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A94156 The Christian-man's calling: or, A treatise of making religion ones business. Wherein the nature and necessity of it is discovered. : As also the Christian directed how he may perform it in [brace] religious duties, natural actions, his particular vocation, his family directions, and his own recreations. / By George Swinnock ... Swinnock, George, 1627-1673. 1662 (1662) Wing S6266A; ESTC R184816 359,824 637

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thy soul delight it self in fatness If Religion were thy business God would not serve thee as the World doth its servants God is such a Master that ten thousand Worlds to him are as nothing yea less then nothing and vanity He is a Master without exceptions because he is an ocean of all and nothing but infinite perfections His Worship must needs be the best work because it is it self a reward Thou canst not deny but the work of Saints and Angels in Heaven is the best work by a thousand degrees that Creatures are capable of or can possibly be exercised in Truly their work and reward is the same to worship and enjoy the blessed God They who make Religion their business have a taste beforehand of their future blessedness Religion also bringeth in the greatest profit The World payeth her servants in Cyphers and Counters aery honors a brutish pleasure and fading riches which are worth nothing but Religion here in Figures and Pearls which are worth thousands the precious blood of Christ the inestimable Covenant of Grace and Eternal immediate communion with the Infinite God Reader if profit be the bait at which thou wilt bite I will tell thee in a few words how much Religion will he worth to thee Truly two Worlds not a farthing less Exercise thy self unto Godliness Godliness hath the promise of this life and that which is to come 1 Tim. 4.7 8. Ah who would not work for thee O King of Nations when in doing of thy commands there is such great reward Friend who would not cast his net into the waters of the Sanctuary when he may be confident of such an excellent draught Once more If none of these things move thee Quest 4 I shall ask thee one question more and then leave thee to thy choice What wilt thou do in a dying hour I say again Reader if Religion be not thy business now What wilt thou do when thou comest to dye Now possibly thou bearest thy self up with the streams of carnal comforts but what will become of thee when all these waters shall be dryed up and nothing of them seen but the mud of those sins which thou hast been guilty of in the use or rather abuse of them Now thou canst do well enough thou thinkest without God and his Worship but ah what wilt thou do when thou comest to look into the other World Alas then thy brightest Sun of bodily delights will be clouded thy freshest flowers will be withered and thy greatest candles extinguished and leave onely a stink behinde them Believe it death will search thee to the quick and try to purpose what mettal thou art made of When thou comest to lie upon thy sick bed and thy wealth and honors relations and flesh and heart shall fail thee what will become of thee if God be not the strength of thy heart and thy portion for ever What will he do to look death in the face upon whom the jealous God shall frown We read in Epiphanius of a Bird called Charadius that being brought into the room where one lieth sick if he look on the sick person with a fixed eye he recovereth but if he turn away his eyes from him he dyeth Friend what a miserable condition will thy poor soul be in when all thy friends and riches shall leave thee and the blessed God himself shall not vouchsafe thee a good look but turn away his face from thee Surely thy disease will be unto death eternal Thy friends may carry thy body to its grave for a time but frightful Devils will carry thy soul to hell to remain there for ever and ever Religion indeed is like the stone Chrysolampis which will shine brightest in the dark of death The truly Religious may launch into the Ocean of Eternity and sail to their everlasting harbor as the Alexandrian ship came into the Roman haven with top and top gallant with true comfort and undaunted courage Let death come when it will he can bid it welcome Death is never sudden to a Saint no guest comes unawares to him who keepeth a constant table But as when the day dawns to us in Europe the shadows of the evening are stretched on Asia so the day of their Redemption will be a long night of destruction to thee That Jaylor who knocketh off their fetters and setteth them at perfect liberty will binde thee in chains of darkness and hale thee to that dungeon of horror whence thou shalt never come forth O Reader these are no jesting matters I am confident as lightly now as thou thinkest of a Religious man as if he were onely some singular and affected person it may be thou canst hardly look on him but with a squint eye or speak of him but with a jeer yet when thou comest to dye thou wouldst give a thousand Worlds if thou hadst them to give for the least drop of his holiness or the least crum of his happiness Ponder these four forementioned particulars and thou canst not but think them weighty Questions Do not O do not dally or jest with them for be confident thou wilt finde them one day to be edged tools Possibly Reader thou art one of them that hast heard these Sermons preached and belongest to that Parish where Providence hath cast me And then as I have a special relation to thee I must beg of thee as upon my bended knees for the Lords sake and as thou wouldst not have them brought in against thee at the dreadful day of judgement that thou put the will of the Lord discovered therein immediately into practice My hearts desire and prayer to God for thee is that thou mightest be saved O that I knew what to do for thee which might be effectual for that end If thou wilt believe the blessed God the way to the happiness in Heaven is to exercise thy self to godliness on Earth there is no going into life but through the strait gate The Devil putteth old mens spectacles on young and old mens eyes which cause them to think that the way to Heaven is broad and large when God himself hath told us that it is narrow and few go in it I have acquainted thee in this Treatise what is the price not natural but pactional of Salvation there must be striving labouring fighting using violence a working it out with fear and trembling and God is resolved he will not abate the least mite O that I could therefore prevail with thee to set upon it in good earnest I do not plead with thee for my self but for thy own profit that thou mayest be happy for ever and shall I lose my labour Neighbour surely thou believest that these things are not toys and trifles but matters of infinite concernment and wilt thou slight them Alas to be frying in Hell or living in Heaven for ever are of greater consequence then thy understanding can possibly conceive The weight of these things hath so overburthened several persons
mindes that it hath made them distracted and mad and canst thou trample them as dirt under thy feet without any regard at all Because I would willingly be both faithful and helpful to thee I shall earnestly in the name of the blessed God be●eech thee as thou wouldst leave these dying comforts with a lively courage to minde and practice these two particulars without which thou canst never make Religion thy business Make sure that thy heart be throughly changed That building which reacheth up to Heaven must have a strong and sure foundation If the Watch be not of the right make it will never go true He must live in the Spirit who would walk in the Spirit Natural bodies follow the tendency of that body which is predominant in them Stones move downward Fire upward each would be at its Center th●t which stoppeth either offereth violence to it So it will be with thee thy life will be according to the tendency of thy heart if that be carnal and the flesh predominant such will thy life be if that be changed and the Spirit be predominant in it thy life will be spiritual also if the Law of God be written in thy affections then and not till then it will be legible in thy conversation O do not rest in Civility Morality Performances Priviledges or any thing short of renewing-grace It is the heart by generation cheifly polluted and it is the heart by Regeneration which must be purified or thou perishest eternally When an error is in the foundation of an house it will not be mended by daubing or rough-cast but must be pull●d down and built up anew If any man be in Christ Jesus he is a new Creature Old things are past away and all things are become new 2 Cor. 5.17 O Friend consider that by the irrevocable decree and sentence of the living God None shall he saved but those that are converted and renewed And for the sake of thy precious soul give thy self no rest till this change be wrought I assure thee it concerneth thee for thine everlasting life or death dependeth upon it 3 John ver 3. Mat. 18.3 Heh 12.14 Be much with God in Religious duties Secret praying reading and meditating are great helps to piety The bottom of a Christians building is underground and out of the Worlds sight The greatest part of that trade which a Saint drives with God is unseen and his returns are unknown to the world Christ giveth his sweetest kisses and dearest embraces to his Spouse when she is alone Jacob met with the blessing when he had parted with his company and wrastled singly with the Angel of the Covenant Bread eaten in secret how sweet is it When God meeteth thy soul in a morning or evening prayer communion with his Majestie will be sweet to thee indeed Take heed of omission of duties in the Closet The Amalekite had not eaten in three days who was nigh death It is observed that the places under the Line are not so hot as some places at a further distance because though they have the beams of the sun falling perpendicularly to cause a more intense heat yet the nights there being longer then in some other parts the days are not so hot When the nights are long the days are very cold when there are long omissions of duties godliness will cool Ah didst thou but know what many a Saint hath gained by that hidden calling I am confident thou wouldst mind it what ever thou didst omit Remember how often and earnestly I have urged thee to this duty It is thy priviledge that though thou canst not every day have the showres of publick Ordinances yet mayst thou have the watering-pots of secret duties to make thy soul fruitful Let no day pass without thy morning and evening Sacrifices Fasting is bad for some bodies I am sure to fast from spiritual food is exceeding injurious to thy soul He that runneth into enormities as a Drunkard or Swearer or Adulterer c. he stabbeth his soul he that omiteth daily duties he starveth his soul Now what great difference is there between the death of the soul by stabbing and by starving If thy soul dye eternally it will be little comfort to thee to plead that thou didst not drink or swear as others O Friend let no day pass without secret duties if thou risest in the morning and followest thy calling all day and liest down at night and never desirest Gods company or askest his blessing I would know wherein thou dost God more service then the Ox or Ass For shame Friend do not thus play the beast any longer I have in this Treatise endeavoured to assist thee by discovering the Nature and Necessity of making Religion thy business I cannot but think that the Reasons which I have laid down for this duty will move any man who is not resolved to make himself eternally miserable It is no mean mercy that thou mayst adopt all thy natural and civil actions into the family of Religion that though like cyphers they signifie nothing of themselves yet having the figure of Godliness put before them they may signifie much and stand for thousands I shall Reader onely acquaint thee with some particulars which I treat of in the book and then leave thee and it to the blessing of God I am very large in directing thee about the immediate Worship of the Lord as knowing that is of greatest weight and worth No preparation can be too great for No devotion can be too gracious in Religious Actions Amongst many other Rites and Ceremonies of the Jews ●nt Margarit le R tibus lulaeo●um it is related that before the doors of their Synagogues they have an iron plate against which they wipe and make clean their shoes before they enter and that being entred they fit solemnly for a season not once opening their mouths but considering with whom they have to do Truly Friend it concerneth thee to be full of reverence when thou appearest solemnly in Gods presence Think of it He is a jealous God and will not be mocked they that dally with him undo themselves Serious piety will abundantly profit thee but careless service will highly provoke God Spiders cobwebs may better be suffered in a Cottage the● in a Kings Palace In the next place I proceed to Natural Actions and then to Recreations about both which thy care must be that they exceed not their bounds and that they taste and savour of Religion Mandrakes if duly taken is good physick but if immoderately it casts into a dead sleep and congeales the spirits It requireth much piety and prudence not to abuse those things whilst thou art using them Satan catcheth many a soul with these baits and then throweth them into the fire But if Religion be thy business that which is poison to others will be nourishing food to thee After these I speak to Particular Callings that they might be managed so as not to
sinking into the boundless bottomless Ocean of destruction and misery through his falseness and treachery When lo on a sudden the Glorious God out of the superabundant riches of his mercy resolving that the Devil should never rob him of the honor of that manifold Wisdom unsearchable Goodness and Almighty Power which had been manifested in the work of Creation did provide and cast out the Covenant of Grace a plank sufficient for his poor shipwrackt Creature to swim safe to shore on As all the Rivers meet in the Sea and all the lines in the Centre so do all the comforts of Mankind meet in this Covenant The whole Scripture is sincere milk but this Covenant is the Cream of it All our mercies are contained in it all our hopes are sustained by it and our Heaven is at last attained through it The blessed God doth not onely enter into a Covenant of mercy but out of compassion to our infirmities hath been pleased to confirm it by his hand and seal By his hand in his word by his seals by the privy-seal of his Spirit and by the broad-seals of the Sacraments that by these immutable things in which it is impossible for God to lye we might have strong consolation who have fled for refuge to lay hold upon the hope set before us Heb. 6.18 The Lords Supper is a sign and seal of the Righteousness of Faith or the Covenant of Grace Rom. 4.11 When the blessed Saviour was taking a doleful farwel of an ungrateful world as a lively resemblance of his sufferings for his and as an undeniable evidence of his love to his he instituted this Supper 1. As a lively resemblance of his passion for his people A crucified Christ is the sum of the Law and the substance of the Gospel the knowledge of him is no less worth then Eternal life Now as he was crucified by the Jews and Souldiers actually and by unbelieving Gentiles who live amongst us interpretatively so he is crucified in the Gospel declaratively and in the Sacrament representatively This Cup saith Christ is the new Testament in my blood 1 Corinth 11.25 The Old Testament was sprinkled with the blood of Beasts but the New Testament with the blood of Christ Hebr. 9.15 19. This precious blood which was the costly price of mans Redemption which is the onely path to Eternal Salvation which was promised to Adam believed by the Patriarchs shadowed in the Sacrifices foretold by the Prophets and witnessed in the Scriptures is drunk received signified and sealed in the Supper Christ instituted this ordinance also to be a standing evidence of his affection to his The same night that he was betrayed he took bread The dearest Jesus kept his best wine till the last He knew his Disciples would be full of sorrow for his departure he therefore provided his strongest cordial against their saddest fainting fits After the Passover he took bread and instituted the Sacrament After Supper then comes the Banquet the Sweet-meats At the Lords Table Christ kisseth his Spouse with the sweetest kisses of his lips and ravisheth her heart with his warmest love In other Ordinances he Wooeth her in this he Marrieth her In other Ordinances she hath from him the salutes of a loving friend but in this the embraces of an Husband Other duties are pleasant and wholsom food but this is the costly delightful feast In this Christ bringeth his beloved into his Banqueting house a store-house of all sweet delights of variety of delicacies and his Banner over her is love Cant. 2.4 A certain man made a great Supper Luk. 14.16 I may truely say so of the Sacrament This is a great Supper in regard of its Author The great God is Master of the feast He gave his own Son for the life of the World 2. In regard of the matter of it which is the flesh of Jesus Christ Men set bread and wine on the Table but Christ setteth his own body and blood there In this ordinance we eat not onely Panem Domini sed panem Dominum The bread of the Lord but the bread which is the Lord. The gods say they are come down in the likeness of man behold here God the Son cometh down in the likeness of bread and wine he himself is eat and drunk by faith Is not this a rare banquet 3. In regard of the great price of it Banquets are costly but O what did this feast cost Beasts are slain before they can be food for our bodies but Lo here the Lord of life was put to death that he might be food for our starving souls Cleopatra dissolved a pearl worth 50000. l. in Vinegar and drunk it up at a draught but as costly as her liquor was it was much worse then puddle water in comparison of the precious blood of Christ which the beleiver drinketh at this great Supper 4. In regard of its great effects It sealeth pardon peace and salvation to the Saint it conveyeth the Image and love of God nay God himself into the soul Through the golden pipe of this Ordinance is conveyed the golden Oyl of divine influence There is Manna indeed in this pot Well may it be called a great Supper The Elements are of small value but the Sacrament is of infinite worth A conveyance of land fairly written in Parchment with wax fastened to it is of little price but when it is signed sealed and delivered to the use of a person it may be worth much it may convey thousands A little bread and a spoonful or two of wine are in themselves of very small value but when received according to Christs institution and accompanied with his benediction they will be of unspeakable value they will convey thousands and millions to the beleiver The Lords Supper is indeed like an Elixar which is small in quantity but great in value and efficacy having in it the spirits and substance of many excellent things In prayer all the graces are exercised and so also at the Supper but not onely all the graces but most of the other Ordinances of God are invited to this feast The Word Prayer Singing do all meet at the Table and contribute their help to carry the Christian up to Heaven I premise these things Reader purposely to make thee more wary The corrupting of the best is worst of all Poison in Wine is much worse then in Water Kings expect that their Children should be respected though their officers be refused Surely saith God They will reverence my Son Mat. 21.37 The very work about which he comes will make him welcome Though they refuse my Servants yet they will reverence my Son The Casuists say Sacramentum articulus mortis aequiparantur A man must be looked upon at the Sacramental board as if he were on a bying bed Friend thou shouldst be as serious when thou art going to the Lords Supper as if thou wert going into the other World He that cometh carelesly gets nothing from Christ It
