loathes it as the sicke stomack-doth loathe that meate most that it once surfeited on and what once cast up it ever hateth it 3 It will be religious alone and if it cannot get company it will be singular ● good heart will walke to heaven alone if it cannot get company it would rather have company but if it cannot it will rather goe alone to heaven than any where else with company Ioshuah saith I will goe my way if you will not goe with me I will not goe
the waters of Israel with them of Damascus Are not Arbanah and Pharphar rivers of Damascus better than all the waters of Israel And had not his servants beene wiser than he to perswade him to so small a thing his reason had returned him home without his errand Men thinke it reason to professe religion but so far as they may thrive prosper by it to trust in God but so far as they see him and as he leaves a pawne behinde him to favour religion and religious persons when the times favour them But they see no reason to forsake themselves to hate father and mother to part with their profits their lands liberties or lives and they never thought them wise men that for such conceits would so easily part with so precious things And what is the reason but because they never became fooles that they might be wise and because their religion is not now regulated by the proper rule of religion but of corrupt and naturall reason Against this use these considerations first how can corrupt reason be a perfect rule being made so crooked as it is and so contrary to the straight rule of the Scriptures and the greatest resister of conversion Nicodemus cannot see how an olde man can be borne againe and so disclaimes the Doctrine of Regeneration the blinde eye of naturall reason puts no difference between the light of the Sunne and darknesse nor the blind Samaritane betweene water of life and well water Secondly naturall reason is too short a rule and how it can it be a perfect rule because not onely made so crooked as it is but seeing if it were entire it is not able to comprehend many Mysteries of the faith and of the Gospell that must be ruled reason if entire yet it is too short for such mysteries as are above reason faith though it goes by the way of reason yet it goes farre beyond reason And no marvell for reason cannot reach many secrets in nature Eccles. 11.5 Thou knowest not the way of the winde nor how the bones grow in the wombe Who ever gave a reason of the Loadstones drawing iron of the fig-tree taming a wilde bull of the little Remora fish that aresteth a ship passing swiftly on full seas of the dying of the corne in the earth before it can live and much more must it grope as in the darke and shut up it selfe as an owle eye against the shine of mysteries in grace How absurd and contrary to reason is the creation of all things out of nothing nature cannot beleeve it but faith must Heb. 11.3 The conception of a Virgin without hand of man The resurrection of dead bodies almost infinitely transmutated That life must be fetched out of death heaven out of hell that losses for Christ is gaine that not kisses but killings are love that death is advantage Philosophers laugh at these things Acts 17. So the life of reason is cleane contrary to the life of faith Thirdly the rule must goe before the thing ruled but reason must be an attendant to follow faith not an usher to goe before for the malepertnesse of reason is the raiser and feeder and ever hath beene the mother and nurse of all errour and heresies Carnall reason raised up Anthropomorphits who conceive of God every way as a man brought Images into the Churches hatched that monster of Transubstantion and all Popery And whence are our new Pelagian positions quickned in the profound mysteries of election and predestination but because we must with our candle drowne the light of the Sunne and receive into our spoone the deepe sea and Ocean The Apostle Paul gives faith unto that which reason cannot reach and cryes out Oh the deepnesse but proud reason must be a straine beyond Paul and must comprehend all this deepnesse in the slat and shallow of it selfe Thus wee see the unfitnesse of this rule reason must know her place and not presume to checke or prescribe to faith if Hagar will contest with Sarah shee must be cast out of doores 2. Some make the way of their fathers the rule of their religion and courses as the musled and misled Papists who depend on their Predecessours as Ruth upon Naomi there is no intreating of them to depart where they are gone thither will these where they dwell there will these where they die there will these and there they will be buried likewise the olde Idolaters Ier. 44.17 who would still offer sacrifice to the Queene of heaven because their fathers did so the case was over-ruled by the former ages So the Papists refuse knowledge will heare no Sermons come to no Church because their forefathers did no such thing which is altogether absurd Against which consider first how absurd it is in religion for what is this else but to consult with flesh and blood in the matter of our faith which Paul in the matter of his religion refused to doe Gal. 1.16 Immediately I consulted not with flesh and blood c. hee held it unmeete and absurd in the matters of God to conferre with men Secondly it is absurd in reason as if a sonne were bound to pull out his eyes because his father was blinde or hee must poyson himselfe because his grandfather was so Thirdly it is attended ever with a seduced conscience the very prop of false religion and studde of superstition as in blinde Papists and Iewes for come to these blinde seduced consciences and demaund of them thus why will not you goe to Church or take the oath of Allegiance or the like Oh say they my conscience will not suffer mee just as the Iewes conscience would not suffer them to goe into the Common Hall lest they should be defiled Ioh. 18.28 yet in the meane time their conscience could suffer them to accuse arraigne and condemne the innocent Son of God They made great conscience of putting the thirty silver peeces into the treasurie but none at all of giving thirty peeces to betray Christ. So these conscionable Catholikes make no conscience of Treasons of Equivocations of blowing up of Parliaments and the like And what a rule is that which Turkes and Infidels can truly alledge for their religion who suck in their impious Alcoran with their mothers milke from their forefathers which the Samaritanes alledge for their mixture Iohn 4.20 Our father 's worshipped in this Mount And this all limbes of Antichrist alledge for themselves which a man may frame unto and be without all religion As these bragge of Peter and Paul and of bones and relickes of Saints and Martyrs But for the Doctrine of faith of religion of holinesse and a good conscience they quite cast off Fourthly this is contrary to the rule which calls us from our forefathers to it selfe Ezek. 20.18 I said walke not in the statutes of your forefathers but walk in my statutes and judgements and doe them and he complaines of that stubborne and rebellious generation
