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A20762 A guide to godlynesse or a Treatise of a Christian life shewing the duties wherein it consisteth, the helpes inabling & the reasons parswading vnto it ye impediments hindering ye practise of it, and the best meanes to remoue them whereunto are added diuers prayers and a treatise of carnall securitie by Iohn Douname Batcheler in Diuinitie and minister of Gods Word. Downame, John, d. 1652.; Payne, John, d. 1647?, engraver. 1622 (1622) STC 7143; ESTC S121690 1,341,545 1,134

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occurrent The which ioy far exceedeth all the ioyes of the world For they satisfy not but leaue the soule empty so that the ioy of one pleasure doth but stirre vp the appetite to hunger after another which if it should not be inioyed leaues nothing but sorrow behind whereas this as our Sauiour speaketh is a full ioy in the fruition of God partly in sense and feeling according Iohn 15. 11. to that of the Psalmist O taste and see that the Lord is good Psal 34. 8. and partly in the assurance of faith which maketh vs reioyce in expectation of full fruition Worldly ioy is short and momentany like the crackling of thornes vnder a pot which causeth a suddaine blaze as suddenly Eccles 7. 6. goeth out but the ioy of the Spirit is lasting and permanent and Iohn 16. 22. no man as our Sauiour saith can take it from vs. That consists in eating and drinking and the inioying of such company as are like our selues but this in the soules fruition of her beloued Spouse whose loue is Cant. 1. 2. better then wine seeing his fauours are so full of rauishing delight that the heart is not able to containe them as we see in the example of the Spouse in the Canticles who being brought by her Bridegroome into his banketing house was so filled that she euen surfeted of his delicacies which forced her to cry out Stay me with flaggons Comfort me with Cant. 2. 4 5. apples for I am sicke of loue Of which sweete and gracious entertainment of the faithfull soule the Psalmist also speaketh They shall bee abundantly Psal 36. 8. satisfied with the fatnesse of thy House and thou shat make them drinke of the riuer of thy pleasures Finally the ioy of worldlings accompanieth their prosperitie but when the euill day commeth it leaueth and forsaketh them and is turned into sorrow and griefe of heart but the godly reioyce euen in their tribulation affliction in their assurance of Gods loue and because they know that they shall worke together for their good these light and momentany afflictions causing vnto them a farre Rom. 5. 3. Rom. 8. 28. 2. Cor. 4. 17. Iam. 1. 2. most excellent and an eternall waight of glory They account it all ioy as the Apostle Iames speaketh when they fall into diuers tentations knowing that the tryall of their faith worketh patience And when they are persecuted for righteousnesse sake they being blessed in their sufferings reioyce Matth. 5 10 11 and are exceeding glad because their reward is great in heauen And thus the Apostle saith that the Thessalonions receiued the Word in much affliction 1. Thes 1. 6. and with ioy in the holy Ghost And that the Hebrewes tooke ioyfully the spoyling of their goods knowing themselues that they had in heauen a better and induring substance The which ioy is a supernaturall gift and fruit of the sanctifying Spirit which all cannot attaine vnto but the faithfull only and therefore the Apostle prayeth for the Romans that Rom. 15. 13. the God of hope would fil them with all ioy and peace in beleeuing that they might abound in hope through the power of the holy Ghost It is a priuiledge wherin wicked men haue no portion but is peculiar to the godly in whom the Kingdome of God is begunne in this life which none inioy but they Matth. 6. 33. which seeke also his righteousnesse seeing it consisteth not onely in peace Rom. 14. 17. and ioy in the holy Ghost but also in righteousnesse as the Apostle speaketh and therefore seeing those things cannot bee separated which God hath conioyned we must labour after righteousnes if we would be partakers of this ioy vnto which if we doe attaine we shall assuredly be filled with it For if the Apostle reioyced in it as in his Crowne Phil. 4. 1. 1. Thes 19. 20. and ioy when he had beene a meanes of conuerting others and bringing them into the way of truth and righteousnesse and if the Apostle Iohn reioyced so greatly that he professeth he had no greater ioy in any outward Ioh. Epist 2 4. and Epist 3. 3 4. thing then when he saw his children walking in this way then what inestimable ioy must this needs cause vnto vs when our selues by walking in the way of holinesse and righteousnesse doe attaine vnto the assurance of our owne happinesse §. Sect. 5 The last speciall priuiledge is Christian liberty The last speciall priuiledge peculiar vnto the godly which the Spirit bringeth is Christian liberty whereby being freed out of the hands of all Luk. 1. 74. our spirituall enemies we serue the Lord in holinesse and righteousnesse without feare and so attaine vnto the glorious liberty of the sonnes of God seeing his seruice is perfect freedome and haue power and dominion ouer all the creatures so as wee may vse them to all purposes both for necessity and comfort hauing full right and interest in them by our adoption The which priuiledge also is a fruit of the Spirit according to that of the Apostle Where the Spirit of the Lord is there is liberty And is deriued vnto 2. Cor. 3. 17. vs when as the holy Ghost by a liuely faith applyeth vnto vs the vertue and efficacy of Christ Iesus his death and satisfaction whereby this liberty was first purchased for vs in which respect our Sauiour also challengeth vnto himselfe this power and prerogatiue of setting vs at liberty as being our alone Redeemer who hath deliuered vs out of the hands of all our spirituall enemies If saith he the Sonne shall make you free you shal be free Ioh. 8. 36. indeed We were subiect to the wrath of God but our Sauiour hath freed Gal. 3. 13. vs from it and by satisfying his Iustice hath reconciled vs vnto him We were vnder the curse of the Law but hee hath freed vs by being made a curse for vs. Wee were the wretched slaues of Satan and in the state of death and condemnation but hee by his death hath destroyed him that had Heb. 2. 14 15. the power of death that is the deuill that he might deliuer them who through the feare of death were all their life time subiect to bondage Wee were seruants to the world and the vassals of the earthly Mammon but Christ hath ouercome the world both for himselfe and all his Elect Ioh. 16. 33. and so set vs at liberty out of this thraldome Wee were the seruants of sinne which made vs slaues to all other enemies and obeyed it in the wicked lusts thereof for as our Sauiour saith Hee that committeth sinne Joh. 8. 34. is the seruant of sinne For his seruants wee are whom wee obey whether of sinne vnto death or of obedience vnto righteousnesse And though with the Rom. 6. 16. Iewes wee were ready to boast of our freedome and as it were out of our store to promise liberty vnto
that he shall neuer taste of the same stripes and reuerenceth him in respect of his power iustice grauity and authority ouer him though he expecteth nothing from them but all good So the Apostle Peter vseth this argument And if ye call on 1. Pet. 1. 17. the Father who without respect of persons iudgeth according to euery mans worke passe the time of your soiourning heere in feare And the Apostle Paul vseth Gods seuerity to the reiected Iewes as a reason to make vs to feare God and exhorteth vs to worke out our saluation with feare and trembling Rom 11. 28. Phil. 2. 12. Besides being partly flesh as well as Spirit and therefore full of infirmities and corruptions it is profitable for the vnregenerate part which is a slaue and not a sonne to be contained in dutie and restrained from sinne by the feare of Gods Iustice power and punishments For our loue being imperfect our feare cannot attaine in this life to filiall perfection but so farre foorth as we are vnregenerate is seruile and slauish And to this end are Gods iudgements denounced and punishments inflicted in the Heb. 3. 12 13. Psal 119. 120. 1. Cor. 10. 6 11. hearing and sight of the godly that they may feare to offend so iust and mighty a God and so escape these fearefull punishments But the chiefe grounds and causes of Gods feare in the hearts of his children are sauing knowledge and a liuely faith whereby being assured of Gods loue in Christ we loue him againe and are aboue all things afraid to doe any thing which is displeasing in his sight either in the omission of any duty or commission of any sinne which our gracious and louing Father either commandeth or forbiddeth §. Sect. 2 That this feare of God is commended vnto vs in the Scriptures and of the great profit of it And this is that feare of God which in the Scriptures is so much commended vnto vs and causeth those who in their hearts imbrace it to bee Pro. 28. 14. Deut. 6. 13. 10. 12. happy and blessed according to that of Salomon Blessed is the man that feareth alway which blessednesse that we may attaine vnto let vs labour after this feare and to this end let vs consider the excellencie and profit of it that our hearts being inflamed with the loue of it we may carefully vse all good meanes whereby we may obtaine it The excellency of it heerein appeareth in that it compriseth in it all other duties and is vsually put for the whole seruice of God wherein the whole man is to bee imployed according to that of Salomon Let vs heare the conclusion of the whole matter Eccles 12. 13. Feare God and keepe his Commandements for this is the whole of man Secondly it is called in this respect the head and beginning of wisedome that is Psal 111. 10. Pro. 1. 7. of all godlinesse and true Religion Thirdly it giueth grace and vertue vnto all other duties and maketh them acceptable in Gods sight For our whole conuersation must be a constant walking in Gods feare In it wee Act. 9. 31. must worship and serue God Serue the Lord with feare And in thy feare will I worship towards thine holy Temple By it our sanctification is perfected Ps 2. 11. 5. 7. 2. Cor. 7. 1. Phil. 2. 12. and our saluation wrought out and finished The profit of this feare of God is also inestimable for it restraineth vs from all vice and sinne according to that of Salomon A wise man feareth and departeth from euill and of Pro. 14. 16. 8. 13. Psal 4. 4. Gen. 39. 9. Dauid Stand in awe and sinne not As we see in the example of Ioseph who had his eares and heart stopped against the vnchaste allurements of his mistresse by the feare of God And of the Egyptian Midwiues who by the Exod. 1. 17 21. feare of God were kept from obeying the wicked edict of the King Whereas contrariwise the want of this feare is the cause of all disobedience and sinne as Abraham implyeth in his speech to Pharaoh and the Gen. 20. 11. Apostle plainely expresseth for hauing set downe a Catalogue of many sinnes he concludeth with this as the cause of all the rest There is no feare Rom. 3. 15. of God before their eyes Secondly it is a fountaine of life making vs to depart Pro. 14. 27. from the snares of death Thirdly it incites and inables vs to the performance of all good duties and therefore the Lord hauing deliuered his Law wisheth that the hearts of his people might be alwayes fraughted Deut. 5. 29. with his feare that thereby they might bee mooued to obey it and the Preacher in this respect compriseth in it alone all other vertues and duties Pro. 15. 33. Eccl. 12. 13. because it mooueth vs to the imbracing of them all Fourthly it deliuereth from all other feares and causeth them to giue place when it is present as the Sunne all other inferiour lights For if we feare God we will not feare the threatnings of men if we feare him that can cast body and soule into hell we neede not feare them that can onely and that by his Act. 5. 29. Luk. 12. 5. permission kill the body as our Sauiour implyeth Fifthly it maketh vs partakers of all good things promised in this life for hee that feareth the Psal 34. 9. Esa 66. 2. Lord wanteth nothing which is good but God is present with such to take notice of all their wants and his eares are open to heare their prayers Psal 145. 19. and grant their desires Finally it bringeth with it euerlasting blessednesse For blessed is the man that feareth the Lord that walketh in his wayes Psal 128. 1. 112. Pro. 28. 14. And happie is the man that feareth alway but he that hardeneth his heart shall fall into mischiefe Which promises belong not alone to those that feare God but also to their posterity after them for their seede shall bee mighty Psal 112. 2. vpon earth and their generation blessed as the Psalmist speaketh §. Sect. 3 Of the meanes of obtaining this feare of God Now the meanes of attaining vnto this feare of God are diuers First to consider and meditate of Gods nature and attributes as of his omnisciency whereby he seeth all things euen the secret corners of our hearts of his omnipotency whereby he is able to reward vs if we feare him or punish vs if we neglect him of his Iustice whereby he impartially iudgeth all men without respect of persons of his truth which neuer fayleth in his promises or threatnings But especially of his mercy and goodnesse towards vs in Christ which will inflame our hearts with his loue and out of this loue cause vs to feare his displeasure as the greatest euill according to that of the Psalmist There is mercy or forgiuenesse with thee that thou mayest be feared The second