man must cut his sute according to his cloth I mean his apparel must not be above his rank and estate Some men famish their bellies to make their backs fine others turn their rents into ruffs their riches into robes Prodigi singulis auribus bina aut terna perdent patrimonia Senec. their lands into laces and hang as Seneca saith two or three Lordships in their ears that when they have their best clothes on we may say of them They are in midst of all their wealth Even those whose honor may allow richer garments then the vulgar ought to distinguish between prodigality and what is sutable to their places Alcisthenes had a costly cloak sold by Dionysius to the Carthaginians for an 120 talents Heliogabalus had rich apparel yet never wore it twice his shoes were embellished with diamonds his seats were strewed with muske and amber his bed was covered with silver and gold and beset with pearl But Augustus Cesar was much on the other hand and wore no other garments then what his wife Sueton. his sister or his daughter made him and being asked the reason answered That rich and gay cloathing was either the ensign of Pride or nurse of luxury So Alaxander Severus Emperor of Rome Lips Exem p. 184. did always cloath himself in ordinary apparrel saying That the Empire did consist invertue not in bravery The ancester of us all was clad in leather Gen. 3.21 and so were the Lords worthies of whom the world was not worthy Heb. 11.37 Though now every servant forsooth must be clad in silk and for gallantry outvie their Lady It is recorded as a peice of high presumption of Hubert Archbishop of Canterbury Speed that when King John had put his courtiers into a new livery he put his servants into the same but in our days presumption and prodigality exceed for peasants can be more gaudy then their Prince The Peacock hath more gayfeathers then the eagle the King of birds A wise man that dwelleth in an hired house having no certain time of abode in it will so far take care of it that it may be a shelter to him against the weather and possibly that it be neat and handsom but he will not be at the cost of curious ornaments or rich pictures because he knoweth not how soon he may have warning to be gone Our bodies are the houses of clay in which our souls dwell we know not how soon death may seal a lease of ejectment and turn our souls out of doors it is prudence to fence our bodies so well with garments that they may be defended against the cold yea to be cloathed somewhat sutable to our conditions but it is extream folly to be prodigal in garnishing our earthly tabernacles when it may be this night our souls shall be required of us Confident I am that Taylors long bills and their poor neighbours short coats who have scarce enough to cover their nakedness will be little for many rich mens credit at the day of Christ Reader if thou art a wealthy man remember this note whilst thou livest That one plain coat bestowed on the back of the poor will become thee better at this day and yeild thee more comfort at the last day then twenty silver laced ones on thy own back There is another thing to be avoided about Apparel Vestium curio●●tas morum mentium deformitatis indicium est Bern. and that is curiosity and wastful expence of time Excessive out ward neatness is often accompanied with excessive inward nastiness Seneca speaketh of some that spend all their morning inter pectinem speculum between the comb and the glass and are more troubled at a tangle in their hair then at a disorder in the Common-wealth How many in our days spend the whole Forenoon in decking their dying bodies and leave no time to dress their immortal souls they spend that precious time between the comb and the glass Cultus magna tura virtutis magna incuria Cato which should be spent between Prayer and Scripture These painted carcasses will tell us that if they can but dress themselves by dinner time it is as much as they desire Alas poor souls what will they do when they come to enter into their eternal estates when time shall be no more A dying bed if their consciences be but awakened will teach them to value time at an higher rate and make them know that a commodity of such worth is not to be wasted 3. I shall speak to the vertues in Apparel which must be manifested 1. Modesty One end of Apparel is to cover our shame and nakedness those therefore that discover their naked necks and breasts cross this end and glory in their shame Such women proclaim their wantonness Lascivious habits are unhandsom and unholy That Women adorn themselves with modest Apparel with shamefacedness and sobriety not with broydered Hair or Gold or Pearls or costly array 1 Tim. 2.9 Modesty is a womans special beauty and a needful vertue in them that are the weaker Vessels As some tempt men to folly by their tongues so others by their attire this the very Heathen were so sensible of that Zalucus the Law-giver of Locris enacted That no woman should be attended with above one Maid in the Street except she were drunk that she should not wear embroydered nor undecent Apparel but when she intended to play the Whore 2. Gravity Antient men those that are in seats of justice and professors must not take up every new-fangle fashion Cloaths of light colours on their backs will not be comely Joseph a child might be handsom enough in a particoloured coat but not so a man When a grave Roman Petitioned the Emperour for a favour and was denyed and had afterwards coloured his hair shaved himself and in light cloaths requested the same courtesie he was wittily answered by Caesar who understood the fraud I denyed your Father yesterday and should I grant it you to day he might take it ill Christians must be much guided by the credit of Religion Whatsoever things are of good report is both a general and a special rule for a Saint to walk by in all such things There may be excellent use of that place Rom. 12.2 be not conformed to this World 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Beza translates it fashion not your selves I love not affected singularity but I like a Christian Gravity both in countenance carriage and attire 3. There is another thing which a Christian must have a respect to in his Apparel and that is his calling and ability It is dishonourable both to a mans person and profession when God hath ranked him among the rich for him to rank himself among the poor and ragged Of Lewis the 11. King of France it is written in his Chamber of accounts Two shillings for fustian to new sleeve his Majesties old Doublet and three half pence for liquor to grease his Boots Agesilaus King
Song gives savoury advice to his Children We need not doubt but his spiritual motions were quickest when his natural motions were slowest that the stream of grace ran with full strength when it was to empty it self into the Ocean of glory Mark what special counsel he gives them who were committed to his special care Deut. 32.46 Set your hearts to all the words which I command you this day for it is not a vain thing because it is your life in which words we have 1. a Commandment and 2. an Argument The commandment is Set your hearts to all the words which I command you this day that is exercise your selves to godliness He doth not say lend them your ears to listen to them slightly or let them have your tongues to speak of them cursorily No it is not set your heads but set your hearts to all the words c. He doth not say let your works be according to these words or let your feet ever make them your walk No it is not set your hands but set your hearts to the words that I speak unto you Make it your business and then your Ears and Tongues your Feet your Heads your Hands and all will be employed about them to the purpose But what special Argument doth Moses urge for the enforcement of this great work Surely that which I am speaking of the weight of it Set your he arts to all the words which I command you this day For it is not a vain thing because it is your life v. 47. Moses had experience that the hearts of the Israelites were exceeding knotty wood and therefore he useth an heavy Beetle to drive home the Wedge It is not a vain thing it is life as if he had said Were it a matter of small moment ye might Laze and Loyter about it but it behoves you to bestir your selves lustily to follow it laboriously to set your hearts to it for it is as much worth as your lives that pearl of matchless price is eng●g●d and at stake in your pursuit of godliness Life though but natural is of so much value that men will sacrifice their honours and pleasures their wealth and liberty and all to it The Egyptians parted with their costly jewels willingly Hinc clamor ille desperation is index omnes mortui sumus binc facilitas illa in dando Calo. in Exod. 12. ●anquam si hoc pretio animas redimissent Jun. in loc to redeem their lives as Calvin observeth The widow in the Gospel spared none of her wealth to obtain health which is much inferior to life Skin for skin all that a man has will he give for his life Throw but a brute into the water to drown it how will it labour and toll and sweat to preserve its life View a man on his death-bed when a distemper is like a strong enemy fighting to force life out of the field how doth Nature then with all the might and strength it hath strive and struggle to keep its ground What panting and breathing what sweating and working of all the parts do you behold and no wonder The man laboureth for life If there be such labour for a natural life that is but umbra vitae a shadow to this the substance which is but the union of the body and soul and lyeth under a necessity of dissolution what labour doth a spiritual life deserve that consisteth in the souls union and communion with the blessed Saviour and which neither men nor devils neither death nor hell shall ever deprive a beleever of but in spight of all it will grow and increase till it commence eternal life Well might Moses expect that such an heavy weight as this should make great impression and sink deep into their affections For it is not a vain thing because it is your life We may say of this work of Christianity compared with all other works what David said of Goliahs sword There is none like it this is soul-work this is God-work this is eternity-work and therefore of greatest weight and requireth us all to make it our business Such blows as these three are one would think might force fire out of a flint This is Soul-work As soul wo is the heaviest wo and soul-wants are the greatest wants so soul-work is the weightest work the dangers of a soul are the deepest dangers the loss of the soul is the dreadfullest loss the neglect of the soul is the dolefullest neglect The consequence of the action is frequently specified from the excellency of the person or subject concerned in it The soul of man is a most excellent piece both in regard of the spirituality and immortality of its substance as also in regard of that divine image imprinted on it those heavenly qualities with which it was at first endowed Princes stamp not their image except in cases of necessity on brass or tynn or leather but on gold and silver the chiefest and most excellent mettals therefore though those affairs which concern the body are but of ordinary respect yet those that concern the soul are of unconceivable weight and regard One soul is more worth then ten thousand bodies then ten thousand worlds The greatest thing saith one in this world is Man and the greatest thing in man is his Soul It is an abridgement of the invisible world as the body is of the visible The body though no mean work considered absolutely yet of ordinary worth considered comparatively to the soul It is a mud-wall inclosing a rich treasure as a common mask to a beautiful face as a course cabinet having in it a precious carkanet The very Heathen acknowledged that the soul was the man 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Plat. the body but its servant and therefore the Christian may well call it and care for it as his darling as his onely one as the original is in that place Psal 22.20 Chrysostom observeth Omnia Deus dedit duplicia Homil. 22. ad popul Antioch God hath given man two Eyes two Ears two Hands two Feet that the failing of the one may be supplied by the help of the other Animam vero unam but one Soul if that miscarry there is no remedy Nebuchadnezzar lost his Reason and that was restored David lost his Wives Children and Goods and yet they were recovered nay Lazarus lost his life and was revived but for the loss of the Soul no power can recover it no price can redeem no pearls no not the whole world can recompence its loss Well might Charls the Fifth Val. Rath Car. lib. 3. when sollicited by a great Counsellor Antonino de Leva to cut off all the Princes in Germany that he might rule alone forbear to put his advice into practice and cry out O Anima Anima O my soul my soul what then will become of my soul It was a royal answer which Maximilian King of Bohemia gave the Pope who perswaded him to turn good Catholique promising him much
