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A76270 A nosegay of divine truths; wherein the chief points of religion are ingeniously discussed, and also the doctrines of predestination, reprobation, &c. rightly determined Highly necessary for all Christians to peruse. And digested into 50 chapters; both French and English, for the benefit of those who are desirous to improve themselves in the French or English tongues. By P.B. formerly of the order of S. Francis, now a convert to the Church of England P. B. 1687 (1687) Wing B152A; ESTC R230839 97,134 289

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Remember that shortly we must follow ' em The hour glass runs without ceasing and it may be Death to Morrow will lay our Bodies in the Dust This Sermon that we have heard to day this Godly Book which we read now may be the last we shall hear or Read. Our Years Months and Days are counted we cannot prolong them who knows whether we shall live till to Morrow how many do we see every day who go and lye down in perfect Health and in the Morning are found Dead in their Beds that which happens to others may happen unto us A Tile from the top of a House falling down upon your Heads may destroy you a fishes bone a Stone of a plum or a bit of bread may choak you Therefore your Life being so short and uncertain you ought not to delay your Conversion You must prevent the day which is wont to prevent you You must not stay till you be old or near Death you must serve God in your Youth you must turn to him without any delay As soon as Acha●● had heard the words of Eliah he rent his Cloths and put saccloath upon his Flesh and fasted and lay in Saccloth and went softly 1 King 21.27 CHAP. XXXIII How the Married Woman that is desirous to be happy after Death and in a good Reputation among Men in this World ought to Live. ABove all things she ought to Fear and Love God the Fountain of all goods She ought to keep his Commandments and Worship him with a deep Humility and avoid the Pomps and Vanities of this World Remembring that she promised in her Baptism to Renounce them as well as to resist the Temptations of the Devil and Flesh She ought to obey her Husband and be taught by him both in matters as well belonging to Religion as his own Family to Love him and be Faithfull unto him till Death But because chastety is the Ornament of Women she ought to have a great care of her Reputation remove the least Sins contrary to pudicity and to avoid the Company of indiscreet and lacivious Women whetheir it be in their Discourses or in their Countenance looks or Garments she ought to delight only in her Husbands Company for the married Woman out of her Husbands Company should be like a Fish out of the Water as the Chich strugled from without the Hen or as a lost sheep exposed unto Woolfs She ought to have so great a care of her Family as she might give an account of all things that are done in her House which ought to be to her what the shell is to a Snail She ought often to hear the word of God keep Company with those that are of a Holy and Exemplary Life read good Books abstain from lascivious because the Reading of them by little and little infects our Souls corrupts good manners and brings us to a shamefull end She ought often to meditate that she is once to die and perhaps sooner than she thinks that she shall be Judged to everlasting Pains or Joyes to an Eternal shame or Glory and this frequent and serious meditation will make her refrain from all unlawfull Pleasures and render her diligent in the practice of Vertues and Remember that as in the harvest we reap but what we have sowed before even so in the other World we receive the Fruits of what we have sowed in this CHAP. XXXIV A great comfort to the scrupulous Woman shewing that all the little Children that dye without Baptism are sav'd BY little Children I mean those that have not yet the use of their reason and I say though the contrary be asserted by a great many that if they dye without Baptism they are saved notwithstanding For our Salvation doth not meerly depend upon an Element which is not always in our power The Baptism that saves us saith St. Peter is not that that puts away the filth of the flesh but the answer of a good Conscience towards God 1 Pet. 3.21 he that sinneth shall be punished Every one shall dye for his own iniquity Therefore the young Children before they can use their reason being not able to commit sin ought not to be punished for God hates and punishes nothing but sin and consequently if they dye are saved But some will say there is an actual sin and an other call'd original 'T is true that young Children before the use of their reason are not capable of the former but by the transgression of Adam they are guilty of the latter and ought to be punished for it I answer it is true that the young Children have encurred the original sin but it is true also it was forgiven unto them for as by the offence of one Judgment came upon all Men to condemnation even so by the righteousness of one the free gift came upon all men unto Justification of life Rom. 5.18 they shall say no more the Fathers have eat a sower grape and the Childrens teeth are set on edge but every one shall dye for his own iniquity Every Man that eateth the sower grape his teeth shall be set on edge Jer. 31.29 the original sin is remitted not as concerning temporal death and other afflictions in this life which are the consequences of that sin but as concerning eternal death and other torments in Hell that did deserve that same sin If any is now damn'd and suffers in the other world 't is for his own sin Suffer little Children to come unto me saith Christ and forbid them not for of such is the Kingdom of God. Mark that Christ spoke to young Children not Baptized of such saith he is the Kingdom of God therefore they are saved though they dye without Baptism the promise is not onely made to our Fathers but to our Children also God is the God of the one as well as of th 'others and to damn little Children meerly because they