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A59669 The sincere convert discovering the paucity of true beleevers and the great difficulty of saving conversion by Tho. Shepheard .... Shepard, Thomas, 1605-1649.; Greenhill, William, 1591-1671. 1641 (1641) Wing S3118; ESTC R9618 105,576 306

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that thou doest doubt of it It may be thou wilt plead Oh I am so ignorant of my selfe God Christ or his will that surely the Lord offers no Christ to me Yes but he doth though thou lyest in utter darknesse Our blessed Saviour glorified his Father for revealing the mystery of the Gospel to simple men neglecting those that carried the chiefe reputation of wisdome in the world The parts of none are so low as that they are beneath the gracious regard of Christ. God bestoweth the best fruits of his love upon meane and weak persons here that he might confound the pride of flesh the more Where it pleaseth him to make his choice and to exalt his mercy he passeth by no degree of wit though never so uncapable But thou wilt say I am an enemy to God and have a heart so stubborne and loath to yeeld I have vexed him to the very heart by my transgressions Yet he beseecheth thee to be reconciled Put case thou hast been a sinner and rebellious against God yet so long as thou art not found amongst malicious opposers and underminers of his truth never give way to despayring thoughts thou hast a mercifull Saviour But I have despised the meanes of Reconciliation and rejected mercy Yet God calls thee to returne Thou hast played the Harlot with many lovers yet turne againe to me sayth the Lord Jer. 3. 1. Cast thy selfe into the armes of Christ and if thou perishest perish there if thou doest not thou art sure to perish If mercy be to be had any where it is by seeking to Christ not by running from him Herein appeares Christs love to thee that he hath given thee a heart in some degree sensible hee might have given thee up to hardnesse securitie and prophanenesse of all spirituall judgements the greatest But he that dyed for his enemies will in no wise refuse those the desire of whose soule is towards him When the Prodigall set himselfe to returne to his Father his Father stayes not for him but meets him in the way If our sinnes displease us they shall never hurt us but wee shall be esteemed of God to be that which wee desire and labour to be Psal. 145. 19. But can the Lord offer Christ to mee so poore that have no strength no faith no grace nor sense of my povertie Yes even to thee why should wee except our selves when Christ doth not except us Come unto mee all yee that are weary and heavy laden Wee are therefore poore because we know not our riches We can never be in such a condition wherein there will be just cause of utter despayre He that sits in darknesse and seeth no light no light of comfort no light of Gods countenance yet let him trust in the Name of the Lord. Weaknesses doe not debarre us from mercy nay they incline God the more The Husband is bound to beare with the wife as being the weaker vessell and shall we think God will exempt himselfe from his owne Rule and not beare with his weak Spouse But is this offer made to me that cannot love prize nor desire the Lord Jesus Yes to thee Christ knows how to pitty us in this case We are weak but we are his A Father lookes not so much at the blemishes of his childe as at his owne nature in him So Christ finds matter of love from any thing of his owne in us A Christians carriage towards Christ may in many things be very offensive cause much strangenesse yet so long as he resolves not upon any knowne evill Christ will owne him and he Christ. Oh! but I have fallen from God oft since he hath inlightned me And doth he tender Christ to mee Thou must know that Christ hath married every beleeving Soule to himsel●e and that where the worke of grace is begun sin looses strength by every new fall If there be a spring of sinne in thee there is a spring o● mercy in God and a fountaine dialy opened to wash thy uncleanenesse in Adam indeed lost all by once sinning but we are under a better Covenant a Covenant of Mercy and are incouraged by the Sonne to goe to the Father every day for the sinnes of that day If I was willing to receive Christ I might have Christ offered to me But will the Lord offer him to such a one as desires not to have Christ Yes sayth our Saviour I would have gathered you as the henne gathereth her chickens under her wings and you would not Wee must know a creating power cannot onely bring something out of nothing but contrary out of contrary of unwilling God can make us a willing people There is a promise of powring cleane water upon us and Christ hath taken upon him to purge his Spouse and make her fit for himselfe What hast thou now to plead against this strange kindnesse of the Lord in offering Christ to thee Thou wilt say it may be O! I feare time is past Oh time is past I might once have had Christ but now mine heart is sealed downe with hardnesse blindnesse unbeliefe oh time is now gone No not so see Isai. 65. 1 2 3. All the day long God holdeth out his hands to a back-●l●ding and rebellious people Thy day of grace thy day of meanes thy day of life thy day of Gods striving with thee and stirring of thee still lasts But if God be so willing to save and so prodigall of his Christ why doth he not give me Christ or draw me to Christ I answer What command dost thou looke for to draw thee to Christ but this word Come Oh come thou poore forlorne lost blind cursed nothing I will save thee I will enrich thee I will forgive thee I will enlighten thee I will blesse thee I will be all things unto thee doe all things for thee May not this winne and melt the heart of a Devill II. Upon what conditions may Christ be had Make an exchange of what thou art or hast with Christ for what Christ is or hath and so taking him like the wise Merchant the Pearle thou shalt have Salvation with him Now this Exchange lyeth in these foure things chiefly First give away thy selfe to him head heart tongue body soule and he will give away himselfe unto thee Cant. 6. 3. yea he will stand in thy roome in Heaven that thou maist triumph and say I am already in Heaven glorified in him I see Gods blessed face in Christ I have conquered Death Hell and the Devill in him Secondly Give away all thy sinnes to Christ confesse them leave them cast them upon the Lord Jesus so as to receive power from him to forsake them And he will be made sinne for thee to take them away from thee 1 Ioh. 1. 9. Thirdly give away thine honour pleasure profit life for him he will give away his Crowne