Manna the Bread of Heaven and what a condition is thy poor soul in then They that have the Green-sickness care not for solid food but hanker after trash They have souls sadly sick that neglect the good Word of God and long after the fancies and wit of men God doth by the foolishness of preaching save them that believe that he alone might have the glory of their salvation That the excellency of the power may be of God and not of us 2 Cor. 4.7 When men nibble at the bait of Humane Eloquence and are caught the skill of the Angler is applauded but when men bite at the naked hook the simplicity of the Gospel all will grant this to be a miracle and say This is the finger of God Dost thou not see that as Daniel and his companyons thrived better and looked fairer with feeding upon pulse then the other Captives who fed on the Kings dainty provision Optimi concionatores ad vulgus sunt dixit Lutherus qui puriliter trivi aliter populariter sim liei● sime d●cent Melch. Adam in vita So those Christians in every Parish look abroad where you will thrive more in holiness and are fairer in Gods eye who feed on plain naked Scripture then those whom no dishes will please but such as are curiously cooked for a Kings Palate Thou wilt not believe but that thy face may be seen in a glass where the sides are not guilded thou wilt chuse an horse not by its trappings and fine furniture but by its usefulness and serviceableness Why shouldst thou be so childish as to be in love with no garments but what are daubed with Silver lace when other plain raiment will warm thy body as well Reader if the fault be not thine own thou mayest gain much nay I must say most good by plain preaching Those that dwell by the Sea side gather up those precious commodities bequeathed to the Sea at the death or wrack of the ship when the Sea is lowest which they cannot do when the waters are highest I do not here plead for vain repetitions and tedious circumlocutions nor for them that dress their meat so slovenly that their Guests loath it I know it s below the Majestie of a King when he is delivering his minde by his Ambassador to play the Orator but it is not below him to speak sense and reason Wise men love a neat compact discourse but it must be more full of matter then words convincing the judgement and working upon the affections Plain solid Sermons are most acceptable to pious and serious souls There is a vast difference between washing the face of a Discourse clean and painting it the former is lawful and commendable the latter sinful and abominable Ministers must minde the capacities of their Auditories and not put that meat into their mouthes which their teeth cannot chew nor their stomachs concoct Their Sermons of quiddities haeccieties and School nicities may in the opinion of giddy men tend to their own praise but never to their hearers profit Such men when their children ask bread give them stones which may choak them but will not cherish them It is pity he should ever teach School that will not speak to his Scholars so as they may understand him But the worst supposition is Thy Teacher may be untaught himself his life may give the lye to his lips As to this prejudice 1. Remember That an accusation must not be received against an Elder except under two or three witnesses thy charity O Christian and the Dignity of his Calling must both move thee to be slow to believe As it is sinful to raise up an evil report Constantine the Emperor said That if he saw a Bishop committing uncleanness he would rather cover that foul fact with his Imperial robe then suffer it to be divulged to the dishonor of the Gospel so it is sinful to take up an evil report whoever laid it down ready for thee But secondly if thy Pastor like a wooden Vessel giveth that wine to thee which he never tasteth nor savoureth himself be not therefore wholly discouraged If it be true that thy Minister is false to God and his own soul that he onely wears Christs livery that he might the more unsuspected do the Devils work I confess it is matter of great lamentation the good Lord take care either for their conversion or ejection for certainly they being listed under Christs colours and false to their Captain do his adversary the Devil double service The sins of Teachers are the Teachers of sins they who forget their Sermons will remember their sins to patronize their own But if the providence of God should binde thee to such a Pastor which is no small unhappiness consider that God fed Elijah by a Raven and surely he can feed thee by an unclean creature He increaseth sometimes his Enemies gifts that they might be instrumental to increase his peoples graces It is unquestionable in my judgement though some I know doubt it that a sinner may convert a soul and my reason is this because the operation of the word doth not depend upon the piety of the Preacher but upon the free grace and power of the Lord. Yet I must also confess that I beleive that God doth not so often vouchsafe to his enemies as to his friends that honour and happiness But as bad as he is God may use him to do thee good As the best Ministers Sermons are not to be received for their good lives sake so the worst Ministers Preaching is not to be rejected because of their evil practices A blind man may hold a Candle to give light to others whilst he himself remains in the dark the Sun of righteousness may convey the light of holiness into the house of thine heart through this sluttish Window Thou mayst derive water from the Fountain of life through a leaden pipe A deaf bell may be useful to call a Christian to Church and he that never heard so as to live may call a soul to Christ Wholesom Sugar may be in a poisoned Cane The Egyptian Jewels were helpful to the Tabernacle David made the spoiles of the Gentiles service able to the Temple and surely the son of David can make the parts and guifts of an Egyptian an Enemy to God serviceable to thy soul The Pharisees in the days of Christ were many of them vicious persons yet they fitting in Moses Chair Christ doth not deny them audience but commandeth his Disciples to distinguish between their words and their works he doth not forbid them to hear their Doctrine but enjoyn them to forbear their doings Mat. 23.2 3. 2. The second thing requisite to preparation is this Before thou goest to hear labour to affect thine heart with the necessity excellency and efficacy of the word There was half an hours silence in Heaven before the seventh Trumpet sounded thy duty is to weigh the nature and end of the word before thou goest
do thou hear and amend Charles the great did set his Crown upon the Bible intimating thereby that his Crown his carriage as a King should be according to the commands of the word O do thou hide this word in thine heart that thou mayst hold it forth to thy companions by the hand of an holy conversation Walk according to this Rule A good Wish about the word wherein the former heads are epitomized THe holy Scriptures being of such authority The Introduction as the hand writing and heart of God himself and so singular a mercy to me that by the guidance of this Star I am directed as the wise men to Jesus Christ I wish in general that I may set an high price upon every part thereof that every peice may be currant with me for his sake whose Image and superscription it beareth O that my carriage before at and after hearing may witness to God and my conscience Preparation for hearing that I esteem the law of his lips above thousands of Gold and Silver In particular I wish that as the Jews when they went to hear the law Preparation for hearing by laying aside evil frames sanctified themselves and washed their cloaths so before I go to read or hear the word I may sanctifie my soul and wash my heart from all superfluity of naughtiness and with meekness receive that ingrafted word which is able to save my soul Prejudice I wish that like Jehoshaphat I may prefer one Micaiah before four hundred false Prophets yet that I may ever make a difference betwixt an evil Ministers Preaching and practice and even when the Minister is full of grace may so distinguish between the treasure and the vessel as not to vallue the Message for the Messengers sake but to bid the workman welcome for the words sake I wish that I may be so sensible of my owninability to profit by this holy ordinance By prayer and of the speakers impotency to Preach home to my conscience that I may cry mightily to my God that he would open my heart to receive the word with all affection and so direct the Arrows which the Preacher taketh out of the quiver of Scripture that they may hit and pierce my dearest corruptions Consideration I desire that the consideration of the words excellency may cause me to prize it highly Of its necessity may make me to improve it diligently and of its efficacy may move me to go to hear as a Prisoner going to a bar to be tryed for my everlasting life or death Good ends in hearing I wish that the weight of the word may sink so deep into my heart that I may never hear Sermons to pick flowers of Oratory or to please my fancy but to receive virtue from Christ for the drying up my issue of sin and that I might cleanse my ways by taking heed thereto according to Gods Word Worldly thoughts laid by That the noise of the World may never hinder me from hearing the voiee of my God At hearing I wish that when I come into the place of worship I may set my self solemnly as before the Judge of quick and dead Seriousness as in Gods presence and as in the presence of the Lord with fear and awe give audience to his word If I were hearkening to an earthly Prince I would be serious O with what reverence should I hear from the blessed and onely Potentate Because without application the word will be unprofitable Application of it I wish that I may never draw a curtain before my own Picture but overlooking others may see my own face in the glass of the law O that by faith I may so take down the hook of the word as to be caught and taken by it Renovation by it My prayer is that the Gospel may come to me not in word onely but in power also that I may go to it as clean paper for any inscription as soft wax for any impression which my God shall be pleased to make upon me O that I might behold the Lord so effectualy in that glass as to be changed into his Image from glory to glory In special I wish that my sins may be placed by me in the front of this spiritual battle as Uriah purposely to be slain and that those smooth stones which are taken out of the silver streams of the Sanctuary may be thrown by so skilful and powerful a hand that they may sink deep into the foreheads of those uncircumcised ones After hearing Petition for a blessing to their death and destruction I wish that after the seed is sown I may beg that the showres of Heavens blessing may accompany it that it may spring up in the fruits of righteousness to the glory of my God and good of my precious soul And because the Gospel is a dish which is not set on every Table Thanksgiving for the Word though free grace bestoweth it on me I wish that I may rise from this spiritual food before I have given thanks to the Master of the feast Practice I desire finally that as I looked like a Saint in hearing I may live like a Saint after I have heard that those blossoms of good purposes which sprouted forth while the Minister was preaching may ripen into practice that whatsoever characters others are known by to be Christians I may be known by this ear mark to be one of Christs sheep even by hearing his voyce so as to follow him wheresoever he goeth Though others like petty Chapmen deal onely in some particular commodities and those such as will serve their own turns I desire that I may deal with the Word by whole-sale and esteem all Gods Precepts concerning all things to be right O that I might order my whole conversation aright and at the last see the salvation of my God! Amen CHAP. XVIII How a Christian may exercise himself to Godliness in receiving the Lords Supper and 1. Of the Nature of that Ordinance and preparation for it VVHen God had caused his everlasting Decree to fall in labour and had delivered it by giving the world a being and upon infinite consultation had formed Man to be his Vice-Roy over all the works of his hands he embarqued him with all abilities needful for such a voyage in the bottom of the Covenant of Works Adam set forth fully furnished with skill and richly fraught with all the Fortunes Hopes and Happiness of Mankinde but he had scarce lanched out of sight before Satan who knew very well the worth of the prize envying man the Haven of bliss to which he was sailing and envying God who was the owner the honor of such of a venture raised a storm whereby the Vessel through the unfaithfulness of Adam the Pilot ran upon a Rock and miscarried O what a joyful spectacle was that to Satan What a doleful sight to Adam to behold himself and all his posterity
Sam. 26.9 But what is it to murther the Son of God no tongue can tell no pen can write the horrid hainous nature of Christ-murther He is thy everlasting Father It made a dumb childe speak to see another stabbing his Father and wilt thou imbrue thine own hands in thy Fathers blood Jesus Christ is thy King and wilt thou stretch forth thy hands against thy Head thy Soveraign Had Zimri peace who slew his Master Nay Jesus Christ is thy Redeemer and wilt thou put him to death who is the Author of thy life He gave thee thy being and wouldst thou deprive him of his being He is the onely Physician that can cure thee and wilt thou kill him Once more Jesus Christ is God and wilt thou lift up thy hand I would say a thought against the blessed God God deserveth infinitely more love then thou canst possibly give and shall thine heart be so full of hatred as to let fly against the God of Heaven Oh! say with David when Abishai perswaded him to slay Saul The Lord forbid that I should stretch forth my hand against the Lords anointed When Satan or thy own heart would perswade thee to be slight in the examination of thy self and formal in thy humiliation for sin that thou mightest be guilty of the body and blood of the Lord let Conscience cry out God forbid that I should stretch out my hand against Jesus Christ the Lords Anointed And truly Friend if after such warning as God gives thee in this head thou shouldst dare to receive unworthily thou wouldst finde it hereafter to thine unspeakable hurt As Reuben told his Brethren when they were in distress Spake I not unto you saying Do not sin against the child and ye would not hear therefore behold his blood is required Gen. 42.22 So if thou now darest to approach the Lords Table in thy sinful unregenerate estate in thy filth and pollution when thou comest to lie under some smart rod or on thy dying bed or at least in the other World Conscience will fly in the face Did I not speak unto thee saying Do not sin against the holy Childe Jesus and thou wouldst not hear therefore behold his blood is required at thy hands O Friend Friend what wilt thou do in such an hour If on him who slew Cain vengeance should be taken sevenfold what vengeance shall be taken on him who slayeth Jesus Christ How dreadful will thy perdition be if the onely Saviour be thine Accuser and that blood which alone can procure thy pardon shall cry for thine eternal punishment O think of it seriously Hast thou never had hard thoughts of the Jews for their cruelty to the Son of God and wilt thou do worse thy self The Jews crucified him but once but thou by continuing an unworthy receiver crucifiest him often The Jews did it ignorantly Had they known they would not have crucified the Lord of glory 1 Cor. 2.8 but thou knowest him to be the Son of God the Saviour of the World They crucified him in his estate of Humiliation but thou in his estate of Exaltation They had not not thee for a Warning when they put him to death but thou hast them for a Warning to thee They crucified him when he was to rise again the third day but thou so crucifiest him that he might never rise more were it in thy power O take heed what thou dost and be not worse then a Jew Thy suffering He that eateth and drinketh unworthily eateth and drinketh damnation to himself 1 Cor. 11.29 Some I know are offended at the translation of the Greek Word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Damnation but I see little reason for it for Damnation is the end of every sin though it be not the end of every sinner Paul speaketh of Believers indeed but as it may be truly said of one that drinketh poyson Such a man drunk his bane though by the help of a Physician such an Antidote may be given as may prevent the Patients death so it may be truly spoken of a Believer who receiveth unworthily He eateth and drinketh his own damnation though through the Grace and Help of Jesus Christ no thank to himself he is recovered out of that sin and saved Beza and the Geneva Translation take it in this sense So the word is taken John 3.17 18. Rom. 3.8 and in several other places Now what an argument is here to disswade thee from going rashly or unpreparedly to the Table of the Lord. That which is a worthy receivers meat will be thy poison the same red Sea of Christs blood which is salvation to others they pass safely through it into the land of promise will be damnation to thee King John Speed as our English Croniclers write Sim●s Eccks Hist. was poisoned by a cup of Wine The Emperour Henry the seventh was poisoned by the bread in the Sacrament through the treachery and treason of a Monk The Israelites did all eat the same spiritual meat and did all drink the same spiritual drink but with many of them God was not well pleased for they were overthrown in the Wilderness 1 Cor. 10.3 4.5 Those that eat and drink in Christs presence were punished with everlasting perdition Mat. 7.23 And do not please thy self because thou feelest no such poisonous operation at present in unworthy receiving that therefore thou needst not fear it They that eat Italian Figs carry their death about them though they fall not down dead suddenly Therefore Reader take some time and pains to commune with thy own heart before thou goest to the Sacrament Charge it upon its allegiance to God to hear thee patiently and to carry it self sutably If I receive this Supper with an holy preparation it will be a seal of and an help to my eternal salvation it will be an earnest of matchless love and an entrance into an endless happy life but if I eat and drink unworthily there is death in the pot death in the cup I eat and drink my own damation O how doleful is that one word Damnation What a dreadful sound doth it make in mine ears What fearful sighs doth it cause in my soul Damnation is no trifling business God threateneth it in earnest The damned feel it in earnest and shall I jest with it Surely I were better eat the bread of affliction and drink the water of adversity then eat this bread and drink this cup of the Lord unworthily Canst thou be so bloody as to stab thy self and thy Redeemer to the heart with one blow O my soul bestir thy self awake out of sleep and do not dally about the concernments of eternal life and death let thy care and conscience be such in fitting thy self for this sacred Ordinance that thy Saviour may see thou hast an high respect for his precious blood and a tender regard to thine own everlasting good For thy help about this Ordinance I shall speak 1. To thy duty before the Sacrament 2.