have not received the Baptism which was not in their power it would be in God a kind of Cruelty CHAP. XXXV The condition of a sinner near Death REpresent to your selves any wicked Man ready to dye he fears sweats becomes pale his eyes are chang'd his tongue stammers and his heart looses all courage The thought that he shall shortly be separated from his body and appear before the Judgment-Seat to receive his Sentence of Life or Death of eternal Happiness or Misery troubles him so much that he knows neither what he saith nor what he doth He wishes but in vain that God would be pleased to restore his health and let him live some few years or months longer that he might in good earnest practise vertue and keep Gods Commandments which he hath so often transgressed Whilst he entertains these vain desires in his troubled mind his Conscience accuses him of all his former Crimes the Devil clearly represents them unto him aggravates them and endeavours as much as he can to cast him into despair Sometimes he sighs desires God to
the Grace of God but the infirmity of his Nature and the Temptations which he is Subject to c. viii p. 29 Grace doth not destroy Concupisence or sensual Lusts c. ix p. 33 Sanctifying Grace is incompatible with Moral Sins c. x. p. 35 Sanctifying Grace may be lost c. xi p. 37 The Righteous Man falls sometimes and Dies in his Sins c. xii p. 41 By Repentance a Man may recover his lost Holiness c. xiii p. 45 Repentance after we have often rejected Gods Grace is not in our Power c. 14. p. 46 Men make fair promises to God and break them very often c. xv p. 53 All vows made unto God of any thing whih is not in our Power are void c. vxi p. 57 Marriage ought to be permitted to all Men and Women indifferently c. xvii p. 6 Holiness consists in the practice of all Vertues an Commandments of God. c. xviii p. 7 Of Predestination and Reprobation c. xix p. 8 Several Impietis do proceed from the Doctrin● of Prdestination and Reprobation as they a● both believed maintain'd and Publish'd by Calvin and his Followers First Impiety It destroys the whole Ministry of the word of Go● c. xx p. 9 Second Impiety It Abolishes Prayer Faith Repentance the u● of the Sacraments and the keeping Gods Commandments c. xxi p. 9 Third Impiety It destroys that Doctrine of ours that God will hav● all Men to be saved and none to Perish an● that he hath no Pleasure on the Death of a Sinner c. xxli p. 10 Fourth Impiety It makes God Cruel and Tyrannical c. xxiii p 11 Fifth Impiety It makes God the Author of Sin. c. xxiv p. 11 Sixth Impiety It causes and Nourishes Vice and is Enmity to good Government c. xxv p. 12 Seventh Impiety It takes away all Comforts c. xxvi p. 12 David and St. Paul did not believe Predestinati● and Reprobation as they are above explain'd the 19th Chapter c. xxvi p. 13 How Predestination is to be understoo● c. xxvii p. 1● How Reprobation is to be understood c.xxviii p. 143. Gods Works are necessary to Salvation c. xxix p. 151 Images are of great advantage to instruct us and inflame our Devotion c. xxx p. 159. Bad Companions are rather to be avoided than the Plague it self c. xxxi p. 163 The Sinner being to die shortly and knowing not when nor how ought not to delay his Conversion c. xxxii p. 169 How the Married Woman that is desirous to be happy after Death and in a good Reputation among Men in this World ought to Live. c.xxxiii p. 273 A great comfort to the scrupulous Woman shewing that all the little Children that dye without Baptism are sav'd c.xxxiv p. 179 The condition of a Sinner near Death c. xxxv p. 185 The condition of a Sinner after Death c. xxxvi p. 191 The Condition of a Holy Soul near the Separation from its Body by Death c. xxxvii p. 192 The Condition of an holy soul after She is separated from her Body c. xxxxviii p. 199 The World is a Cheat. c. xxxix p. 205 Mistrust the World trust in God only c. xl p. 211 Nothing is able to satisfie our Soul but God alone c. xli p. 215 The Covetous Man is always poor and miserable the Liberal always Rich and Happy c. xlii p. 219 We must submit our Flesh to the Spirit c. xlii p. 225 Idleness ought to be avoided c. xliv p. 229 Riches ought to be contemned and how c. xlv p. 233 We must avoid the smallest Sins c. xlvi p. 239 We must Obey Kings and Magistrates c. xlvii p. 241 How Men ought to behave themselves in their troubles c. xlviii p. 249. A necessary Preparation to every one that desires whorthily to receive the Lords Supper c. xlix p. 257 Certains signs to know whether you have the qualities that St. Paul requires worthily to receive the Lords Supper c. L. p. 269 De la GRACE CHAP. I. Dieu presente sa Grace à tous CE que le pain est au Corps l● Grace l'est à l'Ame ca● comme le Corps ne peut pavivre sans aliment ains● l'Ame ne sçauroit subsister de la vi● surnaturelle sans la Grace Nôtr● bon Dieu qui le sçait qui ne veu● pas qu'aucun perisse mais qu'il vive● ne manque pas de nous la presenter● comme il paroist clairement par ce● textes suivants La Grace de Dieu sal● taire est clairement apparue à tous homme● Tit. 2 11. Dieu ayant suscité son fils J●sus l'a envoyé pour vous benir en retira● un chacun de vous de vos iniquitez Ac● 3.26 I l illumine tout homme venant au monde John 1. Car comme il fait luire son soleil sur les Justes injustes ainsy presente-il sa Grace● à tous sans faire distinction de personnes Il se comporte comme le Laboureur Le Laboureur jett esa semence dans son champ une partie tombe en bonne terre apporte bon fruit l'autre partie tombe parmi les ronces les Epines les pierres sur le grand chemin elle est ou étouffée ou les oyseaux du Ciel viennent qui l'emportent Dieu seme sa Grace dans le coeur de tous les hommes ceux qui la reçoivent sont la bonne terre ils portent bon fruit sont aymez de Dieu Ceux qui la rejettent sont la terre remplie de ronces d'épines de pierres ils sont sterils hais maudits de Dieu Quand je dis que Dieu donne sa Grace à tous je ne parle pas seulement de cette Grace universelle qui selon Calvin gist en la predication enterieure par laquelle le Seigneu invite à soy tous les hommes indifferemmen● voire même ceux aux quels il la propose e● odeur de mort pour matiere de pl● grieve condemnation J'entend une Grac● interne qui est une lumiere dans l'en tendement un movement dans la volonté par laquelle Dieu nous faisant connoitre le bien le mal nous incite à embrasser la vertu à fuir le vice à laquelle si nous correspondons nous obtiendrons infalliblement le salut eternel Plussieurs assurent que Dieu ne donne pas cette Grace à tous Ils disent que Dieu sans aucune autre raison que son bon plaisir a determiné les uns pour être sauvez les autres pour être damnez consequemment ils font Dieu injuste quand il punit le péché Car puisque nous ne pouvons pas éviter le peché sans la Grace s'il est vray que Dieu ne Donne pas sa Grace à tous il s'ensuit que tous ne sçauroient pas éviter le péché purtant quand il punit leur peché il les punit pour
