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A02178 The workes of the reuerend and faithfull seruant af Iesus Christ M. Richard Greenham, minister and preacher of the Word of God collected into one volume: reuised, corrected, and published, for the further building of all such as loue the truth, and desire to know the power of godlinesse. By H.H.; Works Greenham, Richard.; Holland, Henry, 1555 or 6-1603.; Hill, Robert, d. 1623. 1612 (1612) STC 12318; ESTC S120843 1,539,296 988

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people and so for mee How gather you this By the annointing of Prophets Priests and Kings which were figures of him Was Christ annointed with materiall oyle as they were No but he was annointed with all gifts of the holie Spirit without measure Why d●e you call him Prophet Because hee was he is and euer shall be the onely teacher of the Church What were then the Prophets and Apostles They were his Disciples and seruants and spake by his spirit What comfort haue you by this Hereby I am sure that he will leade me into all truth reuealed in his word needfull for Gods glorie and my saluation Why call you him Priest Because offering vp himselfe a sacrifice once for all he hath satisfied for all my sinnes and maketh continuall intercession to the Father for me What comfort haue you by the Priesthood of Christ Hereby I am assured that he is my Mediatour and that I also am made a Priest How are you made a Priest By him I haue freedome and boldnes to drawe neere and offer my selfe and all that I haue to God the Father Why call you him King Because ●e doth guide and gouerne me vnto euerlasting life by his word and spirit What comfort haue you by this Hereby I am assured that by his kingly power I shall finally ouercome the flesh the world the diuell death and hell Why call you him Lord Because not with gold nor siluer but with his precious bloud hee hath purchased vs to bee a peculiar people to himselfe What comfort haue you by this Seeing he hath paid such a price for mee he will not suffer me to perish What is the second thing wherein the faith of Christ consisteth Secondly I beleeue that he hath wrought my saluation indeed after that manner that is set downe in the Creede After what manner hath he wrought your saluation 1 By his most painfull sufferings for sinne 2 By his most glorious victorie and triumph ouer sinne In what words are his most painfull sufferings expressed In these words Suffered vnder Pontius Pilate was crucified dead and buried he descended into hell What is the generall meaning of these words By them I shew my selfe to beleeue that Christ endured most grieuous torments both of body and soule What comfort haue you by this I am freed from all those punishments of bodie and soule which my sinnes haue deserued How then commeth it to passe that we are so often afflicted with grieuous torments both in bodie and soule Our sufferings are not by desert any satisfaction for our sinnes in any part but being sanctified in the most holy sufferings of Christ they are medicines against sinne Why are these words added Suffered vnder Pontius Pilate Not onely for the truth of the storie but also to teach that he appeared willingly and of his owne accord before a mortall Iudge of whom he was pronounced innocent and yet by the same he was condemned What comfort haue you hereof That my Sauiour thus suffering not any whit for his owne sinnes but wholy for mine and for other mens sinnes before an earthly Iudge I shall be discharged before the heauenly iudgement seate What is meant by this That he was crucified That he died not onely a common death but such a death as was accursed both of God and man What comfort haue you by this I am comforted in this because I am deliuered from the curse which I haue deserued by the breach of the law and shall obtaine the blessing due vnto him for keeping of the same What is meant by this That he died That his soule was separated from his bodie so that he died a corporali death Why was it requisite that he should die Because by sinne came death into the world so that the iustice of God could not haue beene satisfied for our sinnes vnlesse death had beene ioyned with his sufferings Why is it ●rther added That he was buried To assure vs more fully that he was truely dead What comfort have you by his death and buriall 1 I am comforted because my sinnes are fully discharged in his death and so buried that they shall neuer come into remembrance 2 Secondly my comfort is the more because by the vertue of his death and buriall sinne shall be killed in me and buried so that henceforth it shall haue no power to reigne ouer me 3 Thirdly I neede not to feare death seeing that sinne which is the sting of death is taken away by the death of Christ and that now death is made vnto me an entrance into this life What is the meaning of this He descended into hell This is the meaning that my Sauiour Christ did not onely suffer in body but also in soule did abide most vnspeakable vexations griefes painfull troubles feare of minde ●●to the which both before and most of all when he hanged vpon the crosse he was cast What comfort haue you by this I am comforted in this because in all my grieuous temptations and assaults I may stay and make sure my selfe by this that Christ hath deliuered mee from the sorrowfull griefes and paines of hell What beleeuest thou in this article Hee rose againe from the dead I belieue that Christ in his manhood hath suffered for mee and that he did in the third day ●●● againe by his owne power from the dead Wherin doth this article minister comfort vnto thee In three things 1. His resurrection doth assure me that his righteousnes shall be imputed to me for my perfect iustification 2. it comforteth mee because it doth from day to day raise me vp to righteousnes and newnes of life in this present world 3 It ministreth vnto me a comfortable hope that I shall rise againe in the last day from bodily death What beleeuest thou in this Article Hee ascended into heauen I belieue that Christ in his humane Nature the Apostles looking on ascended into Heauen What comfort haue you thereby 1. I am comforted in this that Christ hath prepared a place for mee in heauen which now I see by Faith and her●a●ter shall fully enioy 2. I am comforted by his intercession to the Father for me What fruite haue you by his intercession 1. First it doth reconcile me to the Father for those sinnes which I doe daily commit 2. Secondly being reconciled in him I can pray to GOD with boldnesse and call him FATHER What is the meaning of this article Hee si●tteth at the right hand of God the Father I belieue that CHRIST in mans nature was aduanced by the FATHER vnto that high authoritie whereby hee ruleth all things in heauen and earth What comfort haue you thereby 1. I am comforted because I shall receiue from him all things needfull for mee vnder his gratious gouernment 2. By his power all mine enemies shall be subdued and troden vnder my feete What beleeue you in this article From thence hee shall come c I belieue
sinne then to sustaine the sores of our bodie Sure it is that if we haue suffered our hearts to be harrowed with the rake of Gods iudgements as occasion from the Lord hath been giuen that we are become soft and well exercised in the feare of God we shall come to the feeling of our sinnes the sense whereof if it bring as it were a sicknesse to the body and a corsey to the soule it is an vndoubted earnest of our regeneration and happy are we if we finde our selues so diseased and troubled with our sinnes True it is that we can hardly being in the skirmish and agonie make any difference betweene the motions to any euill and the consent vnto the same for oftentimes euil motions do so possesse the soules of Gods children sincking downe so deeply in them that though they weepe pray and meditate which be the last meanes remedies to ease and cure them though they feele them with irkesomenesse and loathsomenesse as we feele sicknesse in our bodies yet those motions will be continually in them without diminishing the delight onely excepted Wherefore for our comfort herein we are not to martyr our selues with disquietnes of minde because we are so pestered and thronged with wicked motions and assaults but rather let vs quiet our selues and not suffer our selues to be hindered with sicknesse either of body or minde by meanes whereof we should become more vnprofitable to our selues the whole Church of God For the godly shall not be so freed from sinne but that they shall be assaulted with euill motions suspicions delusions vaine fantasies and imaginations the body of sinne shall neuer be from vs so long as we liue For the scum thereof is almost continually boyling and wallopping in vs foming out such filthly froth stinking sauor into our minds that it is not onely detestable to the minde regenerate and renewed by the spirit of God but also it would make abashed the very naturall man to looke into so loathsome a stie of sinne and sinkehole of iniquitie Yea it maketh vs often to quaile and if it were possible it would corrupt the very part regenerate For mightie is the power and raging is the strength of sinne Neither for all this must we cease to sorrow for our sinnes nor despaire on the other side although our sorrow be but small For if we be sorrowful for the hardnes of our hearts if we can be grieued for that we are no more grieued for our sinnes if we can but sigh grone because we feele our iniquities it is so much a greater comfort vnto vs as it is a greater testimonie that our hearts are not altogether hardened so that if we feele sorrow indeed although we weepe not yet we may gather comfort considering that this sorrow is for sinne with a loue and hunger after righteousnes yea if our assaults be distrust pride arrogancie ambition enuie concupiscence as hote as the fire in the furnace all our daies and though Sathan laieth out oyle in great measure and out of measure that it is the wonderfull mercy of the Lord that we stand and though our prayers be dull and full of wear●somnesse if the striuing and straining of our selues to goodnesse be so hard that we know not whether we striue for feare of punishment or for loue of so good a Father yet if we feele this in our selues that we would faine loue the Lord and be better and being wearied and tyred with our sinnes long gladly to enioy the peace of righteousnes and desire to please God in a simple obedience of faith then let vs comfort our selues there is no time too late to repent in For he commeth quickly to Christ although in the houre of death that commeth willingly and in a desire of a better life howsoeuer sinne and Sathan at that time would especially perswade him For as the hūming Bee hauing lost her st●●g in another doth still notwithstanding make a fearefull and grieuous noyse by her often buzzing about vs but is nothing able to hurt vs so sinne death hauing lost their stings in Christ Iesus doe not cease at all euen in the height of the parching heate of our cōsciences to make a murmuring and with furious stormes of temptations to terrifie vs and our consciences albeit they neuer sting vs. Wherefore if Sathan charge our consciences with sinne if we can feele the things a little before mentioned in our consciences let vs bid him not tell vs what we haue been but what we would be For such we are by imputation as we be in affection and he is now no sinner who for the loue he beareth to righteousnesse would be no sinner Such as we be in desire and purpose such we be in reckoning and account with God who giueth that true desire and holy purpose to none but to his children whom he iustifieth Neither vndoubtedly can the guiltines of sin breake the peace of our cōscience seeing it is the worke of another who hath commended vs as righteous before God and saued vs. It must indeed be confessed that our owne workes will doe nothing in the matter of iustification which from Christ and in Christ is freely giuen vnto vs it must be graunted that in our selues we are weaker than that we can resist the least sinne so farre off is it that we can encounter with the law sin death hell and Sathan and yet in Christ we are more than conquerors ouer them all When the law accuseth thee because thou hast not obserued it send it to Christ and say there is a man that hath fulfilled the law to him I cleaue he hath fulfilled it for me and hath giuen the fulfilling of it vnto me I haue nothing to do with thee I haue another law which striketh thee downe euen the law of libertie which through Christ hath set me free For my conscience which henceforth serueth the law of grace is a glorious Prince to triumph ouer thee If sinne come and would haue thee by the throte send it to Christ and say as much as thou mayst doe against him so much right thou shalt haue against me For I am in him and he in me wherefore O sin I am righteous through my Christ which is become sin to free me which haue been a condemned sinner If death creepe vpon thee and attempt to deuoure thee say vnto it Christ hath ouercome thee and opened vnto me the gates of euerlasting life thou wouldest haue killed him with the sting of sin but the same being of no force thy purpose O death hath failed and he being my life is become thy death If Sathan summon thee to answere for thy debts send him also to Christ and say that the wife is not suable but the husband enter thine action against Christ mine husband and he will make thee sufficient answere who then shall condemne vs or what iudge shall daunt vs sith God