puddle water Reflect on them thy self and compare them with the Law of God and thou wilt find cause to pray over thy prayers to weep over thy tears to be ashamed of thy shame and to abhor thy self for thy self abhorrency Do not think with thy self I have examined my heart faithfully and find that I do not come short of the grace of God I have acknowledged mine iniquities and been sorrowful for my sins and therefore I cannot miscarry at this Sacrament Such a trusting of thy self would be a tempting of thy Saviour and would certainly hinder the success of the Sacrament It would be to thee as the cutting off Sampsons locks was to him Judg 16.20 He thought to have gone forth as at other times and shake himself And he wist not that the Lord was departed from him Thou mayest think after such self-confidence to go to the Lords Supper as at other times but alas what wilt thou do for the Lord will depart from thee and then what sport will Satan and sin those uncircumcised ones make with thee Reader let me perswade thee when thou hast been diligent in the trial of thy spiritual estate and hast with many tears bewailed the pollution of thy nature and transgressions of thy life to cast thy self wholly upon Jesus Christ for assistance in the duty As Jehosaphat when he had 50000. men ready Armed for the battel cryed out O Lord our God we have no might against this great company 2 Chron. 20.6 neither know we what to do but our eyes are unto thee So after thou hast made the greatest preparation possible as beleiving the weight and worth of the supper the purity and Majesty of the Master of the Feast do thou look up to Christ and say Lord I have no ability no might for this great supper for a right performance of this great ordinance neither know I what to do but my eys are unto thee When Asa had an Army of two hundredand fourscore thousand men of valour to fight with the Ethiophians he prayeth and trusteth to God as if he had not one man Lord it is nothing for thee to help whether with many or with them that have no power Help us O Lord God for we rest on thee 2 Chron. 8 1. and in thy name we go against this great multitude So do thou say Lord I have no power for this holy Supper help me O Lord my God for I rest on thee and in thy name I go to this great and weighty Ordinance Truely couldst thou after all the provision thou hast made disclaim it wholly in regard of dependance and cast thy self on Christ for assistance I durst be the Prophet to foretel a good day The gaudy flower which standeth upon its own stalk doth quickly wither when the plain Ivy that depends upon the house and leans on it is fresh and green all the year He that trusteth to his own legs in this duty is as sure to fall as if he were down already the weak child walketh safest that all the way holdeth by and hangeth upon its parent If thou wert now going to receive be advised to write after Davids Copy He looked up to God both for assistance and acceptance I will go in the strength of the Lord I will make mention of thy righteousness yea of thine onely Psa 71.16 Let thy practice be sutable to his when thou goest out of thy house And let thy prayer be the same with the Spouses when thou art entring into Gods house O then look up to heaven and cry mightily Awake thou Northwind and come O South blow upon my Garden that the Spices thereof may flow out Let my beloved come into his Garden and eat his pleasant fruits Cant. 4. ult CHAP. XIX How a Christian may exercise himself to godliness at the Table I Come to the second particular about the Lords Supper Secondly and that is thy behaviour at the Table or in the time of receiving In reference to which I would advise thee 1. To mind the sutable subjects which are to be considered at it 2. To observe the special graces which are to be exercised in it There are three principal subjects of meditation when thou approachest the Table in order to the three graces which must then be acted The Subjects of meditation are Christs passion his affection and thy own corruptions The three graces are Faith Love and godly sorrow Christs death is sure footing for Faith Paul never desired better 1 Cor. 2.2 it is not onely an elect and precious but a tried stone and a sure foundation on which whosoever beleiveth shall never be confounded Isa 28.16 Faith picks excellent food from this heavenly carkass The love of Christ displayed in his death causeth and calleth forth the love of a Christian Faith bringeth the soul that is like a dead coal near to the live coals of Gods burning love in giving his onely Son and Christs burning love in giving himself and by these it is turned into fire all in a flame of love as the Eccho answereth the voice it returneth the love it receiveth Our own sins meditated on stit up the third grace which is godly sorrow Though indeed this liquor will run from any of the three Vessels if they be but peirced When Christ hung upon the Cross under the weight of Gods wrath water came out of his sides as well as blood Who can think of his sufferings without sorrow and of his blood without tears His love in its heat may well thaw the most frozen spirit but sin the cause of his sufferings will like a knife cut and prick to the heart indeed but First I begin with the subjects of meditation and among them in the first place with the passion of Christ First Meditate now on the suffering of thy Saviour the wound of Christ out of which came precious balsom to heal all thy sinful sores ought never to be forgotten but the remembrance of them is never so seasonable as at a Sacrament One end of the institution of this Ordinance was the commemoration of Christs death As oft as ye eat this brrad and drink this cup ye shew forth the Lords death till he come 1 Cor. 11.26 27. The Sacrament is a lively crucifix wherein Jesus Christ is evidently set forth crucified before thine eyes When thou seest the bread and wine consecrated and set apart consider how God the Father did from eternity set a part his onely Son for his bloody passion and thy blessed redemption Consider he was a Lamb slain before the foundation of the World When thou seest the bread and wine upon the Table consider that as the Corn was ground in the Mill to make that bread and the grapes squezed to make that wine so thy Saviour was beaten in the Mill and Wine-press of his Fathers wrath before he could be meat indeed and drink indeed to nourish thee unto life everlasting When thou seest the bread broken
in peices think how the body of Christ was broken for thine iniquities It pleased the Lord to bruise him as Spice is beaten small in a mortar with a Pessel so the word signifieth Isa 53.10 Well might he cry out I am feeble and sore broken I have roared by reason of the disquietness of my heart Psa 38.8 When thou seest the Wine poured out meditate on his precious blood which was shed for many for the remission of sins O consider his wounds and his words I am poured out like water and all my bones are on t of joynt my heart is like Wax it is melted in the midst of my bowels Psa 22.14 Consider the doleful tragedy which he acted from first to last Meditate on his incarnation For the Son of God to become the Son of man for him that lived from all eternity to be born in time for him that thundereth in the clouds to cry in the Cradle for him that created all things to become a creature is a greater suffering then if all the men and Angels in this and the other World were crowded into an atome or turned into nothing This was the first and greatest step of his humiliation Consider the manner of his birth he was born not of some great Princes but of mean and indigent Parents not in a Royal Palace but in a place where Beggers and Beasts are entertained a Stable he was no sooner born but sought after to be butchered He fled for his life in his very swadling clouts and was an early Martyr indeed When he grew up though he was of ability to have sway'd the Scepter of all the Empires in the World to have instructed the greatest Potentates and Counsellours in the mysteries of wisdom and knowledge though to him Adam and Solomon yea and Angels themselves were fools yet he lived privately with his supposed Father many years and suffered his deity to be hid as light in a Dark Lanthorn neer thirty years save that once it darted a little out when at twelve years of age he disputed which confuted the great Rabbies of the Jews Luk. 2.46 When he entred upon his publique Ministry he is no sooner ascended the Stage but all the Divels in Hell appear against him and he is forced to fight hand to hand with them for forty days together and when they left him they did not take their leave but departed onely for a season Luk. 4.13 His whole life was a living death How poor was he when he was fain to work a miracle to pay his Tax The Foxes had holes and the Birds of the Air had Nests but the Son of man had not where to lay his head though he were heir of all things Mat. 8.20 What did he suffer in his name when the worst words in the mouths of the Jews were thought not bad enough for him He is called the Carpenters Son a Glutton a Drunkard a Blasphemer a friend of Publicans and sinners a Samaritan a Devil nay the Prince of Devils What hunger and thirst and weariness did he undergo He that feeds others with his own flesh had many an hungry belly He that gave others that water of which whosoever drinketh shall thirst no more had his own veins sucking and paining him for thirst He that is himself the onely Ark for the weary Dove to flie too for rest did himself take many a wearisom step and travail many a tiresome journey Well might the Prophet call him a man of sorrows and acquainted with greifs though he had suffered no more then what is already written but all this was but the beginning of his sorrows The dregs of the cup were at the bottom Doubtless many an aking heart had he as a Woman with Child beforehand when he thought of the bitter pangs sharp throws and hard labour which he was to suffer at the close of his life O Friend Remember this Son of David and all his troubles but to come to his end which is specially represented in this Ordinance I will take him in the Garden where he felt more then I can write or think Consider his body there it was all over in a goar blood Ah what suffered he when he did sweat clods of blood To sweat blood is against nature much more in a cold season most of all when he was full of fear and terrour then the blood retreats to the heart to guard it and to be guarded by it But behold Reader thy Saviour for thy sake and under the weight of thy sins did sweat blood in a cold night when he was exceedingly afraid Ah who would not love such a Saviour and who would not loath sin But the sufferings of his body were nothing to the sufferings of his soul these were the soul of his sufferings Observe his expression My soul is exceeding sorrowful My soul is sorrowful unto death Vnto death not onely Extensively seventeen or eighteen hours till death ended his life but chiefly Intensively such sorrow as the pangs of death bring surely far greater Again Father if it be possible let this cup pass from me Wise and valiant men do not complain of nothing Ah how bitter was that cup which Valour and Resolution it self seemed unwilling to drink The two most tormenting passions which are Fear and Grief did now seize upon him in the highest degree He began to be sorrowful and very heavy saith Matthew Chap. 26. vers 37. He began to be sore amazed and very heavy saith Mark Chap. 14. vers 33. Reader follow him farther One Disciple selleth him at the price of a Slave another Disciple forsweareth him all of them for sake him and fly the greedy Wolves lay hold on this innocent Lamb the bloody Jews apprehend him binde his hands like a Thief and hale him away to the High-Priest then they hire persons to belye Truth it self But when their testimony was insufficient upon his own most holy confession a sentence of condemnation is past upon him Consider now how the servants smite his blessed cheeks with their fists and spit on that beautiful face with their mouths which Angels counted their honor to behold the Masters flout him with their scornful carriage and mock him with their petulant language He must be the sink into which they fling all their silth Afterwards they carry him to Pilate he sendeth him to Herod Herod with some scorns and scoffs sendeth him back Thus is he like a foot-bal spurned up and down between those inhumane wretches Pilate tears his flesh with wounds and wails and presenteth him to the people with a crown of Thorns on his head to move pity the people thirsting after his blood can by no words be perswaded by no means be prevailed with to let this innocent Dove escape Though he be put in competition with a Murtherer yet the Murtherer is preferred before him and as the worst of the two he is at last condemned as a seditious person and a Traytor against Caesars Crown and
Dignity to be crucified without the gate lest the City should be polluted with his blood Now Reader come along like the beloved Disciple and behold thy Saviour bearing his own Cross and going to the place of execution to dye the death of a Slave for no Freeman was ever crucified therefore Julian in derision called him The staked God He is no sooner come to the dismal place of dead mens skulls but they tear off his cloathes and some think skin and all glued to his back with their bloody scourgings Now they stretch his body as cloth with tenters and rack it so that his bones start out of his skin I may tell all my bones Psal 22.17 in nailing his two hands to the two horns and his feet those parts so full of nerves and sinews and so the most sensible of any parts of the body to the stump of the Cross They digged my hands and my feet and hang him up between two Thieves as the most notorious Malefactor of the three He was numbred among the Trangressors His bloody watching fasting scorched wracked body is oppressed with exquisite pain and his anguish so vehement that he cryeth out I thirst to quench which they give him vinegar and gall and spice it with a scoff to make it rellish the better Let us see whether Elias will come and save him But Oh! who can imagine what he suffered in his soul when he hung under the weight of mens revenge Devils rage the Laws curse and the Lords wrath Men revile him wagging their heads and saying Thou that destroyest the Temple and buildest it in three days save they self He saved others himself he cannot save To him that was afflicted pity should have been shewn but they added affliction to the afflicted and forsook the fear of the Almighty All the Devils in Hell were now putting forth their utmost power and policy for this was their hour and the power of darkness to encrease his sufferings that if possible they might provoke him to sin thereby to have separated his Humane nature from his Divine that it might have perished eternally and all mankinde with it but the sting of his death is yet behind The head of that arrow which pierced his heart indeed was the frown of his Father That his Kinsmen the Jews whom he came to sanctifie and redeem for he was the glory of his people Israel should deliver him up to be crucified was not a small aggravation of his misery That his Apostles that had been eye-witnesses of his miracles and ear-witnesses of his Oracles to whom he had spoken so pathetically Will ye also forsake me and who had told him so resolutely We will go with thee into prison and to death Luke 22.33 Mat. 26.35 should now in his greatest extremity turn their backs upon him added some more gall to his bitter cap That his Mother should stand by the Cross weeping and have her soul pierced through with the sword of his sufferings was far from being an allay to his sorrows but that his Father of whom he had often boasted It is my Father that honoreth me My Father loveth me I and my Father are one should now in his low estate in his day of adversity in his critical hour not onely not help him and leave him alone as an harmless Dove amongst so many ravenous Vultures to contest with all the fury of Earth and Hell but also pour out the Vials of his own Wrath upon him and though the Union was not dissolved yet suffer the beams the influences to be restrained that he might fully bear the curse of the Law and feel the weight of sin this was the hottest fire in which the Paschal Lamb was roasted this caused that Heart-breaking Soul-cutting Heaven-piercing expression My God My God why hast thou forsaken me O how how justly might he have cryed out with Joh. Have pity upon me my friend have pity upon me for the hand not onely of my Enemies and my friends of multitudes of men and of Legions of Divels but the hand of God hath touched me How truely might the Husband have taken up his Spouses lamentation Is it nothing to you all ye that pass by Behold and see if there be any sorrow like unto my sorrow which is done unto me wherewith the Lord hath afflicted me in the day of his fierce anger Ah who can write or read such a tragedy with dry eyes Friend when thou art at the Sacrament think of these sufferings and beleive it they will make work among thy sins When thou takest the cup of wine do not forget the cup of Worm-wood which thy Saviour drunk for thy sake he drank of the Brook in the way he drank the cup of his Fathers wrath infinitely imbittered with the curse of the law that thou mightest drink the cup of blessing At the Table obey his own command Do this in remembrance of me Secondly Meditate on the affection of Christ We will remember thy love more then wine saith the Spouse when thou seest the wine think of that love which is better then wine Belevie it if ever there were a love-feast this is it Men testifie their love in bestowing food on their hungry friends but ah what love was that which gave his blessed body and precious blood to feed his starving enemies He that considereth what Christ suffered and for whom may well think he was little else but a lump of love His compassion is infinitely visible in his passion What love was that which moved him to lay down his life for thee Friend if ever thou hadst hard thoughs of Christ take a view of him in the former subject of meditation and consider whether his heart be not set upon sinners when he shed his heart blood for their souls The redness of the fire discovers its heat O how did the redness of this Rose of Sharon the blood which issued from his head and back and hands and feet and heart and whole body speak his burning his fiery love Well might the Apostle John joyn and pair those Turtle-Doves Who hath loved us and washed us in his blood Rev. 1.5 In every drop of his blood there is an Ocean of love Well might the Apostle Paul p●oduce this as an undeniable testimony of the truth of his love Who loved me and gave himself for me Gal. 2.20 His bleeding passion was such a full demonstration of his dearest affection as the whole World never saw the like before nor ever shall again In it his love was dissected and ript up you may tell all its bones Judas gave him to the Jews out of love to money The Jews gave him to Pilate to becondemned out of love to envy Pilate gives him to the Souldiers to be Crucified out of love to self interest but Christ gave himself out of pure love to save souls The great and glorious God doth things that are singularly eminent for the manifestation of his attributes When he
