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A41124 The riches of grace a treatise shewing the value and excellency of a gracious spirit by comparing it with the nature and spirits of wicked and ungodly men, which desire not the wayes of the Lord Jesus / by that reverend and faithfull minister of Gods word, William Fenner ... Fenner, William, 1600-1640. 1641 (1641) Wing F697; ESTC R6526 27,782 148

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or any other thing and therefore he prayes Oh when wilt thou comfort me but alas men suffer themselves to be filled with this and that lust with some corruptions or other Now when a mans purse is full of stones there is no roome for silver so when the heart is full of sinne there is no roome for grace Joh. 8. 37. My Words saith Christ to the Jewes have no place in you As a great Inne filled with guests all the roome is taken up so as there is no roome for others and by reason of the noyse they cannot heare what others call for so it is when the soule is filled with sinne continually bawling for tendance and accomplishment there is no roome for the Word of God to enter all the roomes are taken up there are guests in every corner all the faculties are filled Therefore the Apostle James Jam. 1. 21. exhorts them Wherefore lay aside all malice and superfluity of naughtinesse and receive with meekenesse the ingrafted Word which is able to save your soules all superfluity of wickednesse sinne and evill though it be never so small or little it is superfluity and therefore if ever you would take physick take it fasting if you desire it should doe you most good so there is no taking of the Word of God or any meanes of Salvation to have any profit by them upon a full stomach as when the heart is filled with sinne with pride envy malice hypocrisie earthlinesse deadnesse untowardnesse to godly duties If thou wouldst desire grace consider the want of it wert thou never so gracelesse yet if thou didst but know the want of it thou wouldst desire it without grace thou art childe of hell a brat of the devill and an heire to the curse of the great God better had it beene for thee that thou hadst beene borne a dogge or a toade a serpent or any thing else than to be borne to live and dye without Grace Art thou proud and hast not grace to bee humbled know God will know thee a farre off and then woe woe damnation is thy end Livest thou in any sinne and hast not grace to mortifie and in time to kill it better had it beene for thee that thy cradle had beene thy Coffin and thy mothers womb thy grave than that thou shouldst live to sinne and dye without repentance O cursed art thou there are not so many letters in Gods booke as thou hast curses for thy portion it would burst thy heart with griefe if it were sensible of the 100000. part of that woefull griefe My heart breaketh for the longing for thy judgement the Prophet considering what a fearefull thing it was to bee without the comfort of Gods word it breakes his very soule True desire of grace is sensible of the want of it I say not therefore that it is without grace for there is difference betweene being in want of a thing and being without a thing a man may be in want of full health and strength and yet not without health and strength so a Christian seeing in himselfe not to have attained to the full degree of grace desiring after it is sensible of the want of it A dead man yee may carry to London or whither you will he never desires to baite in the way hee feeles no hunger nor thirst whereas a living man cannot travaile long but necessity of nature calls for refreshment a fearefull signe that men are dead in sinne and in the state of eternall death seeing they can travaile up and downe their whole lives and yet feele no want of grace Answ 5 Lastly feare to offend God the feare of evill is the desire of good feare to transgresse against Gods Commandements feare to pray coldly feare to have a by thought at any of the Ordinances of God feare to bee proud feare to carry malice and thoughts of revenge feare to do any evill to displease thy heavenly Father This feare is a marke of true repentance 2 Cor. 7. 11. Where there is most feare there is most desire What is the reason that women are most subject to desire but because they are most fearfull What is the reason that Stags and Harts as King James excellently noteth are so thirsty after revenge but because they are timerous and fearefull by nature Who desire most to be exalted to this and that honour place and office of credit and preferment but such as feare they shall never have honour enough Who are more covetous than they that feare they shall never have riches enough Would I urge you to the desire of grace I thinke I can bring such motives out of the Word of God as will either leave you in the gall of bitternesse or else make you to desire grace Mot. 1 Grace is like the poore man Solomon speakes of in Eccles. 9. 15. who when a King had besieged a City yet he by his wisdome delivered it but no man remembred this poore man though they had beene all dead men had not he by his wisdome delivered them yet no man accounted or esteemed of him So it is with grace were it not for grace we should all be damned and albeit that grace doth bring Salvation among us yet where is the man that truely accounts of it even so as to desire it Mot. 2 Consider that there is no good indeede good to thee but onely in grace What is it that men desire is it not good Psal. 4. Many say who will shew us any good some good or other all seeme to ayme at but it is a wonder what wide aymes men take some think it is in pleasure and therefore ayme onely how they may spend the time merrily in eating and drinking in hawking and hunting in carding and dicing and the like some thinke it in honour and some in riches some in learning some in one thing and some in another but alas thou mayst eate and drinke and yet be damned when thou hast done thou mayst desire much gold and silver and yet perish in hell after thou hast got it thou mayst desire honour and promotion and yet bee damned when thou hast attained it these are true but vaine goods outward and temporary good onely in reference to a further good so that if a man should rest on them he should lose all his good Our Saviour Christ puts a base Pronoune upon them calling them these things as if they were not worthy the naming Mat. 6. 33. Seeke first the Kingdome of God and the righteousnesse thereof and all these things shall be added unto you Where our Saviour forbids his Disciples the seeking of earthly things In the first place talke not of these things neither let your thoughts bee troubled about them for they are not what they seeme or as many judge them to be but if you would have the true good first secke the Kingdome of heaven So in James 5. 1 2 3. Goe too now ye rich men weepe and howle for the