is guilty of Injustice that give Six-pence to one Beggar and a Farthing to another And though in strictness he is indebted to no Man yet being a God of infinite Goodness and Mercy he vouchsafes to all what is sufficient to Salvation CHAP. III. God gives to all Men Grace sufficient to Salvation ALthough it is Evident both by the Scriptures and by Experience that God gives a greater measure of Grace to one Man than to another yet we cannot tax God with the least injustice He is under no Obligation to us and may do whatever seems him good nor dare any Man say to him why doest thou so Notwithstanding if ●e are not Saved we must not impute ●ur Perdition to God Almighty since ●e gives to every Man a sufficient mea●ure of Grace to work out his own Salvation This cannot be denied unless we will deny these words of S. Paul to Titus 2.11 The Grace of God which bringeth Salvation appear'd unto all Men. Those words you see express a Grace universal and sufficient to Salvation Appeared unto all Men there you have Grace Universal given to all Men. Which bringeth Salvation there you have it sufficient Judge I pray you saith God by his Prophet Isaiah betwixt me and my Vineyard what could have been done more to my Vineyard that I have not done in it 5.3 CHAP. IV. Our Co-operation with Grace is necessary to Salvation FRom what hath been said already it remains most certain that God gives to all Men Grace sufficient to Salvation And to deny that Truth as too many are wont to do is no less than to accuse God himself of unparallel'd Cruelty For it is as much as if we should say that he hath sent some into the World on purpose to be damned or that he willeth the end but willeth not the means thereto which are Impieties that common sense cannot apprehend as being incompatible with the nature of a God infinitely good and merciful We must confess as is manifest by that passage of St. Paul in the foregoing Chapter that God vouchsafes to every Man Grace sufficient to Salvation Yet notwithstanding the truth of this no Man nevertheless shall be saved unless he Co-operates that is Joyns his own endeavours with that Grace which appears evidently by ●hese two following Texts As many as were ordained to Eternal Life believed Act 13.48 If thou wilt be saved keep the Commandments He that made us without our selves will never save us without our selves saith Austin If with St. Paul we could be transported to the third Heavens and there behold all those Saints who were all more or less endued with the Grace of God whilst they were here below we should find that they have arrived to those degrees of glory and happiness which they now enjoy by co-operating and joyning their own endeavours with Gods Grace CHAP. V. Grace works differently GRace is like Fire it acts continually but differently Sometimes it works insensibly as it did in John the Baptist who was Sanctified from his Mothers Womb as it doth in all little Infants who are Baptised and as probably it wrought in Zachary and Elizabeth who being addicted to the practice of Piety from their Youth would have sound it very hard to have told the very time when it was that Grace render'd them Righteous and Acceptable to God. It comes oftentimes like the dawning of the day without being perceived Sometimes it works sensibly as it appeared in Mary Magdalen when she was converted to the Lord and forsook her sins as it befel St. Paul when having a Commission to Persecute the Christians he heard a Voice saying Saul Saul why Persecutest thou me and as it hapned to St. Peter when having denied his Master Thrice and that with Swearing and Cursing he Repented of his fault when he heard the Crowing of the Cock. And thus in this Sense we may compare Grace to the Sun which by piercing a Cloud with its Beams disperses the Mist and becomes visible to our Eyes CHAP. VI. Grace is Resistible WHen God gives us his Grace 't is not to force us but to assist us because of our selves we are not able ●o do any supernatural good we may then resist it And not to speak of our own Experience we have but too many proofs thereof in Holy Writ They rebelled and vexed his holy spirit Isa 63.10 Woe unto thee Corazin woe unto thee Bethsaida for if the mighty works which were done in you had been done in Tyre and Sydon they would have repented long ago in sackcloth and ashes Mat. 11.21 Ye always resist the holy Ghost Act. 7.51 But some will say Resistance supposes acting against now he that is dead has no power to Act and therefore a Sinner being dead in Sin can have no power to resist Grace To whom I answer that that Conclusion is not good for in the Antecedent is spoken of a natural Death and in the Consequence of a moral Death A Sinner who is dead in Sin is not dead in all respects for as much as we read in the Scripture that sometimes ●e is like a Man half dead sometimes ●e is like a Man asleep Luk. 10.30 Eph. 5.14 'T is certain that we may ●esist Grace And to make it appear more clearly mark well these following Texts How often would I have gathered ●hy Children as the hen her chickens and ●ye would not I have called and ye refused I have stretched out my hands and ye regarded not When I called ye