sinners love their friends who love them and wilt thou be worse then Publicans and sinners Consider seriously Jesus Christ loved thee when thou wast in a loathsome estate Ezek. 16. when thou wast wallowing in thy blood when no eye pitied thee then was his time of love he passed by thee and said unto thee Live yea when thou wast in thy blood he said unto thee Live And wilt thou not love him Ponder the heat of his love possibly the greatness of that fire may warm thy heart and thou mayest reflect some heat back again for indeed love is a Diamond which must be written upon with its own dust He loveth thee as a servant surely this is a favour for he hath thousands of glorious Angels who count it their honor and happiness to serve him To be made one of his hired servants was the great priviledge desired by the Prodigal Ye call me Lord and Master and ye say well for so I am John 13.13 but though this may be somewhat it is not enough for him He loveth thee as a friend Ye are my friends John 15.15 I have not called you servants but friends Friends love entirely witness Jonathan and David Jonanathan loved David as his own soul Friendship is one soul in two bodies saith the Philosopher This is much but his love to thee is more then so he loveth thee as his Brother He is not ashamed to call them brethren I will declare thy name unto my brethren Heb. 2.11 Some Brethren are knit very close in the bond of love Camh. Brit. In Queen Elizabeths Reign in a fight between the Earl of Kildare and Earl of Ter Owen two of the Earl of Kildares Brethren were slain which he took so heavily that he dyed shortly Some write that there is no such love in the World as between Foster-Brethren in Ireland This love is great but his love is greater He loveth thee as his childe the stream of love descendeth most swiftly from Parents to their children He shall see his Seed Isa 53.10 How tender is the Mother of her childe Can the Mother forget her childe that sucketh her breast The Mothers bowels will yern towards her childe the Mothers breasts will put her to pain if not drawn and thereby minde her of her childe But though the Mother may prove a Monster and like the Ostrich leave her young to be destroyed yet will I not forget thee saith the Lord Thou art engraven upon the palms of my hands thy walls are ever before me Isa 49.13 14 15. Children have you any meat If not lo here is my body Thou mayst say of Christs love to thee as David of Jonathans Thy love to me is wonderful it far surpasses the love of women for he loveth thee as his Spouse Men do or at least should love their wives above all relations For this cause shall a man leave Father and Mother and cleave to his wife But who can conceive Christs love to his Spouse Thou art all fair my love thou hast ravished my heart my Sister my Spouse How fair is thy love my Sister my Spouse Cant. 4.8 9 10. The nearest affinity is Spouse and the nearest consanguinity is Sister to shew that his affection is like that of the nearest relations If this be not enough Reader he loveth thee as himself nay above himself he did as it were hate himself out of love to thee He denied himself displeased himself and gave himself to be buffeted scourged condemned wracked crucified and to be a sacrifice for thy sins Well is it possible for thee to read of this infinite love without love When wood hath been laid a sunning it takes fire presently Hast not thou been so fitted by the warm hot beams of this Sun that now upon the very thoughts of Christ thou art all in a flame Truly it would be as great a miracle for thee to be in such a furnace of love and not fired with love to him as for the three Worthies in Daniel to be in the midst of the fiery furnace and not burnt Christ loved thee so unspeakably as thou hast read as a servant as a friend as a brother as a childe as a wife as himself nay above himself all this when thon wast a sinner without strength yea his enemy which threefold gradation the holy Ghost taketh special notice of Rom. 5.6 8 10. and wilt thou ever give him cause to complain of thee as Paul of his Corinthians the more I love the less I am beloved Love him dearly love him entirely love him above all love him more then all say with the Spouse Stay me with flagons comfort me with apples for I am sick of love and with holy Brandford sprinckle thy trencher thy food with tears that thou canst love so loving and so lovely a Saviour no more 3. When thou art at the Table Exercise repentance what sorrow for and anger against thy sins should the sight of a crucified Saviour cause Some tell us that if the murderer be brought near and touch the body slain by him it bleeds afresh O when thou who art indeed the murderer of the Son of God dost touch and taste his body and blood shouldst not thou fall a bleeding a weeping a fresh Behold his broken bleeding body with an eye of faith and thine eye cannot but affect thine heart with grief I am confident thou canst not see it with dry eyes Was his soul exceeding sorrowful heavy even unto death for thy sake and is not thine friend for thy sins Did he drop so much blood and canst thou drop never a tear the very rocks were rent at his sufferings and is thy heart harder then those stones Is it possible for the head to be so pained and peirced and the members not be affected with it surely Deep calleth unto Deep Deep sufferings in Christ for deep sorrow in thee O Christian If his body were broken to let his blood out thy soul may well be broken to let it in They shall see him whom they have peirced and mourn for him as one that mourneth for his onely Son Zach. 10.12 His love may make as Davids kindness even a Saul to lift up his voice and weep It is so great and so hot a fire that one would think it would distil water out of thee wert thou never so dry an herb When Christ sat at Supper in the Pharisees house Mary washed his feet with her tears When Christ and thy soul are supping together thou mayst well weep in remembrance of thy unkindness and wickedness But the cheifest reason why I mention repentance now to be exercised is not so much for thy contrition or sorrow for sin though when the sweet sauce is a little sharp with Vinegar the meat will rellish the better for it as for thine indignation and anger against sin When thou considerest that thy dearest Saviour in a cold night lay groveling on the ground all over in a bloody sweat that
thy best friend in the World was so inhumanely used so barbarously but chered thou shouldst cry out as David in a holy passion As the Lord liveth the man the sin that hath done this thing shall surely be put to death When Antonius after Caesar was Murdered in the Senate house brought forth his Coat all bloody cut and mangled and laying it open to the view of the people said Look here is your Emperors Coat and as the bloody-minded Conspirators have dealt by it so have they dealt with Caesars body Upon this they were in an uprore and cryed out to slay the Murderers and took Brands and ran to the Houses of the Conspirators and burnt them down to the ground and as they apprehended the Murderers put them to death Reader thou seest at the Sacrament the wounds and blood of thy blessed Redeemer the dreadful painful death which thy Soveraign underwent O what canst thou do less then vow to be revenged on his Murderers thy corruptions and in an holy anger endeavour their speedy execution if thou wouldst have a full sight of sins filth and sinfulness go to Mount Calvary and behold thy Saviour hanging upon the Cross and good Lord what thoughts wilt thou have of thy lusts Physitians in unseemly convulsions advise their Patients to look into a glass that beholding their deformity they may strive the more against it The world never had such a glass as the sufferings of Jesus Christ for the discovery of sins loathsom ugly features and its horrid hideous hellish face now how should this light provoke thee to loath and hate sin O what Child would not abhor those weapons which murdered his dearest Father It was the glory of Alexander that as soon as ever he had opportunity he slew the Murderers of his Father upon his fathers Tomb. Truely Reader a Sacrament day is a special opportunity and thou wilt shew but little love to thine everlasting Father if thou dost not now put his Murderers to death upon those Monuments of his passion Now thou art at the Table think of thy unthankfulness ambition hypocrisie covetousness irreligion and infidelity and the rest how these crucified the Lord of glory and resolve through the strength of Christ that these Hamans shall be all hanged that these sins shall be condemned and crucified CHAP. XX. What a Christian ought to do after a Sacrament I Shall speak to thy duty after the Supper Thirdly Which consisteth mainly in these two things Thankefulness and Faithfulness 1. Thankefulness After such a Banquet as this is thou mayst well give thanks The Jews at their Passover did sing the hundred and thirteenth Psalm with the five following Psalmes which they called the Great Hallelujah A Christian should in every thing and at all times give thanks but at a Sacrament the great Hallelujah must be sung then God must have great thanks then we must with our souls bless the Lord and with all within us paise his holy name O Reader call upon thy self as Barak and Deborah did Awake awake Deborah Awake awake Barak utter a song and lead captivity captive thou son of Abinoam Judg. 5. Awake my love awake my joy utter a song a feast is made for laughter and wine rejoyceth the heart of man Friend is not this a rare feast where is thy chearful face Is not here good wine a cup of Nectar indeed the blood of the Son of God what mirth what musick hast thou to this Banquet of Wines Antiently it was the beginning and ending of Letters Gaudete in Domino Rejoyce in the Lord. It will be an excellent conclusion of this Ordinance to rejoyce in the Lord. O let thy soul magnisie the Lord and thy spirit rejoyce in God thy Saviour Luk. 1.46 47. The cup in the Sacrament is called the Eucharistical cup or the cup of blessing let it be so to thee Let thy heart and mouth say Blessed be the Lord God of Israel who hath visited and redeemed his people Luk. 2. Canst thou think of that infinite love which God manifested to thy soul without Davids return VVhat shall I render to the Lord for all his benefits His heart was so set upon thy salvation His Love was so great to thy soul that he delighted in the very death of his Son because it tended to thy good It pleased the Lord to bruise him Isa 53.10 Valde delectatus est Junius reads it He was exceedingly delighted in it Surely the mind of God was infinitely set upon the recovery of lost sinners in that whereas other Parents whose love to their children in comparison of his to Christ is but as a drop to the Ocean follow their children to their graves with many tears especially when they dye violent deaths he delighted exceedingly in the barbarous death of his onely Son in the bleeding of the head because it tended to the health and eternal welfare of the members Friend what manner of love hath the father loved thee with He gave his own Son to be apprehended that thou mightest escape his own Son to be condemned that thou mightest be acquitted his own Son to be whipped and wounded that thou mightest be cured and healed yea his own Son to dye a shameful cursed death that thou mightest live a glorious blessed life for ever Glory to God in the highest peace on earth and good will to men Alass how unworthy art thou of this inestimable mercy Thou art by nature a child of wrath as well as others and hadst been now wallowing in sin with the worst in the World if free grace had not renewed thee nay thou hadst been roaring in Hell at this hour if free grace had not repreived thee Thy conscience will tell thee that thou dost not deserve the bread which springeth out of the earth and yet thou are fed with the bread which came down from heaven with Angels food O infinite love Mayst not thou well say with Mephibosheth to David VVhat is thy servant that thou shouldst look upon such a dead dog as I am For all my fathers house were as dead men before my Lord yet didst thou set thy servant among them that did eat at thine own Table Lord I was a lost dead damned sinner before thee liable to the unquenchable fire and yet thou hast been pleased to set me among them that eat at thine own Table and feed on thine own Son O what is thy servant that thou shouldst take such notice of such a dead dog as I am Look abroad in the World and thou mayst see others refused when thou art chosen others past by when thou art called others polluted when thou art sanctified others put off with common gifts when thou hast special grace others fed with the scraps of ordinary bounty when thou hast the finest of the floor even the fruits of saving mercy As Elkanah gave to Peninnah and to all her sons and Daughters portions but to Hannah he gave a worthy portion because he loved her
art a good Husband for thy soul I doubt not but thou esteemest thy time in the week days at so high a rate that thou darest not sqander it away in doing nothing or in that which is worse then nothing but O what worth what price wilt thou set upon an opportunity upon a Lords day How diligent wilt thou be to improve the least peice of that day God giveth thee six whole days for thine own works do not deny to him one whole day in seven Let thy conscience be Judge Is it not unrighteousness to buy by one measure which is greater and sell by another measure which is lesser when the day is consecrated to God as the goods of Ananias it is dangerous to keep back any part of it for our own use Do thou all the day long live and walk as it were in the other World Make it a Sabbath a day of rest 1. From sin and wickedness this is thy duty every day but especially on this day Every sin on a Sabbath is double the season is a great aggravation of the sin The wicked indeed are like the raging Sea which cannot rest but every day bubble up mire and dirt Isa 57.20 2. From the World and the works of thy calling Ye shall keep the Sabbath therefore for it is holy unto you Every one that defileth it shall surely be put to death for whosoever doth any work therein that soul shall be cut off from among his people Exod. 31.14 The Jews were to rest from works of least importance as gathering sticks he that fetched in sticks was sent out of the World with stones and of greatest concernment as building the Tabernacle and though the Christian now hath more liberty yet he hath no leave at all to pollute the day by wickedness or to prophane the day by any earthly work which might have been done before the day or may be done as well after it May I not say to thee of this day as Elisha to Geehezi Is this a time to receive money and garments and sheep and oxen and men-servants and maid-servants 2 Kings 5.26 Is the Sabbath a time for civil affairs The Sabbath day is therefore called a day of restraint Deut. 16.8 because then men are forbidden all work saith Junius As none were ever losers by laying afide their own works to attend Gods Worship he took care of Israels safety whilst they were in his service that none of their Neighbours though bitter enemies should so much as desire their Cities Exod 34.24 so none I am confident were ever gainers by inching in some part of their callings unnecessarily at the end of Gods day and by setting God aside to serve themselves the very time will be a Canker to consume their estates And as they that take Crocus into their stomachs bring up not onely ill humours but that also which would prove good nourishment So some have had experience that their prophanation of Gods day to increase their estates hath forced them to vomit up the whole God hath given thee days enough for thy calling space enough to mind it in thou needst not trespass upon his holy day upon his holy ground It was no small aggravation of Adams sin that though he had choice of fruits he would eat of the forbidden fruit so it will much increase thy sin if when thou hast choice of time for thy trade thou shouldst meddle with it on a Sabbath Reader Debet totus dies festivus à Christiano expendi in operibus bonis Grostead in precept as thy duty is to rest the whole day from wickedness and worldly work so also to imploy the whole day in Gods Worship be either praying or reading or hearing or singing or meditating or discoursing with others about the Works or Word of God Be always taken up either with publique Hoc sensu loquitur propheta Sià primo mane incipimuslauda re d●um continuandas esse ejus laudesad ultimam noctis partem Calvin in loc private or secret duties In the 92. Psalm that Psalm for the Sabbath v. 1 and 3. we are exhorted to shew forth Gods loving kindness in the morning and his faithfulness at evening Now we know that in Scripture sense the morning and the evening are the whole day The whole day is Gods by ordination and why should not it be his by observation God hath dedicated this day wholly to hsi own Worship now every devoted thing is most holy to the Lord. Lev. 27.28 The Pope and Church of Rome have half holy days as St. Blacies day which is holy in the forenoon onely but God and the Church of Christ have no half holy days Observe how exact God is in expressing a whole natural day From evening to evening you shall keep the Sabbath Lev. 23.32 Their days were reckoned from evening to evening from the creation but ours because Christ rose in the morning from morning to morning If thou hast any sincere delight in God and esteem of the true riches I cannot but think that thou wilt be covetous of the smallest part of Gods day and wish as R. Jose Iewish Antiq. l. 3. c. 3. Ex Buxtorf Comment mas that thy portion may be to begin the Sabbath with those of Tiberias because they began it sooner then others and to end it with those of Tsepphore because they continued it longer then others If thy soul ever met God on a Sabbath thou wilt surely be ready to say with Joshua Thou Sun stand still in Gibeon Iosh 10 12. and thou Moon in the vallies of Ajalon O that the day were longer that I might have more time to fight the Lords battels against my spiritual enemies Eightly If thou wouldst make Religion thy business on a Lords day Meditate therein on the word and works of God Consider his works This is part of the work of the day David in that Psalm for the Sabbath gives thee a pattern O Lord how great are thy works and thy thoughts are very deep Psa 92.5 Is a dishonour to a workman to make excellent peices and to manifest abundance of Skill and Art and ingenuity and then not to have them taken notice of God hath done his mighty works to be remembred and wondred at It s said of Pythagoras that he lived sequestred from men in a cave for a whole year together that he might meditate on the abstruse points of Philosophy I wish thee to an easier and pleasanter task to sequester thy self some time every Lords day to ponder the infinite perfections which appear in the operations of his hand God will be both admired and magnified by his people on earth as well as in Heaven which none can do but those that seriously consider his works Men have been much wondred at for some peculiar rare works though in them a Christian should look farther even to God the Author of their skill and wisdom The very Greeks acknowledged somewhat like this that all