him all his posterity by sin Gen. 3. 1 2 3 c. Now mans misery appeares in these two things 1. His misery in regard of sinne 2. His misery in regard of the consequents of sinne 1. His misery in regard of sinne appeares in these particulars 1. Every man living is borne guilty of Adams sin Now the justice and equity of God in laying this sin to every mans charge though none of Adams posterity personally committed it appeares thus First If Adam standing all mankind had stood then it is equall that he falling all his posterity should fall All our estates were ventured in this ship therefore if we should have been partakers of his gaines if he had continued safe its sit we should be partakers of his losse too But secondly we were all in Adam as a whole countrey in a Parliament-man the whole Countrey doth what he doth And although wee made no particular choyce of Adam to stand for us yet the Lord made it for us who being goodnesse it selfe beares more good will to man than he can or could beare to himselfe and being wisdome it selfe made the wisest choice and took the wisest course for the good of man For this made most for mens safety and quiet for if he had stood all feare of loosing our happy estate had vanish'd whereas if every man had beene left to stand or fall for himselfe a man would ever have beene in feare of falling And again this was the sure way to have all mens estates preserved for having the charge of the estates of all men that ever should be in the world hee was the more pressed to looke the more about him and so to bee more watchfull that he be not robbed and so undoe and procure the curses of so many thousands against him Adam was the Head of mankind and all mankind naturally are members of that head and if the Head invent and plot Treason and the head practise treason against the King or State the whole body i● found guilty and the whole body must needs suffer Adam was the poysoned roote and cisterne of all mankind now the branches and streames being in the root and spring originally they therefore are tainted with the same poysonous Principles If these things satisfie not God hath a day comming wherein he will reveale his owne righteous proceedings before men and Angels Rom. 2. 4. Oh that men would consider this sinne and that the consideration of it could humble peoples hearts If any mourne for sinne it is for the most part for other foule actuall sinnes few for this sinne that first made the breach and began the controversie betwixt God and man Next unto the sinne against the Holy Ghost and contempt of the Gospell this is the greatest sinne that cryeth lowdest in Gods eares for vengeance day and night against a world of men For now mens sinnes are against God in their base and low estates but this sinne was committed against Iehovah when man was at the top of his preferment Rebellion of a Traytor on a dunghill is not so great as of a Favorite in the Court Little sinnes against light are made horrible no sinne by any man committed was ever against so much light as Adam had This sin was the first that ever displeased God Drunkennesse deprives God of the glory of sobriety whoring of Chastity but this sinne darkens the very Sunne defaces all the Image of GOD the glory of man and the glory of GOD in man this is the first sin that ever did thee a mischiefe This sinne like a great Captaine hath gathered together all those troops and swarmes of sins that now take hold upon thee Thanke this sinne for an hard heart thou so much complainest of thank this sinne for that hellish darkenesse that overspreads thee This hath raised Satan Death Judgement Hell and Heaven against thee O consider those fearefull sinnes that are packt up in this one evill 1. Fearefull Apostacie from GOD like a Devill 2. Horrible Rebellion against GOD in joyning sides with the Devill and taking GODS greatest enemies part against God 3. Wofull unbeliefe in suspecting Gods threats to be true 4. Fearefull Blasphemy in conceiving the Devill Gods enemy and mans murderer to be more true in his temptations then GOD in his threatning 5. Horrible pride in thinking to make this sin of eating the forbidden fruit to bee a step and a stayre to rise higher and to be like God Himselfe 6. Fearefull contempt of God making bold to rush upon the sword of the threatning secretly not fearing the plague denounced 7. Horrible unthankfulnesse when God had given him all but one tree and yet he must be singring that too 8. Horrible theft in taking that which was none of his owne 9. Horrible Idolatry in doting upon and loving the creature more than God the Creator who is blessed for ever You therefore that now say no man can say blacke is your eye you have lived civilly all your dayes looke upon this one grievous sin take a full view of it which thou hast never shed one teare for as yet and see thy misery by it and wonder at Gods patience He hath spared thee who wast borne branded with it and hast lived guilty of it and must perish for ever for it if the Lord from Heaven pity thee not But here is not all consider secondly every man is borne stark dead in sinne Ephes. 2. 1. he is borne empty of every inward principle of life voyde of all graces and hath no more good in him whatsoever hee thinkes then a dead Carrion hath And hence he is under the power of sin as a dead man is under the power of death and cannot performe any act of life their bodies are living coffins to carry a dead soule up and downe in 'T is true I confesse many wicked men do many good actions as praying hearing almesdeeds but it is not from any inward principle of life Externall motives like plummets on a dead yet artificiall clock set them a running Iehu was zealous but it was only for a kingdome the Pharisees gave alms only ●o be seene of men If one write a Will with a dead mans hand deceased that Will can hold no Law it was not his Will because it was not writ by him by any inward principle of life of his own Pride makes a man preach pride makes a man heare and pray sometimes Selfe-love stirs up strang desires in men so that wee may say this is none of Gods Act by his grace in the soule but Pride and selfe-love Bring a dead man to the fire and chase him and rubbe him you may produce some heate by this externall working upon him but take him from the fire againe and he is soone cold so many a man that lives under a sound Minister under the lashes and knockes of a chiding striving Conscience he hath some heate in him some affections some feares some desires some