is our Iudge and acquiteth vs and Christ was condemned and iustifieth vs he is our iudge that willeth not the death of a sinner he is our man of law who to excuse vs suffered himselfe to be accused for vs. O gluttonous hell where is thy defence O cruell sin where is thy tyrannous power O rauening death where is thy bloodie sting O roring lion why doest thou fret and fume Christ my Law fighteth against thee O law is my libertie Christ fighteth against thee O sin and is my righteousnes Christ fighteth against thee O diuel is my Sauiour Christ fighteth against thee O death and is my life Thou didst desire to paue my way to the burning lake of the damned but contrarie to thy will thou art constrained to lift vp the ladder wherby I must ascend into the new Ierusalem Wherefore if we shall finde our selues forsaken of God so as we perceiue nothing but matter of despaire let vs still hold our owne in the certaintie of our faith stay our selues sith Christ is giuen vs of God that he might extinguish sin triumph ouer the law vāquish death ouercom the diuel destroy hel for our only comfort and consolation But peraduenture some will say my faith is weake and cold and my conscience is as a flaming lampe and burning fornace I feare the Lord will still pursue me with his wrathfull indignation Thou doest well to feare but feare and sinne not For feare which subdueth the securitie of the flesh is in all most requisite in that the weaker we are in our selues the stronger we are in God But that feare is dangerous which hindreth the certaintie of faith in that it incourageth our enemie more fiercely to set vpō vs when we comming into the campe wil cast away our armour especially which should defend vs. Comfort thy selfe the Lord will not quench the smoking flaxe nor breake the bruised reede he looketh not on the quātitie but on the quality of our faith For as a good mother doth not reiect her childe because through some infirmitie it is weake feeble and not able to goe alone but rather doth pitie and supporte it least peraduenture it should fall and recompenseth that with motherly affection which in her childe is wanting by occasion in like manner the Lord God our most gracious father doth not cast vs off because through our imperfections we are vnable or afraid to draw neerer to the throne of grace but rather pitieth vs and seeing vs a farre off desirous to come vnto him meeteth vs by the way and by grace and strength of his owne hand directeth our steppes vnto his kingdome And as he which freely purposeth to giue a wedge of gold will not withdrawe his gift because the hand of him that should receiue it is weake troubled with the gout palsey or leprosie so that by any meanes though in great weakenes he be able to hold it euen so the Lord purposing in free mercie to bestow on vs an immortall weight of glory will not depriue vs of it though many filthy blemishes haue polluted and weakened our faith so that in any small measure we be able to take hold of his promises neither are we to looke for the perfection of faith because we neuer beleeue as we ought but rather on that which the Gospell offereth and giueth and on Gods mercie and peace in Christ in whose lap if we can lay our heads with Saint Iohn then we are in felicitie securitie and perfect quietnes Contrariwise there be some who notwithstanding that a tormented conscience is a stinging Serpent that it were much better that all the creatures rose vp against vs euery one bringing their bane then once to come before the dreadfull face of God are so blockish that they are wholy resolued into hardnes If they be pricked with sicknes they crie alas if they be pinched with pouertie they can complaine but as for the torment of minde they cannot skill of it And euen to talke of a brused contrite and broken heart is a strange language For proofe whereof our cōsciences are rocked asleepe so that not one amongst a thousand knoweth what it is to be pressed and harrowed with the rake of Gods iudgemēts But blessed are they that to their owne saluation feele this in their bodies whilest sinne may be both punished and purged For though God spare vs for a time yet we know what he keepeth for our ende Wherefore it is the best for vs to runne to the Lord in this life with a troubled minde least we tarrie till the Lord haue locked vs vp with the heauie fetters of desperation when he shall summon vs to the barre of his iudgement in the sight of his Angels and impanelling the great inquest of his Saints against vs shall denounce our fearefull and finall sentence of eternall condemnation for we see many that haue beene carelesse haue made good cheare all their life long yea and when men haue laboured to make them feele the iudgement of God they haue turned all to mockery but their iolity the Lord hath so abated when they draw towards death that in stead of resting sporting whereunto they had been giuen they haue felt the terror of death hell and damnation and lapping vp their ioyes in finall desperation haue forced out cursings against their filthie pleasures Wherefore if we in the tempest of our temptations will saile a right course neither shrinking nor slipping into the gulfe of desperation neither battering our barke against the rocke of presumption let vs in a contrite spirit crie vnto the Lord Haue mercie vpon me heale my soule for I haue sinned against thee forgiue all mine iniquities and heale all mine infirmities Thou healest those that are broken in heart and bindest vp their soares why art thou cast downe my soule and why art thou disquieted within me waite on God for I will yet giue him thankes he is my present helpe and my God Yet my soule keepe thou silence before God of him commeth my saluation he is my strength therefore I shall not much be moued His mightines is enough to giue me courage yea and shall be euen when I am forlorne I know that the diminishing of my body goods friends or any other thing is a calling of me to that which neuer shall diminish nor decay I beleeue that my Lord and my God allureth me daily thither that I might not doubt that when my body is laid in the graue and there consumed as it were to nothing yet notwithstanding my soule resting in the bosome of the Lord shall returne vnto me and shall rise to glory euen as it resting in this life in the mercies of Christ did rise to grace verily I see that with ioy that my flesh must goe to decay for looke what freshnes soeuer was in it it diminished day by day And I neede not goe farre to seeke for death for I feele not
though babish things both in life and doctrine become vs being babes yet hauing past our child-hood the Lord looks for more manly ripenesse both in knowledge in holines of life though our perfect age be not consummated before the resurrection As little children whether in teachablenes to good or reformablenes from sinne are either wo●●e by a faire word or ●llured by a trifling benefit or awed by a checke or feared by a frowning looke or stiiled by seeing another beaten before them or else quieted by the rod so if we be children either the promises of God must affect vs or the mercies of God must allure vs or his threatnings in his word must awe vs or his angrie countenance must feare vs or his correcting of others must humble vs or else the corrections of God vpon our selues must pull vs downe But as those children are of most liberall ingenuous nature who are rather allured with faire words than driuen to dutie with the rod so they are most gracious which are most broken with the conscience of their vnkindnesse more prouoked by the promises of God then by all the curses thunderings and threatnings of the law but they that are affected with neither degenerate as yet from the affections of children Hypocrisie 1 HEe obserued some who outwardly liued an honest ciuill life yet lying hypocritically in some sinne were constrained in death or before to vtter it to their shame Which kinde of iudgements are most necessarie that God might shewe himselfe to be God and his threatnings to be true that the wicked might lesse reioyce in their exceeding impietie and that Gods children might be raised from their securitie Iudgement 1 IN our most earnest matters wee must be zealous ouer our owne heart and then especiallie examine and call to account our affections because that in such a case there is either some speciall worke of God or else it is some notable worke of the flesh or of Sathan And whereas it is a pedagogie of the soule that in all things we had neede to aske the gouernement of God by his word and spirit for that a man knoweth what hee is but not what he shall be in this or that action When wee cannot gage the depth of our heart wee must impute it to want of prayer and the not trauailing with our heart how to doe the things in wisedome 2 Though all exercises of pure religion purely vsed doe both strengthen iudgement and whet vp affections yet reading hearing and conferring do most strengthen iudgement and in part whet on affections But praying singing and meditation doe mos● chiefly whet vp affection but in part strengthen iudgement and vnderstanding 3 Being desired to giue his iudgement of a weighty matter hee answered Syr neither am I able to speake nor you to heare for that wee haue not prayed indeede I may talke and you answere as naturall men but wee are not now prepared to conferre as t●e children of God 4 Hee fatherlie exhorted men to labour for increase of iudgment first by reason then by example by reason thus without soundnes of iudgement it is a more difficult trauailing for the childe of God with his owne heart to any fruit Againe not being stayed in iudgement one shall be troubled to commit and afraide to doe many things which indeede he might lawfully and comfortably doe if he had knowledge Thirdly wee shall not without good knowledge satisfie our godlie desire in perswading or dislwading an●e for that we cannot doe so assuredly substantially and effectually as wee ought and would doe By example he exhorted men to consider of the Prophet Dauid in his Ps●lme ●19 hee prayeth for knowledge hauing no one thing oftner then this Teach mee O Lorde thy statutes c. Sound ioy 1 THe more one tasteth of heauenly things the lesse is his ioy in earthly things the more one feeleth earthlie things pleasant the lesse ioy can hee haue in heauenlie Coloss 3. 1. Phil 3. 20. 2 Wee must in reading the iudgements of God obserue this rule If any man will trie conclusions against Gods conclusions hee shall prooue nothing in the ende but himselfe to be a foole And if hee faile in his triall by how much the more he might be admonished by so much the more hee shall be without excuse There are many that feare Psal. 14. 5. where no feare is but there are more which reioyce where no cause of ioy is 3 Some ioy euery man must haue either carnall or spirituall and therfore when Cain had lost his title and interest in heauen hee made himselfe a seate on earth and when hee had lost the harmony of a good consciēce his nephew Tubal was faine to inuent Organs that hee might haue some musicke and solace in outward things And 2. Kings 11. when the people could not haue their owne fond delights Salomon causeth Apes Peacockes and such like to bee brought from Ophir for them Men will haue ioy ●t they cannot haue the more solemne melodie by Arte they will haue the common instruments of the Countrey But the reason is because the soule is mouldring and the heart is p●rching drie But let these sandie mouldring earthly hearts consider that there is no secure nor true ioy which either time may loose or death dismay or the iudgements of God make afraide It is no sound ioy that either will leaue vs or wee shall be glad to leaue it as an vnprofitable possession 4 Manie had rather part from all fauour of God then loose the grace of some wittie speech which they haue deuised but cursed bee that merriment which respecteth not either dutie to God or loue to our neighbour Knowledge THere are manie who haue a generall knowledge of the Truth but when it comes to particular practise they are hindred with profites pleasures and selfeloue 2 They whose knowledge is in swelling words and painted eloquence of humane wisedome being but a doctrine of the letter in their death they are as if they knew nothing of Christ crucified and whereof comes it that there is so much preaching and so little learning but because men preach and delight to heare plausible nouelties to please the eare rather then the simple power of the Word to pierce the heart they take the bone and refuse the marrow they are content with the shell but want the kernell and not onely the law killeth but also the Gospell that is the letter of the Gospell beeing ministred without the spirite Aske the wounded conscience what comfort it is to heare that Christ dyed for our sinnes Nay aske if this gall not as much as the lawe it selfe so long as it is rather conceiued by reason than receiued by faith 3 He said how after hee knew God hee desired by prayer two things principallie the one that hee might loue the Saints the other that hee might willingly and