of God in Ordinances but also the Marrow of his day that no Lords day may satisfie me without the Lord of the day Alass what is the best time without the Rock of eternity what is the best day without the Ancient of days what are the Ordinances of God without the God of Ordinances what are Sabbaths Sermons Sacraments and Seasons of Grace without the dearest Saviour but as broken Cisterns glorious Dreams or guilded nothings I have read of a good soul who answered his Friend Speak to me while you will no words can satisfie except you mention Christ write to me what you will it will not satisfie except in your Letters I may read Christ O that in no Sermon I might be contented till I hear Christ and that in no Chapter I might be pleased till I can read Christ that as the Needle touched with the Load-stone never resteth till it turn to the North so my heart may be re●● less in holy duties till it turneth to and hath fellowship with the Lord of Heaven The Lords day is an excellent resemblance of my future blessedness wherein I shall enjoy my Saviour fully and my God shall be all in all to me Lord let never this day pass without some taste of those celestial pleasures Meditation on the Works and Word of my God being a duty most in its prime and season on a Sabbath day I beg that what time I spare from publique private or secret performances I may imploy to this purpose that I may behold my God to be infinite in wisdom power and goodness in his foot-steps of creation and stand amazed at that rare Workmanship those curious contrivances of his which Angels look into with admiration that appear in his Master-peice that work of Redemption and for his word let my heart be able to say with David O how love I thy law it is my meditation all the day I wish that I may watch over my thoughts words Watchfulness and actions all the day long in special that as when the holy things belonging to the Sanctuary were to be removed they were covered all over lest any dust should soil them so I may cover my heart with such circumspection that no dust of sin may cleave to it O that I might be so wise and watchful that there may not be the least minute of the day wherein I may not either do or receive some good Lord let no Sabbath pass without some saving good to my precious soul I desire Finally Conclusion of the day that I may not lose the heat of the day in the cool of the Evening I mean that what good If gain from my God through his Ordinances in the day may not be lost by my negligence at night but that as a wise Commander I may then double my Guard and expect with much importunity some evening dews of comfort and grace O that I might so keep the Sabbath of my God chuse the things that please him and take hold of his Covenant that I might so turn away my foot from the Sabbath from doing my pleasure on his holy day Is 56.4 5. and 58.13 and call the Sabbath my delight the holy of the Lord that I may have with the Eunuch within the House of my God a name better then of Sons and Daughters even an everlasting name that shall not be cut off Amen A Good Wish to the Lords day HAil thou that art highly favoured of God Luk. 1.28 thou map of Heaven thou golden spot of the week thou Market-day of souls thou Day-break of eternal brightness thou Queen of days the Lord is with thee blessed art thou among days I may say to thee what the Angel said to Daniel Dan. 9.23 O day greatly beloved Psa 45. Thou art fairer then all the Children of time grace is poured into thy lips God even thy God hath anointed thee with the Oyl of gladness above thy fellows Of the Jewish Sabbaths and other Festivals in comparison of thee it may be spoken They perish but thou remainest and they all wax old as a Garment Heb. 1.11 12. And as a vesture hast thou folded them up and they are changed but thou shalt maugre the malice of men and Devils continue the same and thy years shall not fail As the Temple succeeded and exceeded the Tabernacle this was fleeting that was fixed so dost thou all former Sabbaths they were but morning stars to usher in thee the Sun and then to disappear Other Festivals in all their Royalty are not arrayed like unto thee All the graces triumph in thee all the Ordinances conspire to enrich thee the Father ruleth thee the Son rose upon thee the Spirit hath overshadowed thee Thus is it done to the day which the King of Heaven delighteth to honour Thou hast not onely a common blessing with other days by the law of nature but a special blessing above all other days from the love of thy Maker Let thousands mark thee for their new birth-day Exod. 12.42 be thou a day as it was said of that night to the Jews much to be Remembred much to be observed to the Lord for bringing many out of worse then Egyptian bondage Esther 8.16 be thou to them a day of light and gladness of joy and honour and a good day On thee light was created the Holy Ghost descended life hath been restored Satan subdued sin mortified souls sanctified the Grave Death and Hell conquered O how do men and women flutter up and down on the Week-days as the Dove on the waters and can find no rest for their souls till they come to thee their Ark till thou put forth thy hand and take them in O how do they sit under thy shadow with great delight and find thy fruit sweet to their taste O the mountings of mind the ravishing happiness of heart the solace of soul which on thee they enjoy in the blessed Saviour They are sorry when the days shorten for thy sake they wish for thee before thou comest they welcome thee when thou art come and they enjoy so much of heaven in thee that thence they love and look and long the more for their eternal Sabbath Go forth O thou fairest among Women and be thou fruitful in bringing forth Children to thy Maker and Husband Gen. 24.60 Be thou the Mother of thousands and of millions and let thy seed possess the Gate of them that hate them Do thou like Rachel and Leah build up the House of Israel do thou worthily in Ephratah and be thou famous in Bethlehem Gird thy sword upon thy thigh O thou mighty and gracious day and in thy Majesty ride prosperously because of meekness righteousness and truth let thy right hand teach the terrible things let thine arrows be sharp in the hearts spiritual enemies whereby the people may fall under thee Psa 132. The Lord hath chosen thee he hath desired thee for his habitation
Fathers writeth that the Primitive Christians were so holy in their talk at their Table that one would have thought they had been at a Sermon Non tam caenam caenant quam disciplinam Tertul. Apologet cap. 39 not at a Supper Plato gives rules for the writing down the Table Talk of men thereby to make them more serious Luthers Colloquia Mensalia Printed in a large Folio do abundantly prove that he was not idle when he was eating but that his Table was his Pulpit where he read many profitable Lectures There is scarce a meeting of ungodly men to eat but the Devil hath his Dish among them Psa 35.16 The Drunkards have a song of David to sugar their Liquor The Gluttons have some Taunts to fling at Saints as Sauce to their meat At Herods Birth-day Banquet one Dish served in was the Baptists head Should not friend God have his dish at thy Table When thou art eating bread let thy meditation and expression be like his who sat at Table with Jesus Christ Blessed is he that shall eat bread in the Kingdom of God Luk. 14.15 Consider Gods bounty and mercy in feeding thee and cloathing thee when many hungry bellies and naked backs are abroad in the World how many would be glad of thy scraps when thou hast asked God leave for his creatures thou mayst taste his love in the creatures Mayst thou not gather and conclude if the Streams are so refreshing and satisfying what refreshment and satisfaction is there in the well of living waters If bread be so savoury to an hungry body how sweet how savoury is the bread which came down from heaven to an hungry soul Lord give me evermore that bread Do as the Jews They did eat and delighted themselves in thy great goodness Nehem. 9.21 When thou art feeding thy body delight thy soul in Gods great goodness Thus like Mary when Christ was at meat thou mayst break thy box of precious Ointment and perfume the whole room with its fragrant smell 3. In returning thanks when thou hast eaten Thy duty is to begin thy meales with prayer and to end them with praise Thou canst not give God his due price for mercies but thou mayst give him his due praise Though thou art never able to buy them of him yet thou art able to bless him for them If thou didst Dine at thy Neighbours Table thou wouldst think thy self very unmannerly to turn thy back upon him without any acknowledgment of and thankfulness for his courtesie Every meal thou makest is at Gods cost for shame be so civil as to thank him for his kindness Saints are compared to Doves Isa 60.8 especially for their eyes Thou hast Doves eyes Cant. 5. Now Doves after every grain they peck look upward as it were giving thanks When God opens his hand thou mayst well open thy lips When thou hast eaten and art full Joel 2.26 thou shalt bless the Lord thy God Deut. 8.10 Do not like the fed Hauk forget thy Master or like them that go to the Well as soon as they have fild their Buckets at it turn their backs upon it Why shouldst thou forget God when he remembreth thee When thou shalt have eaten and be full then beware least thou forget God Deut. 6.11 12. Let not thy fulness breed forgetfulness you think him a surly beggar who if he receive but a small peice of bread shall fling away from your doors and give you no thanks The Primitive Christians did break bread from house to house and did eat their meat with gladness and singleness of heart praysing God Some understand it of Sacramental others of Corporal bread Acts 2.46 47. The Lord Jesus was known by his actions or expressions in giving of thanks Luk. 24.31 Nay the Heathen would acknowledge their Dunghil deities in those outward mercies Dan. 5.4 They drank Wine and praysed the gods of Gold and of silver and of brass of iron of wood and of stone Wilt not thou do as much for the true God as they for their false Gods O let him have all thy praise who sendeth in all thy provision God takes it very ill when we do not own and honour him as the Author of our Meat and Drink Because Israel was so prided with her Pronounces Possessives My bread and my water my wool and my flax mine oyl and my drink God turnes them all into privatives For she did not know that I gave her Corn and Wine and Oyl therefore will I return and take away my Corn in the time thereof and my Wine in the season thereof and recover my wool and my flax Hosea 2.5.8 9. Trumpeters love not to sound in those places where they are not answered with a considerable Eccho God delights not to bestow mercies on those persons who will not return him sutable praise those that return things borrowed without thanks must expect the next time they need to be denyed I have read a story in the writings of an eminently pious Minister who was an eye and ear witness of the truth of it of a young man who lying upon his sick bed was always calling for meat but as soon as he saw it was brought to him at the sight of it he shook and trembled dreadfully in every part of his body and so continued till his food was carried away and thus being not able to eat he pined away and before his death acknowledged Gods Justice in that in his health he had received his meat ordinarily without giving God thanks The despisers of Gods benificence have been patterns of his vengeance He hath remembred them in fury who have forgotten his favours Some write of the Jews that in the beginning of their Feasts the Master of the House took a cup of Wine in his hand and began its consecration after this manner Blessed be thou O Lord our God the King of the World Ex P. Fagi in Deut. 8. which createst the fruit of the Vine this they called Bircath hajaiin the blessing of the cup possibly to this David alludeth in Psa 116.13 14. What shall I render to the Lord for all his benefits I will take the Cup of Salvation and call upon the Name of the Lord after the cup the Master of the House took the bread and consecrated it thus Blessed be thou O Lord our God the King of the World which bringest forth bread out of the Earth this they called Bircath halechem At the end of the Feast the Master called to his Friends Let us bless him who hath fed us with his own and of whose goodness we live and concluded with a large Thanksgiving wherein he blest God First For their present Food Secondly For their deliverance from Egyptian bondage Thirdly For the Covenant of Circumcision Fourthly For the Law given by the Ministry of Moses And then he prayed that God would have mercy On his people Israel Secondly On his own City Jerusalem Thirdly On Sion the Tabernacle of his
eyes shall behold strange women and thine heart shall utter perverse things Pro. 23.20 Excess turnes men into swine and then they are fit for legions of divels Intemperance calls off the guard thy watchfulness and then the enemies may enter thick and threefold They that are not sober cannot be vigilant 1 Pet. 5.8 How unfit is a man in his intemperance for any duty Ambrose observes Tabulas legis quas accepit abstinentia conteri fercit ebriteas Amh. cap 6 de Ebri Aug. Confess lib 10. As Moses received the tables fasting so he broke them when the people had been feasting judging them at that time very unfit to hear the law It may be thou art not a drunkard but yet usest to exceed in eating Austin avoided the sin of drunkenness sed crapula non nunquam surrepit servo tuo he sometimes transgrest in eating but Lord saith he thou hast taught me to use my meat as my medicine Let thy rational faculty command thy sensitive consider how contrary to reason it is for a man like a Dolphin to have his mouth in his maw and like the Ass-fish Epicharmus cals the Ass-fish 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 such a one as varieth from the ordinary course of nature to have his heart in his belly and how contrary to Religion it is to have the Kitchin for thy Church a Table for thine Altar and the Belly for thy God Luke 21.34 Take heed lest your hearts be overcharged with surfeting and drunkenness and so that day come upon you unawares God alloweth us sometimes a liberal use as in days of Thanksgiving and at Marriages but never a lustful abuse of his Creatures Secondly Thy duty is to be temperate as to the quality of thy diet Though here no certain quality of food can be set down God allowing something to the conditions and much more to the weakly and sickly constitutions of men yet in general this must be observed that we make not provision for the flesh Rom. 13.12 We may preserve the flesh but we must not provide for the flesh Our Enemie is strong enough already we need not put more Weapons into his hands To live after the flesh is the sign of a sinner Rom. 8.13 It s intemperance for a person in health to study and strive how he may gratifie his palate The Spirit of God cals it a sowing to the flesh Gal. 6.7 The Husbandman plots contrives and labours how he may sow his seed to his best advantage A Fleshmonger will be meditating in the morning before he riseth with what art his dinner may be so sauced and drest that if possble he may excell a beast in carnal delights he is sowing early that he may reap liberally The Christian may take his food but his food must not take him It s sinful to be given to our appeties It s not un lawful to eat dainties but it is unlawful to set the mind upon them We may receive them into our stomachs but not into our hearts When thou sittest to eat with a Ruler consider diligently what is before thee and put a Knife to thy throat if thou be a man given to appetite be not desirous of his dainties they are deceitful meat Pro. 23.1 2 3. In which words we may take notice 1. Of a supposition If thou be a man given to appetite For a man to be given to Wine it notes his extraordinary love to and likeing of that liquor For a man to be given to Women it speaks his excessive care and endeavour to enjoy that brutish and ungodly pleasure For a man to be given to prayer Psa 109.4 it speaks prayer to be his trade his imployment the work which he chiefly minds and putsueth For a man to be given to God Rom. 12.1 it notes the soul to be wholly at Gods service to go when God bids him go to come when God bids him come so for a man to be given to his appetite it implyeth that all his projects are to please his palate he is a caterer for the flesh wholly subject to that sence altogether at the devotion of his appetite our appetites are given to us but we must not be given to our appetites as Heliogabalus who was served in at on meal with 7000. Fish and 5000. Fowles And 2. here is an imposition Be not besirous of his dainties this is a disswasion from the former irregular affection We may eat and digest dainties but we may not crave and desire dainties God made man not for fleshly dainties but for spiritual delights It is a beastly principle and practice to be at the command of provender as Apicius the Roman who wrote ten books of directions how to set forth a feast with all sorts of dainties and it s said the expences of his Kitchin amounted to two millions of Gold 3. Here is a position For they are deceitful meat The desire of dainties is a deadly desire There is murder under the meat Ordinary nay Manna extraordinary fare would not satisfie the sweet-tooth'd Israelites they lusted for quailes but God gave them their desire they had flesh and death together Some read the former verse thus Thou puttest a knife to thy throat if thou be a man given to appetite To pamper the body is the way to destroy soul and body too Dainties entice to excess He that erreth in the quality of his food will quickly exceed in the quantity They that plot night and day to please the flesh declare publiquely that they have nothing of the spirit sensual not having the spirit Jude v. 19. The flesh and the spirit are like two Buckets in a Well as the one mounts up the other falls down There is a flat opposition between sowing to the flesh and sowing to the Spirit Gal. 6.7 Nay the Apostle is express in the mention of this kind of intemperate men They serve not the Lord Jesus Christ but their own bellies Rom. 15. All the Servants of Christ are Soveraigns over the flesh Ordinances are ineffectual to persons that are sensual Rain falls off as it falls on upon an Oyled post When the waters of the Sanctuary flowed the Miry places that is sensual hearts could not be healed Ezek. 47.11 Behemoth lyeth in the Fens that is saith an Expositour the Devil in fleshly men Job 40.21 Epicurus saith one whilst he favoureth his fleshly palate doth neglect the heavenly palace There is a distinction of diet to be considered in regard of bodies in regard of estates and also in regard of times all which piety and prudence must direct the Christian about But sure I am it is a duty to keep under the body 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 I club it down beat it black and blue and to bring it into subjection 1 Cor. 9.27 They that acquaint us with the Jewish customs tell us that their Ordinary meals were neither many in a day nor costly they were called Arucoth which signifieth such ordinary fare as travellers have