to grow up in holinesse as plants and children naturally grow so also doe the children of God being planted in his courts To helpe us herein we will somewhat at large consider three things 1. Meanes of obtaining a full measure of holinesse 2. Markes of one that hath attained it 3. Motives to provoke us thereunto The meanes are five I. Meditation and sound consideration concerning 1. God 2. thy selfe 3. grace it selfe First in God thinke 1. of his will 1 Thess. 4.3 This is the will of God even your sanctification We ought to follow God if he should call us through hell it selfe much more in the sweete practise of sanctification which hath a happy fruite 2. Of his promises 2 Cor. 7.1 Seeing we have these promises let us cleanse our selves from all filthinesse of flesh and spirit and grow up unto full holinesse All the promises are made to the practisers of holinesse Matth. 5.8 Blessed are the pure in heart 3. Of his glory which thou oughtest by all thy endeavour to promote being the end of thy life and of thy selfe but herein especially is our heavenly Father glorified when our light shines before men Matth. 5.16 Secondly in thy selfe consider these things 1. In thy creation thou receivedst a soule a body faculties and sences with parts and members from him and in him thou now livest movest and hast thy being and canst thou doe him too much service in them Doth any man build an house but he will looke to dwell in it Doth any plant an orchard or vineyard and not looke for usefull fruites to himselfe Thy selfe art Gods house thy soule Gods garden and doth not hee expect not onely fruite of holinesse but much fruite 2. In thy redemption the end of which was not onely to deliver thee from the condemnation of sinne but from thy vaine conversation 1 Pet. 1.18 redemption is not onely from the guilt and punishment but from the service and corruption of sinne and sanctification is an inseperable companion of justification 3. In thy life and present estate thou art a Christian and professest Christian religion which onely prescribes the rule of holy life whereby thou must walke thou must life like a Christian that hast communion with Christ that walkest in the light as hee is in the light 1 Iohn 1.5 that hast the Spirit of Christ which perfecteth daily his owne worke and beautifieth his owne dwelling 4. In thy death and future estate remember thou must die and onely holinesse of heart and life shall attend thy soule when all things else shall leave it and without holinesse thou shalt never see God Heb. 12.14 If death shall leave thee unholy the last judgement shall so find thee So therefore live now as thou maist ever live hereafter Thirdly meditate on the grace and worke of holinesse it selfe 1. what a difficult worke it is and therefore thou must goe seriously about it oh the worke of mortification is a painefull work a man cannot die without paine no more can the olde man sinne hath a strong heart and is loath to die and therefore as to die is no dallying matter so he that meanes to dally in this businesse shall never happily proceede in the degrees of holinesse 2. What an excellent worke it is for hereby we shall be daily partakers of the divine nature 2 Pet. 1.3 which is not in respect of the nature and essence of God which is incommunicable but in respect of the most excellent and precious qualities and gifts bestowed by the Spirit of God on those that are regenerate wherein we shall be like unto our heavenly Father and grow up to the similitude of Iesus Christ till he shall be all in all unto us II. Meanes of growing to a full measure of holinesse is in our Text Prayer First for the grace it selfe Psal. 51.10 Create in me a cleane heart O God and renew a right spirit within me Secondly for the increase of the grace Phil. 1.9 And this I pray that yee may abound yet more and more in knowledge and judgement verse 11. being filled with the fruites of righteousnesse 1 Thess. 3.13 The Lord make your hearts stable and unblameable in holinesse Thirdly for continuance and confirmation in grace as in the Text. Ephes. 3.14 I bow the knee that yee may be strengthened by the Spirit in the inner man Psal. 51.12 Oh stablish me with thy free Spirit Let it be thy daily prayer as Davids Psal. 86.11 O Lord knit my heart unto thee let thy good Spirit leade mee even to the land of the living Fourthly for a blessing on the meanes of grace Psal. 119.18 Open mine eyes that I may see the wonders of thy Law III. Meanes An holy use of the word and Sacraments For the word in generall Iohn 15.3 Now you are cleane by the word which I have spoken unto you and chap. 17.17 Father sanctifie them in thy truth thy word is truth Rom. 1.15 by preaching the Gospell the righteousnesse of God is revealed from faith to faith Now there be in the word foure things which specially helpe forward our sanctification 1. The commandements and precepts Psal. 119.4 Thou hast commanded that wee should keepe thy precepts diligently These let us see what wee ought to ayme at and how farre we are off from our duty 2. The promises and comforts of it Psal. 19.11 In keeping of them there is great reward Revel 20.6 Blessed and happy is hee that hath part in the first resurrection on such the second death hath no power 3. The threats and denunciations of judgement that are in it Revel 22.15 Without shall be dogges and enchanters and whoremongers and murtherers and idolaters and whosoever loveth or maketh lyes 2 Pet. 3.11 Seeing all these things shall be dissolved what manner of persons ought we to be in holy conversation and godlinesse 4. The examples that are in it Heb. 12.1 Seeing we are compassed with such a cloud of witnesses let us cast off every thing that presseth downe and the sinne that hangeth fast on us Examples of holy men will make us trust in God Psal. 22.4 Our forefathers trusted in thee and thou didst deliver them this confirmeth our confidence Godly women must shew the holy and hidden man of the heart as Sarah did 1 Pet. 3.5 Observe in the reading or hearing of the word these particulars for the decay of corruption and the increase of sanctification The Sacraments or visible words helpe forward sanctification because by baptisme we are borne into the Church and notably it both representeth and sealeth our mortification and quickning Rom. 6.4 and by the Lords Supper wee are fed and nourished in the grace of the covenant in faith love and comfortable assurance IV. Meanes Godly company That man goes apace in the grace of sanctification who is a companion as David of all them that feare God Psal. 119.63 Now godly company furthereth sanctification 3 wayes 1.