reports 2. When anie report the faults of others without care of their credit or when with flattering hearts they commend any man 2. Inwardly either 1. In suspition without iust cause 2. In iudgement falsly or hardly of anie man Which bee the occasions of false witnesse hearing They be fleshly hatred of our enemies the carnall loue of our selues or of our friends to get the things we loue and to auoide the things we feare or hate How are wee partakers with false witnes bearers If we either command or counsell it to be done If wee mislike it not or not stay it if we can What is here commanded 1. First in iudgement to further righteous causes so farre forth as my calling requireth 2. Secondly to speake the truth from my heart to euery man so farre forth as it is requisite for him to know it 3. Thirdly to be as carefull of the credit of my neighbour as of mine owne both in his presence and absence so farre forth as the nature of his offence will permit 4. Fourthly to hope and belieue the best of euery man Rehearse the tenth Commandement Thou shalt not couet c Ar● all motions and desires euill No for the desire of meate drinke sleepe and such like are naturall and in their owne nature good vnlesse through our corruption they become sinfull What motions be euill These motions be euill which are either against God or our Neighbour Are all those forbidden in this Commandement No for all those which are against God are forbidden in the first commandement but these motions onely are here forbidden which are against our Neighbour Seeing in the former Commandements wee are forbidden to hurt our neighbour in heart how doth this differ from the former In the former Commandements the setled desires of the heart are forbidden but the motions are onely here forbidden whereunto the heart doth not consent Whereof doe these motions arise They either arise from our owne corruption or are offered by Sathan or by the world Are all these motions sinne in vs All that arise of our corruption are sinnes in vs but they that be offered by Sathan or the world are not sinnes vnles we be infected with them How are wee infected with them 1. First when weetake pleasure in them 2. When wee be intangled with them 3. When we suffer them to tarrie in o●●●in●es though our hearts doe not giue co●sent How is this Commaundement brok●● Three waies 1. First when euill motions arise of our corruption moouing vs to hurt our Neighbours 2. Secondly when we be infected with those motions which Sathan or euill men doe put ●nto our mindes 3. Thirdly when we doe not with like affection desire the good of our Neighbour as wee doe our owne What is then commaunded I am commaunded to loue my Neighbour as my selfe Who is your Neighbour Eu●ry one that is neere mee and standeth in neede of my helpe and it lieth in me to helpe him though otherwise he be a stranger vnto me or my foe Why iudge you so Because of the Image of God in him and that hee is mine owne flesh in respect of our first parents Doth the Law of God prescribe the perfect rule of righteousnes Yea for there is no good thing in deede worde or thought but heere it is commaunded and likewise no euill but heere it is forbidden Can euery one keepe the Law of God perfitl● They that are not borne againe of God cannot keepe it neither in all nor in any one point as pleasing God thereby in respect of themselues Why so Except a man be borne againe of God hee cannot see the kingdome of heauen not enter therein neither can hee keepe the commaundements of God moreouer all men by nature being borne and conceiued in sinne are not only insufficient to any good thing but also disposed to all vice and wickednes What punishment is due to the breakers of Gods Law In this life the curse of God and death with manifold miseries both of body or soule or both What else Where this curse is not taken away euerlasting death and damnation both of bodie and soule in the world to come But God is mercifull Hee is indeed full of mercie but hee is also full of righteousnes which must fully be discharged or else wee cannot be partakers of his mercie And cannot wee by our selues make satisfaction for our sinnes We cannot by any meanes but rather from day to day encrease our debt But doth not God wrong to man to require of him that he is not able to performe No for God made man so that hee might haue performed it but hee by his sinne spoyled himselfe and his posteritie of those good gifts Can anie creature in heauen or earth which is onely a creature make satisfaction to his righteousnesse No none at all for First God will not punish that in another creature which is due to be paid by man and besides none that is onely a creature can abide the wrath of God against sinne and deliuer others from the same What manner of man is to be sought out to bee our Mediatour and Deliuerer Hee which is indeed a very man and perfectly righteous and more mightie than all creatures that is hee which also is very true God Why must hee be man and perfitly righteous Because that the righteousnes of God requireth that the same nature that sinned should pay and make amends for sinne Why must hee be God withall Because that by his godly power hee may abide the burden of Gods wrath in his flesh and may get againe and restore to vs the righteousnes and life which wee haue lost Who is that Mediatour which is very God and very man and perfi●ly righteous withall Our Lord Iesus Christ who was made vnto vs Wisedome Righteousnes Sanctification and Redemption What is the vse of all that hetherto hath b●ene taught The vse is to bring vs to a sound perswasion and f●eling of our sinnes because they haue deserued so grieuous punishmēt as either the death of the sonne of God or hell fire Are they onely deliuered from the curse of the Lawe and made partakers of the merites of Christ that are truely humbled They onely and none other Es●i 57. Matthew 5. 3. 4. 5. and as for the Lawe heauen and earth shall passe away but one jote or title of Gods Law shall not fa●e till all be fulfilled How is the truth of Gods Law fulfilled It is fulfilled in 1. Gods children because it bringeth them to be truely humbled in themselues for their sinnes and then sendeth them to Christ in whome it is fully fulfilled 2. The wicked because it declareth to them their iust confusion when to the ende they either presume or despaire Is sorrow for sinne sufficient to bring vs to Saluation No for wee must also haue a true Faith What is that true Faith that saueth vs It is a true
our selues to GOD whereby wee crucifie and kill the corruption of our nature and reforme our selues in the inward man according to Gods will What is it to crucifie the corruption of our nature It is truely and with all my heart to be sorie that I haue angred God with it and with my other sinnes and euery day more and more to hate it and them and to flie from them How is this sorrow wrought It is wrought in mee partly by the threatnings of the Law and the feare of Gods iudgements but especiallie increased by feeling of the fruit of Christ his death whereby I haue power to hate sinne and to leaue it How is this reformation of our selues wrought in vs Onely by the promises of the Gospell whereby we feele the fruit of the rising againe of Christ. What doth insue hereof Hereby wee are raised vp into a new life hauing a law written in our hearts and so reforme our selues Hereby it appeareth that none can repent of themselues or when they will Yea for it was saide before that it is the gift of GOD giuen vnto them that are borne againe By this it is also euident that Gods Children stand in neede of Repentance so long as they liue Yea for there is none of Gods Saints but alwayes carrying this corruption about them they sometime fall and are farre from that perfection of goodnes which the Lord requireth Se●ing it was said before that good workes did proceede from Rep●ntance what properties are required of workes 1. First that they be such as God hath commanded in his Law 2. Secondlie that they that doe them bee such as be ingrafted into CHRIST and continue in him What say you then of the good workes of them that be not in Christ They doe no good workes because they neither are as yet members of Christ nor doe offer them to GOD in the Name of Christ. 3. The third propertie of workes is that they may bee to glorifie God and to assure our saluation Is it not lawfull to seeke our owne praise and merit by our owne good woorkes No For all our good workes are imperfect and saluation is onely merited by the death of Christ as was saide before We haue heard that the Law worketh the knowledge of our sinnes and feeling of our miseri● What meanes hath God ordained to worke and increase Faith in vs Hee hath ordained 1. The Gospell to beget and breede it in vs. 2. Prayer 3. Sacraments 4. Discipline 5. Affliction to confirme it in vs. What is the Gospell It is that part of Gods word whereby the holie Ghost worketh in vs a liuely Faith to apprehend the free remission of sinnes in Iesus Christ. How many kindes of Faith be there Two a Generall Faith whereby I belieue God to be true in all his workes Speciall and this is either whereby I belieue God to be iust in his threatnings and so am made penitent Or whereby I belieue him to bee made mercifull in his promises and so come to repentance What difference is there betweene Penitence and Repentance Penitence is a sorrow for sinne wrought by the Law Repentance is a recouering our selues from sinne wrought by the Gospell Is there such difference betweene the Law and the Gospell Yea for the Law differeth from the Gospell in foure things 1 First the Law reuealeth sinne rebuketh vs for it and leaueth vs in it but the Gospell doth reueale vnto vs Remission of sinnes bringeth vs to CHRIST and ●reeth v● from the punishment belonging vnto sinne 2. The Law commandeth to do good and giueth no strength but the Gospell inable●● vs to do good the holy Ghost writing the law in our hearts assuring vs of the promise 3. The Law is the ministerie of wrath condemnation and death but the Gospell is t●e ministerie of grace iustification and life 4. In many points the Law may be conceiued by reason but the Gospell in all poin●● is farre aboue the reach of mans reason Wherein doe they agree They agree in this that they bee both of God and declare one kinde of righteousnesse though they differ in offering it vnto vs. What is that one kinde of righteousnesse It is the perfect loue of God and of our neighbour What thing doth follow vpon this That the seuere law pronounceth all the faithfull righteous How doth the Law pronounce them righteous Because that they hau● in Christ all that the Law doth aske But yet they remaine transgressors of the Law They are transgressors in themselues and yet righteous in Christ and in their inward man they loue righteousnes and hate sinne What then is the state of the faithfull in this life They are pure in Christ and yet fight against sin What battell haue they They haue battell both within the battell of the flesh against the Spirit and without the temptation of Sathan the world How shall they ouercome By a liuely Faith in Iesus Christ. 1. Ioh. 5. 4. What call you th● flesh The corruption of our nature wherein wee were borne and conceiued Doth that remaine after regeneration Yea it dwelleth in vs and cleaueth fast vnto vs so long as wee carie the outward flesh about vs. How doth the flesh fight against the spirit By continuall lusting against the spirit What is that 1. By hindering or corrupting vs in the good motions words and deeds of the spirit 2. By continuall moouing vs to euill-motions words deeds What call you the spirit The holie Spirit which God in Christ hath giuen vs whereby wee are begotten againe D●● wee not receiue the spirit in full measure and in perfection at the first No but first we receiue the first fruits and afterward the daily increase of the same vnto the end if the fault be not in our selues How doth the Spirit fight in vs By lusting against the flesh How doth it lust against the flesh 1. First partly by rebuking and partly by restraining in vs the euill motions and deeds of the flesh 2. By continuall inlightning and affecting vs with-thoughts words deedes agreeable to Gods wil. What call you the world The corrupt state and condition of men and the rest of the creatures How doth the world fight against vs By alluring and withdrawing vs to the corruptions thereof What meanes doth it vse 1. It allureth vs by false 1. Pleasures 2. Profit 3. Glorie of this world from our obedience to God 2. It allureth vs other-paines losses and reproches to distrust Gods promises whiles by How shall wee ouercome the pleasures profit and glorie of this world 1. By a true Faith in IESVS CHRIST who despised all these things to worke our saluation and to make vs ouercome them 2. By Faith in Gods word that feareth vs from doing any thing against his will How shall wee ouercome the Paines losses and reproches of the World 1 By aliuely Faith in Iesus Christ who suffered all those things to worke our