of Sparta was slighted by the Persians for his over-plain Habit. Covetous men often please themselves that they are not guilty either of pride or prodigality in their Apparel when it may be often said to them what Socrates told the ragged Grecian A man may see your Pride through the holes of your Coat As the Prodigal erreth in excess so the Niggard erreth in defect One of the Jewish Rabbies used to say That men should apparel themselves below their estates that they may thrive the sooner that they should cloth their Wives above their estates that they might live the more peaceably but their Children according to their estates that they might Marry them the better Of Sleep I Shall now speak to Sleep which is the last natural action I have mentioned In reference to which three things are principally to be minded 1. The Quantity of it 2. The season 3. The end of it 1. The quantity of it Thy Sleep Reader must be moderate but how much or how little thy own prudence or piety together must judge No certain time can be prefixed though some general rules may be propounded Seven hours sleep is by Physitians judged sufficient for any ordinary person in health youth requires more sleep then age Weak men then strong men Thy discretion will much help thee if thou observest thy constitution Cholerick and Melancholick bodies need longer sleep then the Phlegmatick or Sanguin that the acrimony of Choler may be tempered and the concoction furthered To the Plegmatick much sleep doth increase their cold and moyst humours and will in time make their bodies altogether sickly The Sanguin are apt to wax gross and corpulent and unfit for action all which is helped forward by much sleep Take heed of immoderate sleep There is no part of our lives so totally lost as that which is spent in sleep Sleep cometh like a Publican saith Plutarch and stealeth away a third part of our time Laentius Therefore the wise Heathen have been watchful against this enemy Aristotle used to sleep with a Bullet in his hand over a brazen pan that when it fell out of his hand he might be awakened with the noise Pythagoras used with a thread to tye the hair of his head to a beam over him that so when he did but nod he might be awakened thereby Christians have more cause for bodily as well as spiritual watchfulness David was so far from sleeping at prayer that he would break his sleep for prayer Psa 119.62 v. 147. I prevented the dawning of the morning and cried I hoped in thy word Many are the discommodities of immoderate sleep It wasteth time a most precious talent which is committed to us by God and must be accounted for at the great day A man asleep can hardly be said to live Sleep is a kind of death It injureth the soul hindring it of time robbing it of the bodies service Pro. 26.13 to 17. and by blunting its tools dulling its faculties that they become unfit for those ends to which they were designed It wrongeth the body by weakening the natural heat and filling the head with vapours by abating the memory lessening the understanding and by making the body heavy lumpish and in a word a sink of diseases It is an enemy to a mans estate Solomon diswades from sluggishness from this argument So shall thy poverty come as one that travelleth and thy want as an armed man Pro. 6.11 Wealth will not come without working They are deceived who think to have the pleasure of slothfulness and the plenty of laboriousness The diligent hand maketh rich but slothfulness will cloath a man with rags Pro. 10.4 23.21 2. The season of sleep In general the day is by the command of God and order of nature the time for watching and the night for sleeping The Sun approaching draweth forth the spirits from the center to the Circumferent parts and openeth the pores of the body both which do provoke to working and waking but when the Sun departeth the spirits return to the inmost parts of the body which inviteth to sleep and besides the naturall moysture and silence of the night are according to Physitians very conducible to sleep Wherefore to sleep in the day and watch in the night is unless necessity compelleth it sinful and a perverting the course of nature They that sleep sleep in the night 1 Thes 5.6 7. Which may be understood literally of a natural as well as mystically of a spiritual sleep That Roman Emperor that turned the day into night and the night into day was abhord as a monster in nature Such persons are great hinderers of their own health and thereby of their outward happiness for sleep draweth the natural heat inward and the heat of the day draweth it outward whereby there ariseth a fight with nature to the ruine of the body Sleep after dinner in young persons caufeth heaviness of the head dulness of wit defluxions of humors lethargies and other cold diseases of the brain and also palsies by relaxing the finews Besides it is not to be forgotten that Ishbosheth lost his life and David his chastity by lazing on their beds in the day time The most convenient season I suppose for sleep I confess I speak in anothers art is some considerable time after a moderate supper When thou hast commended thy soul to God and put off thy cares with thy cloaths then thou mayst commit thy body to thy bed He giveth his beloved sleep Psa 127.2 Ahashuerus who commanded 127 provinces could not command one hours sleep Ester 1. 3. The ends of sleep must be minded Sleep is given us by God not for the solution or weakning but for remission and refreshing of nature which would be not onely wearied but quite tired out by continual labour The effects of moderate sleep will speake its ends Sleep will if taken seasonably and not in excess help digestion recreate thy mind repair the spirits comfort the whole body It concocteth not only the meats but also the humors By the retreating of the heat into the inner parts the vital faculty is much strengthned because the heart is abundantly supplyed with blood for the breeding of spirits The ends of sleep will somewhat direct us about the measure Sleep may be followed till the concoctions in the stomack and liver are finished which will be discovered upon our awaking ordinarily by a sensible lightness of the body especially of the head and the passage down of the meat from the stomack Thus I have dispatched natural actions and discovered how a Christian in eating and drinking cloathing and sleeping may serve Jesus Christ A good Wish about Natural actions wherein the former heads are epitomized MY corrupt heart being prone to turn things lawfull into fuel for lust The introduction like the spider to suck poison out of the sweetest flowers and to make what my God giveth me for a comfort to prove through the subtilty of
work As a Bird that wandreth from his Nest so is a man that wandreth from his place Pro. 27.8 By place the Holy Chost understandeth particular callings Now God had taken care that none should molest a Bird in her Nest there she was safe Deut. 22.6 7. but when she begins to wander then she is in danger either to be shot by the Fowler or caught in the Snare or made a prey to other ravenous birds So a man that is diligent in his calling whilst he is imployed therein is in Gods precincts and so under Gods protection but when he wandreth abroad from his calling going out of his bounds to sit and talk he is a weft and a stray and so falleth to the Lord of the Mannor the God of this World Reader thou mayst expect to be preserved whilst thou art a working but not when thou art wandring Tertullian speaks of a Christian woman who going to a play was possessed by the Devil and when he was asked by those that came to cast him out how he durst possess one that was a Christian he answered I found her in my own place Friend they who like Dinah gad abroad are often defiled before they come home Those Souldiers who leave their places in a March and stragle to pilfer are many times snapt and slain by their enemies when they who keep their places are safe and secure O mind thy calling in its place and season and know this for thy comfort that whilst thou art about thy lawful work observing Scripture rules in it thou art under Gods Wing Secondly Deal righteously in thy calling Take heed of unjust gain believe this truth A clear and clean conscience is infinitely better then a full purse A little with the fear of the Lord is better then the possessions of many wicked men Psa 37.15 A little wholesome food is better then a thousand poisoned Dishes All the Wealth which is got in Gods way is pleasant but all the wealth which is got unjustly by wickedness is poison The blessing of the Lord maketh rich and bringeth no sorrow of heart with it Pro. 10.22 Defrauding thy Neighbour and cheating thy Customers maketh rich and bringeth the sorrow of Hell with it He that resolveth to be unrighteous it is commonly said may soon be rich When the spring of conscience is screwed up to the highest pin that it is ready to break and godliness is locked up fast into an outhouse and not suffered so much as to peep into the Shop or Warehouse to take notice of what is done there such a Tradesman may gain silver but alass he loseth his precious Saviour and his never dying soul O what a dreadful gain is it to get earth with the loss of Heaven He that will be rich in hast shall be poor enough in Hell Know y● not that the unrighteous shall not inherit the Kingdom of Heaven be not deceived God will not be mocked 1 Cor. 6.9 Do not think Reader though thou canst cheat thy Chapmen that thou canst cozen God no he will not be mocked he seeth thy false weights and false measures which thou ordinarily usest though thou hast others to bring forth for a colour if occasion be and he will deal justly with thee for thy injustice by sending thee to that place where there is judgement without mercy I have read of an old rich covetous wretch that lying upon upon his death-bed he asked his Son whether he would not do any thing that his Father should desire him His Son answered yea then saith the Father Hold your finger in the flame of that Candle an hour Sir saith the Son I cannot possibly endure that No saith the Father I must burn for ever in Hell for raking up an estate unjustly for you and yet you will not burn a finger one hour for me O Reader if thou art guilty of this sin think of it betimes Thy ill gotten wealth will breed those wormes which will gnaw thee eternally Besides thou mayst think to raise thy House by such heaps but God himself saith it is the way to ruine it He that is greedy of gain troubleth his own house Pro. 15.27 Whilst he thinks to feather his nest he doth indeed fire it It is an observation of the house of Desmond in Ireland That Maurice the first Earl of that family raised it by injustice and by injustice Girald the last Earl ruined it The crafty Fox in the Fable hugd himself that he had cozend the Crow of his break-fast but when he found himself poisoned therewith he wisht it out of his belly Unjust gain like the Italian buttered Spunge may go down glib but it swelleth in the body and never cometh away till it hath ruined the party Such men spin a fair thred to strangle themselves with The getting of treasures by a lying tongue is a vanity tossed too and fro of them that seek death Pro. 21.6 7. Cornelius a Lapide hath a pretty fable wherein he compareth men unjust in their dealings to Spiders the righteous to Bees The Spider ubraided the Bee for going up and down for hony Thou stayest at home saith the Bee but in thy working losest thy life Salis onus unde veneratillus abiit Erasm adag How often is that Latin Proverb fulfilled The burthen of Salt returneth to the place whence it came The occasion of which was the falling of Salt by the wrack of a Ship into the Sea the place whence it came God often sendeth some to squeeze those Muck worms when they have sucked themselves full Deceitful dealing as an huge heap of Ice by the Sun by the scorching fire of Gods wrath dissolveth into nothing As the Patridge sitteth on eggs and hat cheth them not so he that getteth riches and not by right shall leave them in the midst of his days and at his end shall be a fool Jer. 17.11 Thirdly Be careful that thy particular Calling incroach not upon thy general Many lose Religion in a crowd of earthly businesses The interposition of the earth as to the Moon eclipseth the light of their Holiness It is reported of the inhabitants of Oenoe a dry Island near Athens that they bestowed much labour to draw in a River to water it and make it fruitful but when the passages were opened the water came in so plentifully that it overflowed the Island and drowned all the people Many that will be rich by their extraordinary labours to make their Flocks and Fields fruitful fall into temptations and snares and many foolish and hurtful lusts which drown them in destruction and perdition 1 Tim. 6.9 A Candle that burns well above ground when put under ground doth many times burn blew and go out the light of holiness which hath shined eminently in some profess ors when they have had little to do with the World hath been abated in a great degree when they have had great dealings They in regard of much business have been like those in a Mill
this and hast thou not abundant cause to be heedful lest by thy pattern thou shouldst draw thy Children to sin and to Hell The Idolatrous Israelites drew their children to joyn with them in the Worship of false Gods Ezek. 18.2 Plutarch observeth of Cato that he was very wary not to speak an uncomely word in the presence of his Children Plut. in vit Cat. This Heathen will condemn many Christians who will curse and swear and drink and roar and that in presence of their children Reader avoid sin both for thy own and others sake As a stone thrown into the water makes but one circle at first but that one begetteth many so though the sin in thee at first be but one ye it may cause many both in thy children and servants The sin of a Master or Mistris is like an infectious Air which others breathing in are infected by it Thy servants will as readily put on thy lusts as thy livery and thy Children will be proud of such a patronage such a cloak for their villany A dark eye benights the whole body Weigh all thy words and all thy works considering how many followers thou hast he that sinneth once sinneth twice if he sin before others Be serious and diligent about the concernments of God and thy soul that others may take example by thee The biggest Stars are brightest and give light to those that are of a lesser magnitude Thou who art the greatest shouldst be the most gracious in the family if the Sun shine not on the mountains it must needs be set in the vallies If thy children and servants behold thee careful of thy language and consciencious in thy carriage when they see thee humble fervent constant and serious in holy duties they may learn by thee and write after thee such a patten may tend exceedingly to thy spiritual profit It is observed of Caesar by Cicero that he would never say to his Souldiers Ite sed Venite Go ye but Come ye marching before them himself and giving them a pattern Do thou Reader go before thy Family in Sobriety and Sanctity as their faithful Captain and they may sooner then thou expectest follow after thee Naturalists tell us of the Mulberry tree that there is nothing in it but what is Medicinal in some sort or other the fruit the root the bark the leaf all are useful Truly so it ought to be with thee All thy expressions all thy actions should be instructions to thy Inferiours Thy behaviour in private in publique towards God towards thy Wife towards thy Children towards thy Servants towards thy Neighbours should all be Lectures to teach others Religion and Righteousness that you may be able to say to your Children as Seneca to his Sister Though I can leave you no great portion yet I leave you a good pattern Besides one work required of thee as I shall shew thee before the conclusion of this Chapter is to admonish and reprove others in thy family for their faults which with what face canst thou do or with what hope of success unless thou art free thy self It was a shame to Plutarch that his Servant should say My Master writeth falsly he saith it is unbeseeming a Philosopher to be angry ipse mihi irascitur and he himself is angry with me If thou reprovest thy childe for not praying and thy servant for drunkenness and art guilty thy self though thou acquaintest them never so much with the wrath of God which will certainly seize upon Atheists and Drunkards they will never believe thee for they know thou dost not believe thy self Thy words would seem to draw the nail of sin out but thy works are such an heavy hammer that they drive it in to the very head When the rude Souldiers saw the Roman Senators sit gravely and discourse soberly they took them for gods and were awful of them but when they perceived one of them to grow waspish they took them for men and spoiled them Herod feared Johns reproof knowing that he was a just man Mark 6.20 Where there is piety in the person there is majestie and authority in the reprehension Let the Righteous smite me Psal 141.5 The Snuffers of the Sanctuary were of pure gold He that would reprove others dimness and make them shine brightly with the light of holiness had need to be irreproveable himself Reader walk unspottedly otherwise when thou threatenest thy children or servants with the judgements of God against fin thou dost like David pass a sentence of death and condemnation against thy own soul Fourthly Be careful and diligent that thy whole Family may sanctifie the Lords Day When the Israelites were to sacrifice to God in the Wilderness they went with ther little ones and all their housholds Exod. 12. When Elkanah went up to sacrifice to the Lord all his house went with him 1 Sam. 1.21 Thy duty is according to these examples to see that all thy family unless necessity should hinder serve the Lord in publique Do not suffer any of thine to be playing idly in the Churchyard when they should be praying earnestly in the Church nor to be talking vainly of the World when they should be hearkning reverently to the Word O what pity is it that they should be sucking poyson when they should be sucking milk out of the breasts of Consolation The fourth Commandment doth fully speak thy duty not onely to be careful that they forbear thy work but also that they minde Gods Worship Thou knowest not but that thy childe or servant by missing one season may miss of salvation Possibly they are wrought hard in the Week days and have very little time for their souls so that their onely time of improving their spiritual stock by trading towards Heaven is on a Sabbath Day Or it may be they are careless of their main work of providing for the other World all the Week that if thou shouldst neglect them on the Lords Day they will he left under a necessity of perishing Surely they who have but one good meal in seven days and are robbed of that are unconceiveably wronged When David came to his Brethren to the Camp Eliab said to him How camest thou down hither Where is the flock and with whom hast thou left those few sheep in the Wilderness 1 Sam. 17.28 I know the pride and the haughtiness of thy heart Give not God cause to greet thee thus at Church How camest thou hither Where is thy flock thy Family With whom hast thou left those few sheep thy Children and thy Servants I know thy pride they are not good enough to come along with thee or to be minded by thee or I know thy covetousness thou hast imployed them about earthly businesses or I know thy carelesness and Soul-cruelty thou carest not what becometh of them whether they be saved or damned for ever I tell thee Friend some Gentlemen by going abroad alone without their servants have lost their silver and