Spirit renewes us onely within and not without doth he make us beleeve as Christians and not live as Christians doth the sappe and juice of a tree onely quicken it within and not cause it produce fruites outwardly Thou hast not received the Spirit of Christ if it be not unto thee life unto righteousnesse Rom. 8.10 that is make thee lively and active in all the wayes of godlinesse Faith is not as a light under a bushell therefore shew mee thy faith by thy workes Grace is as a light in a cleare lanterne which from within enlighteneth without Now the rather must we labour for renovation without as well as within 1. Because flesh and blood unrenewed shall not enter into heaven 2. The disorder of the outward man and members argue a sinfull and disordered soule seeing the body is but a servant of the soule and doth nothing but by the Masters direction and appointment an evill eye issueth from an evill minde and a corrupt tongue moveth according to the abundance of the heart 3. No outward deformity is comparable to this of sinne in the members which makes the body to God indeed vile and contemptible as a dead and loathsome corpes is to man Fourthly to keepe the outward man blamelesse beware of all unchastity and impurity of body and on the contrary watch unto chastity and civill honesty 1 Cor. 6.13 The body is not for fornication but for Christ the Lord and the Lord for the body That is the body is ordained for the Lords use and ought to be imployed to his glory And the Lord for the body to redeeme and sanctifie the body as well as the soule and consequently to rule the body and command that as well as the soule being the Lord of the body as well as of the soule And the same Apostle saith the body is a member of Christ as well as the soule Shall I take a member of Christ and make it a member of an harlot verse 15 Can any thing be more opprobrious unto Christ than to transforme him into an harlot Can any thing derogate more from his glory and majesty or be more contrary to his most holy nature Againe Christs body was Gods Temple Ioh. 2.21 Destroy this Temple because the Deity dwelt in it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 bodily and of this Temple Salomons Temple was but a type So thy body is Christs Temple in which he dwells by his Spirit 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 virtually Now the light of nature teacheth to preserve Temples pure and cleane but grace much more to preserve spirituall Temples cleane and holy And therefore as Christ when he went into his Fathers Temple made a whip and whipped out buyers and sellers and money-changers who had made his house a denne of theeves so doe thou in Christs Temple which is thine owne body beate it downe and overthrow the wanton and stragling corruptions of it whip out those roving lusts which make the house of Christ as a denne of harlots and filthinesse Coloss. 3.5 Mortifie your earthly members fornication uncleannesse and all inordinate affections Eph. 5.3 But fornication and all uncleannesse let it not once be named as becommeth Saints The fifth Rule Magnifie Christ in thy body both by life and death this was the Apostles care Phil. 1.20 As alwayes so now Christ shall be magnified in my body Thy body is mortall fraile fading yea a vile body Col. 3.21 yet in this body Christ will and must be magnified Quest. How Answ. 1. By keeping the heavenly treasure of the knowledge of God and the attendant graces in these earthly vessels as Paul 2 Cor. 4.7 We have this treasure in earthen vessels that the excellency of the power might be of God 2. By holding out the word of life and carrying the name of Christ in an holy undaunted and constant confession and profession in the place where thou livest as Paul did through the world 3. By expressing in this frail body not the doctrine only but the life of Iesus Christ conforming thy selfe to his blessed example in humility holinesse charity piety patience and other vertues that all men may see and say surely this man is a member of Christ he lives the life of Christ he resembles the patterne 4. In this weake body of thine carry about the mortification of Christ Iesus 2 Cor. 4.10 suffer afflictions for the name of Christ and beare in thy body as Paul did the markes of the Lord Iesus Gal. 6.17 fulfill in thy body the rest of the sufferings of Christ carry the badge of a true Disciple yea if God call thee offer up thy body and life a thankfull sacrifice not in life onely but unto death if thereby thou maist magnifie Iesus Christ. Thus did the faithfull Saints and Martyrs offering themselves the sweetest sacrifice of all others Yea our Lord himselfe comming into the world Heb. 10.5 said Burnt offerings thou wouldest not have that is now after the comming of Christ but a body hast thou given me that in this my body I might offer that expiatory sacrifice of all which the other were but shadowes Even so say thou Burnt offerings God calls not for but he hath given me a body to offer unto him and give up unto him in life and death in way not of a Propitiatory but of an Eucharisticall sacrifice of praise thereby to magnifie his name 5. Thou magnifiest him in thy body when thou magnifiest him in his body as when thou admirest the graces of his servants honourest his members delightest in them that excell in vertue helpest and releevest the poore Saints all which he taketh as done to himselfe These are the generall Rules now of the speciall for speciall parts To keepe the severall parts of the body blamelesse the word is plentifull in severall precepts but especially injoynes a strait watch over the senses which are the windowes of the soule But that the discourse may not swell beyond a reasonable proportion I will onely cull out 1. two principall senses and 2. two principall organes and members of the body and give some short rules concerning them and in them we shall see it is no easie thing to keep the body blamelesse neither in them nor in the rest which I must be silent in The two senses are the sight and hearing the senses of discipline and the other two members are the hand and tongue the which being well ordered by the word much blame would be cut off from the lives of men which they now stand guilty of First for the eye to keepe it unblamable We must watch it well for you must know that of all the sciences there is none so quicke a messenger to the heart and soule as the eye by reason whereof it requireth a strait watch God hath given to the eye power to see every thing but cannot looke into it selfe and therefore hee hath given to man understanding that he may looke into himselfe by