these men what would people say of vs They would count vs Atheists they would thinke vs the wickedest men in the world Well for our instruction and consolation herein let vs learne that these kindes of temptations are either corrections for some sinnes past or punishments for some sinne present or forewarners of some sinne to come We shall see many tempted to adulterie who no doubt cannot be brought to commit it and yet because in their youth they haue committed it and not repented of it it comes to them againe The like may be obserued in theft in gluttonie and in other temptations which are not so much sent vnto vs presently to ouercome vs as to put vs in minde that sometime heretofore we hauing bin ouercome with them should now repent for them Sometime a man shall lie in some sinne whereof when he will not be admonished neither by the publike nor priuate meanes then some other strange temptation shall fall vpon him differing from that wherein he presently lieth to admonish him of that other sinne As when a worldling shall be tempted to adulterie a thing which he hath no desire to doe yet it is to make him looke to his worldlines whereof he hath so strong and thorough a liking wherewith if then he will not be awaked he may suddenly fall into that too and so by the punishment of God in punishing one sinne with another both his sinnes shal be to his great shame layd open and one sinne shall make knowne another Sometime also it commeth to passe that one shall be tempted with such a sinne as neither heretofore nor presently he hath giuen any liking or entertainment vnto and yet the Lord by it may forewarne him how he may fall into it hereafter as also to shew that he hath stood all his former life rather by the grace of God than by the strength of flesh and blood Wherefore when thou art moued to doubt of God of Christ of the word or of iustification doe not so much stand wondring at these strange temptations as thinke with thy selfe that it is the mercie of God by them to cause thee better to discerne of those temptations in others when thou shalt haue obserued with feare and trembling how they make their first entrie into a mans heart how they gather strength how they agree with our corrupt nature in what degrees they come to some groweth how the spirit of God doth resist thē what be the meanes best to preuaile against them And thus if thou make thy profit by them thou shalt so wonderfully search and descrie by seuerall veines the bodie age and ●leight of these temptations in others by an holy experience which God hath taught thee in thy selfe that besides that thou shalt lay forth mens secret corruptions as if thou werst in their bosomes thou shalt be able also by the seede of sorrow in thy selfe to beget an vnspeakable ioy in others who in time may be tempted as thou now art Thinke moreouer and besides that such is the efficacie of sinne that they who are now no Papists Heretikes Adulterers or Theeues may for their secure contemning foolish passing ouer of these temptations sent vnto them suddenly shortly after fall into them because they would not seeke to make some vse of them nor confesse before the Lord both their pronenesse and worthinesse to fall into them But if we will humble our selues in such temptations learne by them meekely to discerne the corruptions of our harts we shall not onely presently deliuer our selues from perill but be also further enabled to assist others hereafter in the like danger But some will oppose against these things which we haue deliuered Doe you thinke it a remedie to cast downe them that are alreadie humbled This is rather to be a butcher than a builder of a mans conscience To whom I answere that I desire preachers to be builders and not butchers and it is one thing generally to applie and another particularly to lay the medicine vnto the wound It is good to begin with searching first and to purge the sore by the vineger of the Law after to supple it with the oyle of the Gospell Both which must be done in wisedome vsing them to some in greater to some in lesser measure For as some hauing nothing but a decay of nature no mortall humour neede rather restoratiue than purging medicines so some rather troubled for some spirituall wants than for grosser sinnes neede not so much the sharpe threatnings of the Law as the sweete promises of the Gospell As the body through some extraordinarie repletion hauing gotten some great surfet not so much to the weakening of nature as to the threatning of imminent death and therefore requireth rather some strong purgation than comfortable and cordiall medicines euen so the soule brought almost to deaths doore with some extraordinary sinne is rather to be bored and pearced with the denouncing of Gods iudgements than otherwise But because we would deale more plainly and lesse confusedly it is good in our accesse to afflicted consciences to lay these two grounds First we must perswade the persons humbled that their sins are pardonable their sores curable And after that this visitation is not so much a signe of Gods wrath and anger as a seale of his mercie and fauour in that it is not either blind or barren but plentifull in good effects and fruitfull in godly issues The former how needfull it is the experience of so many almost as haue been throwne downe is a sufficient witnes who haue had this as a tagge tied to their temptations that neuer any were so plagued as they none euer had the like temptations the Lord will surely make an end of them in some strange and vnknowne temptation Wherein they are not vnlike vnto men fallen into some dangerous disease who thinking them selues to be without the fadome of the Physitions skill not to be within the compasse of things recouerable adde a second and sorer griefe vnto their former Wherefore as these men seeme to be halfe healed when any man of knowledge can be brought who by experience hath cured the like maladie in like degrees in others so these sorrowfull soules are not a little by hope refreshed strengthened to looke for some ease when they see none other temptation to haue ouertaken them than such as hauing fallen into the nature of man haue found mercy at the hands of God that he might be feared This ground worke framed it is good to build vp repaire the decayed ioy of the mind partly by the law to make a preparatiue for these ioyes if the mind not truly humbled be not fit to be truly comforted partly by the Gospell if the conscience kindly throwne downe is become a fit subiect to apply the sweete promises of God in Iesus Christ vnto it And here againe to answere them that denie the law wholy or at
and for the tribes of thine inheritance 4. Fourthly God graunts his seruants the holy meanes of saluatiō namely preaching prayer Sacraments holds backe the efficacie of his spirit for a time In this case they are like the corne field that is plowed and sowed with good corne but yet for a time it neuer giues rooting beneath nor so much as a shew of any blade appeares aboue Thus the spouse of Christ when she comes into his wine-seller she fals into a swowne so as she must be staied with flaggons and comforted with apples because she is sicke of loue 5. Fiftly God giueth his children a strong affection to obey his will but he lets them faile in the act of obedience it selfe like as a prisoner who hath escaped the hand of his Iayler hath an affectiō to run a thousand miles euery houre but hauing happily his bolts on his legges hee cannot for his life but goe very softly gauling and chafing his flesh and with much griefe falling againe into the hands of his keeper This is it that Paul complaineth of when he saith I delight in the lawe of God concerning the inner man but I see another law in my members rebelling against the law of my mind leading me captine to the law of sin which is in my members O wretched man that I am who shall deliuer me from this body of death This second manner of Gods forsaking of his Elect is when hee hides his graces for a time not by taking them quite away but by couering them by remouing all sense and feeling of them And in this case they are like the trees in the winter season that are beaten with winde weather bearing neither leaf nor fruite but looke as though they were rotten dead because the sappe doth not spread itselfe but lies bid in the roote Dauid often was in this case as namely when he saith Will the Lord absent himselfe for euer Ana will hee shewe no more fauour is his mercie cleane gone for euer Doth his promise faile for euermore Hath God forgotten to be mercifull hath hee shut vp his ●ender mercies in displeasure Selah This comes to passe because the Lord very often in and by one contrarie workes another Clay spittle tempered together in reason should put out a mans eyes but Christ vsed it as a meanes to giue sight to the blind Water in reason should put out fire but Elias when he would shew that IEHOVA was the true God powres water on his sacrifice and fills a trench therewith to make the sacrifice burne The like appeareth in the worke of grace to saluation A man that hath liued in securitie by Gods goodnes hath his eyes opened to see his sinnes his heart touched to feele the huge loath some burden of them and therefore to be waile his wretched estate with bitternes of heart Hereupon hee presently thinks that God will make him a firebrand of hell whereas indeede the Lorde is now about to worke and frame in his heart sanctification and sound repentance neuer to bee repented of The man which hath had some good perswasion of Gods fauour in Christ comes afterward vpon manie occasions to bee troubled to be ouerwhelmed with distrustfullnes grieuous doubtings of his saluation so as he iudgeth himselfe to haue been but an hypocrite in former times for the time present a castaway But indeed hereby the Lord exerciseth fashioneth and increaseth his weake faith In one word marke this point that the graces of God peculiar to the elect are begunne increased and made manifest in or by their contraries A man in this Desertion can discerne no difference betweene himselfe and a cast-away and the rather if with this Desertion be ioyned a feeling of Gods anger for then ariseth the bitterest temptation that euer befell the poore soule of a Christian man and that is a wrastling and strugling in spirit and conscience not with the motions of a rebelling flesh nor the accusation of the Diuell which are oftentimes very irkesome and terrible but against the wrath of a reuenging God This hiddden and spirituall temptation more tormenteth the spirit of man then all the rackes or gibbets in the world can do And it hath his fits after the māner of an ague in which euen Gods own seruants ouercarried with sorrow may blaspheme God and cry out that they are damned Iob was in this estate as hee testifieth Oh that my griefe were weyed saith he and my miseries were layd together in the balla●ce for it would be heauier then the sand of the sea therefore my words are swallowed vp for the arrowes of the Almighty are in me the venome thereof doth drinke vp my spirit the terrours of God fight against me And further he complains that the Lord is his enemy that he sets him as a But to ●●●●●e at This was Dauids temptation when hee said O Lord rebuke mee not in thine anger neither chostise mee in thy wrath haue mercie vpon me O Lord for I am weake O Lord heale me for my bones are vexed my soule is also sore troubled but Lord how long wilt thou delay Returne O Lord deliuer my soule saue me for thy mercies sake Hence it followes that when any that hath bene a professor of the Gospell shall despaire at his ende that men are to leaue secret iudgements to God and charitably to iudge the best of them For example one Maister Chambers at Leycester of late in his sicknesse grieuously despaired and cried out that he was damned and after dyed yet it is not for any to note him with the black marke of a reprobate One thing which he spake in his extremitie O that I had but one drop of faith must moue all men to conceiue well of him For by this it seemeth hee had an heart which desired to repent and belieue and therefore a repentant beleeuing heart indeed For GOD at all times but especially in temptation of his great mercy accepts the will for the deede Neither is it to be regarded that hee said he was damned for men in such cases speake not as they are but as they feele thēselues to be Yea to go further when a professor of the gospell shall make away himselfe though it be a fearefull case yet still the same opinion must be carried First Gods iudgements are very secret 2. They may repent in the very agonie for any thing we know 3 None is able to comprehend the bottomles depth of the graces mercies which are in Christ Iesus Thus much of the manner which God vseth in forsaking his Elect Now followe the kinds of desertion which are two desertion in punishment desertion in sinne Desertion in punishment is when God deferreth either to mitigate or to remooue the crosse and chastisement which he hath laide vpon his children This befell Christ on the crosse My God saith he my God why hast
will punish it in them ass we may see in this kingly Prophet Dauid 2. Sam. 12. 2 to bring them to an examination of themselues as he did in the Mariners Ionah 1. 3 to moue them to repentance as in the Israelites Hoseah 5. vers 15. 4 to trie them as the Eagle her yong ones and the goldsmith his mettals as hee did l●b chap 1. 5 to confound Sathan all his ministers who would ioy if Gods children should euer prosper doe these men serue God for n●●ght Iob 1. 9 6 that as the camomile doth spread better by treading the tree growe better by pruning the Pomander smell better by rubbing the iron looke better by scouring and the bodie like better by purging so the godly might be better by affliction In a word were wee not sometime in trouble wee should forget God we should not cal vpon his name nor be distinguished from bastardes nor conformable to Christ nor weaned from this world nor vnderstand Gods will nor desire to be dissolued and to be with Christ. Vse Is Dauid afflicted who then can iudge of Gods loue or hatred by outward things Eccles 9. Dauid in his trouble thought he was cast out of Gods fauour but hee was deceiued Dauids enemies thought that God had forsaken him but they were deceiued and euen Gods children doe oftentimes thinke the proude and rich and Epicures blessed but they also are deceiued To gee on is Dauid afflicted 1 Suspect thine estate if thou euer art at ease in this world It is the greatest misery neuer to taste of any misery 2 Be patient to endure crosses since the most godly haue beene thus crossed 3 If the righteous scarcely be saued where shall the wicked and the sinners appeare 1. Pet 4. 