upon these duties and strivings that have beene but poore Physitians to them Oh looke up here to the Lord Jesus who can doe that cure for thee in a moment which all creatures cannot doe in many yeares What bolts what strong fetters what unruly lusts temptations and miseries art thou lockt into Behold the Deliverer is come out of Sion having satisfied Justice and paid a price to ●anisome poore Captives Luc. 4. 18. with the Keyes of Heaven Hell and thy unruly heart in his hand to fetch thee out with great mercy and strong hand who knowes but thou poore prisoner of Hell thou poore Captive of the Devill thou poore shackled sinner mayst be one whom he is come for● Oh looke up to him sigh to Heaven for deliverance from him and be glad and rejoyce at his comming This strikes terrour to them that though there is a meanes of deliverance yet they lye in their misery never groane never sigh to the Lord Jesus for deliverance nay that rejoyce in their bondage and dance to Hell in their bolts nay that are weary of deliverance that sit in the stockes when they are at prayers that come out of the Church when the tedious Sermon runs somewhat beyond the hou●e like prisoners out of a Jaile that despise the Lord Jesus when he offers to open the doores and so let them out of that miserable estate Oh poore creatures is there a meanes of deliverance and dost thou neglect nay despise it Know it that this will cut thine heart one day when thou art hanging in thy gibbets in Hell to see others standing at Gods right hand redeemed by Christ thou mightst have had share in their honour for there was a Deliverer come to save thee but thou wouldst have none of him Oh thou wilt lye yelling in those everlasting burnings and teare thy haire and curse thy selfe from hence might I have been delivered but I would not Hath Christ delivered thee from Hell and hath he not delivered thee from thine Alehouse Hath Christ delivered thee from Sathans societie when he hath not delivered thee from thy loose company yet Hath Christ delivered thee from burning when thy faggots thy sins grow in thee Is Christs bloud thine that mak'st no more account of it nor feelest no more vertue from it than in the bloud of a chicken Art thou redeemed dost thou hope by Christ to be saved that didst never see nor feele nor sigh under thy bondage O the devils will keepe holiday as it were in hell in respect of thee who shalt mourne under Gods wrath and lament Oh there was a meanes to deliver us out of it but thou shalt mourne for ever for thy misery And this will bee a bodkin at thine heart one day to thinke there was a deliverer but I wretch would none of him Here likewise is matter of Reproofe to such as seeke to come out of this misery from and by themselves If they be ignorant they hope to be saved by their good meaning and prayers If Civill by paying all they owe and doing as they would be done by and by doing no body any harme If they be troubled about their estates then they lick themselves whole by their mourning repenting and reforming Oh poore stubble canst thou stand before this consuming fire without sin Canst thou make thy selfe a Christ for thy selfe Canst thou beare come from under an infinite wrath canst thou bring in perfect righteousnesse into the presence of God This Christ must doe else he could not satisfie and redeeme And if thou canst not doe thus and hast no Christ define and pray that heaven and earth shake till thou hast worne thy tongue to the stumps endeavour as much as thou canst and others commend thee for a diligent Christian mourne in some Wildernesse till doomes day digge thy grave there with thy nayles weepe buckets full of hourely teares till thou canst weepe no more Fast and Pray till thy skin and bones cleave together Promise and Purpose with full resolution to be better nay reforme thy head heart life tongue some nay all sinnes live like an Angell shine like a sunne walke up and downe the world like a distressed Pilgrim going to another Countrey so that all Christians commend and admire thee Die ten thousand deaths lie at the firebacke in Hell so many millions of yeares as there be piles of grasse on the earth or sands upon the Sea-shore or starres in heaven or motes in the Sun I tell thee not one sparke of Gods wrath against thy sinne shall be can be quenched by all these duties nor by any of these sorrowes or teares for these are not the blood of Christ. Nay if all the Angels and Saints in heaven and earth should pray for thee these cannot deliver thee for they are not the blood of Christ. Nay God as a Creator having made a law will not forgive one sinne without the blood of Christ Nay Christs blood will not doe it neither if thou doest joyne never so little that thou hast or doest unto Jesus Christ and makest thy selfe or any of thy duties copartners with Christ in that great worke of saving thee Cry out therefore as that blessed Martyr did None but Christ none but Christ. Take heed of neglecting or rejecting so great salvation by Jesus Christ. Take heede of spilling this potion that onely can cure thee But thou wilt say this meanes of redemption is onely appointed for some it is not intended for all therefore not for mee therefore how can I reject Christ It is true Christ spent not his breath to pray for all Iohn 17. 9. much lesse his bloud for all therefore he was never intended as a Redeemer of all But that he is not intended as a Deliver of thee How doth this follow How dost thou know this But secondly I say Though Christ be not intended for all yet he is offered unto all and therefore unto thee And the ground is this chiefly The universall offer of Christ ariseth not from Christs Priestly office immediately but from his Kingly office whereby the Father having given him all power and dominion in heaven earth he hereupon commands all men to stoop unto him and likewise bids all his Disciples and all their successours to goe and preach the Gospell to every creature under Heaven Mat. 28. 18 19 For Christ doth not immediat●ly offer himselfe to all men as a Saviour whereby ●hey may be incouraged to serve him as a King but first as a King commanding them to cast away their weapons and stoop unto his Scepter and depend upon his free mercy acknowledging if ever he save me I will bles●e him if he damne me his name is right●ous in so dealing with me But that I may fasten this exhortation I will shew these foure things I. The Lord Jesus is offered to every particular person which I will shew thus What hast thou to say against it