did not answer when I spake ye did not hear but did evil before mine Eyes and did chuse that wherein I delighted not Isa 65.12 it is further evident by that parable of our Lord Jesus Christ in St. Mat. 22.4 where he says that he sent out his Servants saying all things are ready come unto the Mariage but they made light of it And if a Man cannot resist Grace what means the request of St. Paul we beseech you also that ye receive not the Grace of God in vain To what end serve the Exhortations of the Prophets of our Saviour Jesus Christ and his Apostles CHAP. VII Grace doth not destroy Liberty GOD hath made Man after his own Image and Likeness he hath given him a reasonable Soul the use of his understanding and the Liberty of his will. He has given him Power to consider to deliberate to consult and to choose and consequently has given him Authority to govern his own Actions For having made him Lord and Master of the whole World below 't is not to be imagined that he hath made him a Slave to himself To force his Will were to destroy his nature Grace doth not at all compel him but assists and aids him And to prove this truth that Grace does not destroy Liberty Observe well these following Texts God made Man from the begining and left him in the hand of his Counsel Eccl. 15.14 I have set saith he before thee this day Life and Death Good and
Evil Deut. 30.15 and in verse 19. he saith I call Heaven and Earth to record this day against you that I have set before ●ou Life and Death Blessing and Cursing ●herefore chuse Life Some may say that Liberty seems ●●consistent with these words of St. John whosoever is Born of God doth not com●it Sin for his seed remaineth in him and ●e cannot Sin because he is Born of God. ●or if he cannot Sin then he is not free ●●en Grace destroys Liberty for the ●ght understanding of this passage we ●ust distinguish between a Moral and Natural Power when we may not do 〈◊〉 thing we use commonly to say we ●annot do it which is to be understood ●f a Moral Power and not a Natural ●nd thus we must expound those words ●f the Angel where he says that he ●ould do nothing against Sodom till ●ot were escaped into Zoar Gen. 19. ●2 When then 't is said that whosoever is ●orn of God cannot Sin we must not ●elieve that the Natural Power is taken ●way but the Moral 't is as much as to ●●y that as long as he Acts according 〈◊〉 the Principles of his Spiritual Birth ●nd doth his utmost endeavours to be ●ke his Heavenly Father he cannot ●in which we are to understand as School-men term it in sensu composito but not in sensu diviso CAAP. VIII If no Man Lives in this World without Sin we must not blame the Grace of God for it but the infirmity of his Nature and the Temptations which he is Subject to MAN is subject to so many sorts of Sins that 't is very rare to find one in this World exempt from all Sins Oftentimes we are caught by Sins of ignorance and because they seem matters of little weight we are not sensible of ' em Again Sins of Frailty surprize us all of a sudden and other Sins overtake us very often by reason of the continual Temptations of the Devil the World and the Flesh Therefore what St. John saith if we say that we have no Sin we deceive our selves and the Truth is not in us appears but too true but though it is true in an ordinary sense that in this World Man is not without Sin yet by the Grace of God he may Live without falling into it I can do all through him that Comforts me saith St. Paul by saying all he excepts nothing now if he can do all through him that strengthens him then by Grace he can live without committing Sin otherwise that exhortation of St. Peter Be diligent that at Christs coming ye may be found of him in Peace without Spot and Blameless 2 Pet. 3.14 would be vain and to no purpose if by the assistance of Gods Grace we could not live without being spotted and defiled with Sin and to make it appear by reason thus I argue either the Grace of God is sufficient for the avoiding of Sin or it is not if it be not sufficient Ergo in vain God gives us his Grace for that effect and doth injustly punish our Sins seeing that he Punishes us for a thing which we could not avoid and since we cannot say so of God without Blasphemy we must say that his Grace is sufficient as it appears by these words of Christ to St. Paul sufficit tibi gratia mea and therefore we must conclude that with Grace a Man may live without sin if then we do not live in this World without sin we must not blame the Grace of God for it but either the frailty of our nature or the continual Temptations of the Devil and of the World. CHAP. IX Grace doth not destroy Concupiscence or sensual Lusts BY Grace 't is true we overcome Sin to Grace we are indebted for all the good works we do and for the Victories we obtain over our grand Enemies the Devil the World and the Flesh But tho it cools the Fires of our Lusts yet it doth not totally extinguish ' em Experience convinceth us too often that the Flesh Lusteth against the Spirit and these are contrary the one to the other Gal. 5.17 so long as we are here below in the Church Militant although we have the Grace of God on our side yet we must not hope to live without Wars Witness St. Paul he was in the State of Grace and yet his Lusts alarm him he is encountred with the sharp Goads of the Flesh his Flesh Warreth against his Spirit and the good that he would do he doth not and is forced to cry out Oh wretched Man that I am CHAP. X. Sanctifying Grace is incompatible with Mortal Sin. TO prove this assertion we must know the right Definition of Mortal sin and of sanctifying Grace or what are the effects of both Mortal sin is so call'd because it procures death to the soul or deprives it of the Grace of God which is its supernatural Life and sanctifying Grace is so term'd for as much as it sanctifieth the soul and renders it acceptable to God. By mortal sin the soul is in Enmity and hatred with God but through sanctifying Grace it becomes his friend and well beloved By mortal sin it is doomed to the Infernal Lake of Hell but