the directions the Scripture doth afford us which be of two sorts and both of them within that in Iob 31. that because the eye is a most swift messenger unto the soule and most slippery as Iob make a covenant with thine eyes not to behold vanity And because all thy watching is too little for so quicke a member pray the Lord that he would turne away thine eye from beholding vanity Psal. 119.37 Wherein is this watch I. To pull away thine eyes from unallowed objects First beware of an hypocriticall deceitfull eye as in Prov. 6.12 there is one that twinkleth with his eye this is an eye quick-sighted to deceive his brother See thine eye be single as Christ teacheth that is such an eye as may discerne to doe that thou doest that it be just 2. by just meanes 3. doe it with all thy heart uprightly 4. within compasse of thy calling and if thou canst get this single eye the whole body will be likewise single II. There is a lustfull or an adulterous eye 2 Pet. 2.19 we reade of unchast persons that have eyes full of adultery First there be them that have eyes full of spirituall adultery gazing upon Popish pictures and images which they hang up in their houses as alluring harlots corrupters of the heart which is an opening of the doore to idolatry and a signe of a man willing to be deceived But the eyes of the Church are as doves eyes Cant. 1.14 chast and pure not gazing upon idolatrous pictures Secondly corporall adultery that delight in lascivious pictures filthy portraitures of naked men and women in whole or such parts as may incite the corruption of heart and feede it with contemplative adultery we neede bring no oyle to this flame the more lamentable it is that the Divell hath got such pictures into request in this wanton and unclean age for where can a man goe where he may looke off them which a manifest signe of adulterous eyes 2. Such are their eyes who are adulterous living pictures that so attire and disguise themselves to lay open their nakednes beyond all modestie to ensnare the eyes senses of others say not thou thinkest no hurt in it except thou be sure others thinke no hurt by it 3. Such are their eyes that reade lascivious and wanton bookes teachers of adultery and lewdnesse that frequent stage-playes with their beastly acts and actions wherein all gates and walls are cast open to the Divell beware of this eye by which death and poyson enters into the heart III. There is a covetous eye which is not satisfied with riches Eccles. 4.8 neither doth hee say for whom doe I thus labour this eye defraudes the soule of pleasure and is an evill sicknesse As Ahabs who was discontented with a kingdome for want of Naboths vineyard There be three things that never say enough the horse-leach the fire and the grave and adde the fourth a covetous eye which as Iobs Elephant Iob 40. thinkes hee can swallow the whole flood Iordan Let a covetous man have but a moate of dust or earth in his eye what trouble is it to him yet he thinkes to thrust a whole Country could he get it into his eye and see never the worse Take heed of this covetous eye there is no greater an enemy to faith and contentation or any good exercise than it is IV. There is an envious eye Matth. 20.15 Is thine eye evill because mine is good such an eye as Satan cast upon the happinesse of man when hee was fallen from his owne Take heede of this sore eye that cannot abide the light Basil saith that whereas many evills are in it yet onely one good thing goes with it it is the greatest plague to him that hath it V. There is a sleepy a dull and a negligent eye not open or quicke to behold with fruite and profit the noble workes and actions of God whereas God hath made the eye of a round figure and of quicke motion that it might easily move it selfe any way or every way in viewing the workes of God in beholding the afflictions of his people and the necessities of his brethren The second thing wherein we must be carefull in watching the eye is to labour to holde and fixe the eyes upon allowed and profitable objects As 1. God made our eyes to looke upward and hath given mans eye one muscle which the beasts eye wants that it should not fixe it selfe as theirs upon the earth yea hath compassed the eyes with browes and lids to fence them from dust and earth that though we looke sometimes on the earth yet the least dust or earth should not get into them Psal. 123.2 to shew that our eyes should be lifted up unto him and in seeing his creatures behold himselfe 〈◊〉 ●hem Esay 40.26 Lift up your eyes aloft and behold who created all these things the invisible things of God his power divinity and eternity were made visible to the very Gentiles by things created Rom. 1.20 And shall Christians onely looke on these things as they to make our selves inexcusable shall we looke upon the Sunne and not on him that made it 2. Let us fixe our eyes on the workes of God in and for his Church for the strengthening of our faith and confidence as Iohn 2.23 they that saw the workes of Christ Many of them beleeved in his name seeing the workes he did For the Lord doth nothing for or against his Church but according to his truth revealed in the word the Lord doth no worke in his Church either of judgement or of mercy but they are as it were the very commentaries of the Scriptures and therefore all the workes of God that wee can behold in or for his Church doe notably stirre up our faith in him 3. God hath allowed us our eyes to behold our brethren to behold their graces to see their good example to affect embrace and encourage them to imitate them to glorifie God for them thus our eyes should imitate the eyes of God which are upō the just to affect protect reward them Yea we must holde our eyes upon our brethrens misery to pitty releeve them we must not turne our eyes from our owne flesh as the unmercifull Priest and Levite did from the wounded man who were condemned by the pittifull Samaritan 4. Our eyes we●● given us not onely to be organes of sight but to be fountaines of teares in beholding both our owne sinne and misery and the sinne and wretchednesse of our brethren The Iewes eye beholding the brazen Serpent was a watery and mournefull eye because hee was stung by the Serpent so ours much more whose sting and paine is mortall and inward And can we beholde any creature and not see in it the expresse prints and markes of our owne sinne which still must adde to our griefe And for others Good Lot was vexed daily to see the uncleane conversation of the Sodomites and Davids
eye gusht out with rivers of teares because men kept not the word Psal. 119.126 These sinfull objects every where should be the griefe of our soules and as swords piercing our hearts which we can too easily conceive pleasure in 5. Our eyes should be ever looking homewards and heavenwards and towards the end of our way as quicke travellers gaze not on things before their feet but hasten to the end of their way This is by heavenly conversation and constant expectation of our Lords returne to take our account we should long after Christ and the place of his abode there should our hearts be where our home is our house our husband our father our eldest brother even Christ himselfe is Thus to order our eyes consider first the danger of a neglected eye in Eve shee saw the fruite was good and forgot the commandement Potiphars wife cast her eye immodestly on Ioseph and said Lye with me David saw Bathsheba washing and was all inflamed It can looke to all things else but not to it selfe that thou mightest looke to it so much more And if the eye spy not nets laid for us it selfe becomes a net Ambrose Secondly an evill eye is made a signe of an evill heart Mark 7.22 out of an evill heart commeth an evill eye and if the eye be evill the body is darke Matth. 6.23 Thirdly a man that gives his heart to God will give his eye too for God calls for both Prov. 23.26 My sonne give me thy heart and let thine eyes delight in my wayes And if thou give him not both he cares for neither and if thou give him not thine eye as well as thy heart thou wilt lose thy heart quickly the adulterous woman will steale away thy heart though thou seemest to give it to God if thou watch not thine eye Fourthly know that if thou wilt not looke to thine eyes hee that made the eye must needes see thee Psal. 94.9 he sees the least unlawfull looke Lots wife cannot turne her face backward but hee sees and smites This is Salomons argument to the young man that will walke in the sight of his owne eyes that God will bring him to judgement Eccles. 