who were worthily reiected in Adam both for the guilt of his sinne and the corruption of our nature which we haue deriued from him Now this benefit of Christ giuen vs of God to bee the foundation of our election and saluation may be vnto vs a most forcible argument to make vs loue God aboue all things who hath so loued vs that hee hath not spared to giue his onely begotten and dearely beloued Sonne vnto vs and for vs euen vnto the death that wee by him might attaine vnto eternall life and happinesse and also to expresse this loue by labouring and indeuouring to serue and please him in all the duties of a godly life For what should withdraw our hearts from God which he hath tyed vnto him by such a bond of loue that was much stronger then death it selfe why should any hire intice vs to neglect his seruice and to serue Satan the world and our owne lusts by committing any knowne sinne vnlesse it be of equall value to that gift that God hath giuen to vs and for vs that he might redeeme vs from all iniquity and appropriate vs vnto himselfe for his own seruice But ten thousand worlds cannot match this gift and why then should we lose the benefit of it by neglecting the seruice of God and hiring our selues to worke wickednesse for the base hire of worldly vanities §. Sect. 2 That the work of redemption should mooue vs to serue our Redeemer in all duties of a godly life Againe as Christ our Sauiour giuen vnto vs by God his Father so also the great worke of Redemption wrought by him may serue as a most powerfull argument to mooue vs vnto the diligent performance of all the duties which belong to a godly life For though the worke of our Creation and preseruation are inestimable benefits yet this much exceedeth them being farre aboue all humane conceit and so vnspeakeable that it can neuer be sufficiently expressed and magnified by the tongue of men and Angels Yet let vs take as we are able some slender view of it and with rauishing wonder admire and adore the rest which we are not able to comprehend And consider first what wee were who were thus redeemed Rom. 5. 8 10. to wit mortall men dust and ashes weake and of no strength strangers sinners yea enemies vnto God and our owne saluation Secondly from what we were redeemed namely out of the greatest and most desperate misery which could possibly bee incident vnto any creature For Christ hath deliuered vs from the wrath of God the curse of the Law and all the fearefull plagues therein threatned temporall and eternall from the miserable bondage and captiuity of sinne and Satan from death hell and euerlasting condemnation both of body and soule and that when we were so desperately and vnrecouerably plunged into these fearefull miseries that wee were vtterly vnable to helpe our selues yea when all the power of men and Angels was altogether vnsufficient to doe vs any good Thirdly consider who redeemed such poore sinfull wretches out of this wofull plight euen the glorious Sonne of God equall to his Father in power and Maiesty hee vouchsafed to pitty vs in our misery and to take vpon him our deliuerance Fourthly consider the meanes which he vsed to effect this great worke of our Redemption namely by humbling himselfe in taking vpon him our nature and vniting it in a substantiall and inseparable vnion vnto his Diuine nature that so he might in our stead doe and suffer whatsoeuer was necessary for our saluation Fifthly consider the manner of effecting this great worke or the meanes which hee vsed that he might redeeme vs namely by offering himselfe vnto God his Father as a sacrifice for our sinnes and an all-sufficient price for our Redemption and to suffer in his body and soule all those punishments which were due vnto vs for our sinnes As all the miseries of his life pouerty and meane birth flight from his enemies the tentations of the deuill hunger wearinesse the persecutions scornes reproches and slanders of the world and wicked men And those especially which he indured a little before his death for he was betrayed by his owne Apostle and forsaken by the rest apprehended by his enemies and by them most iniuriously and barbarously abused and haled from one Iudgement seat to another falsly accused wrongfully condemned blindfolded buffeted rayled at spit vpon scorned and mocked whipped crowned with thornes and crucified and so suffered for vs that cruell ignominious and accursed death of the Crosse and his Fathers wrath due to our sinnes which made him to sweate drops of Blood and vnder the waight of this intolerable burthen to complaine as a man forlorne and forsaken of God All which he willingly meekely and patiently suffered for vs that he might redeeme vs out of the hands of all our enemies and purchase vs vnto himselfe Psal 100. 2. as his owne peculiar people So that wee are now his by a treble right for he hath made vs and therefore we are his euen his home-borne seruants who owe vnto him our birth and being hee preserueth vs and giueth vnto vs all the good things which we inioy and so we are his hired seruants who owe vnto him all loue and duty for the rich wages of his bounteous benefits and finally he hath redeemed vs out of the hands of our mortall enemies by giuing for vs not siluer or gold or any corruptible 1. Pet. 1. 17 18. thing but himselfe and his owne precious Blood as a price to satisfie his Fathers iustice for our sinnes and therefore we are no more our owne but 1. Cor. 6. 20. his by the Law of Redemption What then remaineth but that we yeeld vnto our Sauiour his owne right which hee hath so dearely bought and seeing he hath giuen a price for vs which is of ten thousand yea infinite times more value then his purchase O let vs not defraud him of his bargaine but deuote our bodies and soules wholly to him that we may glorifie him by our seruice and be sorry that we haue no more to giue vnto him Wee owed our selues vnto him before by right of creation but by our sinnes robbed him of his due by selling our selues ouer to Satan as his slaues for the base hire of worldly vanities and now hee hath againe made vs his owne by giuing himselfe as the price of our Redemption and therefore let vs not againe depriue him of his right and defraud him of his seruice which if we vngratefully doe there remaineth no further sacrifice Heb. 10. 26. for sinne He hath giuen himselfe for vs and shall we thinke it too much to giue our selues to him He came not to be serued but to serue and to giue Mat. 20. 28. his life a ransome for many and shall the seruant detract his seruice when his Lord and Master his King and Soueraigne hath abased himselfe to doe seruice for him Hee hath
only inchoate and begun And therefore as they are delighted with the Law of God in the inner man so they finde another law in their members Rom. 7. 23 24. warring against the Law of their mindes and leading them captiue to the law of sinne The which spirituall bondage affecteth them with such griefe and sorrow that it forceth them to cry out with the Apostle O wretched Gal. 5. 17. man that I am who shall deliuer me from the body of this death We are not wholy and perfectly sanctifyed but remayne partly flesh and partly spirit like a city which is at ciuill warres within it selfe And these doe continually lust the one against the other So that no sooner doe we set our selues to performe any Christian duties of a godly life in the spirituall part but presently the flesh opposeth and interrupteth vs in it No sooner doe wee resolue to goe forward in the waies of godlinesse but forthwith the corruption of our nature like an heauy burthen incompasseth vs and as it were clingeth about our neckes so as wee cannot proceede without much labour and wearinesse All which and many other the like impediments as they doe much disturbe and distract all in the duties of a godly life so especially yong beginners at their first entrance into it For then the Heb. 12. 1. flesh is strongest to oppose and the Spirit weakest to make resistance Then the world and worldly wicked men doe vse most indeuour to regaine vs into their wonted society in the works of darkenesse when wee haue newly left their company and the pleasures of sinne and the baytes of worldly profits alluring vs to continue in our wonted courses are freshest in our memories when as wee haue lately renounced and forsaken them so as they are still scarce out of our sight Then the deuill bendeth all his might and malice his stratagems and engins of battry against vs as Sennacherib against Hezechiah when wee doe disclaime his seruice and refuse to pay him tribute Then wee meete with gteatest difficulties and haue least strength to ouercome them Then wee goe in the waies of Christianity like little children when they first learne to goe alone who at euery step are ready to stagger and fall through weakenesse and want of practice whereas when wee haue accustomed our selues to these courses for some moneths or yeeres wee goe both more steadily and with much greater safety and delight Finally then wee are like vnto sluggards who leaue their down-beds with much irkesomnes discontent but when they they haue once risen and shaken off their sloth they are sorry that they haue slept so long and goe cheerefully about their businesse Neyther did euer man repent of his repentance though at the first entrance it seemed vnpleasant difficult but rather feeleth such ioy and comfort in it that he much grieueth in his soule that he was no sooner grieued for his sins Now this difficulty is much increased vnto yong beginners by diuers meanes Frst because they are apt to trust too much vnto their owne strength which most faileth those that most rest vpon it and doe not walke in the life and strength of faith relying themselues wholly vpon Gods power and promises For so naturally are we through pride and selfe-loue addicted to our selues that we will not easily seeke for helpe abroad so long as any hope remaineth that we shal finde it at home Secondly because in our first beginnings we are more fickle vnconstant and vnsettled in our Christian courses For how can he make any good proceedings in his way who sometimes goeth forward and sometimes backward how can he dispatch his businesse who vndoeth one day that which he did in another or how should a man preserue his health and strength who one day carefully vseth good dyet or physicke and the next day neglecteth both and impayreth and hindreth them by the quite contrary courses Finally because we looke more vnto our selues then vnto God and so seeing the difficultie of the worke and comparing it with our owne weakenesse wee beginne to despaire of euer atchieuing it but in the meane time seldome or neuer looke vnto God who is all-sufficient to strengthen vs and to make vs perfect vnto euery good worke We apprehend our weakenesse to goe alone and are thereby discouraged because we consider not that wee are led and supported by the hand of our heauenly Father We see our wounds and weaknesses but not the salues and remedies We behold with Elias seruant who are against vs but through our spirituall blindnesse cannot discerne the more numerous and potent aydes that are on our side And finally we are ready with the Apostle to take notice of the Law of our members warring against the law of our Rom. 7. 24 25. mindes and leading vs captiue to the law of sinne but not with him to acknowledge with thankfulnesse our deliuerance by Iesus Christ And to be discouraged with the sight and sense of our infirmities but not to 2. Cor. 12. 9. consider that Gods grace is sufficient for vs. §. Sect. 4 That the difculty of a godlife must not discourage vs from it In all which respects it cannot be denyed but that there is some difficulty in leading of a godly life and much paines and labour required for the right performance of the duties which belong vnto it Notwithstanding this must bee no impediment to hinder vs from entring into and proceeding in the course of Christianity Yea rather because this aboue all things is most excellent profitable and necessary as concerning vs no lesse then the euerlasting saluation or condemnation both of our bodies and soules the difficulties which we finde in this way should bee so farre from discouraging and making vs sit still or turne backe againe to inioy our sinfull pleasures that they should rather inflame our disires whet and confirme our resolutions and make vs much more painefull and diligent in our indeuours that wee may attaine vnto it seeing though the difficulty were much greater yet the excellency profit and necessity of leading such a life doe farre exceede it And this vse our Sauiour Christ maketh of it For from the consideration of the small number which shall be saued and the difficultie of attayning vnto heauenly happinesse hee enforceth this exhortation Striue to enter in at the straight gate for many I say vnto you Luke 13. 24. Matth. 7. 13 14 will seeke to enter in and shall not bee able Because straight is the gate and narrow is the way which leadeth vnto life and few there bee that finde it So he telleth vs else-where that the Kingdome of God suffereth violence and the Matth. 11. 12. violent take it by force And the Apostle Peter hauing said that the righteous shall scarcely be saued that is not without much difficulty and laborious 1. Pet. 4. 18 19. diligence taketh thereupon occasion to perswade all both to patient suffering