through sanctifying Grace it is made an heir to the Kingdom of Heaven Now the Definition and the effects of mortal sin and sanctifying Grace being opposites they cannot possibly be found at one and the same time in one and the same subject as day and night chase away each other and cannot exist both together at the same time in the same place and subject so mortal sin and Grace cannot cohabit at one and the same time in one and the same soul and therefore the one is inconsistent with th' other CHAP. XI Sanctifying Grace may be lost THere is nothing certain in this fading and miserable Life but Death the most splendent Crowns are tottering and the best established Monarchies are oftentimes subverted And as the health of the Body which we count a great Treasure is too frequently lost so it fares with sanctifying Grace which is the Ornament of the soul this is very Evident in these Texts ye did run well ye are fallen from Grace Gal. 5.4 holding Faith and a good Conscience which some having put away concerning Faith have made Shipwrack 1. Tim. 1.19 Some are already turned after Satan having Damnation because they have lost of their first Love 5.12 15. the Dog is turned to his Vomit again and the sow that was washed to her wallowing in the mire 2 Pet. 2.22 't is that which Experience also proves to us but too often and to our shame David a Man of great Faith and Integrity committed two great Sins Adultery and Murder 2 Sam. 11.4 Solomon who was the beloved of the Lord yet through the Love of strange Women his heart was turned from the Lord God of Israel and went after other Gods 1 King 11. Peter the first of the Apostles to whom Christ had given his special
are not without controversy among many specially the free Election of the Faithful which yet cannot be weakened for the common sort do think God as he foreseeth that every Man deserving shall be so maketh difference between Men that therefore when he foreknoweth that they shall be not unworthy of his Grace them he adopteth into place of Children and whose Nature he espieth that they will be bent to Wickedness and Ungodliness them he appointeth to the Damnation of Death So by cloaking it with the vail of foreknowledg they do not only darken Election but fain that it hath beginning from elsewhere l. 3. c. 22. S. 1. God maketh them his Children by free Adoption whom he will have to be his Children and that the inward cause thereof is in himself because he is content with his own secret good Pleasure l. 3. c. 22. S. 7. Neither do we any thing pass upon the subtlety of Thomas that the foreknowing of deservings is not indeed the cause of Predestination on the behalf of the Act of him that doth predestinate but on our behalf it may after a certain manner be so called that is according to the particular weighing of Predestination as when it is said that God predestinateth Glory to Man by deservings because he hath decreed to give to him Grace by which he may deserve Glory For sith the Lord will in Election have us to look unto nothing but his meer goodness if any Man shall covet here to see any more it shall be a wrongful goodness l. 3. c. 22. S. 9. Whom God passeth over he rejecteth and for none other cause but for that he will exclude them from the Inheritance which he doth Predestinate to his Children l. 3. c. 23. S. 1. They farther say also that it is not for nothing said that the Vessels of Wrath are prepared to Destruction but that God hath prepared the Vessels of Mercy therefore they say that that is cause why Man should charge God if by his bare will without their own deserving they be predestinated to Eternal Death l. 3. c. 23. S. 2. Wherefore there shall be no Controversy if we shall say that God according to the will of his good Pleasure without any deserving chooses to his Sons whom he will rejecting and refusing other whereas therefore God chooses one Man refusing another this cometh not of respect of Man but of his Mercy alone which ought to have Liberty to shew forth and utter it self where and when it pleaseth him l. 3. c. 23. S. 10. See l. 3. c. 24. S. 1. l. 3. c. 21. S. 1. 5. c. 22. S. 4. 5. 6. 7. 11. Thus speaks Calvin and his followers Jacob and Esau say they being not yet Born neither having done any Good or Evil that the purpose of God according to Election might stand not of Works but of him that calleth it was said unto Rebecca the elder shall serve the younger as it is written Jacob have I Loved but Esau have I Hated What shall we say then is there Unrighteousness with God God forbid for he saith to Moses I will have Mercy on whom I will have Mercy and I will have Compassion on whom I will have Compassion Even for this same purpose have I raised thee up speaking unto Pharao that I might shew my Power in thee and that my name might be declared through all the Earth Who art thou that Replieth against God shall the thing formed say to him that formed it why hast thou made me thus hath not the putter Power over the clay of the same lump to make one Vessel unto honour and another unto dishonour what if God willing to shew his Wrath and to make his Power known endured with long suffering the Vessels of Wrath fitted to Destruction and that he might make known the Riches of his Glory on the Vessels of Mercy which he afore prepared unto Glory Rom. 9. these are the words whereupon they ground this kind of Predestination and Reprobation which being not rightly understood as I will make it appear are the cause of several Impieties CHAP. XX. Several Impieties do proceed from the Doctrine of Predestination and Reprobation as they are both believed maintain'd and Publish'd by Calvin and his Followers First Impiety It destroys the whole Ministry of the word of God. IF God from all Eternity did by his absolute and immutable decree Elect me to be saved without any respect of my Faith good Works and Obedience to his Commandments or did by the same decree appoint me to Eternal Damnation without considering my Infidelity bad Actions and Disobedience to his Commandments What then can all the Exhortations