flesh How far are such from obedience to Gods Law Let the Husband honor the Wife as the weaker vessel that is use her tenderly China dishes and Venice glasses must be tenderly handled because they are weak vessels The Husband must with the mantle of love cover many infirmities An Heathen could tell Sarah That Abraham was a covering of the eyes to her Gen. 20.16 The eye is the tenderest part of the body God hath provided a special cover to fence it When God would speak his infinite respect to and care of his people he saith They are as dear to him as the apple of his eye Truly Husbands ought to be as tender of their Wives as of the apple of their eyes But Reader see the reason of this Injunction of love to Husbands and Wives That your prayers be not hindred as if he had said Winde up those weights of meekness and love or Religion will stand still Take away those needful props and piety will fall to the ground O friend as thou hast any love to the honor of God honor thy Wife as the weaker vessel if God hath caled thee to that relation If thou art a Wife be of a meek and quiet spirit If there be not concord in affections there will be sad discord in petitions When there is War in a Kingdom how are Sabbaths prophaned Ordinances despised Prayer and Scripture neglected men are hurried away in haste to this and that place and leave duties behinde them So in a family which is a Kingdom in a little volume Divisions will put Religion behinde and force it to stand back Rubenius Celer would needs have it engraven on his Tomb that he had lived with his Wife Ennea forty three years and eight moneths and yet they never fell out It is happy where the Husband and Wife are like the two branches in the Prophet Ezekiels hand so closed together in one bark that both made but one piece or like Pilades and Orestes of whom it is said They both lived but one life and where the whole family like the multitude of Believers is of one accord of one heart and of one soul in the Lord Acts 4.32 with the encrease of God I have now dispatched what I intended to offer thee for the advancement of Godliness in thy Family If thou art a stranger to this honorable comfortable work of worshipping God in and with thy Family O that I could prevail with thee to put the counsel of God speedily into practice I must assure thee from the Living and Almighty God That thou art accountable to the Judge of quick and dead for all the souls in thy Family God hath the chief propriety in every person in thy dwelling As the flock which Jacob looked after was Labans so the family which thou hast the oversight of is Gods Thy sons and thy daughters which thou hast born to me Ezek. 16.20 God may say to thee more truly then Laban did to Jacob These sons are my sons Gen. 39.43 and these daughters are my daughters and these servants are my servants and all that thou seest is mine Indeed God doth in effect say to thee what Pharaohs Daughter did to Moses Mother Take this childe and nurse it for me and I will give thee thy wages Exod. 2.9 Take this Son this Daughter and nurse them for me in my nurture and admonition Take this man-servant this maid-servant and bring them up for me in my fear and service and I will give thee an eternal reward Friend thou wouldst be faithful in bringing up Children or Servants for thy Brother or Soveraign and wilt thou be unfaithful in bringing up Sons and Servants to thy God and Saviour Is it fit that Gods servants should do the Devils work Let Conscience judge Did God give thee them to be brought up in drinking or swearing or lying or Atheism or like so many Heathen or Beasts without any knowledge of his Word and Will Did he honor and intrust thee with their education to have thee poyson their souls by thy irreligious pattern and starve their souls by not giving them spiritual food Is this thy love to thy Maker and Redeemer Besides I must tell thee As Jacob was answerable to Laban for the whole flock if any were torn by beasts or stollen by day or night he bore the loss of all Gen. 31.39 Of his hands it was required So art thou answerable to God for every one in thy Family if any one be devoured and torn in pieces by the roaring Lyon the Devil through thy negligence God will require his soul at thy hands O Reader consider Death will shortly break up thine house when thy children and servants must go to everlasting fire if they dye without grace and the knowledge and fear of God If thou art now careless about the eternal good of thy children and servants that they perish for ever through thy falseness and unfaithfulness how dreadful will thy account be What wilt thou do when the blood of their souls shall be required of thee If Christ sentence men to Hell for not visiting sick and imprisoned bodies for not feeding hungry bodies what sentence will he pass on thee for not visiting those souls committed to thy charge which were imprisoned by the Devil and sick unto death and for not giving them the bread of life but suffering them to starve and dye If on him that brought a temporal death on Cain vengeance should be taken sevenfold what vengeance shall be taken on thee who tumblest others into eternal death Believe it Reader these are no jesting things If therefore thou hast any bowels towards the children of thine own body if thou hast any compassion towards thy poor servants whom Christ thought worth his own blood if thou hast any love to thy dearest Saviour or thine own everlasting salvation if thou would leave this withering World with comfort and look into the other World with courage exercise thy self to godliness in thy family obey the particulars for that end commanded thee by the infinite God do thine utmost that all of thy family may be of the family of Faith and all of thine houshold may belong to the houshold of God that so when the King of Terrors shall give a discharge from all relations thou mayest with thy family be translated from living together in one House to dwell for ever in one Heaven Reader Thou mayest perceive in the close of the tenth Chapter that much more is promised then I have in this Treatise performed the payment of which though I do at present defer yet through the strength of Christ I shall not deny If thou hast any interest at the Throne of Grace I do earnestly desire thy prayers that this part may finde acceptance with the Saints and be instrumental for the advantage of many souls and that in the other part I may receive much assistance from the blessed Saviour thereby I shall be the more enabled to be serviceable to
thine and others salvations A good Wish about the Government of a Family wherein the former heads are epitomized THe Government of my Family being a special talent and trust committed to me by the blessed God The introduction and being a business of exceeding concernment both in regard of its influence upon the whole Kingdom which is raised or ruined by the good or wicked management of Families and in reference to the everlasting estates of the precious Souls in it wherewith I am charged I wish in general That I may never like a rotten post endanger the whole building of Church and State in any degree by my unfaithfulness in my place nor be so unmerciful and unnatural as to see that bloody Butcher Satan drive my children and servants like silly sheep to the Shambles of Hell and never stir or strive to rescue them out of his hands But th●t my resolution and practice may be according to Joshua 's religions pattern that whatsoever gods others serve whether the World or the flesh yet I and my house may serve the Lord. O that I might so walk in the midst of my house with a perfect heart that Grace like Maries box of Oyntment may perfume the whole house with its savour and that in every corner of it as it was said of holy Hoopers there may be some sent of godliness In particular I wish That I may keep my house so cleanly swept from the filth of sin Motives to exalt godliness in a family and so curiously furnished with the ornaments of the Spirit that it may invite the noblest Guest the ever glorious God to take up his abode in it My God hath told me Gods blessing will be on a god y family That the House of the Righteous shall stand Pro. 12.7 though sin rotteth the timber and maketh the houses of the wicked to fall that in the house of the Righteous is much treasure Prov. 15.6 even when there is but little silver th●t he blesseth the habitation of the Righteous Prov. 3.33 Surely his blessing can make my bed easie my sleep sweet my food savoury my cloaths warm my dwelling pleasant my children hopeful my wife a meet help my ground full of plenty and all I set my hands to to prosper O my soul what an argument is this to move thee to exalt holiness in thy house Thy God will bless it nay that God whom the Heaven of Heavens cannot contain will come and dwell in it Without question his coming will as to Zacheus bring salvation to thy house the company of this King will turn thy Cottage into a Court and his presence will change thy dwelling were it a Prison into a Palace O! let nothing be in thy house which may be distasteful to so great and so good a Friend Let no sin dwell in thy Tabernacle but let Holiness to the Lord be written on every person room and vessel in it that whatsoever name other houses are known by the name of thy house may be from henceforth and for ever Jehovah Shammah The Lord is there I wish Gods curse will be on a wicked family That I may so give credit to the Word of Truth which saith That the Curse of the Lord is in the house of the wicked that the flying Roll of Curses the length whereof is twenty cubits and the breadth ten cubits shall enter into the house of the Thief and into the house of him that sweareth falsly and shall consume it with the timber thereof and the stones thereof Zach. 5.2 3 4. and that he will pour out his wrath upon the Heathen which know him not and upon the families that call not on his name That I may tremble for fear that Atheism should raign in my house and so it should be ranked amongst the irreligious and markt for vengeance Ala● what a direadful noise do those Murthering pieces make in mine ears The Curse of God will canker all my comforts and blast all my blessings and that both speedily and irresistibly But O my soul meditate a little upon the latter Text which is a Prediction as well as a Petition What a bitter potion doth thy God give thee to purge Atheism out of thy family Consider its nature it is Wrath Pour out thy Wrath. Gods Anger is terrible like fire burning and overturning all before it if but a spark of it light upon his own people Psal 99. ● a●d 85.4 how pitifully do they roar out We are consumed by thine anger Cause thine anger towards us to cease O Lord rebuke me not in thine anger There is no soundness in my flesh because of thine anger Truly no wonder that they thus bewail it for who knoweth the power of his anger Eut his Wrath is anger in the greatest degree Anger boiled up to the height O how scalding is this boiling Lead If the wrath of a King be the Messenger of death What is the wrath of an Almighty God This wrath can stuff thy bed with thorns and appoint wearisome nights unto thee it can sauce thy dishes with poyson infect thy raiment with plague sores fill thy body with torturing distempers thy soul with horrors and terrors it can waste all thy wealth in a moment and turn thy Wife Children and all thy comforts into amazing crosses and terrifying curses Hell it self is nothing else but this wrath to come one Spoonful one Drop of it will turn an Ocean of the sweetest Wine into Gall and Wormwood Wouldst thou be an Atheist in thy family for all the World to live one hour under this scorching wrath Alas it is a fearful thing to fall into the hands of thy God for thy God is a consuming fire Observe further its measure pour out thy wrath When thy God poureth out his Spirit he giveth it in an extraordinary degree The persons upon whom it was poured are said to be full of the Holy Ghost If thy family be irreligious thou mayst expect this scalding wrath not by drops but by shorews to come pouring down upon it O my soul let this thought soak and sink so deep into thee that thou mayst dread the omission of duties in thy family as much as the unquenchable fire Let his favour make thee chearful in his service and let his anger make thee fearful of the least sin in thy house To this end I wish that I may use much circumspection whom I admit into my dwelling Directions for the exalting godliness in a Fam●ly that as those who are to plant an Orch-yard get the best grafts they can so that mine house may be an Eden the garden of the Lord a Paradise on earth 1 Take heed whom thou makest members of thy Family I may as my occasions require look out for the choycest flowers the best and fruitfulest trees the holiest Christians in the Country O let me never make my house a Pest-house by taking in irreligious and infectious persons and such as
will bring the plague along with them One scabbed sheep may wrong the whole flock one putrid grape corrupt a cluster a little Leaven Leaveneth the whole lump Lord in the choyce of inhabitants for my house let my eye be not onely upon my own welfare and their fitness for my work but chiefly on thy glory and their willingness to work the work of him that sent them into the World Ioh. 9.4 Psa 26.4 5. and 119. Let me hate the congregation of evil doers Let me not sitwith vain persons Let mine eyes be upon the faithful in the Land Let them that fear thee turn unto me and such as keep thy righteous judgements Let me dwell with them here on earth with whom I shall dwell hereafter in the house not made with hands but eternal in the Heavens I wish that that there may be a Church in my house and all the persons in it 2 Mind holy performances in thy Family both Morning and Evening at least imploved in those holy performances which my God requireth My house should be a resemblance of Heaven Above in his greatest and most glorious house my God is served without ceasing and without sinning O that though in his lower and lesser house natural and civil actions cause intermission of and the body of death causeth imperfections in holy duties yet he might be worshipped both constantly and perfectly in a Gospel and Evangelical sence I have read that amongst the worst of Turks the Moors it is a just exception against any Witness by their law Prayer that he hath not prayed four times in every natural day ● Hall Contemp. I wish that none in my Familie may be worse then Turks but that both all apart may secretly and all together may privaetly offer up the Morning and Evening Sacrifice of prayer and praise to the Lord my God Daniel would pray three times a day though he were cast to the Lions for it and shall my Family neglect prayer when the Omission of it will make them a prey to roaring Lions It is the honour and happiness of my house to exalt the Worship of my God in it his Service is the greatest freedom his work is a reward to it self why should we be our own enemies in banishing our best friends out of our family The mercies of my God are renewed upon me and mine every Morning his care and love is continued to us all the day long the dews and showrs of his compassion fall down upon us every Evening shall we be forgetful of him who is every moment so mindful of us O let my Family never be so void of grace and manners as not to bid our God Good-Morrow and Good-Night upon any pretence whatsoever I wish that the word of Christ may dwell richly in my heart and house Scripture instruction and Catechising that my whole familie may have their set meales every day of this Spiritual food How can I expect that Children or Servants who know not the God of their Fathers should serve him with perfect hearts Alas how often are their ignorant hearts like dark Cellers abounding in vermine full of sin 1 Cron. 28.9 O that I might so talk of the Word of God in my house Deut. 6.7 8. when I lye down and when I rise up that it may be written upon the Posts of my House and on my Gates that I may so often water the young plants in it that their first acquaintance may be acquaintance with God and from their childhood they may know the holy Scriptures and be wise to Salvation through faith which in Christ Jesus Though others care be to instruct their Servants onely in their own work let my care be to instruct mine in Gods Will and Word Though others labour to leave their children rich let my endeavour be to leave mine religious Lord enable me so to teach them thy Trade in their youth that they may not depart from it when they are old Prov. 22.6 that their young years well led may be like the Sweetness of a Rose whose swell remaineth in the dried leaves I wish That all the voyces in my house may tuneably sing Gods praises Singing Psalms yet that they may not like Trumpets and Pipes make a sound being filled onely with winde but have hearts fixed and prepared when they sing and give praise O that all the Viols in my house may be so in tune and their strokes so true that singing with grace in our hearts we may make melody to the Lord. Drunkards have their Songs in derision of them that are good Atheists have their Sonnets in dishonor of the blessed God Why should not the voyce of joy and rejoycing be in the Tabernacle of the righteous Psal 118.15 Though my house is a Tabernacle and all the inhabitants in it Travellers yet our work is pleasant O let us go merrily on and make Gods Statutes our Songs in this house of our pilgrimage Because my pattern of evil will do more hurt to my family 3 Set them a good example then my precepts can do good servants and children being apt to be led more by the eye then the ear I wish That I may take heed to my self weigh and watch over all my words and works not onely for my own but also for the sake of them that are committed to my charge Distillations from the head often consume and destroy the vitals My family is like a flock of sheep if the first leap through into a ditch or river the rest are ready to follow O that I might therefore be wary in all my ways and be so serious in Spiritual so sober in Natural actions so righteous towards men so religious towards my God so faithful in every relation and so holy and heavenly in every condition that I may have cause to say to my children and servants as Gideon to his Souldiers Look on me and do likewise Judg. 7.17 I wish 4 See that thy family sanctifie the Lords Day That my house may not onely spend some part of every Week day but also the whole Sabbath day in the service of my God It is a special priviledge granted me by the Lord for my families profit wherein I may be singularly helpful to my own and my housholds everlasting happiness O that not the least part of it may be lost or prophaned by any within my gate either by worldly labour pastimes or idleness but that I may be so mindeful of my charge as to take care that my children and servants do forbear what my God forbiddeth and spend that Sacred Day altogether in Sacred Duties To which purpose I desire That all my houshold both males and females if of capacity may appear before the Lord in publique and in his Temple give him praise and that in private I may whet the Word on them as the mower doth his sithe by going over it again and again according