meanes is the consideration of Gods Iudgements Psal 130. 4. executed on the wicked which are so many instructions vnto vs to feare God and auoide his displeasure that we be not partakers with them in their punishments So the Psalmist saith that the righteous seeing the destruction of the wicked should feare God and deride their folly and the Apostle Psal 52. 6. telleth vs that the former examples of Gods Iudgements were written for 1. Cor. 10. 11. our learning that they might admonish vs to take warning by their harmes lest we fall into the same euils The third meanes is the diligent reading and hearing of the Scriptures which are called The feare of God Psal 19. 9. because they worke his feare in vs. And thus the Lord inioyneth the King to haue the Law with him and to reade therein all the dayes of his life that hee Deut. 17. 19. may learne to feare the Lord his God For in them are contained many Commandements inioyning many exhortations moouing and many reasons perswading to this feare Feare the Lord with reuerence and reioyce Psal 2. 11. with trembling Let all the earth feare the Lord let all the inhabitants of the earth stand in awe of him for he spake and it was done he commanded and it stood fast O feare the Lord all ye his Saints for there is no want to them that Psal 33. 8 9. 34. 9. Isa 8. 13. Heb. 12. 28. feare him The fourth meanes is to deny our selues and our owne wisedome and when God commandeth any thing not to aske counsell of carnall reason vnto which the more we incline the more the feare of God abateth in vs as we see in the example of Eue who following sense and reason obeyed the deuils aduice and cast off the feare of God And this the Wiseman implyeth Bee not wise in thine owne eyes but feare God and Pro. 3. 7. depart from euill The fifth meanes is to meditate often on our owne infirmities and weakenesse and of the malice and might of our spirituall 1. Pet. 5. 8. Eph. 6. 11 12. Phil. 2. 12. 1. Cor. 12. 10. enemies which will make vs worke out our saluation with feare and trembling and whilest we stand to take heede of falling The sixth is to remember our end daily and continually as first the day of our death which will worke our hearts to Gods feare as the Psalmist implyeth and Psal 90. 12. secondly the day of Iudgement and end of the world which is called The 2. Cor. 5. 11. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 2. Pet. 3. 11 14. terrour of the Lord because it is a notable meanes to worke his feare in our hearts The last and chiefe meanes whereby all the rest are made effectuall is feruent prayer For it is no naturall faculty or habit but the gift of God which he promiseth to put in the hearts of the faithfull that they Ier. 32. 39 40. may not depart from him and is to bee obtained by faithfull and effectuall prayer As we see in the example of the Psalmist who prayeth the Lord to knit their hearts vnto him that they might feare his Name Psal 86. 11. §. Sect. 4 Of humility what it is and the causes of it The last vertue required is humility whereby knowing and acknowledging Gods power iustice maiesty goodnesse mercy and infinite perfection and our owne vilenesse and vnworthinesse imperfections and sinfull corruptions we doe renounce all glory and praise as not belonging vnto vs and ascribe it wholly vnto God vnto whom alone it rightly appertaineth So that it is the nature of humility to vilifie and abase our selues in our owne sight euen to the ground as the word importeth to cast off all opinion of our workes and worthinesse and in the sight and sense of our sinnes and corruptions to acknowledge our selues worthy of Gods most heauie punishments in this life and the life to come and contrariwise to ascribe all glory and praise vnto God alone euen of all the good we haue in vs or is done by vs from whom alone we haue it according to that of the Psalmist Not vnto vs O Lord not vnto vs but vnto thy Psal 115. 1. name giue the glory And of Daniel O Lord righteousnesse belongeth vnto Dan. 9. 7 11. thee but vnto vs confusion of faces because wee haue sinned against thee The causes of this humility are first the knowledge and acknowledgement of Gods infinitenesse in all excellency goodnesse and perfection in which he is so incomprehensibly glorious that when we come in his presence it maketh vs to vilifie and abase our selues what opinion soeuer before wee had of our owne worth and excellencie euen as the light of a Glow-worme is quite dazeled when the glorious beames of the Sunne doe shine vpon it Thus in the sight and sense of Gods glory and maiesty Ezechiel was cast to the ground Manoah concluded that hee should Ezech. 2. 1. Iudg. 13. 22. Esa 6. 5. die Esayas cryeth out Woe is me for I am vndone because I am a man of vncleane lips c. for mine eyes haue seene the King the Lord of hosts And Iob hauing seene the Lord abhorred himselfe and repented in dust and ashes Iob 42. 6. Especially if wee consider that this God mighty and glorious in himselfe is so infinitely gracious vnto vs in conferring vpon vs so innumerable benefits and aboue all that inestimable gift of his onely Sonne to worke that great worke of our Redemption The consideration whereof will make vs to humble our selues with Iacob and to confesse that we are lesse then the least of Gods mercies and to say with Dauid Who am I and my 2. Sam. 7. 18 22. house that thou hast brought me hitherto wherefore thou art great O Lord God for there is none like thee c. Secondly the knowledge and acknowledgement of our owne vilenesse and vnworthinesse both in regard of our bodies which are but dust and ashes as Abraham acknowledgeth and in respect Gen. 18. 27. of our soules which howsoeuer they were created according to Gods Image in wisedome holinesse and righteousnesse yet through the fall of our first parents and the corruption deriued from them vnto vs they are wholly defiled in all the powers and faculties of them with originall corruption and loaded with the guilt of innumerable numbers of actuall transgressions whereby we are made subiect to the wrath of God the curse of the Law the plagues and punishments of this life and eternall death and condemnation in the life to come In which regard wee haue just cause to humble our selues with the prodigall sonne and to say with him Father I haue sinned against heauen and earth and am no more Luk. 15. worthy to be called thy sonne And if there be any good thing in vs or done by vs to acknowledge with the Apostle that wee haue it of Gods free 1. Cor.
streame winde and tide of our corruption and therefore we must at no time intermit our labour for so we shall in short time be carried further backe then we can recouer in a great space and with much labour but we must be in continuall exercise and as it were with vnwearied diligence ply the oare vntill by death we arriue at the hauen of happinesse Our hearts like the plummets of a clocke draw vs with the waight of their corruption downeward till they pitch themselues and rest vpon earthly vanities vnlesse euery day yea many times a day we pull them vp and giue spirituall motion vnto them by these Christian exercises Thirdly sinne is so wily and deceitfull that if we cease from the duties of a Christian life and intermit the keeping of a straight watch ouer our selues and actions it will soone steale vpon vs and fortifie it selfe against all vertue and goodnesse For though at the first it seemeth content that we should but for a little space displace good duties and giue but a little way for a small while to the pleasures of it yet it will increase in strength comming to liue as it were in its old home and proper element and hardly leaue its hold or giue way to the re-entry of those vertues and Christian duties which it formerly expelled In which regard we shall be blessed if fearing Pro. 28. 14. alwayes we stand continually vpon our watch and not onely keepe our Matth. 26. 41. 2. Tim. 4. 5. Heb. 3. 13. soules strongly manned with sauing graces but take care that they may be daily trained and exercised in all Christian duties that so we may not be beguiled and hardned through the deceitfulnesse of sinne Lastly there is no lesse danger from outward enemies the world and the deuill if we neglect the daily exercise of a godly life For the world if it once finde our hearts Dina-like straying from God will easily rauish and defile them with her filthy pleasures and when we haue beene at some time inticed to accompany her fauourites in the delights of sinne wee shall hardly get out of their imbracements nor purge our selues from that pollution Iob 1. 7. wherewith they haue tainted vs. The deuill also like a malicious enemy 1. Pet. 5 8. walketh about continually and as a roaring Lyon seeketh to deuoure vs and if he finde vs at any time cleane swept of Gods graces and garnished Matth. 12. 44. with the hellish ornaments of vices and sinne he will enter into vs and taking possession reserue vs for his owne vse And therefore it behoueth vs with like diligence to preuent his wiles and malice by keeping our soules continually furnished with Gods graces and our selues exercised in all Christian duties that so we may neuer be at leasure to admit of his tentations And seeing this euill one is ready euen whilst we sleepe to sow his tares of tentations in our hearts a ground too fruitfull for such a graine Matth. 13. 25. our care must be with like diligence to cast out this hellish seede that it take no rooting or if it haue to weede them out as soone as they haue sprouted vp and doe outwardly appeare in our words or actions §. Sect. 5 Another reason taken from our calling and profession The sixth reason to mooue vs to this daily exercise is taken from our calling and profession for wee are Citizens of heauen and pilgrims on Phil. 3. 20. Col. 3. 2. earth and therefore though our bodies are here beneath yet our conuersation should be in heauen and our minds and affections should be on things aboue our speeches should bee of those things that concerne our owne countrey and in all our actions we must indeuour to further our iourney towards our heauenly home neither must we one while goe forward and another while backward or idlely sit still we must not one part of the day goe in the right way and in another part erre and wander in the by-wayes of sinne but we must be still going forward and holding the right roade neuer turning out of it till we come to our heauenly home We are called to be Gods seruants and therefore we must not deuide our seruice betweene him and the world seeing it is fit wee doe onely his worke from whom we receiue so liberall wages neither can we serue God and Mammon which are of so contrary a disposition but whilst wee incline to the Mat. 6. ●4 one we must of necessity neglect the other as our Sauiour hath taught vs. We are called to be his Souldiers and therefore we must onely fight his battels and not spend some part of our life and strength in his seruice and some part in fighting on the deuils side by quenching the good motions of Gods Spirit and contrary to the light of our owne knowledge and consciences neglect holy duties and runne on in such courses as are displeasing vnto God We are called to be Gods labourers and therefore we must intend our businesse that it may prosper in our hand and not vndoe in one day that which we haue done in another We must not like vnskilfull husbandmen sometimes plant and soone after plucke them vp one while sow good seed another while tares nor like foolish builders pull down one day what we haue set vp in another nor like vnfaithful Watchmen one while sit in the watch Tower and soone after slothfully sleep and giue ouer our charge nor like carelesse Pilots guide the ship one day toward the wished hauen and the next through sloth and negligence let it roame whither the winde and tide will carry it till it run vpon the sands split it selfe against the rocks But we must in the whole daily course of our liues giue all diligence to make our calling and election sure by holding 2. Pet. 1. 10. a constant and continuall course in the Christian exercises of a godly life §. Sect. 6 The last reason taken from the vncertainty of our liues The last reason to mooue vs vnto the continuall and daily exercise of Christian duties is taken from the vncertainty of our liues and Mat. 24. 46. when by death wee shall bee called to Iudgement For seeing wee know not at what time our Master will come it shall bee our wisedome to keepe our accounts alwayes euen that wee may be ready at all times without feare to yeeld vp our reckonings and to carry our selues continually like wise and faithfull seruants in the exercise of holy righteous and Christian duties that so we may bee blessed when our Lord comming vpon the sudden shall finde vs so doing and because we are vncertaine when the Bridegroome will come let vs like the fiue wise Virgins Mat. 25. 1 2. haue our lampes and oyle of faith and lights of a godly life alwayes prepared that so we may enter with him into the marriage Chamber of heauenly happinesse and there eternally solace
especially those which respect his Sabbaths and seruice as the profaning of his holy Day by vtter neglect of all holy duties or by imperfect performance of them want of preparation of reuerence and attention faith and feruency of spirit in hearing the Word and calling vpon Gods name want of care in laying it vp in our hearts and memories and practising it in our liues c. And thus as in our Complaints wee are to bewaile other wants so those especially which make vs vnfit to performe any acceptable seruice vnto God and in our petitions as wee are to beg other gifts and graces whereof we stand in need so those aboue others which inable vs to the better sanctification of the Lords Day in performing vnto him his spirituall worship as hungring and thirsting after the meanes of Gods glory and our saluation prepared hearts and good consciences faith and feruency of spirit reuerence and attention in hearing the Word and Gods blessing and assistance of his holy Spirit vnto his Minister and Ambassadour that he may speake the Word powerfully and profitably as to all the Congregation whereof we are members so vnto vs especially for our edification and building vp in all spirituall grace the mortification of our speciall vices and corruptions the increasing of our vertues and confirming of our strength vnto the performance of all Christian and holy duties wherein as yet we are most defectiue And finally in our praises and thankesgiuing we are to magnifie Gods holy Name as for all his blessings and benefits so for those especially which respect this Day As the giuing of Iesus Christ to be our Sauiour and Redeemer and causing Luk. 1. 