of the Prophets of J. Christ of the Apostles and other Ministers of the Gospel profit me For what purpose serves this Admonition of St. Peter be deligent to make your calling and Election sure 2 Pet. 1.10 for what end to say with David Psa O Lord rrbuke me not in thy anger neither chasten me in thy displeasure have mercy upon me O Lord for I am weak O Lord heal me for my bones are vexed my Soul is also sore vexed but thou O Lord how long Return O Lord deliver my Soul O save me for thy Mercies sake and restore to me the Joy of my Salvation What advantage can I draw from these good Counsels harden not your Hearts receive not the Grace of God in vain hold that fast which thou hast that no Man take thy Crown Take heed least at any time your hearts be overcharged with surfeiting and drunkness and the cares of this Life Watch ye therefore and pray always Luc. 21.24 be sober be vigilant because your adversary the Devil as a roaring Lyon walketh about seeking whom he may devour whom resist stedast in the Faith 1 Pet. 5.8 for what purpose serve all these Precautions take heed least ye fall believe not every Spirit but try the Spirits whether they are of God for many false Prophets are gone into the World 1 Jo. 4.1 all that is unprofitable even hurtful for it is as saith Calvin that they may become the more deaf and that he doth set his Light before them on purpose to make them the more blind He shineth fourth Doctrine but that they may be more dull He layeth them a Remedy but not that they may be healed Inst l. 3. c. 24. S. 13. And if there be any profit in these Exhortations Counsels Precautions and Threatnings it is only to the Minister he being well pay'd for his Pains For Either I am predestinated or I am not it is one or the other But whether I am or am not all Exhortations Counsels Precautions and Threatnings are unprofitable because without them I shall still be saved if I am Predestinated and with 'em I shall still be damned if I am appointed to Eternal Damnation Wherefore I may in the mean time take my Pleasure Indulge my Senses Disobey Kings Princes and Magistrates disturb Kingdoms sow Sedition cause Tumults and
you ought to respect and obey them If J. Christ the only Son of God your Lord and Saviour was willing to pay Tribute unto Caesar and be Subject unto him why shall a Man of the Common People refuse to obey the high Powers You are not to be the Judg of them that are Established from God to Rule If what they Command be not an Evident Sin you must obey and you are not to dispute and argue to know whether what they ordain be Just If you do not clearly see that their Ordinances are opposite to those of God you ought to Judg of them Charitably and cleave thereunto If you idly spend your time in hearkening either to your Passion or Discourses of Wicked and Seditious Persons they will persuade you that white is black and that the Magistrates Ordinance made and Publish'd for the Glory of God the Salvation of your Soul and Common good is but to ensnare your Conscience and for the utter Ruin of the good Government Consider that all Misfortune of Mankind came because Eve spent idly her time in Discoursing with the Serpent He said unto her yea hath God said the shall not eat of every Tree of the Garden she said unto the Serpent we may eat of the Fruit of the Trees of the Garden but of the Fruit of the Tree which is in the midst of the Garden God hath said ye shall not eat of it neither shall ye touch it lest ye Dye and the Serpent said unto the Woman ye shall not surely Dye for God doth know that in the Day ye eat thereof then your Eyes shall he opened and ye shall be as Gods knowing good and Evil Gen. 3. She suffered he● self to be persuaded by the Serpent She did not obey God who commanded her not to eat of the Fruit of the Tree of the knowledg of good and Evil. And this is the spring of all our Miseries Your King and Superiors make and publish an Ordinance in nothing contrary to Gods Law you busie your selves in hearkning unto your Passion and talking and arguing with Wicked malecontent and Seditious Persons they make you believe that that Ordinance tends to the Total Destruction of your Religion Liberty and Priviledg of the Subject you transgress this Commandment and so loose your Life Goods Honor and very often you are the cause of all the troubles and miseries which afterwards unfortunately happen in a Kingdom CHAP. XLVIII How Men ought to behave themselves in their troubles WHither you be rich or poor old or young in health or in disease you must not expect to be without troubles Did you ever hear of any Man that was freed from ' em Are there not daily complaints made in our Streets I do not believe that there is any Man in the World more unhappy in Wife and Children than I am saith one Do not you hear others saying that they know not how to maintain their Family and that they are so perplext that if Death should present it self it would be pleasant to them Doth not the Wise complain of her Husband and the Husband of his Wife the Father of the Child and the Child of his Father the Master of his Servant and the Servant of his Master To make it short where will you find a Man that can say I am free from all troubles and afflictions The Disease is general and this is the Remedy When you are in troubles you must not say 't is long of this Man or of that Woman so did the Israelites spake they murmured against Moses they would have stoned him saying that it was long of him that they were afflicted You must not do as the Dog doeth who when any Man throws a stone at him is wont to run after it and bite it instead of assaulting and biting him that threw it You must let the Creature alone and run strait unto God acknowledging that he being a Father altogether good and wise if he will have you to be in troubles 't is certainly for your advantage though it seems to you otherwise You must submit your selves to his Will saying Lord if thou wilt have me to be poor I will be so if thou wilt have me to be sick I am content if deprived of my Wife Children or