11.9 if thou wilt walke after the sight of thine owne eyes doe but know that for thy quicke and nimble and unallowed lookes thou shalt come to judgement Now the directions for the eare The heart cannot possibly be kept in good state without diligent observation of the senses no more than a Citty can be defended where the ports and gates are cast open And as in the keeping of a gate of a Citty diligent care must be taken whom they let in and whom they let out So in keeping this sense we must know 1. when to shut it 2. when to open it First we must keepe shut our eare against the voice of the tempter that Satan and sinne enter not by this wicket Eve not doing this death entred into her soule and all ours Secondly wee must keepe out the entising and alluring of sinners which are as the Syrens songs Prov. 1.10 My sonne of sinners entise thee consent not And take heede of evill rotten and poysonfull communication let no evill corrupt communication passe through thine eares for evill words corrupt good manners and the want of learning this counsell is the bane of all modesty and civility in this age for this corrupteth first the heart and then the conversation it is like fire cast into a barrell of gunpowder that sets all on fire presently A Christian must neither speake filthy language nor heare it Thirdly keepe out reproaches slanderous and reviling tales whisperings against the good names of our brethren for what difference is there betweene carrying of Satan in the tongue or in the eare A good man will not slander with his tongue nor receive it into his eares David sinned in the ease of Mephibosheth by meanes of slanderous Ziba whom he should have driven away with an angry looke Fourthly wee must not heare or give heede to false doctrine errours heresies and libertine opinions contrary to truth received Deut. 13.3.8 If thy brother thy owne sonne or thy daughter or the wife that lyeth in thy bosome or thy friend which is as thine owne soule intice thee secretly saying let us serve other Gods c. thou shalt not consent unto him nor heare him neither shall thine eye pittie him nor shew mercie nor keepe him secret but thou shalt even kill him and thine hand shall be first upon him to put him to death and then the hands of all the people c. 1 Tim. 4.1.7 Beware of this itching eare which comes to Church rather to censure the Preacher than it selfe as Herod having Iohn before him sought some miracles to please his curiosity but sought not grace for his salvation and departed and left Iohn as he found him as the beasts uncleane went out of the Arke uncleane came they in and so they went out They sinne against this rule that desire novell doctrine forsake the beaten path and simplicity of received truthes and runne into new and strange conceits and confused errours troubling with the faith of men the peace of the Church and happy proceedings of the Gospell Fifthly especially beware of hearing Gods name blasphemed by oathes and cursed speeches or his religion or profession or servants dishonoured without our defence A godly heart is carefull neither to sinne himselfe nor communicate in the sinnes of others In a word in all the speeches we heare remember Iob 34.3 The eare tryeth words as the taste tryeth meates to let no words goe downe into the soule which are not wholesome else we are justly blame-worthy by neglecting this sence Secondly we must learne to know when to open the eare As 1. To heare the word of God This is called an hearing eare and an obedient eare an eare inclined to heare wisdomes sayings Prov. 4.20 Remember it is a note of him that is of God to heare his word hee heares what the Spirit saith to the Churches Iohn 8.47 hee is swift to heare Iames 1.19 2. There is a deafe eare by which men become like the idols that have eares and heare not And this being a great plague is followed with a greater the eare turned from hearing the Law Gods eare is turned from hearing his prayers his very prayer is abominable what then is his person Now would you know whether you have this hearing eare or not take it thus It is Swift Patient Wise. First swift to heare on all good occasions it knowes God hath given him two eares and on either side of the head to teach him to apprehend all occasions to gaine instruction Secondly patient in hearing our owne sinnes disgraced the coare of our owne corruptions lanced and let out our owne duties described it must be a boared eare like Christs signified by that boared eare of the Iewish servant Exod. 21.6 a painfull signe of perpetuall subjection and
our callings both generall and speciall Be faithfull in thy profession of godlinesse lurke not as an hypocrite among the Saints carry no treacherous purpose to save thy selfe by denying or betraying the truth give it thy heart hand and tongue and life if it require it beware of a politique profession never let thy practise disagree from thy profession Consider Christ professed a good profession before Pilate and sealed it with his life and death 1 Tim. 5.13 and wilt thou so nourish any secret fraud in thy heart contrary to thy profession and Paul telleth Timothy hee had made a good profession and a faithfull before many witnesses And this is a most necessary doctrine we know not how soone we may be called to it therefore learne it betimes that we may be like our heavenly Father in faithfulnesse not onely in times of prosperity but in times of tryall for a Christian man is that indeede which he is in tryall let us shew our selves to bee that wee seeme to be Then in thy speciall calling be faithfull Christ was a faithfull high Priest in things concerning God Heb. 2.17 and Moses was faithfull in all the house of God as a servant Heb. 3.5 So it is required of every Minister or dispenser of the secrets of God that hee be faithfull 1 Cor. 4.1 the steward of Gods house must be faithfull to his Lord and to his family It is not great pompous titles that commends a Minister but his faithfulnesse Prov. 13.17 A faithfull Messenger is health And in thy private calling deale faithfully with all men and in all things both great and small so doth God who is not the rule onely but the witnesse and judge 1 Thess. 4.6 Let no man defraud his brother God is the avenger of all such things 4. In friendship be faithfull God is most faithfull to his friends in prosperity in adversity in life in death Be faithfull especially in the fellowship of the Gospell specially aiming at holinesse as the Lord doth and to draw thy friend along to heaven with thee and helpe him out of sinne else a sorry friend art thou But how farre we from this among whom it is so hard to finde a faithfull friend who in civill things will sticke to a man in adversity Where is to be found the friendship of David and Ionathan Among Heathens we reade of a Daman and Pithias of a Pylades and Orestes of an Euryalus and Nysus of an Achates who was a faithfull friend to Aeneas and would not leave him in danger But few such are to be found among Christians among whom faithfull friendship is degenerated into pollicy and flattery The Heathens could say that they used not fire or water oftner than friendship would Christians could say so of faithfull friendship and yet they seeme to pull the Sunne out of heaven who would take faithfulnes from friendship in the lives of men Would to God that Christians had not forgotten these naturall principles We all professe our selves to be of the family of Christ would it were with us as in that that but one of twelve were unfaithfull to God and their friend But wee see the contrary too too often 5. In communicating to thy brethren be faithfull lay out thy Lords talent faithfully as a wife and faithfull servant whom the Lord may make ruler over his house Luk. 12.42 Hast thou much many talents be faithfull in much and thou shalt finde much faithfulnesse in the Lord. Hast thou little be faithfull in that little and thy Lord shall make thee ruler over much when it shall be said Well done good and faithfull servant c. Matth. 