78 79. this Sunne of righteousnesse to arise and shine vnto vs the continuance of his Sabbaths and the light of his Gospell wherein hee reuealeth vnto vs his holy will concerning our saluation and the meanes whereby we may attaine vnto it the peace liberty and safety which we inioy together with his spirituall fauours for granting vnto vs his Word and Sacraments and making them in some measure effectuall by the inward operation of his holy Spirit for the begetting and increasing of our faith and the worke of Sanctification in vs and the like With prayer we must also as leisure and opportunity serueth ioyne the reading of some fit portion of holy Scriptures for the better seasoning of our hearts and settling of our affections vpon holy things for the inflaming of them with the loue of Gods Law and with longing desires after the publike meanes of our saluation With which priuate exercises when wee haue prepared our selues we must if we be gouernours of families vse all good meanes for the fitting and preparing of our children and seruants for the publike seruice of God not thinking it enough for those that haue the charge of others to performe priuate duties by themselues vnlesse they cause their inferiours also to ioyne with them But especially before wee goe to the Church we must call them all together vnto prayer wherein after the confession of our sinnes and earnest petition for all necessary graces wee are to desire the assistance of Gods holy Spirit for the sanctifying and preparing of the whole family that they may in some acceptable manner performe all good duties which belong to the Sanctification of the Lords Day Neither must we as many doe thinke it sufficient that wee bring our families to Gods seruice nor neglect the duty of priuate prayer because it is to be performed publikely in the Congregation and so cause one duty to shoulder and thrust out another but wee must ioyne them together seeing the priuate seruice of God is not onely on his holy Day acceptable in it selfe but a notable and necessary meanes to fit and prepare vs for the right performance of his publike worship In which respect as we must be carefull that the publike seruice doe not exclude the priuate either morning or euening so much more that the priuate doe not hinder the publike but we must so order and dispose of these family-exercises as that they may be finished in seasonable time and not hinder vs from comming to the beginning of publike prayer with the residue of Gods people §. Sect. 4 Duties to be performed when we are going to the Church After all which duties performed in the family we are when we are ready to goe vnto the Church or when wee are in the way to spend that time in holy Meditations thinking with our selues that we are going not vpon some slight or ordinary businesse but to present our selues in the glorious presence of the great King of heauen and earth who being infinite in all holinesse and perfection and a God of such pure and piercing eyes that he seeth not onely our outward actions but searcheth the heart and reines hateth and abhorreth all impurity and corruption dissimulation and hypocrisie all cold formall and negligent seruice and will bee worshipped of vs in spirit and truth Let vs call to minde that we are going not to conferre with our companions or with mortal men not much superiour vnto vs but to speake and make our suits to Gods supreme and most glorious Maiesty to heare him speaking vnto vs by his Ambassadours in whose presence the heauens are vncleane and the blessed Angels hide their faces And that not about ordinary and slight matters but such waighty and important businesse as no lesse concerneth vs then the eternall saluation or damnation of our bodies and soules Finally that we are going about such affaires as will according as we dispatch them make vs much better or worse For the Word shall prosper to the atchieuing of that Esa 55. 11. end for which God sends it and shall neuer returne in vaine either it will soften vs like wax or harden vs like clay either it will be Gods strong power 2. Cor. 2. 15 16. to our saluation and the sauour of life vnto life or the sauour of death vnto Rom. 1. 16. 2. Cor. 2. 15 16. death for our deeper condemnation and by performing this duty in hearing of it we shall be neerer heauen or hell And hauing with these and such like meditations brought our selues to the place of diuine worship let vs enter into it with all feare and reuerence as into Gods owne House and place of his glorious presence saying with Iacob Surely the Lord is in Gen. 28. 16 17. this place how dreadfull is this place this is none other but the House of God and this is the gate of heauen CAP. XLI Of the publike duties of Gods seruice on the Lords Day §. Sect. 1 That we must ioyne with the Congregation in all the duties of Gods seruice ANd thus hauing placed our selues in Gods holy Assembly we are to ioyne with them in all duties of Gods seruice with vnanimity of heart and vniformity in action and gesture as becommeth those that professe themselues to be of the same
consciences from dead works and their naturall impurity the sanctity of our memories whereby they become faithfull Registers of good things the freedome of our willes in chusing good and refusing of euill the suppling softening and sanctifying of our hearts the rectifying right ordering purging and and renewing of our affections as loue hatred confidence hope feare despaire ioy sorrow anger zeale and the rest The sanctity of our bodies and outward actions appearing in our new obedience and good workes The integrity sincerity alacrity and constancy of them the parts of this obedience which are the denying of our selues and the profession of Christ How we are to deny our selues namely by resigning vp our selues wholly vnto God to be not onely his seruants but also his souldiers in the Christian warfare where we may take occasion to meditate of that due preparation which is required to this warfare and of the Christian armour and of the conflict it selfe consisting in the manifold tentations of our spirituall enemies and our resistance and of our standing and falling in it How we are also to deny our selues in taking vp our crosse and following of Christ bearing with patience whatsoeuer afflictions hee imposeth and of the meanes whereby we may attaine vnto it In respect of our profession of Christ we are to meditate how we are to carry our selues towards Christ himselfe and how towards his members How wee are to professe Christ at all times by inuocation and calling vpon God in his name and mediation And here we haue much profitable matter of meditation concerning prayer both in respect of the doctrine and vse of it of which I haue before spoken and the particular practice of it in the Lords Prayer of which we may profitably meditate proceeding from one petition to another The profession of Christ in time of danger which is either the profession of the mouth by Christian apologie or of the fact by suffering persecution and martyrdome of which we may meditate and the meanes whereby we may be prepared and strengthened vnto them The profession of Christ respecting his members is our edifying them by instruction admonition exhortation consolation and good example or our helping and relieuing them by the workes of mercy and almes-deedes whereon we may profitably meditate and of the motiues and meanes whereby we may be stirred vp and inabled to performe them And finally our perseuerance in grace and in all these Christian duties euen to the very end of our liues which is the consummation of all the rest is necessary to be thought vpon our certainty of it and by what meanes wee may come to this assurance And thus wee must meditate on the degrees of Gods executing the Decree of our election in this life In respect of the life to come hee executeth it by our glorification of which we may meditate as it is begun or perfected It is begun at the death of the Elect whereby their soules being separated from their bodies are receiued into the ioyes of heauen The which our death is an excellent subiect of meditation as of the nature of it to the elect the certainty of it and vncertainty of the time of our preparation to it and meanes whereby we may be armed against the feare of it §. Sect. 8 Of the meanes of executing the Decree of reprobation Contrariwise there is much matter of meditation afforded from the proper meanes of Gods executing the Decree of reprobation in the wicked as both from the foundation of it the fall of Adam and the hatred and wrath of God following vpon it and also from the degrees of executing this Decree in the wicked and vnfaithfull which are proper to those which are either called or not called or common to them both The former are either hypocrites or openly prophane The degrees proper to these are an vneffectuall calling and their relapse from it into their former wickednesse Here we may meditate of the degrees of this calling which are inward illumination of the minde in the knowledge of the truth worldly and carnall penitence and sorrow arising from terrour and feare or sense and feeling of punishment temporary faith taste of heauenly gifts and externall reformation of life Where wee may consider how farre a reprobate may goe in Christianity and what reall and substantiall differences we can obserue betweene those shewes of graces which are in them and the truth of them in our selues that wee may be the better assured of our sincerity and vprightnesse before God The degrees of relapse in those which are thus vneffectually called are first that they are deceiued with sin and the fraud of their owne deceitfull hearts from whence their hearts become hardened and from thence stubbornly peruerse and so through incredulity not assenting to the truth of Gods Word they breake out to open prophanenesse which is in the end accompanied with despaire and finall Apostacie Vpon all which wee may meditate that wee may make our owne calling and election sure by withstanding the first degrees of Apostacie watching ouer our selues as the Apostle warneth vs that we be not hardned and drawne away by the deceitfulnesse of sinne that there be not found in vs an euill heart of vnbeliefe Heb. 3. 12 13. in departing from the liuing God The degrees of executing this Decree in those which are not called who for the most part are ignorantly superstitious Idolaters Pagans and Atheists are the holding and detayning of the truth in iniustice naturall ignorance and vanity of mind hardnesse Rom. 1. 20 21 c. of heart a reprobate minde and committing of sinne with greedinesse And the degrees common to both are their pollution with all sinne and wickednesse in their liues and their entrance into condemnation at their death when as their soules being separated from their bodies are cast in the torments of hell and pursued with the wrath of God On all which we may meditate that we may take occasion to magnifie Gods Iustice towards them in their deserued punishments and his free grace and vndeserued loue towards vs who being in the same masse and lumpe of corruption are separated from them and made vessels of honour that Gods grace and mercy might be magnified in our saluation §. Sect. 9 Of the eternall execution of Gods Decree at the end of the world c. Of the eternall execution of Gods Decree wee may likewise meditate which shall be at the end of the world and is either generall respecting 2. Pet. 3. 11 12 13 14. the whole world as the destruction of it with flaming fire which consideration the Apostle Peter maketh a strong motiue vnto godlinesse that we may be found of God in peace without spot and blamelesse and the renouation and perpetuall conseruation of it or else the speciall execution of it in the inhabitants of the world which shall be at the generall Iudgement and the eternall retribution which followeth it And heere we may profitably
blessing recompence our labour seeing at the last their heate will exceed and bring vnto vs more lasting comfort then if they had like wood that is seare been quickly kindled with much lesse labour §. Sect. 5 Of the meanes whereby we may feele our hearts affected with a liuely taste and sense of the things whereon we meditate And thus we see how we are to haue our hearts affected with a liuely taste sense and feeling of the things whereon wee meditate now the meanes whereby we may haue it wrought in vs are diuers First we must examine our selues in the court of conscience according to the rule of Gods Word how we haue profited and thriuen in those graces and in the practice of those duties or how we haue been tainted with those corruptions and how farre forth we haue been guilty of those sinnes whereon we haue meditated what defects in those graces and duties doe still remaine in vs or in the full and perfect mortification of our vices and reformation of our liues by leauing and forsaking of those sinnes which in our meditations we haue thought vpon By which examination as wee shall afterwards shew more at large we shall come both to a true sight of our graces and holy duties in which wee haue profited and of the progresse which wee haue made in the mortification of our corruptions which will affect our hearts with vnfained thankfulnesse vnto God by whose grace and assistance we haue been inabled hereunto and with the feruent loue of him who hath been so gracious vnto vs and with a liuely sense and feeling of our spirituall wants and of those corruptions and sins which yet adhere vnto vs that we may be truly humbled in the sight and feeling of our wants and imperfections and labour to come out of them by hearty repentance Secondly when by this examination wee haue come to a true sight of our wants and weaknesses and haue affected our hearts with a true sense of them wee must make an humble acknowledgement of them vnto God and our owne soules laying open our wants like distressed suiters before him who is only able to supply thē our spiritual wounds of sinne and putrified sores of corruption before the Physician of our soules who is All-sufficient and willing to heale and cure them With which humble confession our hearts will bee affected with a more thorow hatred of all our sinfull corruptions and with longing desires to haue all our wants supplyed and also with true comfort and inward ioy in the assurance of their remission and the satisfying of our desires seeing if we acknowledge our sinnes he is faithfull and righteous to forgiue them if we 1. Ioh. 1. 7. 1. Pet. 5. 6. Luk. 1. 53. humble our selues he will exalt vs and if seeing our owne emptinesse we hunger and thirst after grace and righteousnesse he will fill and replenish vs. Thirdly there must follow vpon this a lamentable complaint in respect of the grace wherein we are defectiue and the corruption and sin which doth yet adhere and cleaue vnto vs not so much in regard of any euill of punishment accompanying them from which we are deliuered through Gods mercy and Christs merits as because we haue by them offended and dishonoured our great and glorious God who hath been so gracious to forgiue them The consideration whereof must affect our hearts not onely with mournfull sorrow which must breake out into these bitter complaints but also with an holy anger against our selues which must shew it selfe by expostulating the matter with our soules by aggrauating our sinnes and wants and by rebuking their sloth and sluggishnes in neglecting the meanes which the Lord hath plentifully afforded vs for the mortifying of the one and supplying of the other Fourthly vpon this sight and sense of our wants and sinnes and complaint of our distresse and misery in regard of them there must follow a vehement and passionate wish whereby we are to expresse the feruency and earnest longing of our desires to haue that grace supplied or increased wherein wee finde our defect and that vice and sinne pardoned and mortified which wee feele still cleauing vnto vs crying out with Dauid in a patheticall manner O that my wayes were so directed that I might keepe thy statutes And againe Psal 119. 