Estate nay of my Honour I wholly submit my self to thy holy Will fretting will but increase your miseries submission onely easeth you Suppose that you live in time of War or Famine that they ravish your Children that to one they cut off his Arms to the other his Legs and chop them to the pot that would be very difficult for you to bear scarcely could you see this cruelty without dying Weep Lament Pray to the end that what happened formerly in other Countries may never happen in this Land. But suppose the same should happen what must you do then You ought not to blame this Man nor that Woman you ought to accuse your selves and confess that your sins have deserv'd such Punishments kiss the Rod that strikes you and pray to God with tears to remove his Flail In whatsoever affliction you be you must turn to God for as the Water is in the Sea and the Light in the Sun so Comfort is in God. If you be Poor Pray if Sick Pray if Sorrowfull Pray Prayer is a Key that openeth any Lock 't is a Medecine that healeth any Wound a Weapon that will prevail in any Place Prayers have prevailed in dens and dungeons Men have made Prayers for Captives for Prisoners for poor Men sick dying persecuted tempted sorrowfull afflicted by Beasts Men and Devils and have holpen them Peter was kept in Prison bound with two Chains and the Keepers before the door kept the Prison but Prayer was made of the Church unto God for him and behold the Angel of the Lord came and delivered him Act. 12. The effectual fervent Prayer of a Righteous Man availeth much saith St. James Elias was a Man subject to the same Passions as we are and he Prayed earnestly that it might not rain and it rained not on the Earth by the space of three years and six months and he Prayed again and the Heaven gave rain and the Earth brought forth her fruit Jam. 5.16.17 CHAP. XLIX A necessary Preparation to every one that desires whorthily to receive the Lords Supper LET a Man examine himself and so let him eat of that Bread and drink of that Cup saith Paul 1 Cor. 11.28 examine whether your Sins be bloted out and therefore Examine whether you are truly Penitent Cease to do evil and learn to do well and though your Sins be as Scarlet they shall be as white as Snow though they be red like Crimson they shall be as Wool. Isa 1.17 True Repentance contains three parts Contrition Confession and Satisfaction To the end that Contrition may be good it ought to be Respective Universal supernatural It must be like a Janus with two Faces by one it must
look on Sins committed to weep for 'em and with th' other at future Sins to avoid them which is very well represented by the Definition of contrition which is a grief of the Soul for Sins committed with a firm Resolution to commit 'em no more A grief hath Reference to Sins committed and a firm Resolution to Sin no more hath respect to Futurity 'T is just that Grief be found in our Contrition for as the diseases of our Bodys are heal'd with contrary Remedies so Sins which are the Diseases of our Soul and which have been caused in taking delight with Creatures ought to be healed by greif and 't is reasonable you should resolve to Sin no more otherwise your grief is not wholy respective Your Contrition ought to be Universal and have respect unto all your trespasses for upon supposition you have committed ten different Sins and your contrition be but upon nine none of them is blotted out Your Contrition is false if it were true it should be extended upon all being all hated of God Almighty It ought also to be supernaturaral you ought to be sorry to have offended God because of his infinite goodness and hatred of Sin. If you be sorry to have offended him only because you are deprived of some temporal good or for fear of being punish'd in th' other World or least you hear these Dreadful words Depart from me ye Cursed into Everlasting Fire so that if there were no pain to suffer you should not be sorry to have sinned against him your Contrition is natural and therefore if it hath not the three qualities whereof I spoke just now and come to eat the Lords Body and drink his Bloud you eat and drink unwhorthily and consequently you eat and drink your Damnation Your Confession ought to be intire sincere and humble I do not speak here of the Confession used in the Church of Rome at the Ears of a Priest which being omitted as they say no Sin can be forgiven For though the declaration of our trespasses before a learned and discreet Minister be very useful for his good Counsels yet it doth not follow that being omitted our Sins cannot be forgiven those that teach this Doctrine teach that which is but an invention of Men and that you may be convinced of it it is enough to say that from the beginning it was not so The Confession that I mean here is that which you ought to do before God for who can forgive Sins but God only Mat. 19.8 and that Confession is to be intire for if you do not declare all your Trespasses your Confession is not good You ought to confess that you hate all that God hateth now God hateth all Sins therefore you must confess that you hate all Sins David saith without limited Sense I acknowledg my Transgressions Ps 31.3 It ought to be sincere for to confess your Sins with your Mouth and not with your Heart 't is to mock God who knows the Hearts of all Men and it ought to be humbe I mean full of grief and shame You must be like the Publican who saith God be Merciful to me a Sinner Luk. 18.13 he speaks with so great shame and humility that standing afar off he would not lift up so much as his Eyes unto Heaven Your Satisfaction which is nothing but a Restitution ought to have two respects God and Man. You may steal from a Man two sorts of Goods one Natural as his Money th' other Moral as his Honor and Reputation If you have stolen from him any Natural goods it must be restored and this Restitution is like unto the letting of Blood for as blood-letting removes the Cause of a Feaver and preserves Life so restitution removes Covetousness which is a Feaver that would cause you to Die