one shall have it Therefore say as those Lepers in Samaria if I stay here in my sinnes I die if I goe out to the Campe of the Syrians wee may live wee can but die however if I goe out of Christ I may get mercy how ever I can but dye and it is better to dye at Christs feete than in thine owne puddle Content not your selves therefore with your bare reformation and amending your lives this is but to crosse the debt in thine owne booke it remaineth uncancelled in the Creditors booke still but goe take offer up this eternall sacrifice before the eyes of God the Father and cry guilty at his barre and looke for mercy from him sigh under thy bondage that as Moses was sent unto the Israelites so may Christ be sent into thy soule Rest not therefore in the sight or sense of a helplesse condition saying I cannot helpe my selfe unlesse Christ doth sigh unto the Lord Jesus in Heaven for succour and admire the Lord for ever that when there was no helpe and when he might have raised out of the stones children to praise him yet he should send his Sonne out of his bosome to save thee So much for this particular The fifth Divine Principle followes to be handled CHAP. V THat those that are saved out of this estate are very few and that those that are saved are saved with very much difficulty Matth. 7. 14. Straight is the gate and narrow is the way that leadeth unto life and few there be that finde it Here are two parts 1. The paucity of them that shall be saved few finde the way thither 2. The difficulty of being saved straight and narrow is the way and gate unto life Hence arise two Doctrines 1. That the number of them that shall be saved is very small Luk. 13. 24. the devill hath his drove and swarmes that goe to hell as fast as bees to their hive Christ hath his flock and that is but a little flock hence Gods children are called Iewells Mal. 3. 17. which commonly are kept secret in respect of the other lumber in the house hence they are called strangers and pilgrims which are very few in respect of the inhabitants of the Countrey through which they passe hence they are called Sonnes of God 1 Iohn 3. 2. of the bloud royall which are few in respect of common subjects But see the truth of this point in these two things First Looke to all ages and times of the world Secondly to all places and persons in the world and wee shall see few men were saved 1. Looke to all ages and we shall finde but a handfull saved Assoone as ever the Lord began to keepe house and there were but two familyes in it there was a bloudy Cain living and a good Abel slaine And as the world increased in number so in wickednesse Gen. 6. 12. it is said All flesh had corrupted their wayes and amongst so many thousand men not one righteous but Noah and his family and yet in the Arke there crept in a cursed Cham. Afterwards as Ab●ahams posteritie increased so we see their sinne abounded When his posteritie was in Egypt where one would thinke if ever men were good now it would appeare being so heavily afflicted by Pharaoh being by so many miracles miraculously delivered by the hand of Moses yet most of these God was wroth with Heb. 3. 12. and onely two of them Caleb and Iosua went into Canaan a type of Heaven Looke into Solomons time what glorious times what great profession was there then yet after his death ten Tribes fell to the odious sin of Idolatry following the command of Ieroboam their King Looke further into Isaiahs time when there were multitudes of sacrifices and prayers Isay 1. 11. yet then there was but a remnant nay a very little remnant that should be saved And looke to the time of Christs comming in the flesh for I pick out the best times of all when one would thinke by such Sermons he preached such miracles he wrought such a life as he led all the Iewes should have entertained him yet 't is said He came unto his owne and they received him not So few that Christ himselfe admires at one good Nathaniel Behold an Israelise in whom there is no guile In the Apostles time many indeed were converted but few comparatively and amongst the best Churches many bad as that at Philippi Phil. 3. 18. many had a name to live but were dead and few onely kept their garments unspotted And presently after the Apostles time many grievous wolves came and devoured the sheepe and so in succeeding ages Revel 12. 9. all the earth wondered at the whore in Scarlet And in Luthers time when the light began to arise againe he saw so many carnall Gospellers that he breaks out in one Sermon into these speeches God grant I may never live to see those bloody dayes that are comming upon an ungodly world Latimer saw so much prophanenesse in his time that he thought verily Doomes day was just at hand And have not our eyes seene in the Palatinate where scarce one man in twenty that stood out but fell from their glorious profession to Popery as fast as leaves fall in Autumne Who would have thought there had lurked such hearts under such a shew of detesting Popery as was among them before And at Christs comming shall he finde faith on the earth 2. Let us looke into all places and persons and see how few shall be saved The world is now split into foure parts Europe Asia Africa and America and the three biggest parts are drowned in a deluge of prophanenesse and superstition they doe not so much as professe Christ you may see the sentence of death writ on these mens foreheads Ier. 10. ult But let us look upó the best part of the world and that is Europe how few shall be saved there First The Grecian Church howsoever now in these dayes their good Patriarch of Constantinople is about a generall Reformation among them and hath done much good yet are they for the present and have been for the most part of them without the saving meanes of knowledge They content themselves with their old superstitions having little or no Preaching at all And for the other parts as Italy Spaine France Germany for the most part they are Popish and see the end of these men 2 Thes. 1. 9. And now amongst them that carry the badge of honesty I will not speake what mine eares have heard my heart beleeves concerning other Churches I will come into our owne Church of England which is the most flourishing Church in the world never had Church such Preachers such meanes yet have we not some Chappels and Churches stand as dark lanthornes without light where people are led with blind or idle or licentious Ministers and so both fall into the ditch Nay even amongst them that have the