25.23 Oh that men would remember the doome against the evill servant Matth. 25.30 Cast the unprofitable servant into utter darknesse Why was he judged so severely 1. Because an hypocrite comes among the good servants and receives some talents 2. Having his talent hee hideth it in the earth earth eates him up and buries him alive 3. He is unprofitable hinders his Lord and makes him a loser and doth no good to others all which makes the sentence as just as severe and certaine 2. This faithfulnesse of God is the ground of all true religion and hereupon must the whole frame and all parts of it be laid This appeares in five instances 1. In all the doctrine of faith 2. In all the practise of faith 3. In all the prayers of faith 4. In all profession of faith 5. In all perseverance in faith First we must ground all the doctrine of faith all the articles of faith all our judgement and opinion in matters of faith upon this faithfulnesse of God and this by holding fast in them all the faithfull word Titus 1.9 for that onely is the true religion which is wholly grounded upon his word who is unchangeable in truth and faithfulnesse How could we beleeve all the Articles of faith which are unconceivable and impossible to reason if we ground them not upon Gods faithfulnesse in his word How should we conceive that the heavens and earth were created of nothing that the Sonne of God should become man should be borne of a Virgin should by dying overcome death by descending into hell should deliver from hell How should wee beleeve that our bodies cloathed with corruption and wrapped in deaths garments should rise againe to eternall life which Article the Sadduces mocke at if wee should not apprehend them as the word of him that is faithfull and true Contrary hereto the maine pillars of Popery are set upon the unfaithfull words of men of Fathers Councels Traditions Popes Whereas Rom. 3.4 Let God be true and every man a lyer Be he Father or holy Father further than hee speakes according to the faithfull word Nay if an Angel from heaven speake otherwise let him be accursed Gal. 1.8 Nay the Popish Church is so farre from acknowledging this faithfulnesse of God in the Scripture as it never found a greater resister or opposite among the sects and opposite heresies in the world For bring in either Iewes or Turkes or any kinde of heretickes more vilifying Gods faithfulnesse in the Scripture and Papists shall not be the worst But did ever any of them accuse the Scripture to be a nose of waxe the authority of it to be no better than Esops Fables without the Churches determination to be a leaden and a Lesbian rule to be a seed-plot of heresies and they to be heretickes that stand to the voice of the Scriptures Doe not they call the Bible the booke of heretickes doe they not burne the Scriptures as sometime did wicked Asa Antiochus Maximinus Have they not burned Christian men for having them Let any such furious heretickes against Gods faithfull word be brought in if they can But certainly Papists must carry the bell above all other in the world for standing opposite to the faithfulnesse of God in the Scripture and be the most hereticall as who shut the doore against the
which flowes from the union with Christ hee lyes under the guilt of all his sins Christ carries none of them away if he be put in the scale as Baltazer hee shall be found too light and wanting of his weight 3. The Spirit of Christ is given onely to sonnes he dwells not in that house where is onely a base sound of sanctification in some common gift onely suppressing open sins but not inward lusts whereas effectuall grace not onely checkes secret corruptions but daily renewes the heart and perfects the image of God Hence it is that many that seemed to answer the call fall off to nothing because they were never good whereas true holinesse is like the light clearer and clearer till perfect day And a man truly called is like a faire woven stuffe that weares most shining at the wale and ground and cannot but be best at last I. These are the markes of effectuall calling labour in them and take good paines to get them on thee rest not in a common ungrounded hope nor grutch the time to minde those things seriously For 1. What a comfort of heart and refreshment of soule will this be in the day of trouble to see Gods covenant sealed upon thee 2. What a resolution will it breede to contemne the world the pleasures and profits what a Christian courage against afflictions yea death it selfe against all motions and commotions in States in evill dayes and perillous times 3. What stability in holding our grounds of religion against all disputes in the world against all stratagems of Papists at home or abroad neither their masked distinctions nor coloured devotions shall unsettle this soule but it shall be as mount Zion stable upon sure foundations 4. How sweetely would all Gods ordinances relish and taste ordained for this end how firmely should wee holde our end and aime in our eye in all the meanes beginnings and way of eternall life when we discover daily in our selves assured and infallible markes that wee are in the right way unto it II. If we finde our selves by these notes truly and effectually called be thankfull unto God for this great worke whereby hee hath laid in thy soule such an infallible assurance of eternall life Thou lookest on such as are uncalled see thy nature in them they and thou being digged out of the same pit in their misery see thine owne thou shouldest sweare and drinke and curse and revile goodnesse as fast as they resist the meanes of grace as resolutely as they wert thou left to the power of nature as they be But now thou seest a difference made and who hath made this difference who separated thee Oh praise the Lord for his free and rich mercy who hath poured out the riches of his grace in thy effectuall calling to grace Rom. 9.23 III. Pray earnestly that he which hath called thee would also confirme his owne worke so Peter 1.5.10 The God of all grace who hath called us to his glory in Christ Iesus make you perfect stablish and confirme you to the end And adde watchfulnesse against all such as would againe carry thee away from Christ and the holy calling It is the sinne of many of whom we may marvell so with the Apostle Gal. 1.6 How soone they are carried to another Gospell having lost him that called them into the grace of the Gospell But what was their sinne to the sinne of these in our dayes For they were 1. new converts we have had the Gospell as many yeares as they weekes or dayes 2. They fell of weaknesse wee of wantonnesse wilfulnesse even against the power of the Gospell so long working upon us 3. They by joyning Circumcision and Christ together which was formerly Gods sacred Ordinance we by joyning Christ and Antichrist together reconciling Christ and Antichrist together reconciling light and darknesse together patching our new garment with olde patches and rags of Romish devotions and superstitions and as moles undermining the grounds of holy truthes for which the Lord might justly remove his Candlesticke Who will also doe it The third Argument of the perseverance of the Saints in grace removes all scruple taking the whole worke out of our hands that he who hath the glory of the beginning may also have the glory of the end For 1. As we could not begin our salvation so neither could we end it he that was onely able to lay the first stone in this building is onely able to lay the last Philip. 