5 20. My soule breaketh for the longing that it hath to thy iudgements at all times And with the Apostle Paul O wretched man that I am who shall deliuer Rom. 7. 24. me from the body of this death The which wishes and longing desires will affect our hearts with much comfort in assurance of fruition seeing the Lord hath promised to satisfie the desires of those that feare and serue Psal 145. 19. him Fifthly vpon this must follow an vtter deniall of our selues and our owne strength and an humble acknowledgement of our impotency and insufficiency either to supply the defect of that good thing which wee desire or to remoue that euill and subdue that corruption which though we hate doth notwithstanding stil adhere and cleaue vnto vs confessing with the Apostle that we are not sufficient as of our selues so much as to think a good 2. Cor. 3. 5. thought and that whatsoeuer sufficiency there is in vs wee haue receiued from the Lord who alone worketh in vs both to will and to doe The which 1. Cor. 4. 7. Phil. acknowledgement being made with humble hearts and broken spirits is most necessary and profitable for to whom should we acknowledge our impotency and weaknesse rather then vnto him who is able to manifest his power in our infirmities and to giue vs such spirituall abilities that we 2. Cor. 12. 9. shall bee inabled to doe all things which hee requireth through the power of him that strengtheneth vs. Sixthly after this humble confession Phil. 4. 13. must follow earnest Petition whereby we must craue with all feruency at the hands of God that he wil so assist vs with his grace and holy Spirit and blesse vnto vs all good meanes which wee vse for the increasing of that vertue in which we are defectiue and for the strengthening of vs to that good duty vnto which in our selues we finde an vtter disability or for the mortifying of that vice and corruption which in our owne strength wee are not able to subdue and ouercome attributing vnto him the glory and praise of his owne power and all-sufficiency whereby he is able and of his goodnesse loue and truth wherby he is ready willing to supply by himselfe whatsoeuer is wanting and defectiue in our abilities The which feruency of our suits we must in sincerity of heart inforce with all importunity vrging and aggrauating our owne impotency and need of Gods helpe and his sufficiency to doe what we desire and truth wherby he hath bound himselfe to performe it Lastly out of the consideration of this all-sufficiency and truth of God we must raise
suffer thine eyes to bee blinded and dazeled with the sudden flashes of worldly vanities which like lightening passe swiftly away and leaue nothing behind but blacke darknesse so as thou canst not discerne the beauty and brightnesse of spirituall graces and heauenly excellencies Doe not content thy selfe with a slight and superficiall view of these following reasons which perswade thee for thine owne good vnto the duties of a godly life nor to haue read them ouer with a curious eye rather to see what may bee said then with a purpose to make vse of them for thy practice of holinesse if thou be thorowly conuinced by euidence of truth shining in them but ponder them seriously with thy selfe and if thou finde them to beare any waight be perswaded by them to neglect no longer thine owne good nor to deferre and put off the seruing of God in the duties of a godly life but seeke first his Kingdome and righteousnesse when as thou shalt plainly discerne Deut. 6. 24. that his glory and thy good are through his mercy so matched together that thou canst not seeke the one but thou shalt assuredly finde the other §. Sect. 2 That by leading of a godly life we are assured of freedome from all our sins both in respect of their guilt punishment and corruption Now the good things which accompany the duties of a godly life are either the benefits which as fruits and effects attend vpon it or those speciall and rich priuiledges wherewith God of his free mercy is pleased to crowne his owne graces and to reward as with rich wages that poore seruice which we performe vnto him The benefits which follow a godly life are either priuatiue consisting in our freedome from euill or positiue in the fruition of good and both of them either temporall or eternall The priuatiue benefits of this life are many according to the multitude of euils vnto which it is liable both in respect of sinne and punishment from which in the greatest and worst part we are by the benefit of a godly life freed and deliuered For first if wee leade a godly life it will be a meanes to assure vs of our freedome from the guilt of all our sinnes by sole vertue of Christs death and blood-shed applyed vnto vs by faith both in regard that these holy duties of a godly life are the vndoubted fruits of a liuely faith approuing it to bee sincere and vnfained and as fruits of our Sanctification assuring vs that the same vertue of Christs death and Resurrection which wee finde effectuall for the mortifying of our sinnes and our spirituall quickening vnto holinesse and newnesse of life hath been already alike effectuall vnto vs for the freeing of vs from the guilt of sinne in our Iustification of which the other are but fruits and effects And secondly wee shall hereby be freed in the greatest part from our fleshly corruption and innumerable actuall sinnes seeing those Psal 119. 9 10 11. that are carefull to please God in the duties of a godly life doe bend their whole force in the vse of all good meanes for the subduing of their carnall lusts that though they dwell yet they may not rule and raigne in them resist as much as in them lyeth all the tentations of their spirituall enemies alluring and drawing them into sinne and keepe a conscionable and diligent watch ouer themselues that they may not wittingly and willingly commit any thing which Gods Law hath forbidden and condemned Whereof it commeth to passe that howsoeuer they are sometime and it may be not seldome ouertaken through humane frailty and infirmity and so contrary to their purpose and resolution are led captiue into sinne yet are they by this care and circumspection preserued from falling into any knowne transgression for the most part and from hainous and grieuous sinnes which wound and waste the conscience and like the hectique feuer consume the graces of God as it were the vitall spirits which preserue the spirituall life into which worldly and carnall men who neglect the duties of a Godly life doe ordinarily fall and make them as it were their ordinary trade Or if through violence of tentation and neglect of keeping their watch they haue been surprised vpon a sudden and ouertaken of such sinnes yet hauing this care to please God in the duties of a godly life this will but very rarely happen and when it doth yet they doe not like wicked men multiply their transgressions by committing often the same hainous sinne nor impenitently continue in it from day to day and yeere to yeere but being through frailty falne they doe not lye still but labour to come out of it by vnfained repentance Now how inestimable this benefit is which accompanyeth a godly life whereby in the greatest part we get victory ouer our corruptions by which others are conquered and as slaues held captiue and preserued from falling into innumerable and those the most hainous sinnes it will easily appeare if we consider the greatnesse of the euill from which we are hereby deliuered namely from sinne which aboue all things in the world is most odious vnto God and most pernicious vnto our soules and bodies as being the root and fountaine of all those mischiefes and miseries vnto which men are lyable both in this life and the life to come §. Sect. 3 That by leading a godly life wee are freed from the punishment of our sinnes The which also may be a second motiue to perswade vs vnto a godly life in that being thereby in the greatest part freed from our sinnes in respect Prow 19. 23. of their corruption and sinfull acts and wholly in assurance of faith from the guilt of them by vertue of Christs death and obedience applyed vnto vs we doe also hereby escape the punishments which are due vnto them Of both which the saying of Salomon is verified The feare of the Lord tendeth to life and he that hath it shall abide satisfied he shall not be visited with euill to wit either of sinne and punishment And againe The Prou. 14. 27. feare of the Lord is a fountaine of life to make vs depart from the snares of death For first the faithfull which walke in the waies of holinesse and righteousnesse are wholly freed by the death and sufferings of Christ from all punishments properly so called which are inflicted to satisfie Gods Iustice seeing Christ hath made full satisfaction for all their sinnes and therfore as it would not stand with the Iustice of God to let them goe vnpunished so neither that they should be twice punished once in our surety and the second time in our selues as I haue proued at large in another place Christian Warfare the third part Whereas those who make no conscience of their wayes and neglect the duties of a godly life being out of Christ doe beare the punishment of their sinnes themselues both in this world and the world to come Secondly by
and our owne spirituall good and euerlasting saluation Cheerfulnesse in the wayes of godlinesse when they seeme fullest of difficulty and danger because the Lord in whom we trust is able to support and defend vs. And finally conscience of our well doing and our earnest desire to glorifie and please God in all Christian and holy duties doth not onely much strengthen our faith in the assurance of Gods infinite mercies and Christs all-sufficient merits but also exceedingly confirme our affiance in the sense and feeling of Gods loue so that we are thereby inabled with great confidence to haue our accesse vnto the Throne of grace and with much liberty of speech and spirit to make all our suits knowne vnto him with assurance that they shall be graciously heard and granted For the effectuall Iam. 5. 16. feruent prayer of arighteous man auaileth much And we are assured with Dauid that the God of our righteousnes will heare our prayers and that the Lord Psal 4. 1 3. who setteth apart him that is godly for himselfe will heare vs being such when we call vpon him That the eyes of the Lord are vpon the righteous and that his eares are open to heare their cry The which the Apostle Peter vseth Psal 34. 15. as an effectuall argument to mooue vs to eschew euill and doe good to seeke 1. Pet. 3. 11 12. peace and ensue it because it confirmeth our confidence that God will heare and grant all our suits seeing as the Psalmist speaketh He will fulfill Psal 145. 19. the desires of them that feare him he also will heare their cry and will saue them For howsoeuer the chiefe and principall cause of our confidence and boldnesse be not any thing in our selues but onely Iesus Christ in whom God is well pleased with vs according to that of the Apostle In whom Ephes 3. 12. we haue boldnesse and accesse with confidence by the faith of him And though this be the maine ground of our affiance when we make our suits knowne vnto God because Christ our high Priest maketh intercession for vs in confidence whereof we may as the Apostle exhorteth come boldly vnto the Heb. 4. 16. Throne of grace that we may obtain mercy find grace to help in time of need yet we may draw neere with much more boldnesse and with a true heart in full Heb. 10. 22. assurance of faith when we haue our harts sprinkled from an euill conscience and our bodies washed with pure water that is not only the blood of Redemptiō which purgeth vs from the guilt of our sinnes but also the water of ablution which cleansing vs from the corruption of sinne doth assure vs that we are washed in that Lauer of Christs blood and when our consciences are so purged from dead workes thereby as that wee are inabled in some good measure to serue the liuing God For if wee regard wickednesse in our Heb. 9. 14. Psal 66. 18. hearts we can haue no assurance that God will heare vs if wee come into Gods presence with guilty consciences accusing vs for the neglect of his seruice and for liuing in sinne without repentance shame will couer our faces and take away all boldnesse and confidence when wee make our suits vnto him For we know that if our heart condemne vs God is greater Iob. 3. 20 21 22 then our heart and knoweth all things but if our hearts condemne vs not then haue we confidence towards God And whatsoeuer we aske we receiue of him because we keepe his Commandements and doe those things that are pleasing in his sight For this maketh him to entertaine our suits not onely graciously in respect of vs but also with great pleasure in himselfe according to that of Salomon The sacrifice of the wicked is an abomination to the Lord but Pro. 15. 8. the prayer of the vpright is his delight Whereof it is that Dauid though a man highly in Gods fauour would not rashly presse into his presence to make his suits vnto him before hee had renewed his righteousnesse by faith and repentance For he professeth that he would first wash his hands Psal 26. 