a swell as pray So did the Scribes and Pharisees even twice a week which could not be publike but private fasts And yet this righteousnesse could never save them But I heare the word of God and like the best Preachers This thou mayest doe too and yet never be saved Nay thou mayest so heare as to receive much joy and comfort in hearing nay to beleeve and catch hold on Christ and so say and thinke he is thine and yet not be saved as the stony ground did Mat. 13. who heard the word with joy and for a season beleeved I reade the Scriptures often This you may doe too and yet never be saved as the Pharisees who were so perfect in reading the Bible that Christ needed but onely say It hath been said of old time for they knew the text and place well enough without intimation But I am grieved and am sorrowfull and repent for my sinnes past Iudas did thus Matth. 27. 3. he repents himselfe with a legall repentance for feare of hell and with a naturall sorrow for dealing so unkindly with Christ in betraying not onely of bloud but innocent bloud True humiliation is ever accompanied with hearty reformation Oh! but I love good men and their company So did the five foolish Virgins love the company and at the time of extremitie the very oyle and grace of the wise yet they were locked out of the gates of mercy But God hath given me more knowledge then others or then I my selfe had once This thou mayest have and be able to teach others and thinke so of thy selfe too and yet never be saved But I keepe the Lords day strictly So did the Jewes whom yet Christ condemned and were never saved I have very many good desires and endeavours to get Heaven These thou thousands may have and yet misse of Heaven Many shall seeke to enter in at that narrow gate and not be able True thou wilt say many men doe many duties but without any life or zeale I am zealous So thou mayest be and yet never saved as Iehu Paul was zealous when he was a Pharisee and if he was so for a false Religion and a bad cause why much more mayest thou be for a good cause so zealous as not onely to cry out against prophanenesse in the wicked but civill honesty of others and hypocrisie of others yea even of the coldnesse of the best of Gods people thou mayest be the fore-horse in the teame and the ringleader of good exercises amongst the best men as Ioash a wicked King was the first that complained of the negligence of his best Officers in not repairing the Temple and so stirre them up unto it Nay thou mayest be so forward as to bee persecuted and not yeeld an inch nor shrinke in the wetting but mayest manfully and couragiously stand it out in time of persecution as the thorny ground did so zealous thou mayst be as to like best of and to flock most unto the most zealous preachers that search mens cōsciences best as the whole Countrey of Iudea came flocking to Iohns ministry and delighted to heare him for a season nay thou mayst be zealous as to take sweet delight in doing of all these things Isa. 58 2 3. they delight in approaching neare unto God yet come short of heaven But thou wilt say True many a man rides post that breaks his neck at last many a man is zealous but his fire is soone quench'd his zeale is soone spent they hold not out Whereas I am constant and persevere in godly courses So did that young man yet he was a gracelesse man Matth. 19. 20. All these things have I done from my youth what lack I yet It is true Hypocrites may persevere but they know themselves to be naught all the while and so deceive others but I am perswaded that I am in Gods favour and in a safe and happy estate since I doe all with a good heart for God This thou mayst verily think of thy selfe and yet be deceived and damned and goe to the Devill at last There is a way saith Salomon that seemeth right to a man but the end thereof is the way of death For he is an hypocrite not onely that makes a seeming outward shew of what he hath not but also that hath a true shew of what indeed there is not The first sort of Hypocrites deceive others onely the latter having some inward yet common worke deceive themselves too I am 1. 26. If any man seeme to be religious so many are and so deceive the world but it is added deceiving his owne soule Nay thou mayst goe so fairely and live so honestly that all the best Christians about thee may thinke well of thee never suspect thee and so mayst passe through the world and dye with a deluded comfort that thou shalt goe to heaven and be canonized for a Saint in thy funerall sermon and never know thou art counterfeit till the L O R D brings thee to thy strict and last examination and so thou receivest that dreadfull sentence Goe yee cursed so it was with the Five foolish Virgins that were never discovered by the wise nor by themselves untill the gate of grace was shut upon them If thou hast therefore no better evidences to shew for thy selfe that thine estate is good then these I le not give a pinnes point for all thy flattering false hopes of being saved but it may be thou hast never yet come so farre as to this pitch and if not Lord what will become of thee Suspect thy selfe much and when in this Ship-wracke of soules thou seest so many thousands sinke cry out and conclude It 's a wonder of wonders and a thousand and a thousand to one if ever thou commest safe to shoare Oh! strive then to be one of them that shall be saved though it cost thee thy bloud and the losse of all that thou hast labour to goe beyond all those that goe so farre and yet perish at the last Doe not say that seeing so few shall be saved therefore this discourageth me from seeking because all my labour may be in vaine Consider that Christ here makes another and a better use of it Luk. 13. 24. Seeing that many shall seeke and not enter therefore saith he strive to enter in at the straight gate venture at least and try what the Lord will doe for thee Wherein doth a childe of GOD and so how may I goe beyond these Hypocrites that goe so farre In three things principally First no unregenerate man though he goe never so farre let him doe never so much but he lives in some one sinne or other secret or open little or great Iudas went farre but he was covetous Herod went farre but hee loved his Herodias Every dogge hath his kennell