18. I had perished 2 Note that Dauid was readie to sincke vnder this burthen to faint vnder this crosse to be swallowed vp of these waues and to perish in this trouble of his Thus God woundeth but he healeth againe casteth downe but setteth vp againe killeth but reuiueth againe and afflicteth but comforteth againe We before troubles come are like vnto Peter wee thinke wee can walke vpon the Sea but it pleaseth the Lord to send one dangerous storme or other that we may say with the same Apostle Helpe maister I perish But why was Dauid thus readie to perish he saw the Sea but not the Whale the Egyptian but not the saluation the water but not Christs power walking on the water He was impatient of delaye looked too much to man trusted ouer much in himselfe and thought more of them that were against him then God and his Angels that were on his side And is not this our case when there is but a thinne curtaine drawn for a while betwixt God and vs O let him that is exercised with troubles but aske his owne heart of this point Except thy lawe wee haue heard how Dauid was wounded here is that plaister which cured that wound namely the lawe of the Lord his God He being pursued with the heart betaketh himselfe to these riuers persecuted flieth to these mountaines inuironed hasteth to these bulwarkes and afflicted with delight he comes to these comforters The word of the Lord is a strong tower the righteous flieth to it and is deliuered Here note a difference betweene humane and diuine lawes Philosophie and diuinitie Art thou in trouble what will Philosophie say vnto thee all that it can say is but thus much ferendum est quod vitari non potest I must vndergoe that which I cannot auoide But come to diuinitie it will teach thee whence troubles come why they are sent how thou must endure them by what meanes get out of them to depend vpon God repent of thy sinnes examine thy waies that the ende will be good and that death is aduantage vnto thee it will teach thee that sinne is pardoned Sathan vanquished and that Christ is thy companion in troubles and crowne after It is as the sword of Goliah no weapon like ●●● that spirituall Mannah no foode comparable to it and that poole of 〈◊〉 or ●●●●● riuer into which if thou once descend whatsoeuer thy disease be assure thy selfe of cure But it must be applied or else it will doe thee no more good then the bread that is euer in the cubbord the cloth in the drapers shop the wine in the vessell or the medicine which thou keepest euer in thy pocket Daui● applies it by delighting in it My delight This word my is very remarkeable Dauid a great man delighted in the lawes and statutes of God he made them his counsellors from which as from graue Senators he euer receiued the best counsell One faith that bookes are the best counsellors because they teach without flatterie it is not euer true of the writings of men their maisters teach them to speake silk●n words but it is most true of the word of God which as a true glasse sheweth to euery one his proper fauour If great men would take counsaile here they would not in so short a time make Rehoboams diuision of their inheritance vpon earth nor sell heauen Esau-like for a messe of pottage But because in steed of the booke of God they delight in dice cardes pride pleasure luxurie flatterie and all vanitie no maruaile that the place which did honour them doth honour them no more Delight In the originall it is the plurall number delights as if he should say all my delight onely my delight my chiefe delight And no meruaile for what is it that can delight the heart of man to reade of which is not contained in the booke of God is it historie here is the most ancient and true historie is it poesie here are most harmonicall and golden verses is it Philosophie the secrets of nature are heere opened is it moralitie here are most Christian ethiques is it mysteries what greater mysterie then the mysterie of godlines preached to Adam shadowed out to the Iewes manifested in Christ and reuealed in the word is it policie Aristotle neuer wrote such politikes as here are would you reade much in fewe wordes Theognis and Phocylides and Pythagoras short sentences come farre short of Salomons prouerbes In a word are we merrie here we may sing Dauids Psalmes to Dauids harpe would we be sorie who can reade Ieremies lamentations and not lament In this lawe young and old rich and poore high and lowe males and females may finde that which will delight them And truely all ought to make it their delight it is the word of God the way to life the sword of the spirit our fathers testament the trustiest friend the most comfortable companion and the best salue that euer we can applie to our diseased soules When Chrysosteme was to be exiled by the Emperesse he comforted himselfe with this saying The earth is the Lords and all that therein is Psal. 24 1. when Vrsinus was driuen almost to despaire he comforted himselfe with this saying my
and in an holy courage to be delighted in weldoing For the godly whose onely stayes in trouble are faith and a good conscience are brought by their affliction to a sight of their sin to a desire to haue them pardoned to a feeling of God his mercy in hearing their prayers to an hatred of their sinnes Thus if we can support our faith in Gods promises wee shall reioyce in trouble When heretikes suffer for their illusions and being taught of man they quickly shrinke but when Sathan deludeth them with strange fantasies they are ready to suffer much Doe we know that heretikes wil suffer for their illusions and shall not wee much rather suffer for the truth And yet we see the Lord maketh a distinction betweene their sufferings our martyrdomes For Christians through faith can sing Psalmes in the midst of the flame heretikes by their roring shewe they haue no such ioy It stands therefore vpon vs euen now to be iealous of our prosperitie to bestow the time which we haue in weldoing and striue against sinne For we shall breake the first wall by this and so come with ioy to the other And as the word is a comfort in trouble so is it a bridle from sinne in prosperitie For as it doth not let vs fall in trouble so also it bridleth vs from sin in prosperitie For to this end we read and heare the word that in prosperity it should subdue sin and in aduersitie it should minister comfort But what is the iudgement of God vpon them that know not the word If they bee in health they seeke for nothing but for pleasures for profit and for gaine and thinke whatsoeuer they do to be lawfull yea admonish a man of his couetousnes by the word yet will hee not repent vntill eyther theeues or fire or some other iudgement of God vtterly consume him but hee will obiect why should I not get riches why should I not maintaine my gaine Admonish a theefe at his libertie of his theft and it prevaileth no more then if ye should tel him a storie vntill wofull experience ●each him the truth of it by the prison or by the halter There is no hope to any profit to perswade the adulterer vntill some plague of God haue wrought vpon him So we see when fire is on our houses when we must goe to prison or yeeld to any other calamitie men wring their hands teare their haire and rent their clothes crying for woe to themselues and saying they cannot liue they wil not be seene in the world they are ashamed to looke their friends in the face and why because they haue no feeling of the ioyes of the life to come they haue no stay on Gods prouidence they feele no comfort in his promises but they curse they moyle and pine away with sorrow If we see then the great mercie of God in staying vs from sinne in time of prosperitie and in aduersitie telling vs that he doth not punish vs in wrath but in loue and as a father doth teach vs the contempt of this world the desire of the world to come faith in his promises patience and repentance let vs reuerently esteeme the word Verse 144. The righteousnes of thy testimonies is euerlasting graunt mee vnderstanding and I shall liue IN repeating the same againe which hee had saide before the man of God here vseth two words the righteousnes of thy testimonies whereas before he vseth this one word thy righteousnes so that he meaneth here nothing els but the righteousnes of God reuealed to vs in his word For they bee called testimonies both in respect that they bee records of Gods loue towards vs as also they are testimonials of our obedience towards God So the words may beare this sense true it is Lord that that part of thy word where in thou hast comforted vs with thy promises is euerlasting and that part of thy word wherein thou hast set downe our duties is also euerlasting And I shall liue That is what doe men desire but life that I may liue therefore in godly pleasure Lord teach me to vnderstand thy testimonies See the man of God doth rest his life in this vnderstanding of the word They then that are ignorant are dead in sin Ephes 2. They sit in the shadow of death Luk 1. they are bound in the chaines of ●●●●● as Paul witnesseth of the widowes that liue delicately For as we cal him a man of death on whom not the Iudge but the law or not the lawe but the fact hath already giuen iudgement so they are subiect to the spirituall death on whom not God but his word or not the word but the sinne hath pronounced guiltie What is then life surely this was life the estate wherein Adam liued before hee fell his other life afterward which now is common to vs is a death and wee in him are all dead For when there was no sinne there was no shame when there was no shame there was no trouble when no trouble no death Wherfore sinne bringeth in shame trouble and death and hath left vs dead spiritually by cutting vs off from God For as a ciuill life is when wee are obedient to the ciuill lawes so we liue in God when wee liue according to his lawe And as he is dead ciuilly that by transgressing the lawes of the realme hath cut off himselfe from the common people so we are spiritually dead when sinne hath cut vs off from God The Prophet Abacuk saith chap. 2. 4. Hee that lifteth vp himselfe his minde is not right in him Where the Prophet sheweth that though a man for a time swel not hauing an vpright heart yet afterward he sodainely vanisheth away as a bubble of water for as a bladder with the wind is soone drawne out so the vngodly with conceit of his reason seemeth to bee puft vp but all is but inconstancie The iust man saith the Prophet shall liue by faith not by workes as some would dreame for all the shift of them that will be righteous in themselues will bee as a bubble of water but the iust man beleeuing the forgiuenes of sinne looking for euerlasting life staying himselfe on the promises and prouidence of God hath true soundnesse in him Hee shall liue saith the Prophet noting perpetuitie of time So the man of God his meaning is I shall liue i. perpetually and for euer Wee see then the great mercie of God that commeth by the knowledge of the Worde in that wee finde how hee deliuereth vs from wrath and taketh vs into his fauour he rescueth vs from sinne and clotheth vs with righteousnes he taketh from vs death and restoreth to vs life But marke who speaketh these words doth this man of God attaine to such an heroicall spirit as to crie graunt me vnderstanding and shall wee thinke ourselues sufficiently rich well sighted and that wee are so well clothed that wee neede no such prayer We are like the Laodiceans
who hearing the word were neither hote nor cold Seeing then we are rather Laodiceans than Dauids wee must crie Lord giue vs vnderstanding that we may liue Then let vs learne by other mens harmes which is a princely and heroicall kind of teaching For as Princes children are taught themselues in their owne persons but are not beaten seeing rather others beaten before them so the Lord preacheth to our persons but punisheth other persons round about vs sparing vs that we by their sinnes and stripes may learne to amend and to repent in prayer There is a winter after haruest after heate colde and it is vsuall with the Lord to tempe● his blessings most sweete with some crossings most sower Wherefore let vs pray with our Prophet for the vnderstanding of God his word not onely to be bettered in our mindes but also reformed in our liues Then no diuell no hell no plague no pestilence shall hurt vs yea those troublesome trials which vnto others are testimonies of God his wrath shall be vnto vs seales of his loue which although the world cannot discerne yet by faith we shall both finde it and feele it PORTION 19. COPH. Vers 145. I haue cried with mine whole heart heare me O Lord and I will keepe thy statutes Vers. 146. I called vpon thee saue mee and I will keepe thy testimonies IN the last verse of the former part he set downe the righteousnesse of GODS lawe hee prayed therefore that hee might haue vnderstanding and liue and therefore they that are ignorant haue no life in them because life is onely reuealed in the word Sinners then hauing not receiued the word are dead for the life of sinne is the death of man And our first father was dead when hee had sinned and they who liued in pleasure and all other sinners are dead though they for a while prolong their life on earth yet at death the soule goeth to hell and waiteth there for the bodie and this cuise waiteth on all Cursed are all that continue not in all things c. and after Gods great suffering they shall be cut off Hee knew that the beginning of this life was in the word and hee also knewe that the continuance of it was in the word by the grace of God and therefore hee laboured to haue it increased by the word because he was conuinced by his infirmitie that hee might lose it as Adam did and therefore hee seeketh to finish the course of his saluation with feare If Dauid whose zeale had consumed him did yet in this sort pray how much more ought we which for euery light trouble are discouraged in our dutie He prayeth for the vnderstanding of the word because the diuell wil be ready to allure vs from the word if we be inclined thereto as he dealt with Christ when he laide our scripture against it And yet he liketh not of those that rest in the literall sense but hee craueth the spirit to teach him according to the word for the spirit quickeneth and flesh and blood doth not reueale these