6. in innocency and then he would compasse Gods Altar Now what greater benefit then this or what more effectuall motiue vnto a godly life then to haue hereby the grace and fauour of our Soueraigne Lord and King so as we may at all times with boldnesse come into his presence and as his chiefe fauorites haue his eare still open vnto vs so as we may freely make all our suits knowne vnto him with assured confidence that they shall be heard and granted seeing he taketh delight in our prayers and is as well pleased in giuing as we in receiuing §. Sect. 5 That a godly life bringeth courage and true fortitude The third spirituall benefit which a godly life bringeth is Christian courage and true fortitude For being assured of Gods fauour and gracious assistance no dangers are able to daunt vs and hauing put on the brestplate of righteousnesse we feare not the incounters of any enemies According to that of Salomon The wicked flee when no man pursueth but the righteous are bold as a Lion An example whereof wee haue in Dauid who was so couragious in the assurance of Gods assistance that hee saith he would not be afraid of ten thousand of people that had set themselues against Psal 3. 5. him round about And professeth that because God was his refuge and Psal 46. 1 2. strength he would not feare though the earth were remoued and though the Mountaines were carried into the middest of the sea Yea though he should walke Psal 23. 4. thorow the vale of the shadow of death yet he would feare no euill because God was with him and his rod and staffe comforted him Neither was this his case alone but of all those that feare and serue the Lord who as he sheweth at large stand in feare of no euill though dangers beset them on all sides because they haue made God their refuge and fortresse who will therefore Psal 91. 2 3 c. deliuer them from the feare of the Fowler and from the noysome pestilence c. And giue his Angels charge ouer them to keepe them in all their wayes who shall beare them vp in their hands lest they dash their foot against a stone And therefore if we would be truly couragious let vs serue God in the duties of a godly life and being safe vnder his protection and hauing him on Rom. 8. 31. Psal 56. 11. our side we shall not need to care who set against vs nor to feare what man can doe vnto vs. §. Sect. 6 That a godly life keepeth our consciences pure and peaceable The fourth benefit is that this godly life doth keepe our consciences pure and peaceable For when wee set our selues with full resolution to please God in all things we carefully flee all knowne
chill and cold terrours of death cannot daunt and dismay vs. It calleth to our remembrance our former care to serue and please God and how we haue walked with him before him though not in legall perfection yet with integrity and vprightnesse Esa 38. 3. of heart how we haue done that which is good in Gods sight It witnesseth with our consciences that wee haue beene faithfull Stewards who haue well husbanded Gods talents intrusted vnto vs and that our accounts are euen so that we neede not feare now when we are called to a reckoning Yea it putteth into our hands a generall acquittance sealed with the blood of Christ that wee may haue it in readinesse when we appeare before our Iudge It telleth vs that now all our labours are ended and that nothing remaineth but to receiue our wages and to keepe with God his Saints and holy Angels a perpetuall Sabbath in all ioy and happinesse that now wee are safely passed thorow a sea of danger and are arriuing and entring into the heauenly Hauen of euerlasting rest that we haue fought a good fight and 2. Tim. 4 7. 8. finished it with an happy victory and that now nothing remaineth but to receiue the Crowne of righteousnesse which the Lord the righteous Iudge hath layde vp for vs and is now ready to set vpon our heads with triumph and glory Againe a godly life changeth the nature of death and of a curse for sinne maketh it to become a great blessing as being a meanes to free vs from all euils and to enter vs into the fruition of the chiefest good so that whosoeuer with the Apostle haue led their liues in the true feare of God may say with him For to me to liue is Phil. 1. 21. Christ and to die is gaine For the death of the godly puts an end to all their troubles that all teares may be wiped from their eyes It causeth them Apoc. 21. 4. cease to sinne which so long as they liue in the flesh hangeth vpon them as an heauie burthen and presseth out of them many a sorrowfull sigh and deepe grone It bringeth with it a ioyfull rest from all their labours which in this life are so tedious and troublesome and putteth an end to their wearisome pilgrimage It freeth them from all worldly miseries from pouerty and penurie sores and sicknesses slanders and disgraces and bringeth with it heauenly plentie and the riches of Gods Kingdome perpetuall health euerlasting glory It putteth an end to the spiritual conflict and to all the assaults of our many mighty and malicious enemies so as they shall neuer more be able to disturbe our peace It separateth vs from the society of wicked Psal 120. 5. worldlings which whilest wee liue is so irkesome and dangerous and from participating with them either in their sinnes or punishments It secureth vs from the euils to come and acquitteth vs from approching dangers Finally as it putteth an end to all our euils both of punishment and sinne so it serueth as an entrance into the full fruition of all good and for a straite gate whereby we passe into heauenly happinesse All which considerations should be effectuall reasons to perswade to the leading of a godly life which is alwaies attended vpon by such a blessed death that bringeth so many comforts with it when all other comforts faile and so many ioyes after it of all which they depriue themselues who neglect Gods seruice and spend their time and strength in the eager pursuite of worldly vanities §. Sect. 9 Of the inestimable benefits which a godly life will bring in the world to come Finally as a godly life is in this world profitable to all purposes so is it most beneficiall in respect of the life to come For thereby wee Rom. 8. 1. Apoc. 20. 6. are secured from that euerlasting woe and misery prepared for all those who liue and die in their sinnes seeing there is no condemnation to those who are in Iesus Christ which walke not after the flesh but after the Spirit and the second death shall haue no power ouer them who haue their part in the first resurrection to holinesse and newnesse of life Secondly we are assured hereby of heauenly happinesse For they that haue followed Matth. 19. 28. Christ in the regeneration shall accompany him in glorie They that haue liued like Gods children in holinesse and righteousnesse as in this life they haue the adoption of sonnes and the Spirit of adoption Rom. 8. 15. crying in their hearts Abba Father so shall they in the life to come receiue from their Father their heauenly inheritance whereas they who haue neglected these duties can neither haue this hope here nor that fruition hereafter seeing without holinesse no man shall see God For 1. Ioh. 3. 2 3. Heb. 12. 14. howsoeuer as one saith God made vs without our selues yet he will Augustine not so saue vs. But hauing giuen vs a Being reasonable soules and his Word whereby he hath made vs acquainted with his will and required our conformity and obedience he will haue vs ioyne with him in working out our owne saluation by performing those duties Phil. 2. 12. which he hath prescribed and to walke in the way of holinesse and righteousnesse which leadeth to euerlasting happinesse So that though our seruice of God in holy duties be not the cause of eternall life and glorie but the free mercies of God and merits of Christ yet being the way which leadeth vnto it all may be assured that they shall attaine to heauenly happinesse who goe constantly in it whereas contrariwise they who neuer goe in this way can neuer come vnto that glory vnto which it leadeth Finally a godly life is most profitable in respect of the life to come because God graciously crowneth his owne graces in his children and the fruits of them in their new obedience with a proportionable measure of glory and happinesse so that they who haue in this life shined brightest in the light of grace Dan. 12. 3. and godlinesse shall in that life shine brightest in glorie and blessednesse They who haue most glorified him by their holy conuersation he will impart vnto them the greatest measure of glory and both make them capable and replenish them with greatest ioyes So that if wee haue any care or desire to be secured from endlesse miseries or to be assured of eternall happinesse let vs be moued hereby to serue and please God in the duties of an holy life yea seeing the Lord in some proportion fitteth his wages to our workes and the rich rewards of his free grace according to those indeuours which he hath wrought in vs of seeking his glory let vs being transported with an holy ambition deuote our selues wholy to his seruice not only labour to keep an ordinary pace with others but striuing for the richest prize let vs indeuour to out-strip all that run with
him by an absolute faith when there is no reason for it but wee must examine his tentations by the rule of Gods Word which will easily discouer the fraud weakenesse and maliciousnesse of them For nothing giueth Satan more aduantage against weake Christians then their readinesse to giue credit to his tentations without bringing them to the touchstone of Gods Truth Fourthly if Satan taketh aduantage from the humour of melancholy abounding in vs to fill and fraught our hearts with these scruples feares we must vse the helpe of the skilfull Physician for the remouing of this cause that so the effects may cease And withal aske the counsel of some iudicious faithful Diuine who may direct vs in our wayes resolue our doubts vpon whose iudgement grounded vpon Gods Word we must more rest then vpon our owne weake conceit and opinions especially being thus blinded with those blacke and foggie mists which false feare and melancholy haue cast before them Fifthly wee must labour to haue our hearts possessed and replenished with the true and filiall feare of God springing from Faith and Loue whereby we shall be made zealous in Gods seruice and then there will be no roome for these Panicke and superstitious feares nor any aduantage giuen to Satan of seazing vpon vs with his suggestions Lastly we must carefully take heed that we doe not yeeld our selues ouer to be ruled by these scruples and feares either to doe or not to doe any thing because of some euill threatned but in things indifferent it is our best course to resist the tentation by doing the contrary to that which is suggested if Christian prudence tell vs that it is conuenient all circumstances considered And in things lawfull or vnlawfull we are to performe or omit them not out of scrupulous feare of any euils threatned by the tempter from which God is al-sufficient to shield vs but in obedience to God because he in his Word hath commanded or forbidden them §. Sect. 3 That carnall feare is a great hinderance vnto godlinesse and the meanes to be freed from it Secondly we are hindred by carnall feare in the duties of a godly life whilest thereby we are mooued to thinke that we shall neuer be able to performe them though we vse all our indeuour or if we haue begunne well yet we shall neuer hold out vnto the end by reason of our owne frailties and infirmities the afflictions and troubles which crosse vs in these courses and the manifold and malicious tentations and persecutions which are raised against vs by the enemies of our saluation By which feares our mindes are troubled our hearts vexed and turmoyled our courage quailed our resolutions weakned and we vtterly disabled and discouraged from entring into this course of Christianity when as we haue little or no hope of proceeding continuing in●● vnto the end that we may be saued The which tentation is much strengthened when we see the many faintings and faylings of others that haue gone before vs who professing Christianity haue either neglected the duties belonging to it or performed them to little purpose in a cold formall carelesse maner and in the end haue wholy desisted returned back to their old prophanenes Which impediment if we would remoue we must know that neuer any did seriously sincerely seeke God in the waies of his commandements but they haue assuredly found him And therfore we must not be discouraged with the faylings and relapses of hypocrites temporaries if our owne conscices testifie vnto vs that we labour to serue and please God in the vprightnesse of our hearts Secondly our faintnes and weaknesse must not discourage vs from entring into and proceeding in the waies of godlinesse seeing we walke not in our owne strength but by the power of God assisting vs nor by vertue of our own resolutions indeuours but of Gods gracious and free promises made vnto vs in Christ that he will not onely iustifie but also sanctifie vs free vs as well from the corruption of sin as the guilt and punishment The which if we apprehend by a true liuely Faith we shal be able to ouercome all difficulties and to serue God in some good acceptable maner as I haue more fully shewed in the beginning of this Treatise Finally we need not to feare our perseuerance in the duties of godlinesse vnto the end if disclayming our owne strength we rest and rely wholy vpon Gods power and promises seeing he is able and al-sufficient to perfect that good worke which he hath begunne to enable vs likewise who are impotent in our selues to doe all things necessarie for his glory and our saluation Phil. 1. 6. 4. 13. Ioh. 10. 28. Rom. 8. 35 36 38. through the power of Christ which strengtheneth vs. To arme vs against all the tentations of the deuill the world and our owne flesh so that all the power of hell the prosperity or persecutions of the world nor any thing else whatsoeuer shall be able to separate vs from the loue of God or to put out and extinguish our loue of him in our hearts or to hinder our proceeding in the wayes of godlinesse vntill by walking in them wee attaine vnto euerlasting ioy and happinesse §. Sect. 4 That carnall sorrow is an impediment to a godly life Againe we are much hindred in the duties of a godly life by carnall sorrow and lumpish heauinesse For if as the Apostle saith 2. Cor. 7. worldly sorrow causeth death both in respect of the life of grace and glory then must it needs also disable vs vnto all actions of life being made as vnfit for them hereby as a man in the state of death to performe any works of the liuing Now this heauines excessiue sorrow ariseth from diuers causes as first from the sight sense of our innumerable grieuous sins when as it is not mixed with faith the loue of God but meerely ariseth out of seruil feare self-loue apprehending Gods terrible Iudgments against vs for our sins Secondly from the imperfection in our sanctification whereof it is that our vnmortified corruptions doe rage sway in vs disabling vs vnto Gods seruice and making vs prone vnto sin That the duties which we performe are so ful of wants weaknesses that we can with no cōfort looke vpon them That the graces of Gods Spirit are imperfect continually assaulted with our contrary corruptions our faith with doubting our affiance with diffidence our humility with pride our repentance with security and hardnesse of heart and so in the rest Thirdly from our weaknesse in faith perswading vs of the remission of our sinnes and of our reconciliation and peace with God Fourthly from spirituall desertions whereby God estrangeth himselfe from vs and seemeth to haue left and forsaken vs. Fifthly from our fainting and failing in the waies of godlinesse and often relapses into sinne Sixthly from our manifold and sharpe afflictions which