and flames of hell for a heart as stiffe as a stake to bow as hard as stone to bleed for the least prick not to mourne for one sin but all sinnes and not for a sit but all a mans life time Oh it is hard for a man to suff●r himselfe to be loaden with sin and prest to death for sinne so as never to love sinne m●re but to spit in the face of that which he once loved as dearely as his life It is easie to drop a teare or two and be sermon sick but to have a heart rent for sinne and from sinne 〈◊〉 is is true humiliation and this is hard 2. The straight gate of Faith Eph. 1. 19. its an easie matter to presume but hard to beleeve in Christ. It is easie for a man that was never humbled to beleeve and say 't is but beleeving but it is an hard matter for a man humbled when he seeth all his sinnes in order before him the devill and conscience roaring upon him and crying out against him and God ●rowning upon him now to call God Fath●r is an hard worke Iudas had rather be hanged than b●leeve It is hard to see a Christ as a rocke to stand upon when wee are overwhelmed with sorrow of heart for sin It is hard to prize Christ above ten thousand worlds of pearle 't is hard to desire Christ and nothing but Christ hard to follow Christ all the day long and never to be quiet till he is got in thine armes and then with Simeon to say Lord now lettest thou thy servant depart in peace 3. The straight gate of Repentance It is an easie matter for a man to confesse a mans selfe to be a sinner and to cry God forgivenesse untill next time but to have a bitter sorrow and so to turne from all sinne and to returne to God and all the wayes of God which is true repentance indeed this is hard 4. The straight gate of opposition of Devills the world and a mans owne selfe who knock a man downe when he begins to looke towards Christ and Heaven Hence learne that every easie way to Heaven is a false way although Ministers should pre●ch it out of their Pulpits and Angels should publish it out of Heaven Now there are nine easie waies to Heave as men thinke all which leade to Hell 1. The common broad way wherein a whole parish may all goe a breadth in it tell these people they shall bee damned their answer is then woe to many more besides me 2. The way of civill education whereby many wilde natures are by little and little tamed and like wolves are chained up easily while they are young 3. Balams way of good wishes whereby many people will confesse their ignorance forgetfulnesse and that they cannot make such shews as others doe but they thanke God their hearts are as good and God for his part accepts they say the will for the deed And My sonne give me thine heart the heart is all in all and so long they hope to doe well enough Poore deluded creatures thus thinke to breake through armies of sinnes devils temptations and to breake open the very gates of Heaven with a few good wishes they think to come to their journeys end without legs because their hearts are good to God 4. The way of formalitie whereby men rest in the performance of most or of all externall duties without inward life Mark 1. 14. Every man must have some Religion some fig-leaves to hide their nakednesse Now this Religion must be either true Religion or the false one if the true he must either take up the power of it but that hee will not because it is burdensome or the forme of it and this being easie men embrace it as their God and will rather lose their lives than their Religion thus taken up This forme of Religion is the easiest Religion in the world partly because it easeth men of trouble of conscience quieting that Thou hast sinned saith conscience and God is offended take a book and pray keepe thy conscience better and bring thy Bible with thee Now conscience is silent being charmed downe with the forme of Religion as the devill is driven away as they say with holy water partly also because the forme of Religion credits a man partly because it is easie in it selfe it 's of a light carriage being but the shadow and picture of the substance of Religion as now what an easie matter is it to come to Church They heare at least out wardly very attentively an houre and more and then to turne to a proofe and to turne downe a leafe here 's the forme But now to spend saturday at night and all the whole Sabbath day morning in trimming the Lampe and in getting oyle in the heart to meete the bridegroome the next day and so meete him in the word and there to tremble at the voice of God and suck the brest while it is open and when the word is done to goe aside privately and there to chew upon the word there to lament with teares all the vaine thoughts in duties deadnesse in hearing this is hard because this is the power of godlinesse and this men will not take up so for private prayer what an easie matter it is for a man to say over a few prayers out of some devout booke or to repeate some old prayer got by heart since a childe or to have two or three short-winded wishes for GODS mercy in the morning and at night this forme is easie but now to prepare the heart by serious meditation of God and mans selfe before he prayes then to come to God with a bleeding hunger-starved heart not only with a desire but with a warrant I must h●ve such or such a mercy and thereto wrastle with God although it be an houre or two together for a blessing this is too hard men thinke none doe thus and therefore they will not Fifthly the way of presumption whereby men having seene their sins catch hold easily upon Gods mercy and snatch comforts before they are reached out unto them There is no word of comfort in the Booke of God intended for such as regard iniquitie in their hearts though they doe not act it in their lives Their onely comfort is that the sentence of damnation is not yet executed upon them Sixthly the way of sloth whereby men lye still and say God must doe all If the Lord would set up a Pulpit at the Ale-house doore it may be they would heare oftner If God will alwaies thunder they will alwaies pray if strike them now and then with sicknesse God shall be payed with good words and promises enow that they will be better if they live but as long as peace lasts they will run to Hell as fast as they can and if God will not catch them they care not they will not returne Seventhly The way of carelesnesse when men feeling many difficulties passe