things and all that are of God must bee taught of God Isa. 54 yet alwaies agreeable to the word Now in this part he prayeth that he may haue vnderstanding and ease from his trouble this request he groundeth on these reasons first of his earnestnes in the foure first verses secondly in respect of his enemies in the sixt verse and thirdly in respect of Gods mercies in the fift seuenth and eight verses In the foure first verses he setteth downe his earnest desire and zeale that he had and he prayeth that he may haue a good conscience in the first verse and faith in the promises in the second verse teaching that these two were al the comfort that he had in trouble when he suffered for well-doing and had his sinnes forgiuen and had the fauour of God Then if we will stand in trouble let vs labour to be grounded on the promises of forgiuenes of sinnes of a new life of his fatherly prouidence and let this purge vs from sin and if we can doe this then nothing shall seperate vs from God as Paul saith Rom. 8. and againe he saith there is no condemnatiō to them that are in Christ for they haue his spirit to purge them from sinne and to strengthen their faith The want of these causeth men to step backe and the weakenes of our faith the carelesnes of these causeth such feare in Gods children and such shrinking for the diuel layeth their sinnes to their charge which they see not discharged and their faith is weake and therefore they are diuing vp and down And surely trouble must come to all for so it is ordained though to some lesse than others and therefore when it commeth we are faint if we haue not been carefull to keepe a good conscience and to strengthen our faith But if we haue done thus then shall death be pleasant vnto vs for wee shall be blessed Apoc. 12. and our workes shall follow vs that is our faith and the fruites of our faith Againe if wee suffer for our sinnes c. then wee want faith and a good conscience and therefore we murmur and crie out yea and goe to witches and wisards Yea Gods children though they come not to this grosse sinning yet they inwardly grudge and they haue secret murmurings because they haue failed in strengthening their faith keeping a good conscience but the children of God that make Christ all in all they say the Lord giueth and the Lord taketh this is the patience of Gods children And Iob did not faile till his faith failed and though his three learned aduersaries reasoned against him to proue him an hypocrite yet his conscience sustained him and therefore reckoneth vp his vertues chapter 28. and 31. And he also confessed his faith I know that my Redeemer liueth this was his faith and this was his conscience that in his trouble sustained him These things haue no lesse fruite in prosperitie for the want of them cause men to lift vp themselues on high but the word represseth pride lust and loue of worldly things so that they are ●●ū●le in prosperitie for the worldlings seeke after the things of this world because they neuer felt the peace of conscience they seeke their owne glorie because they neuer felt what the glory of God was and neuer seeke knowledge because they know not what the soule is Yea the children of God because they labour not continually to keepe a good conscience and to strengthen their faith they are carried away with the loue of earthly things after the example of the wicked for prosperitie is as a floud which carieth all things with it and as well good as bad and therefore they are often caried away with the loue of these outward things But the children of God which doe diligently labour after these things they behaue themselues so as that God may be glorified by their prosperitie and aduersitie
perceiued and felt and of the former that there be two sorts the first which is most fearefull when any doe purposely resist the motions of God his spirit and wilfully refuse the meanes of their saluation Of the which the Prophet Zacharie speaketh chap. 7. vers 11 c. They refused to hearken and pulled away the shoulder and stopped their eares that they should not heare yea they made their heart as an Adamant stone least they should heare the Law and the words which the Lord of hostes sent in his spirit by the ministerie of the former Prophets The outragious sinne of these men the Prophet Esay expresseth in these their owne fearefull tearmes chap. 28. 15. We haue made a couenant with death and with hell are we at agreement though a scourge runne ouer and passe through it shall not come at vs for we haue made falsehood our refuge and vnder vanitie are we hid This was a fearefull estate indeede yet for all that no man can say but some of those hauing so hardened their hearts might be and were afterwards conuerted The other kinde of hardnes of heart which is not felt nor perceiued or if perceiued yet not felt which albeit it is lesse fearefull yet it is dangerous enough is in such as although they wilfully resist not God his spirit in good means yet securely carelesly willingly they lie in sinne without any remorse of it or true taste of good things Such was Dauids state by the space of a yeere before Nathan the Prophet came to proue him and rouse him from his lulled sleepe Both these kindes I am perswaded you are free from otherwaies than in temptation Sathan may sometimes moue you thereunto The other kinde and hardnes of heart which is perceiued and felt is of two sorts the one in them which are desirous of meanes whereby they may be relieued although they do finde small or no ease in themselues for a time Of this kinde the Prophet Esay in the name of some of God his people complained Esay 63. 15. And such was Dauids state after that Nathan had reprooued him and God his spirit began ●● worke with him yet crieth he out as you heard before of the losse of God his graces and when he saith that God will accept of no sacrifices be they neuer so many or pretious without a contrite heart and broken spirit he sheweth that for a time euen after the Prophet had reproued him he wanted both This is your case and therefore you are in the state of saluation for Dauid was in this case euen after he had confessed his sinne and had receiued absolution pardon from God by the ministerie of Nathan although he neither felt ioy thereof nor true griefe for the other yet because in truth of heart he confessed his sinne as my trust is you doe and was certainely perswaded of the pardonablenes of it by God his mercie as you must be if you will haue mercie although he was far off from feeling it or applying it to his wofull conscience his state was good and very well to bee hoped of And you must knowe and bee perswaded that those things which are written of God his Saints and namely of Dauid and Peter and such others are ensamples for vs if wee will stay our selues vpon the word of God in the ministerie of his seruants and waite vpon the Lords good time vntill he come neerer vnto vs by his spirite neerer I say for he is come already vnto you or it may be he neuer went from you because to be grieued and humbled with blindnes of minde and hardnes of heart to belieue certainely the truth of God his promises in generall and to reuerence the seruants of God which bring the glad tidings of saluation and to long after comfort vsing the meanes of the Word and Prayer the Sacrament of the Supper and the company of God his children contrarie to hope vnder hope yea without any present feeling all this is a certaine argument that God his spirit is with such and therefore with you This estate though it may be very grieuous yet it is neuer dangerous much lesse is it fearfull vnlesse any be so wilfull that they doe perseuere and continue in desperate refusing all good meanes vnlesse they perseuere I say for that through the subtill sleight of the spirituall aduersarie and his forcible power whereby God suffereth him sometimes for a season to winnowe them as Wheate they are so bewitched and intoxicated that they are carried by violent force of temptation to waxe wearie of or to refuse all meanes of comfort by fits yea almost to haue no desire at all vnto them yea sometimes euen to speake euill of them But all this is but in temptation and therefore God will be mercifull vnto them for Christ his sake Thus Iob cursed the day of his birth and wished to be strangled Ieremie also repented that euer he preached in the Name of the Lord both scarcely abstained from blasphemy Dauid moued with the spirit of ambition thogh dutifully admonished wilfully went on in numbring the people Peter also vaingloriously presuming of his owne strength being most wisely and effectually premonished of his weaknes euen by our Lord Iesus yet wittingly rusheth as an horse into the battell and then very cowardly yeeldeth yea doubly denieth yea strengtheneth his sinne with a threefold corde and fasteneth it with banning and cursing And yet all these obtained mercie most bountifully For why as Sat●ā had desired to winnow them so our Lord IESVS CHRIST prayed for them that their Faith thogh it were vehemētly assaulted yet should not be ouercome although it was battered yet that it should not be destroyed and though it were sore oppressed that it should not be extinguished And heere be you fully perswaded that though Luk. 22. 32. the words seeme to runne as belonging but to Peter viz. I haue prayed for thee that thy Faith should not faile yet that hee prayed as well for the rest of the Apostles yea for all the faithfull For first he saith not Simon Sathan hath desired to winnow thee but you Why then saith he I haue prayed for thee Verily because he should more grieuously offend then the rest although their offence was very great therefore his and our most blessed Sauiour applyed to him the promise but did not impropriate it to him onely and restraine it from the rest Compare with this place Ioh. 17. 20. and you shall see that the heauenly veritie affirmeth that he prayed not only for the Apostles but for all those which should belieue through their word Yea further our Lord Iesus Christ was yesterday is to day and shall be for euer And as the fore-fathers were baptized into him and did eate his Flesh and drinke his bloud so was his prayer effectuall euen vnto them vnder the law much more vnto vs vnder grace And whē you can finde testimony of your heart that when you would doe well
seemeth you are sometimes grieued because you taried not stil at Cambridge according to mine aduise you must know I aduised it not as a thing necessarie but more conuenient as I then supposed but I aduised you to obey your father if his pleasure still continued to haue you home whereunto you yeelded I cannot see how you offend it being your fathers pleasure you should so doe And who knoweth whether being there you might not haue beene as much troubled there being no priuiledge for persons and places in such cases And who knoweth whether it bee the Lords pleasure for the example and instruction and I hope the consolation of others in the end And albeit you will now thinke that here you were neerer the moe and stronger meanes yet knowe you and bee perswaded that God can and doth in such cases worke by fewer and weaker according to his good pleasure Besides it is in our corrupt nature to make much of such as we cannot haue and not so to esteeme those which God doth offer vs as we should I beseech you therefore in the name of Iesus Christ humbly to praise God for those meanes he offereth in mercie vnto you to vse them in faith accordingly and so God shall blesse you by them And then by such conference as you may haue from hence by letters wherein if I may stand you in any stead rather for the good opinion you haue of mee than for any great matter I am able to performe I shall be readie to offer any office of loue vnto you as God shall enable mee and so farre forth as I shall bee at any time instructed in your particular estate in some letters sent from you by conuenient messengers That which I perceieue presently by M. S. Letter is that you are afflicted with the blindnesse of your minde and hardnes of your heart which cannot bee moued either with the promises of Gods mercies or feare of his iudgements nor affected with the loue and delight of the things which bee good nor with the hatred and loathing of the euill Great cause you haue of griefe I confesse but no cause of despaire dare I graunt because I am perswaded that your perswasion is somewhat false partly for want of a sound iudgement of your estate and partly for some defect of faith somewhat through your owne default First therefore knowe you for a certaintie that this is no other tentation than such as diuers of Gods children haue beene humbled with and afterward haue had a good issue out of it and if it please God to mooue you to credit me I my selfe haue knowne others as deepely this way plunged as you can be Remember therefore that God is faithfull and will not suffer you to be tempted aboue that which you shall be able to beare And yet further to confirme you herein the holie Scriptures doe record that this way God heretofore hath humbled his owne people in whose person the Prophet Esay lamentably complaineth O Lord looke downe from heauen behold from the dwelling place of thy holinesse and of the glorie Where is thy zeale and thy strength the multitude of thy mercies and of thy compassions They are restrained from mee And afterwards O Lord why hast thou made vs to erre from thy wayes and hardened our hearts from thy feare And in the next Chapter verse 6. Wee haue beene all as an vncleane thing and all our righteousnesse is as filthie clouts and we all doe fade as a leafe and our iniquities as the winde doe take vs away and there is none that calleth vpon thy name neither that stirreth vp himselfe to take hold on thee for thou hast hid thy face from vs and hast consumed vs because of our iniquities And before Wee grope for the wall like the blinde and we grope as one without eyes we roare like Beares and mourne like Doues So complaineth Ezechias in the bitternes of his soule Like a Crane or a Swallow so did I chatter I did mourne as a Doue And when Dauid crieth Create in m●e O God a cleane heart renue in me a right spirit Restore to me the ioy of thy saluation establish mee with thy free spirit Doth he not declare that his heart was vncleane his spirite crooked the ioy of his saluation lost and himselfe subiect to the spirit of bondage So that wanting the spirit of libertie or adoption hee could neither crie Abba Father nor haue any power against sinne Thus you see how Gods children may be blinded in minde and hardened in heart for a time so that they feele in themselues the grace of the holie Spirit to bee as it were perished and dead Further to relieue the infirmitie of your iudgement in this case because I know it may much distresse you you must vnderstand that there be two kinds of hardnes of heart the one which is not felt nor perceiued the other perceiued and felt and of the former that there be two sorts the first which is most fearfull when anie doe purposely resist the motions of Gods spirit and wilfully refuse the meanes of their saluation of which the Prophet Zacharie speaketh 7. 