thinke most glorious that they are abominable in Gods sight And also by telling vs that we haue peace with God and are highly in his fauour and peace with all the Creatures so as nothing will doe vs any harme when as all things in Heauen and Earth are at enmitie with vs and when God doth but giue the signe of battaile will set vpon vs with all their furie In the other respect hee secureth vs by setting before vs the infinite mercies of God inferring thereupon that we may safely goe on in our sinnes because God is so mercifull that few or none shall bee condemned and that though wee deferre our repentance to the last houre yet euen then wee shall haue pardon if we haue but leisure to say Lord haue mercy vpon me the all-sufficient merits of Christ which are a full price of redemption for the whole World the gracious and indefinite Promises of the Gospell made vnto all Men without exception the impunitie of sinners and namely of themselues hauing long continued in their sinfull courses the prosperitie of the wicked who glut themselues with the pleasures of sinne the afflictions of the faithfull who are precise and strict in all their wayes and diuers other motiues of which wee shall speake more fully hereafter from all which hee concludeth that wee may lay aside all feare and take libertie to satisfie our carnall lusts because there is no danger at all of either present or future punishment And thus in stead of that securitie which we had in our creation and in the state of innocencie accompanying the assurance of Gods loue and protection whereby wee should haue beene made more chearefull and couragious in the duties of Holinesse and Righteousnesse because wee serued such a gracious and powerfull Lord as was both able and willing to protect vs from all perils and to safe-guard vs from all enemies Satan laboureth to worke in vs this carnall securitie whereby wee are encouraged to performe seruice vnto himselfe with all confidence and chearefulnesse perswading vs that we are safe from all danger though we be daily obnoxious to Gods wrath liable to his fearefull Iudgements and in the very jawes of Death and Hell With which securitie hee bringeth more to destruction then with all his terrors and feares whereby hee indeauoureth to plunge men into desperation yea in truth then with all other tentations though neuer so vgly and terrible in their outward appearance In which regard it behooueth all Christians as they loue their soules and would either escape Death and Hell or attaine vnto saluation and euerlasting happinesse that they keepe a narrow watch ouer themselues and that being wounded by this viperous Serpent with the sting of sinne they doe not thereupon fall into this pleasing slumber or rather dead sleepe of carnall securitie the which bringeth all ouer-taken with it into destruction and condemnation of Body and Soule CHAP. II. Of carnall securitie and what it is §. 1 Of the general Parts of this Treatise TO which purpose let vs now speake more specially of it And for our more orderly proceeding I will first shew what it is that so knowing wee may the better auoid it Secondly the causes of it and meanes which Satan and our owne corruption vse to worke it in vs. Thirdly the diuers sorts and kinds of this Vice Fourthly how we may know the one from the other Fiftly the signes whereby we may discerne whether and how farre forth we are tainted and infected with this deadly poyson and lastly the meanes whereby we may either be preserued from falling into it or recouered if we be alreadie ouer-taken §. 2 Carnall securitie defined Concerning the first wee will make it plaine not onely by a Definition or Description but also by Testimonies and Examples of it recorded in the holy Scriptures It may best bee defined if in all things we oppose it to that Vertue whereof it is the priuation namely the true feare of God after this manner Carnall securitie is a Vice or vicious habit whereby forgetting or neglecting both the iustice and power of God in punishing sinne and also his infinite Loue and Goodnesse in Christ his Merits and Iudgements his Promises and Threatnings with the manifold benefits which we haue receiued from him we doe cast off all feare of him and so quietly and securely goe on in sinne without repentance promising vnto our selues immunitie from all punishment and not onely for the present the constant fruition of our carnall delights but also euerlasting saluation in the World to come Vnto this description for the better clearing of the point in hand we may adde that of Bernards describing an hard or secure heart It is that saith he which is not rent with compunction nor Bernard de Consid ad Eugenium lib. 1. softned with pietie nor moued with prayers nor yeeldeth to threatnings and is hardned with stripes It is vngratefull for benefits vnfaithfull for counsailes fierce in respect of iudgements shamelesse in regard of things filthy and dishonest vndaunted in dangers inhumane in humane actions rash in diuine forgetfull of things past neglectfull of things present improuident for things to come It is that which remembreth nothing past but injuries loseth the benefit of all things present and fore-casteth and prouideth for nothing to come but reuenge And that I may in a word comprehend the euills of this horrible Vice it is that which neither feareth God nor respecteth Man So that if we would haue a briefe definition of this Securitie it is nothing else but the absence and priuation of the feare of God for as securitie generally considered is the freedome of the mind from all feare so this speciall kind of it carnall securitie is that horrible Vice which emptieth the heart wholly of the true feare of God And thus the wise Man opposeth them the one against the other Happy is the man saith he that feareth alwayes but he that hardneth Pro. 28. 14. his heart shall fall into mischiefe §. 3 Testimonies of Scripture shewing what it is And this is that securitie of which Dauid speaketh The transgression of the wicked saith within my heart that there is no feare of Psal 36. 1 2. God before his eyes For he flattereth himselfe in his owne eyes vntill his iniquitie be found out to be hatefull And describing the prosperous estate of the wicked he saith That continuing in their corruption and being couered with violence as with a garment They speake loftily Psal 73. 8 9 11. and set their mouthes against the Heauens saying How doth God know and is there knowledge in the most High And Iob discoursing of the same subiect namely wicked men flourishing in worldly prosperitie saith that their houses are safe from feare neither is the rod of God vpon Iob 21. 9. them They take the Timbrel and Harpe and reioyce in the sound of the Organs they spend their dayes in wealth and in a moment
Idoll of a mercy in God falsely fancied vnto themselues whilest they seuer it from his Iustice which will not let the sinnes of such presumptuous wretches goe vnpunished and from his Truth which hath denounced fearefull Iudgements against them who securely abuse his patience and long suffering which should leade them to repentance and make them sorry and ashamed that they should offend so gracious and mercifull a God as an incouragement to hearten them on in their course of wickednesse and to make them contemne his Iudgements and Threatnings §. 8 The eight cause the neglect or contempt of the meanes of grace and saluation The eighth cause is the neglect or contempt of the meanes of spirituall grace and eternall saluation as of hearing the Word the vse of the Sacraments Meditation Prayer holy Conferences and such like For as these are the meanes of working our hearts to the true feare of God repentance and spirituall watchfulnesse so the neglect of them causeth carnall securitie hardnesse of heart and boldnesse in sinning And as all other Vices get head and strength by forsaking the vse of the meanes whereby the contrarie Vertues are wrought because they are the priuation of them and therefore the remouall of the one from that subiect which is capable of them is the placing of the other as wee see Light succeed Darknesse and Darknesse Light Rest Labour and Labour Rest so is it in these the putting away of the feare of God by neglecting the meanes whereby it is bred and nourished in vs is the cause of entertayning carnall securitie And so likewise as all other Vices being admitted doe mutually strengthen one another that they may keepe firmer and surer possession against the Vertues which they oppose so is it betweene these for the more we neglect the Word Sacraments and the rest the more secure wee shall be in all sinfull courses and the more strong wee grow in carnall securitie the more negligent wee waxe in those holy Exercises And therefore the Prophet ioyneth them together as mutuall causes of one another They stopped their eares that they should not heare and made Zach. 7. 11 12. their hearts as an Adamant stone §. 9 The ninth cause hearing the Word without Faith The ninth cause is the hearing of the Word without Faith giuing no credit either to the threatnings of the Law or promises of the Gospell Heb. 4. 2. For as the Word is vnprofitable if it bee not mixed with Faith in those that heare it as the Apostle speaketh so it becommeth in this respect by accident through our corruption dangerous and hurtfull Either it is the sauour of life vnto life or the sauour of death vnto death 2. Cor. 2. 16. Either it weakneth and killeth Vice or giueth more strength and vigour to it either it softneth our hearts like Waxe or hardneth them like Clay either it worketh them to Gods feare when we beleeue his Promises and Threatnings or maketh them more carnally secure when wee giue no credit to them For the Word of God proceeding out of his mouth shall not returne vnto him void but shall accomplish that which pleaseth him and prosper in the thing whereto hee sends it Esai 55. 11. as the Prophet speaketh And as oft as we heare it either it setteth vs forward in the right way that leadeth to saluation or through our corruption and vnbeliefe it maketh vs to goe faster and more securely in the wayes of death and destruction It will make our hearts melt like the heart of good Iosiah or to become more hard like the heart of Pharaoh and wee shall receiue Gods Ambassadors with feare and trembling as the Corinthians did Titus or with proud neglect and 2. Cor. 7. 15. scornefull censures fore-stalling preiudice and resolued obstinacy as the Athenians did the Apostle Paul So the Lord speaketh of some Act. 17. 18 32. who should take occasion vpon hearing the curses of the Law to blesse Deut. 29. 20. themselues in their hearts saying I shall haue peace though I walke in the imagination of my heart to adde drunkennesse to thirst And the Prophet from the Lord saith of the people of the Iewes that whilest they heard and vnderstood not and seeing perceiued not their hearts were made Esa 6. 9. more fat their eares heauie and their eyes more blind which is not caused by any naturall propertie of the Word but by accident through mans corruption that doth abuse it and so maketh that a curse which was ordayned for a blessing Like the weake and tender eye that is made more blind by the bright beames of the Sunne which cause stronger sights to see and discerne the better or the weake eare which is made more deafe by too much hearing of loud sounds or the sicke stomacke which becommeth more sicke by receiuing holesome nourishment whereby one strong and healthy would bee confirmed in health and by well digesting of it minister vigour and strength to the whole body §. 10 The tenth cause the not applying the Word preached The tenth cause is the not applying of the Word preached or read vnto our selues for our owne vse and benefit but putting it off to others as though it concerned them and not vs especially admonitions and reprehensions for sinne and the threatnings of Gods Iudgements against those that continue in them without repentance For so are men blinded with pride and selfe loue that they can see no faults in themselues or if they doe yet they seeme so small and veniall that they are scarce worth the reprouing and so defectiue are they in charitie towards their Neighbours that they can easily spie the least Motes in their eyes and make of euery Moll-hill a huge Mountayne And this maketh them to shift all rebukes for sinne and denunciations of punishment from themselues vnto others to whom they thinke they more fitly belong and so blesse themselues and securely liue in sinne as though they were free from all danger Yea though they be neuer so faultie in those Vices that are reproued yet if in truth they can find out any that in the iudgement of the World doe goe beyond them in those kinds then can they heare them sharpely rebuked without any sting of conscience or sense of the smart of their owne sinnes yea with much pleasure and delight And thus haue I often heard after some powerfull Sermon against couetousnesse a greedie Muck-worme nothing moued for his owne auarice because hee hath beene able to picke out of a whole Citie or Countrey some one supposed to bee more wretched then himselfe vnto whom hee hath applyed all that was spoken And so when pride hath beene rebuked or profanenesse or worldlinesse or any other sinne I haue noted that those who haue highly offended in these kinds in the iudgement of all others haue like innocents securely blessed themselues applying nothing spoken to their owne vse because they could point at others that haue exceeded them