Or else they say commonly thou hast sinned but comfort thy selfe despaire not Christ hath suffered and thus skin over the wound and let it fester within for want of cutting it deeper I say the●efore because they want a faithfull watch-man to cry fire fire in that sleepy estate of sinne and darknesse vvherein they lye therefore whole Townes Parishes generations of men are burnt up and perish miserably Lam. 2. 14. Secondly because they have no leisure to consider of their misery when they have the meanes of revealing it unto them as Foelix Acts 24 25. Many a man hath many a bitter pill given him at a Sermon but he hath no leisure to chew upon it One man is taken up with suites in Law and another almost eaten up with suretiship and carking cares how to pay his debts and provide for his owne another hath a great charge and few friends and hee saith the world is hard and hence like a Mole rootes in the earth week-dayes and Sabath-dayes the world thus calling them on one side and lusts on another and the Devill on the other side they have no leisure to consider of Death Devill God nor themselves Hell nor Heaven The Minister cryes and knockes without but there is such a noise and lumber of tumultuous lusts and vaine thoughts in their hearts and heads that all good thoughts are sad unwelcome guests and are knockt downe presently Thirdly because if they have leisure they are afraid to knovv it Hence people cry out of Ministers that they damne all and will heare them no more and they vvill not bee such fooles as to beleeve all that such say the reason is they are afraid to know the vvorst of themselves they are afraid to be cut an● therefore cannot indure the Chirurgion they thinke to be troubled in mind as others are is the very high-rode to despaire and therefore if they doe heare a tale how one after hearing of a Sermon grew distracted or drowned or hanged hi● selfe it shall be an item an a warning to them as long as they ●●ve for troubling their heads about such matters Men of guilty consciences hence flie from the face of God as prisoners from the Iudge as debtors from the Creditor But if the Lord of Hosts c●n catch you you must and shall ●eele with horrour of heart that which you feare a little now Fourthly because if they be free from this foolish feare they cannot see their misery by reason that they looke upon their est●tes through false glasses and by vertue of many false princip●es in their minds they cheat themselves Which false Principles are these principally I vvill but name them First They conceive God that 〈◊〉 them will not be so cruell as to dam●● them Secondly because they feele no misery but are very well therefore they feare none Thirdly because God blesseth thē in their outward estates in their Corne childrē calling friends c. would God blesse them so i● he did not love them Fourthly because they thinke sinne to be no great evill for all are sinners so this cannot mischieve them Fifthly because they thinke Gods mercy is above all his workes though sinne be vile yet conceiving God to be all mercy all honey and no justice they thinke they are well Sixthly because they thinke Christ dyed for all sinners and they confesse themselves to be great ones Seventhly because they hope well and so thinke to have vvell Eightly because they do as most do who never crying out of their sinnes while they lived dying like Lambs at last they doubt not for their parts doing as such doe they shall dye happily as others have done Ninthly because their desires and hearts are good as they thinke Tenthly because they doe as vvell as God will give them grace and so God is in the fault onely if they perish These are the reasons and grounds upon which profane people are deceived Novv it follovveth to shew the grounds on which the finer sort miscarry Secondly Hollow Professors cheat and cozen their ovvne soules It is in our Church as it is in an old Wood where there are many tall Trees yet cut them and search them deeply they prove pithlesse saplesse hollow unsound creatures These men twist their ovvne ruine vvith a finer thread and can juggle better then the common sort and cast mists before their owne eyes and so cheat their ovvne soules It 's Ministers first work to turne men from darknesse into this light Act. 26. 18. and the Spirits first worke to convince men of sinne Ioh. 16. 9. and therefore it's peoples maine worke to know the worst at first of themselves Novv the cause of these mens mistaking is three-fold First the spirituall madnesse and drunkennesse of their Vnderstanding Secondly the false bastard peace begot and nourished in the Conscience Thirdly the sly and secret distempers of the Will First There are these seven drunken distempers in the understanding or minde of man whereby he commeth to be most miserably deceived First the understandings Arrogancie You shall never see a man meane and vile in his owne eyes deceived Psal. 25. 9. but a proud man or woman is often cheated Hence proud Haman thought surely hee was the man whom the King would honour vvhen in truth it was intended for poore Mo●decay For pride having once overspread the mind it ever hath this property it makes a penny stand for a pound a sparke is blown up to a flame it makes a great matter of a little seeming grace and therefore the proud Pharisee when hee came to reckon with himselfe hee takes his poore counter that is I am not as other men nor as this Publican and sets it downe for 1000. pound that is hee esteemes of himselfe as a very rich man for it So many a man because hee hath some good thing in himselfe as hee is pittifull to the poore hee is a true man though a poore man hee was never given to wine or women Hee magnifieth himselfe for this title and so deceives and over-reckons himselfe There are your Bristow-stones like Diamonds and many cheaters cozen Countrey folkes with them that desire to bee fine and know not what Diamonds are So many men are desirous to be honest and to be reputed so not knowing what true grace meanes therefore Bristow-stones are p●●rles in their eyes A little seeming grace shines so bright in their eyes that they are halfe bewitched by it to thinke highly of themselves although they be but glittering seeming jewels in a swines snout A cab of Doves dung was sould in Samaria's time of famine at a great rate a man living in such a place where all about him are either ignorant or prophane or civill a little morall honesty dung in respect of true grace goes a great way and is esteemed highly of and he is as honest a man as ever lived A man that lookes through a red glasse all things appeare red a man