Eternally and keeps the Grace of God which is the Life of your Soul. And as there are some diseases that cannot be cured without blood-letting likewise there are some Sins viz. Theft Usury and Simony which cannot be absolved without Restitution Non dimittitur peccatum saith Austin nisi restituatur ablatum Epist 4. ad maced Zacheus being convinced of that truth speaks thus Lord if I have taken any thing from any Man by false accusations I restore him fourfold Luk. 19. and if you have stolen his Reputation from him you are bound to restore it as much as it lyes in your Power You are bound to restore unto God three things Body Soul and time God hath given you a Body to apply it in his service hands to do good feet to Run after vertue and a Tongue to Praise him and you have stolen all these parts from him You are bound to restore 'em but how thus you shall restore him your Body when hereafter you apply it to his Service your hands when you do good and cease to do evil your feet when you Run after Vertue and no more after Sin and your Tongue when you sing his Praises and abstain from Blaspheming his holy Name You are bound to restore him your Soul. He gave you an understanding to think upon his infinite perfections a will that you might love him with a Memory that you might remember his Mercies You did steal from him these three faculties You ought to restore 'em but how thus you shall restore your understanding when hereafter you often consider his infinite perfections and think no more sinfully on the Creature Your will when you make more account of him than of all the World. And your memory inremembring always his unspeakable love towards you You must also restore him your time He gave it you to do good and you did steal it from him as often as you did any evil You are bound to restore it in being sorry that you have misimployed it in committing Sin and in abstaining from it hereafter Such ought to be your Contrition Confession and Satisfaction This is the Examen which St. Paul requires of every one that desires whorthily to receive the Lords Body and drink his Blood. CHAP. L. Certain signs to know whether you have the qualities that St. Paul requires worthily to receive the Lords Supper ALthough Chrisostomus writes thus Tom. 5. Serm. de poen Lachrimae sunt quae reconciliant Deo Lacrimae sunt quae Coelum pulsantes crimina delent T●ars do reconcile us with God and knocking at the Gates of Heaven blot out our sins and though some call 'em spungiam peccatorum the spunge of sins some Baptismum animarum the Baptism of Souls and though one speaking of the tears of Peter exclaimeth foelices sancte Apostole tuae Lachrimae quas ad diluendam culpam negationis virtutem habuere sacri Baptismatis Nevertheless they are not a certain sign that he that sheds them hath the qualities required of St. Paul to ear the Lords Body and drink his Blood because some tears do proceed from Nature as well as from Grace and many are seen weeping not for their sins but meerly for their own interest or for fear of pain as it appears in the tears of Judas The first certain proof is this according to Augustin vide si quod delectabat displicet si quod displicebat delectat See whether you hate what you did love afore and whether you love what you did hate You took delight in keeping bad Company see whether you hate it you could not endure to be despised nor the sight of your Enemies see whether you love 'em now The second certan sign is this see whether you feel any Joy. It seems you ought to feel nothing but grief because Repentance is a grief of the Soul for her sins But it is true that that Grief is never without Joy which appears by these three Comparasons of St. Austin How great is the Joy of a General who being environ'd of his Enemies and almost subdued is not onely put out of danger with a small Company of Souldiers but gets the Victory How great is the Joy of those who being on a tempestuous Sea ready to be either swallowed by the Waves or broken against the Rocks see themselves on a sudden free from danger and perceive that the Sea is calm And how great is the Joy of a young Man who seeing himself forsaken by his Physicians finding no remedy to cure him recovers his health in few hours Repentance ought to give you a greater Joy because it doth not onely deliver you from your Enemies the Devil the World and the Flesh but also from the shipwrack of sin and from Eternal Death The third certain and special sign is to see whether you forsake all your sins and avoid the occasions of ' em J. Christ when he healed the sick of the Palsie said unto him arise and take up thy bed and go thy way into thine house If you do not forsake the desire of Revenge if you do not restore all that you have stollen and if you do not avoid that wicked Company which is unto you an occasion of sin your Repentance is not good and therefore the qualities required by St. Paul are not in you Irrisor est non poenitens qui adhuc agit quod poeniteat saith Austin he is a scoffer and not true penitent that still doth what he must repent of Si ergo vis verus poenitens esse saith Bernard cessa a peccato noli amplius peccare If thou wilt be a true penitent forsake thy sins and sin no more quoniam inanis est poenitentia quam sequens coinquinat culpa Because that Repentance is vain which admits of a future Commission of sin To conclude you must avoid the occasions of sin Pythagoras gave this instruction to his Disciples that when they were rising out of their bed in the Morning they should neither lay the blanket nor the sheet upon their bed less being kept warm there they should mind to go to bed again but that they should throw off both blanket and sheet You must not only avoid sin but also the occasion of it qui amat periculum pribit in illo he that loves danger shall die in it Therefore he that is impure let him leave his impurity and he that is a drunkard let him forsake his drunkenness and avoid the occasions of it if so he certainly hath the qualities required by St. Paul worthily to receive the Lords Supper FINIS