the World with him and is a fruit or branch of originall corruption and one kind of hardnesse of heart whereby forgetting Gods Power and Prouidence his Iustice and hatred of Sinne and not obseruing his fearfull Iudgements executed vpon the wicked nor his Mercies extended towards those that serue him mens hearts are emptied of the true feare of God and so without checke and remorse of conscience or griefe of heart quietly and securely goe on in their sinfull courses to their eternall destruction And this is naturally bred and borne in all men alike without exception although nourished and increased diuersly by those causes of securitie before spoken of according to that predominancy which they seuerally haue in one more then in another And continueth and wholly possesseth all the powers and faculties of Heart and Mind as it were a spirituall Lethargie till the Lord awakneth them out of it as he doth euen the wicked sometimes by the thundering threatnings of the Law and sense of his heauie Iudgements for their sinnes striking horror and despaire into their mindes hearts and consciences whereby it commeth to passe that they who slept securely and neuer awaked can now take no rest at all And the godly alwayes whom he first rowseth out of this dead sleepe partly by Legall comminations and partly by some sharpe Afflictions so as like the Iaylor suddenly awakned they crie out to Gods Ministers Men and Brethren what shall we doe that we may be saued and Act. 16. afterwards by the preaching of the Gospell whereby the true feare of God is wrought in them which maketh them to watch ouer their wayes that they may not being ouer-come by tentations doe any thing displeasing in the sight of God So that euen naturally this vaile of securitie is spread ouer the eyes of all men whereby they see not or seeing like men asleepe with their eyes open consider and regard not the all-seeing Eye of God looking vpon them yea euen into all the secret corners of their hearts and reynes the Iustice and Power of God whereby hee is ready and able to punish sinne nor his Loue Mercy and Goodnesse towards all those that seeke and serue him vntill by the preaching of the Word and inward operation of the Spirit applying vnto them the vertue of Christs death this vaile is rent in sunder whereby they come to a sight of Gods sauing attributes which worke in vs a reuerent and filiall feare of him which is alwayes accompanyed with a holy care and watchfulnesse ouer our selues that we doe not any thing displeasing in his sight §. 2 Of carnall securitie which is affected and voluntarie The carnall securitie which is affected and voluntarie is when as men purposely vse all meanes to harden their hearts against Gods feare and to stop their eares that they may not heare any thing which may awaken them of their pleasing sleepe of sinne that so they may without any disturbance commit all manner of wickednesse with delight and greedinesse whereby they much strengthen and increase their naturall securitie vntill by custome it becommeth habituall They adde Arte to Nature and thinking that they cannot sleepe soundly enough and without feare of disturbance in their naturall slumber of securitie they stupifie their senses as it were with opium till they are brought into an vnrecouerable Lethargie and sleepe of death They doe not onely draw ouer their alreadie hard hearts and seared consciences a callum or thicke skin which will not be pierced with the pricke of a pin but as one saith euen a treble plated armor Triplex circa praecordia ferrum which is high proofe against the Sword of Gods Spirit the Word of God yea euen the Musket shot of his Iudgements and Punishments They doe not onely quench all good motions of Gods Spirit restrayning them from sinne but quite put out those small sparkes of the light of Nature which remayne in them They doe not alone stop the voyce and crie of their consciences with the lowder clamour of their tumultuous lusts and passions but put to silence all that would admonish them of their wicked courses with their impudency in sinning They harden their fore-heads against all reproofes and flye in their faces who reprehend their wickednesse They shut their Esa 6. 9. Zach. 7. 11 12. eyes that they may not see Gods Iudgements and stop their eares that they may not heare of them either as they are threatned in the ministerie of the Word or inflicted on impenitent sinners like vnto themselues yea they stupifie their senses that they haue no feeling of them but can out-face their owne punishments and euen laugh when they are lashed with Gods whip And though all these outward Sconces were batterd and beaten downe so as sinne dare no longer abide in the countenance Words and externall Actions yet they haue an inward Fort vnto which being impregnable it may safely retyre euen an heart of Rocky and Adamant hardnesse whereas it may sleepe in great securitie there being no engine or shot which will batter this Hold. §. 3 Of carnall securitie which is in the vnregenerate Secondly this carnall securitie is to be distinguished according to the diuers subiects in which it is For it is to be considered as it is in the vnregenerate before conuersion who are wholly ignorant and forgetfull of God destitute of Faith and the feare of God or as it doth remayne in the faithfull after they are in part regenerate and truely conuerted In the vnregenerate it continueth in it full strength wholly possessing and corrupting the mind and heart and depriuing them vtterly of Gods feare of the sight and sense of their sinnes and of the Iudgements and Punishments due vnto them either threatned and imminent or else alreadie inflicted and imposed In these it raigneth and ruleth without resistance as a King and Soueraigne vnto whom they yeeld peaceable and quiet obedience keeping all in peace without any feare or disturbance and as Satans Vice-Roy subiecteth all the powers of the Mind and Soule vnto his rule and gouernment so as quietly and without feare they doe his will according to the saying of our Sauiour When a strong Man armed keepeth his house all that hee possesseth is in peace Or if the conscience being awakned and affrighted Luk. 11. 21. with the threatnings of the Law and apprehension of Gods Iudgement doth check their lusts and passions and disturb this quiet peace Carnall securitie soone pacifieth these tumults by stopping the voyce of the Conscience and casting it into a deepe sleepe whilest it causeth it to be lulled in the lap of carnall pleasure and singeth vnto it the sweet and bewitching tunes of worldly delights with the dittie of earthly profits and preferments In which they continue till they come to sleepe that last sleepe of death and are summoned to appeare before Gods Iudgement Seate to giue an account of all their former courses vnlesse in the meane time the Lord
hastening his Iudgement doth strike the conscience with such horrors and feare and so vexeth and tormenteth it with the guilt of sinne and apprehension of his wrath that securitie is not able by all the former meanes to bring or keepe it asleepe or to stop and quiet the lowd cryes thereof In which case it is forced to giue place and to yeeld ouer the Regencie of such tormented wretches to his aduersarie and opposite hellish desperation which is like vnto it in nothing but this in that it is alike faithfull seruant to their great Gouernour Satan holding men firmely though after a rougher manner as his Vassalls and Slaues to doe his will till hauing finished their worke they receiue the wages of Hell torments and endlesse destruction §. 4 Of that carnal securitie which remayneth in the regenerate and how it groweth vpon them The carnall securitie of the faithfull is those reliques that remayne of naturall securitie in the part vnregenerate and one especiall fruit of Gal. 5. 17. the Flesh which is but in part mortified by the Spirit For our regeneration and sanctification being vnperfect in this life the Christian Man is partly Flesh and partly Spirit both which are accompanyed with their seuerall fruits as the Apostle sheweth the which continually fight and lust one against the other and sometime the Flesh and its Corruption sometime the Spirit and its sauing Graces preuayleth and giueth the aduerse part the foile as elsewhere I haue more fully In the fourth part of the Christian warfare shewed Thus the part vnregenerate retayneth and nourisheth carnall securitie forgetfulnesse of God and his all-seeing Wisedome his omnipotent Power and seuere Iustice in punishing sinne his Mercy and Goodnesse towards those that feare and serue him and thereby becommeth carelesse and secure and goeth on in sinne without repentance And contrariwise the part regenerate remembring these holy Attributes still retayneth and cherisheth the true feare of God and thereby is made carefull and watchfull to please him in all things and consequently to auoid sinne as the greatest euill or hauing beene ouertaken with it through frailtie and infirmitie not to continue in it but to arise againe out of it by vnfayned repentance And these continually make warre one against the other and sometime the feare of God preuaileth and bringeth securitie in subiection and then the Christian maketh conscience of all sinne and with all care and watchfulnesse auoydeth all tentations causes and occasions that might allure or draw him vnto wickednesse then he daily renueth his repentance and laboureth diligently in the vse of all good meanes whereby hee may make 2. Pet. 1. 10. Phil. 2. 12. 1. Cor. 10. 12. his calling and election sure and as the Apostle speaketh worketh out his saluation with feare and trembling and by his owne and others fals is made more carefull to looke vnto his standing Sometimes securitie getteth the vpper hand and giueth Gods feare the foyle so that in respect of sense and feeling it groweth cold and languishing and very faintly and remisly exerciseth it selfe in its actions and operations And then the Christian presuming on his owne present strength and of his former progresse in the wayes of godlinesse beginneth to stand at a stay supposing that he is now rich enough in spirituall grace and therefore may leaue gathering and spend vpon the stocke that hee is out of all danger of declyning and going backe and that God will keepe him safe in his greatest negligence and howsoeuer hee carryeth himselfe make good vnto him his gracious promises of life and saluation And then forgetting Gods Iustice and Iudgements and his Mercy and Goodnesse towards him hee beginneth securely to glut himselfe with worldly pleasures and to pursue earthly profits and preferments he groweth timorous to be seene in any course of Godlines which may crosse him in their fruition and willing to strayne his conscience in vsing all meanes whereby he may obtayne and securely inioy them Then he sticketh not to quench the good motions of Gods Spirit inciting him to returne to his former holy courses and restrayning him from sinne wherby he grieueth this holy Ghest and were he not most gracious without respect of desert would soone make him wearie of his lodging Then he beginneth to neglect the exercises of mortification which tend to the subduing of the Flesh and his former care in often renuing his Couenant with God by renuing the condition thereof Faith and Repentance Then he groweth carelesse and negligent in the meanes of Grace and Saluation as hearing the Word receiuing the Sacrament Prayer communion with the Faithfull and holy Conferences whereby they are mutuall helps to stirre vp Gods graces in one another not caring much whether he vse them or no and therefore taking slight occasions as lawfull and sufficient excuses of their neglect or when he doth performe these duties it is after a cold and formall manner dully and drowsily negligently and wearily without any taste or spirituall feeling of ioy and comfort in the vse of them And in a word is little or nothing affected either with Gods Promises or Threatnings either with his Mercies or with his Iudgements either with loue and delight in that which is good or with hatred and dislike of that which is euill and therefore securely lyeth snorting in his sinnes as though there were no feare of danger and taketh no care to better his present estate by rising out of them by vnfayned repentance §. 5 Of insensible and sensible securitie in the faithfull And this is that carnall securitie which is incident to Gods dearest Children the which neuerthelesse may bee distinguished in respect of the diuers degrees of it for either it is insensible and not perceiued or else sensible and discerned The former like a deepe sleepe doth stupifie for the time of the continuance of it all their senses and abuseth their mind and imaginations with deceiuing dreames and false apprehensions whereby they conceiue that they are in good estate highly in Gods fauour and free from all danger and therefore securely goe on in their sinfull courses without repentance and neglect the meanes whereby the feare of God might bee renued and repayred in them or else vse them after a cold and formall manner And this was the case of holy Dauid himselfe after his fearefull fall into those grieuous sinnes of Adulterie and Murther till he was awakned out of this 2. Sam. 12. dead sleepe by that message which God by Nathan sent vnto him and of the Angell of the Church of Laodicea who in his carnall securitie blessed himselfe with a false opinion that his estate was in such a degree of excellency and perfection that nothing was wanting vnto Apoc. 3. 17. him whereas in truth he was exceeding miserable poore blind and naked as our Sauiour testifieth The other securitie which is sensible bringeth the faithfull but into an heauy slumber so as they may say with the Spouse