to all the truthes delivered in a Sermon and commend it too but goe a way and shake off all truthes that serve to convince them And hence many men when they examine themselves in generall whether they have grace or no whether they love Christ or no they think yes that they doe withall their hearts yet they neither have this grace or any other what ever they thinke because they want a reflecting light to judge of generalls by their owne particular courses For tell these men that he that loves another truely will often thinke of him speake of him rejoyce in his company will not wrong him willingly in the least thing Now aske them if they love Christ thus If they have any reflecting of light they will see where they have one thought of Christ they have 1000. on other things Rejoyce nay they are weary of his company in word in prayer And that they doe not onely wrong him but make a light matter of it when it is done all are sinners and no man can live without sin Like a sleepy man fire burning in his bed-straw he cryes not out when others haply lament his estate that see a farre off but cannot helpe him Isay 42. 25. A man that is to be hanged the next day may dreame overnight hee shall be a King why because hee is asleepe hee reflects not on himselfe Thou mayest goe to the Devill and be damned and yet ever thinke and dreame that all is well with thee Thou hast no reflecting light to judge of thy selfe Pray pray therefore that the Lord would turne your eyes inward and doe not let the Devill and delusion shut you out of your owne house from seeing what Court is kept there every day Fiftly the understandings impiety whereby it lessens and vilifies the glorious grace of God in another whence it comes to passe that this deluded soule seeing none much better then himselfe concludes if any be saved ● shall no doubt be one Isay 26. 10 11. Men will not behold the Majesty of God in the lives of his people many a man being too light yet desirous to goe and passe for current weighs himselfe with the best people and thinkes what have they that J have not what doe they that J doe not and if he see they goe beyond him he then turnes his owne ballance with his finger and makes them too light that so he himselfe may passe for weight And this vilifying of them and their grace judging them to be of no other mettall then other men appeares in three particulars First they raise up false reports of Gods people and nourish a kennell of evill suspitions of them if they know any sin committed by them they will conclude they be all such if they see no offensive sinne in any of them they are then reputed a pack of Hypocrites If they are not so uncharitable having no grounds they prophesy they will hereafter be as bad as others though they carry a faire flourish now Secondly if they judge well of them then they compare themselves to them by taking a scantling onely by their outside and by what they see in them and so like children seeing stars a great way off think them no bigger nor brighter then winking candles They stand a far off from seeing the inside of a child of God they see not the glory of God filling that temple they see not the sweet influence they receive from heaven and that fellowship they have with their God and hence they judge but meanly of them because the out side of a Christian is the worst part of him and his glory shines chiefly within Thirdly if they see Gods people doe excell them that they have better lives and better hearts better knowledge yet they will not conclude that they have no grace because it hath not that stamp that honest mens money hath But this prank they play they think such and such good men have a greater measure and a higher degree of grace then themselves yet they dare be bold to thinke and say their hearts are as upright though they be not so perfect as others are And so vilifie the grace that shines in the best men by making this gold to differ from their owne copper not essentially but gradually and hence they deceive themselves miserably not but that one starre or sincere Christian differs from another in glory I speake of those men onely that never were fixt in so high a sphere as true honesty dwells yet falsely father this bad conclusion that they are upright for their measure that they have not the like measure of grace received as others have Sixthly the understandings idolatry whereby the mind sets up and bowes down to a false image of grace that is the minde being ignorant of the height and excellence of true grace takes a false scantling of it and so imagins and fancies within it selfe such a measure of common grace to be true grace which the soule easily having attained unto conceives it is in the state of grace and so deceives it selfe miserably Rom. 10. 3. And the minde comes to set up her image thus First the minde is haunted and pursued with troublesome feares of Hell Conscience tells him hee hath sinned and the Law tells him he shall die and Death appeares and tells him he must shortly meere with him And if he be taken away in his sinnes then comes a black day of reckoning for all his privie prankes a day of bloud horrour judgement and fire where no creature can comfort him Hence saith hee Lord keepe my soule from these miseries hee hopeth it shall not prove so evill with him but feares it will Secondly Hereupon hee desireth peace and ease and some assurance of freedome from these evils For it is an Hell above ground ever to be on the wrack of tormenting feares Thirdly That he may have ease he will not swagger his trouble away nor drowne it in the bottome of the cup nor throw it away with his Dice nor play it away at Cards but desires some grace and commonly it 's the least measure of it too Hereupon he desires to heare such Sermons and read such Bookes as may best satisfie him concerning the least measure of grace for sinne onely troubling him grace onely can comfort him soundly And so Grace which is meate and drinke to an holy heart is but Physicke to this kinde of men to ease them of their feares and troubles Hereupon being ignorant of the height of true grace he fancieth to himselfe such a measure of common grace to be true grace As if he feeles himselfe ignorant of that which troubles him so much knowledge will I then get saith he ●f some foule sinnes in his practise trouble him these he will cast away and so reformes If omission of good duties molests him he will heare better and buy some good Prayer-booke and pray oftner And if he be perswaded such a man is a very