11. They refused to hearken and pulled away their shoulder and stopped their eares that they should not heare yea they made their hearts as an Adamant stone least they should heare the Lawe and the words which the Lord of Hostes sent in his spirit by the ministerie of the former Prophets The outragious sinne of these men the Prophet Esay expresseth in these their owne fearefull tearmes Wee haue made a couenant with Death and with Hell wee are at agreement though a scourge runne ouer and passe through it shall not come at vs for we haue made falshood our refuge and vnder vanitie are we hidden This was a fearfull estate indeed yet for all that no man can say but some of these hauing hardened their hearts might bee and were afterward conuerted The other kinde of hardnes of heart which is not felt nor perceiued or if perceiued yet not felt which albeit it is lesse fearfull yet it is dāgerous enough is in such as although they wilfullie resist not Gods spirite in good meanes yet securely carelesly and willinglie they lie in sinne without any remorse of it or true taste of good things Such was Dauid his estate for the space of a yeare before Nathan the Prophet came to reprooue him and rouze him from his lulled sleepe Both these kindes I am perswaded you are free from otherwise then in temptations Sathan may somtimes moue you thereunto The other kind of hardnes of heart which is perceiued and felt is of two sorts the one in them which are desirous of meanes whereby they may be relieued although they doe finde small or no ease at all in themselues for a time Of this kinde the Prophet Esay in the name of some of Gods people complained And
we be not too quiet in sinne that we please not our selues in a generall good and in a perswasion we haue heard enough but still let vs labour for the word for I dare say that all our power in prayer commeth from the word euen as the life that is in a tree is inuisible and yet by the fruites comming out in due season is discerned of all and as the life of a childe is a thing not seene but by mouing going and feeling is easily perceiued so the life of faith is a thing very secret and yet by the effects of it at one time or other is discerned of good men There may seeme to be workes and yet not faith and there may be faith and yet not workes by and by following Many men thinke the word now preached not to be the right word because few men are brought to the obedience of God by so long preaching of it But we must rather reason the contrarie this is a sure note it is the true word because it is so much refused and men are made the worse by abusing the word which as it would make them better and doth make better all that obey so it maketh worse all that doe not receiue it in loue that they may be saued 2. Thess. 2. 11. AN OTHER ADDITION OF AN HVNDRED GRAVE COVNSELS OR DIVINE APHORISMES IF you desire to heare the word with profit obserue these things before you goe to the Church humble your selfe in prayer to God that he may prepare your vnderstanding affection and memorie to receiue and that the Preacher may speake to your conscience after in hearing with some short prayer applie the seuerall threatnings promises and instructions to your owne estate when you are come home from hearing change all that you remember into prayer and desire God that you may remember it most when you should practise it and vse to teach others and to conferre of the things remembred it is a good way to remember a thing diligently to remember the reason of it 2 The cause why our meditations and prayers are no stronger in the night is because we ioyne not with meditation the examination of our hearts vpon our beds which if we did in some truth it would keep vs from drowsinesse want of reuerence in our prayers as well as worldly men are kept waking by thinking of worldly matters Here we are taught by Dauids example when we want the more solemne and glorious meanes in dignitie to make a supplie by often and sincere vsing of such priuate meanes as we can 3 It is better to offer a voluntarie and free sacrifice in respect of Gods mercie as doe the Angels than a violent and constrained obedience as doe the Diuels And this dare● say that though the fearefull pronouncing of the curse the wrath the iudgement of God be fearefull in the law yet the denouncing of our separation from Gods kingdome of the gnawing worme of the second death is farre more fearefull in the Gospell which by how much it is the more proper seate and treasurie of Gods mercies so when thundrings and lightnings doe proceede from thence they are the more piercing 4 Two notes to discerne good Christians from hypocrites First whether they complaine of their owne wants and corruptions Secondly whether they speake with griefe and compassion of the infirmities of others 5 To one that seemed scrupulous in wearing the Surplice and Cap and notwithstanding stood in neede of greater things he said As I will not for all the world aduise you ●o weare them so I would counsell you to be well grounded ere you leaue them least you shaking them off ●ather of light affection than of sound iudgement afterward take them againe to your great shame and the offence of others 6 The greater gifts we haue the flesh is the prouder and Sathan the readier to assault vs. 7 The Church is to feare and expect some notable affliction when long ease and prosperitie haue bred either superstition or prophanenesse 8 Thinke not with thy selfe if I were in such a place if I were in such a calling or if it were such a time if I had obtained such a thing or if such a trouble were past then I would serue God then I would take another course though the time were changed and these things changed yet if thy minde were not chaunged thou wouldest be of the same opinion still and though these lets were r●moued yet the diuell would put more great impediments into thy minde to hinder thee still but redeeme the time present doe good while thou mayest serue God to day for who knowes whether thou shalt liue till to morrow God hath left to man the time past to repent of it and the time present to consider of it but the time to come hee hath wholly taken to himselfe to dispose of it Thou maist imagine the time to come but if thou hast beene deceiued in the time past art deceiued of the time present much more thou shalt be deceiued of the time to come Say not then I will doe such a thing and such a thing hereafter doe something now for art thou a Papist Hast thou free will If thou finde thy selfe vnfit now thou shalt find thy selfe more vnfit hereafter if there be manie occasions to hinder thee now there will bee moe occasions to hinder thee hereafter 9 The persons afflicted are either the reprobate or Gods elect the children of wrath or the children of God The afflictions of the reprobate are the punishments of their sinnes here they suffer some in hell they shall suffer all torments here for a time there for euer here a little there vnmeasurable Gods children are either his children onely by election and not by effectuall vocation or else such as are called in Christ. The affliction of Gods children not effectually called are the punishments of sinne God will haue them vnder the rigor of his iustice to make them meet to receiue the grace of his mercy Gods children not onely by election but also by effectuall vocation are of two sorts they are either such as are not sufficiently called which are more out of Christ then in Christ or else they are sufficiently called in whome Christ liueth Againe those that are not sufficiently in Christ which are more carnall than spirituall are of two sorts they are either babes in Christ in whome there hath bene no more working of the spirit or such as haue had a greater worke of God in them in whom the spirit is quenched those that are but babes in Christ and continuing babes still in whom there is but a little worke of God and great abundance of flesh their afflictions are the punishments of sinne because they will not bee gouerned by the rule of Gods spirite God will haue them ruled by the rodde of affliction
himselfe whether hee be in the Faith or no 2. Cor 13. 5. Why else 2. Secondly because euery one must be able to proue and examine mens doctrines and doings by the Scriptures that they be not in their saluation by them deceiued 3. Thirdly because euery one must be able as his calling requireth to teach admonish exhort and comfort one another 4. Fourthly because euery one must be able to make an account of the faith and hope that is in him What if men cannot reade Then they must vse the helpe of others that can reade Is it enough to reade the Scriptures priuately or with others No for God hath also commaunded to heare them read publikely in the Church And is it enough to heare them read publikely in the Church No for hee also hath ordained preaching to be vsed Why must preaching be ioyned with ●eading Because it is the most principall and proper meanes to beget Faith in vs. Why must Faith be mixed with the Word read and preached Because otherwise the word profiteth vs nothing How many things are requisite to bee in euery one that will come to heare the Word read and preached Amongst others foure are necessarie What is the first 1. First a reuerend feare of the Maiestie of God 2. Secondly an assured faith in Christ. 3. Thirdly an earnest endeuour to frame our liues thereafter 4. Fourthly they must pray for the holie Ghost to bee giuen them to enlighten their mindes and to write all these things in their hearts Which be the principall parts of Gods word The Law and the Gospell What call you the Law It is that part of the Word that commaundeth all good and forbiddeth all euill What if wee could keepe the Law Then wee should be blessed What if wee breake the Law Then we are subiect to the curse of God and so to death and damnation What call you the Gospell It is that part of the word which containeth the free promises of God made vnto vs in Iesus Christ without any respect of our deseruings What doth that worke in vs It worketh in vs a true and liuely faith in Iesus Christ whereby wee lay holde of the free remission of our sinnes in him and the true repentance of them What must wee learne by the whole word of God Two things 1. First to make a right and sound entrance to our saluation 2. Secondlie how to encrease and continue in the same vnto the ende What is required for our right and sound entrance to our saluation Three things are required 1. First to know and to be perswaded of the greatnes of our sinnes and the miserie due to the same 2. Secondly to know and be perswaded how we may be deliuered from them 3. Thirdly to know and bee perswaded what thankes wee owe to God for our deliuerance How shall wee come to the right sight of our sinnes and a sound perswasion of the greatnesse of them By the spirit of God leading vs into the true vnderstanding of the Law and a due examination of our selues thereby Where is the Law set downe It is written in many places of the Scriptures but the summe thereof is contained in the ten Commandements Rehearse them I am the Lord thy God thou shalt haue none other gods but me How are they deuided Into two principall heads or tables as they be called What doth the first table teach vs It teacheth vs our dutie towards God and is contained in the foure first Commaundements What doth the second teach vs Our dutie towards our neighbour and is contained in the sixe last Commandements Why are the duties towards God set downe before the duties towards our neighbour 1 Because the loue of God is the ground of the loue of our neighbour What followeth hereof 2 That none can rightly loue his neighbour except he first loue God Why are the duties towards our neighbour ioyned to our duties towards God 3 Because the loue of our neighbour is the proofe of our loue towards God What ensueth hereof 4 That none can loue God aright except he also loue his neighbour Why are the Commandements set downe in ten parts and not in generall 5 Because God is not pleased with doing our duties in generall or in some part but he will be wholy serued in all and euery one of his Commandements Why are they set downe singularly or to euery one 6 Because euery one must doe his owne dutie though none goe before him What followeth of this That euery one must beare his owne burthen and none shall haue