1.6 Hee that hath begun the good worke in you will performe it untill the day of Christ. 2. It is safe for us that it is in Gods hand to finish our salvation who hath begun it for were it put into our hands againe it would be quite lost every day and therefore the Apostle Peter saith 1 Pet. 1.5 We are kept by the power of God to salvation Gods faithfulnesse preserves to salvation who are once effectually called Rom. 8.30 Whom hee calleth hee justifieth and glorifieth Philip. 1.6 I am perswaded that he that hath begun this good worke will finish it to the day of Christ Heb. 6.9 10. We are perswaded of you such things as accompany salvation for God is not unfaithfull And the reason is drawne from the unchangeable perfection of Gods nature decree will and affection to the Saints I. In his nature is no shadow of change especially in giving his good and perfect gifts Iames 1.13 and this unchangeable nature suffers him never to forsake this worke of his hands Psal. 138.8 Object God is unchangeable but I finde many changes in my selfe such dulnesse deadnesse frowardnesse as if hee should not forsake mee I feare I shall wholly forsake him Answ. All the Saints of God have found the like changes in themselves and yet all their changes nor all thy changes can never change God 2. None can wholly forsake God but such as are wholly forsaken of God but he never wholly forsakes the Saints for he hath said I will not leave thee nor forsake thee Hebr. 13.5 his desertion and their falls are but for a time for God in due time puts under his hand II. In his decree of the finall salvation of the Saints hee is faithfull and unmoveable 2 Tim. 2.19 The foundation that is decree of Gods election abides sure it stands on a sure foundation and hath this seale The Lord knowes who are his Object Yea God knowes but what is that to us no man knowes but by extraordinary revelation Answ. The Apostle addes a twofold impression of this seale in the heart of man by which he sets his seale to Gods faithfulnesse 1. Invocation of Gods name 2. A departing from iniquity which being fruites of effectuall calling he knowes himselfe sealed up thereby to salvation Object Stapleton saith God is faithfull in his decree so long as we be faithfull and deserve not that he should forsake us Answ. This were to make our perseverance depend
yours As for me I and my house will serve the Lord. And Lot in the midst of a naughty generation did not follow that patterne but walked alone in his owne way Eliah stood alone for the worship of God and in Iohn 11. Mary desired that her sister would come and sit with her at Christs feete but she will sit downe alone if Martha will not so a good heart will if it can get company to heaven and be glad of it but if it cannot it will goe alone But a false heart will looke at rulers at rich men at safety among men at lawes at multitudes and cannot abide the reproach of singularity Fourthly see thy heart be well watched for it will soone be bowed away from God 1. Suspect the deceit of it for it is deceitfull above all things Ierem. 17.9 therefore thou must looke well to it and to the flipperinesse of it it will deceive thee else deale with it as with an untrusty fellow set a watchfull eye over him to keepe him from his flippery trickes 2. Watch it in the first motions of sinfull thoughts for these being admitted defile the man and make him justly blameable Matth. 15.18 Consider that a godly man is said to have right thoughts Prov. 12.5 and that his desires are onely good chap. 11.23 not that his heart is quite empty of evill motions and desires but hee resists and fights against them he hates them and repents of them and God imputes them not 3. Watch it in the least sinnes as well as in the greatest for he that is unjust in the least is unjust in much a pilferer will easily purloyne a greater booty Yea watch it well not onely in sinnes that bring no benefit but in those that are somewhat beneficiall not onely in things our inclinations or occasions carry us not unto but those which run with the streame of nature Herod will doe many things but leaves not Herodias Iehu destroyes Baal but not the calves for that was now dangerous hee feared the people and walked for all this in Ieroboams sin that set them up 4. Because thy watch is not sufficient set it under Gods watch keepe thy heart in Gods presence set thy selfe still in his sight and thou shalt not sinne Shall I doe this saith Ioseph and sinne against God Walke with God as Henoch did and avoid blame Fifthly let thy heart be a right ordered heart carried in the wayes of God and this will leade the whole m●n in the same way To this purpose 1. Get the law written in thy heart Psal. 119.3 Blessed are they that keepe his testimonies they worke no iniquity Ierem. 32.40 I will write my law in their hearts and they shall not depart from it Keep the word and it sh●ll keepe thee The Lord having written his Law in Tables made choyce of the Arke to lay up the same in Exod. 25 1● but this Arke must be laid with pure golde within and without signifying that the proper place to lay the word in is a sincere heart both within and without any other but this will shut it out one time or other 2. Thou must see thy heart holde and hide all the commandements Psal. 119.6 Then shall not I be confounded when I have respect to all thy commandements It is a generall sinne of men they desire to have the word framed and fitted to their desirable and unprofitable lusts but thou must come to the light as one carefull to get a word for every action and as one submitted to the whole forme of doctrine delivered 3. Frame thy heart to the word and never seeke to have the word framed to thy heart So Ely 1 Sam. 3.18 The word of the Lord is good it was not fitted to his heart being a lamentable prediction of his owne ruine and the ruine of his posterity But yet he fitted his heart to it And so did Abraham to the difficult commandement Goe and sacrifice thy sonne So Hezekiah 2 Kings 20.19 Good is the word of the Lord which thou hast spoken when he was threatned by the Lord for his pride he frameth his heart unto the word and acknowledgeth it good Now for the second faculty and that is the will And because a perverse will upheapeth the measure of sinne and blame and there is no sinne we commit which is not a preferring of our owne will before Gods therefore it is impossible that any man should keepe his soule without blame unlesse hee set a narrow watch round about his will to keepe it in some order and frame with the most righteous will of God For which end our wills 1. must be denied 2. renewed 3. freed 4. framed unto God 1. Our wills by nature are crooked and rebellious the naturall will is not subject to God nor can be so long as it is naturall Now the cure of the crooked will is to deny it and captivate it to the will of God in all things let our wills loose to themselves they will be sure to approove improove chuse and refuse cleane contrary to God And therefore as he that must set up a frame must carry away the rubbish so must hee deny his owne will that must frame to Gods who commandeth Honour mee by not doing your owne wills 2. They must be renewed else shall a man still fulfill the will of the flesh And it is not in us to will till the Lord worke first the will and then the deede so that grace now must guide thy will as nature hath formerly swayed it 3. They must be freed Voluntas est libera quatenus liberata They are chained to unrighteousnesse and when the Sonne sets us free we are free indeede and till this time we are servants of sinne whose wills are not their owne but their masters we must every day seeke more freedome to good and get grace against the bondage under evill Rom. 7.25 4. They must be framed that there may be but one will betweene God and us that wee may say feelingly Thy will be done This is when the will determines every thing with God and for God both in matter of faith and obedience First in matter of faith and repentance If the will of God in the Gospell require repentance of sinne and to beleeve in Iesus Christ let thy will determine now with and for God bewaile thy sinne beleeve the promises cast thy selfe upon Iesus Christ claspe the promises against reason as Abraham did in receiving his sonne Secondly in matter of obedience both active and passive 1. Active If the Law require duties to be done to God or man there God expresseth his will frame now thy will to such duties be they never so difficult as Abraham in sacrificing his sonne never so dangerous as Daniel in praying to the God of heaven even under the sentence of death 2. Passive in any crosse or affliction upon thy selfe or others when God reveales his will
determine thy will with his as David Psal. 39.9 I held my tongue and spake nothing because thou Lord didst it There must be but one will betweene God and a faithfull soule betweene Christ and a Christian. Quest. How may I know my will thus denied renewed freed and framed to God Answ. The signes of it are 1. in respect of it selfe 2. in regard of sinne 3. in regard of good duties 1. In respect of it selfe it will not runne before but will waite upon sanctified knowledge and renewed reason it will not inthrall the light of the minde to inordinate desires it will be prooving still what is the good and acceptable will of God It will resolve and purpose that so long time as it is in the flesh to walke after the will of God 1 Pet. 4.2 2. Thou shalt know it in regard of sinne 1. It is resolute in resistance of sinne and the occasions for although the will renewed admit sinne in respect of corruption yet it selfe is in great part set against sinne that it willeth it not fully it purposeth not to sinne as David I vowed I will keepe thy judgements it hath a fast purpose to cleave to God Psal. 119.104 and hates all the wayes of falshood 2. When it yeelds to sinne it is with griefe it doth not sleepe in sinne so but that the heart waketh So the Apostle Rom. 7.15 he even hateth sinne while he is a doing of it I hate that I doe 3. After sinne it riseth timely by repentance if he fall into sinne he hardens not his heart Prov. 28.14 he wills it not neither before nor after there is a strugling and a reluctation in him against it and thus you may know the will rightly framed 3. In regard of good duties it will not onely be well-doing but chearefull in well-doing he doth good duties willingly freely There is a difference in doing one and the same action betweene a good man and a wicked man the worke of the will renewed is not onely to take opportunity to doe good but seeke opportunity to doe it it will not doe good of constraint but will doe it with willingnesse he will doe it cheerefully as a good Pastour feedes his flocke not by constraint but of a willing minde 1 Pet. 5.2 Quest. Why should wee thus looke to our wills Answ. First the state of Christianity is rather a willing than a doing the will of God thou that canst doe no more wouldst thou doe lesse Secondly no greater plague can befall a man than to be given up to his owne will the holding to a mans owne will is the losse of the will and soule too Thirdly as thy will is pleased with the sinne so it shall be revenged in the sorrow of it that will of thine that will not be compelled to obey shall be compelled to suffer all the plagues of sinne by a just recompence are laid upon the will as his sinne was a resistance and renouncing of the will of God for in hell no sinner shall ever obtaine what hee would but shall ever sustaine what hee would not Thus God brings the wayes of the wilfull sinner upon his owne head Ezek. 11.21 Thirdly to keepe the soule blamelesse we must narrowly watch all our affections wherein the soule moves it selfe every where for man by his fall hath lost not his affections but the holinesse and rectitude of them for now man naturally hateth the Lord and his image in his word in his servants and graces he feares and flies what hee should most joy and delight in that is God himselfe he joyes in swallowing the pleasures of sinne the baytes of his perdition hee is angry and impatient at God himselfe as Ionas and carried with a rageing madnesse causelesly and intemperately on any occasion And therefore we must fly to the grace of regeneration which doth not abolish affections but the disordered motions of them and restores them towards their originall rectitude and goodnesse Where this worke of grace is not and where the spirit hath laid no bridle upon the affections no marvaile if that soule runne riot into all unruly lusts and make it selfe blame-worthy and guilty every moment of foule sinnes Yea where this grace is care must be to preserve it even in every affection the least disorder of any of which is enough to impure the soule and leave it under blame Now the rules of keeping the affections unblameable and then for the reasons I. To keepe thy affections unblameable thou must labour seeing they cannot be unblameable if they be not good in the rise to get a good rise for thy affections a good motion must be from a good mover labour to see who is the mover of thy affections whether the Spirit of God or the wicked spirit or thine owne carnall spirit Excellent are those affections that are moved by the Spirit of God as when feare anger love joy griefe are 1. grounded on just causes 2. guided by the rule of renewed reason for the Spirit never moves but according to the word 3. tempered in ordinate measure now they become servants of grace Whereas if thy owne carnall spirit move them contrary to the word for their subject object manner or measure now they turne enemies to God and to thine owne soule II. Be sure they be carried upon right objects onely set thy affections where Gods Spirit would set them Here first the proper object of love is God himselfe and not for his gifts but for himselfe and of Iesus Christ whom if any man love not let him be accursed and that not as a Iesus onely but as a Lord And then the things of God wee must covet the most excellent gifts and with Mary choose the better part even our part in the Gospell and word of Christ and then entirely love the friends of God all our delight must be in the Saints that excell in vertue Secondly the object of our anger is sinnes not persons nor so much the sinnes of others as our owne which are nearer us Thirdly the object of our joy is pardon of sinne Gods favour and countenance Psal. 4. It is wrong placed when it is in the creature not in the Creatour when in the gift not in the giver Fourthly the object of our patience is evills of punishment which we must patiently suffer but not evills of sinne as Moses Fifthly of our feare the true object is God more for his goodnesse than greatnesse more for his mercy than justice Mercy is with thee to be feared Psal. 130.4 more lest we offend him than be offended by him And so in the rest What a businesse now is it to keepe our affections upon allowed and warrantable objects III. In these best objects see they be most vehement and intense To doe this observe these rules First bestow on the best things the best affections thou must love the Lord thy God with all thy soule all thy heart and strength nay more thou