excuse by the example of others Are there not some rules which serue for the better vnderstanding of euery one of the Commandements Yea there be foure which haue speciall vses 1 First in euery commandement where euill is forbidden there the contrarie good is commanded 2 Secondly many moe euils are forbidden and many moe good things are commanded in euery commandement than in words are expressed 3 Thirdly because God is a spirit therefore his commaundements are spirituall and require spirituall obedience 4 Fourthly in euery commaundement where euill is forbidden there the occasions of the euill are forbidden and where good is commanded there also the occasions of good are commanded Rehearse the first Commandement Thou shalt haue none other gods but me What euill is here generally forbidden Euen that which the words doe import What good is commaunded To haue God to be my onely God and to be alwaies in his presence What is it to haue God to be our onely God To giue him all things which be proper and peculiar to his Maiesty Which be those that properly concerne God and therefore be the speciall things commanded They be very many Rehearse the summe of them wher● b● the rest may be vnderstood I am bound to beleeue in God to loue God to feare and obey him to pray vnto him and praise him After what sort m●st you performe these duties of faith loue feare obedience prayer and thankesgiuing With my whole mind and vnderstanding with my whole heart and my whole strength Which bee the peculiar sinnes herein forbidden To faile in giuing to God any of these or the like forenamed good things in any part or in any respect What else is particularly forbidden To giue any of the forenamed good things to any creature or any other thing whatsoeuer whereby my heart may be withdrawne from God in any part or in any respect Which be the occasions of the breach of this Commandement 1. First the vaine desire of the pleasures riches and glorie of this world 2. Secondly a negligent and carelesse vse of the meanes to serue God his prouidence Are not the contrarie good things to these commaunded Yea. Which are they 1. First a heart contented with any estate and vsing things of this world as though we vsed them not 2. Secondly a reuerend and diligent vse of the meanes to
if before it was begun is now continued or i● it was not before now beginneth and neuer endeth world without ende For though true it is that sicknesse pouertie imprisonment or banishment haue ended their tearme in death yet a wounded heart which was temporall in this life is now eternall after this life that which before death was in hope recouerable is after death made vncurable and vnrecouerable It is good therefore to consider if euen in this life the torment of conscience be so fearefull how much more grieuous is it to sustaine it in hell where that is infinite which here is finite where that is vnmeasurable which here is measurable where is the sea of sorrow whereof this is but a drop where is the flame of that fire whereof this is lesse than a sparke But to shut vp this argument Some there haue beene who throughout all their life time haue beene free from all other troubles so as either they felt them not at all or else in very small measure and by that meanes neuer knew what outward trouble meant As for example some men there haue beene who for sicknesse neuer knew the head-ach for pouertie neuer knew what want meant who for discredit were neuer euill spoken of who euer put farre from them the euill day of the Lord who made a league with death as it were and a couenant with hell who though they could crucifie euery crosse rather than come vnder any crosse yet they could neuer escape a wounded conscience either in this life or in the life to come True it is that Gods children by faith and repentance doe often escape it but the wicked and such as are borne vnto it as to their sure inheritance the more they flie from it the more it pursueth them If we haue transgressed the Ciuill Iawes the Iudge by bribes may be corrupted if a man haue committed some capitall offence by flying his Countrie he may escape the Magistrates hands but our consciences telling vs that we haue sinned against God what bribe shall we offer or whither shall we flie whither shall we goe from his spirit or whither shall we goe from his presence If we ascend into heauen is not he there If we lie downe in hell is he not there If we flie to the vtmost parts of the sea is he not there also There needeth no apparitor to summon vs there needes no Bayly arrant to fetch vs there needes no accuser to giue in against vs sin will arrest vs and lyeth at the doore our owne consciences will impannall a Quest against vs our owne hearts will giue in sufficient euidence and our owne iniquities will pleade guiltie to our owne faces Thus we see both by the experience of them that haue suffered the wound of the spirit and by the comparing of it with other euils what a weight most grieuous and burthen intolerable it is to haue a tormented conscience Now let vs shew how we may preuent and by what meanes Gods children falling into some degrees of it for if it rage in extremitie it is an euill most dangerous may safely and quietly be deliuered from it And here a iust complaint is to be taken vp and it is a wonder to be marked that we see many so carefull and watchfull to auoyd other troubles and so few or none take any paines to escape the trouble of minde which is so grieuous We see men louing health and loathing sicknes in diet temperate in sleepe moderate in Physicke expert skilfull to purge and to auoid such corrupt humors which in time may breede though presently they doe not bring forth some dangerous sicknes yet to auoyd the diseases of the soule no man abateth his sleepe no man abridgeth his diet no man prepareth Physicke for it no man knoweth when to be full and when to be emptie how to want and how to abound Others caried away with the loue of riches and very slie to fall into pouertie will not sticke to rise early and take sleepe lately to fare hardly to teare and taw their flesh in labour by land and by water in faire and foule weather by rockes and by sands from farre and from neere and yet to fall into spirituall decaies to auoide the pouertie of conscience no man taketh such paines as though saluation and peace of minde were not a thing worthie the labouring for Some ambitiously hunting after honour and not easily digesting reproches behaue themselues neither sluggishly nor sleepily but are actiue in euery attempt by loue and by counsell by prudence and prowesse by wit and by practise by labour and learning by cunning and diligence to become famous and to shun a ciuill reproch yet to be glorious in the sight of God and his Angels to fall before the heauens in the presence of the Almightie to be couered with shame and confusion of conscience we make none account as they who neither vse any meanes to obtaine the one nor auoid those occasions which may bring the other Others vnwilling to come within the reach and danger of the law that they may escape imprisonment of body or confiscation of goods will be painefull in penall Satutes skilfull in euery branch of the ciuill law and especially will labour to keepe themselues from treasons murthers felonies and such like offences deseruing the punishment of death yet when the Lord God threatneth the seizure both of soule and body the attaching of our spirits the confiscating of our cōsciences the banishing of vs from heauen the hanging of vs in hell the suspending of our saluation the adiudging of vs to condemnation for the breach of his commandements no man searcheth his eternall law no man careth for the Gospell neither the sentence of euerlasting diuorcement from the Lord neither the couenant of reconciliation is esteemed of vs. And to reach our complaint one degree further Behold the more we seeke outward pleasures and to auoid the inward trouble of minde the more we haste and runne into it and suddenly plunge our selues in a wounded spirit ere we be aware Who posteth more to become rich who hopeth lesse to become poore than the marchant man who aduentureth great treasures who hazardeth his goods who putteth in ieopardie his life and yet suddenly he either rusheth vpon the rocke of hardnesse of heart or else is swallowed vp of the gulph of a despairing minde from which afterwards he cannot be deliuered with a ship full of golde Wofull proofe hath confirmed how some men wholy set on pleasures such as could not away to be sad and to be hedged vp alwaies of godly sorrow haue had their tables made snares and euen their excesse of pleasures hath brought excesse of sorrowes and whilest they laboured to put the euill day farre from them they haue vsed such follies as haue bred them most bitter and terrible torments of their fearefull and trembling consciences There be some of another sorte who
I am I am sure he hath infirmities as others haue we are no Angels our nature is corrupt we are but flesh I am sure you would not haue vs Gods Thus the diuell commeth to tempt but he apparrelleth himselfe in another sute when he commeth to accuse and then of a flye he makes an Elephant of the very smallest pricke of a pinne a globe of the whole earth of a molehill a mountaine and presseth sillie soules with feares and terrors that they know not how to winde out themselues If he cannot bring them to make no conscience where they should make conscience he will labour to bring them to make conscience where they neede make no conscience He careth not whether thou wilt be remisse or superstitious so thou be one of them If he cannot get you to follow the Epicurisme of the world as Libertines in diet and apparell he will make you so precise as to thinke it a hainous sinne to eate one bit of meate or to weare one rag of cloath more than for necessitie How needfull therefore it is to saile with an euen course we may coniecture by other things which will bewray the corruption of our nature In the time of a plague we shall see some will be so bold that without any lawfull calling or godly warrant they will rush into places infected and then falling sicke their conscience prickes them for their tempting of God by an vnaduised boldnes in the houre of their death Others plunged as deepely in a quite contrarie extremitie are too fearefull when they doe but heare of the sicknesse and for very feare haue beene brought to deaths doore only by imagining thēselues to haue been infected when they haue been most free who oftentimes haue euen died and that without any naturall cause that euer could be knowne but onely through immoderate feare and the iudgement of God comming vpon them for their infidelitie and vnbeleefe Thus it is with vs in Christianitie in that as well the oppressing our selues with too much feare to be ouercome as the carnall securitie in not fearing to be ouercome may bring sinne vpon vs God his children must labour for a measure and that must be sought for in the word which will teach them how they shall neither decline on the right hand nor on the left but will guide them in the narrow way shewing in euery thing what is vertue what is vice what is the meane what is the extreame Among many examples let vs consider of zeale a most precious vertue in Christianity so long as it is free from the extremities Otherwise if we be cold in zeale it is a sinne on the left hand if we be zealous without knowledge it is preposterous and becommeth a sinne on the right hand But can we not come to some perfection No if you vnderstand it for an absolute vnspottednes albeit to that perfection which the Scripture taketh for soundnes trueth and sinceritie of heart which is voide of carelesse remisnes we may come Neither doth the Lord deale with vs after our sinnes nor reward vs after our iniquities in whose eyes the most glorious actions of men are but as waters flowing purely from the Conduit but defiled by passing through a filthy chanell Wherfore hauing these imperfections let vs not seeke to be more righteous than we can be saying for euery error of this life Oh I am none of God his sonnes I am none of his daughters for I cannot finde that perfection in me which is to be required But let vs comfort our selues in the truth of our hearts and singlenes of our desires to serue God because he is God and so we shall be accepted of God I speake this to this end that poore soules might haue comfort and know that if they abhorre sinne as sinne if they examine themselues for it if they grone vnder it if they mislike themselues for it if they feare to fall into it the Lord will not pursue them with the rigor of his law but will giue them the sweetnes of his promises they are no more vnder the curse but vnder grace But further to inforce our exhortation to auoyde too scrupulous a feare which hindereth the true examination of our hearts let vs thinke that it happeneth in the spirituall conflict as in ciuill warres We reade that many cities lying in great securitie haue suddenly both beene assaulted and ouerthrowne as also how some Countries too much negligent in the meanes through an excessiue fearefulnes haue incouraged their enemies with more greedy violence to pray vpon them With which kinde of stratagems our aduersarie me diuell being well acquainted doth often practise this policie If he see vs without all feare too quietly to rest in our selues he thinketh his assault must needes be the stronger because our resistance is the weaker Againe if he descrieth in vs a cowardly feare and fainting of heart before we once begin to ioyne battell with him he will set vpon our immoderate feare and as villainously as suddenly stab vs to the heart and make a present spoyle of vs. Common practise doth further teach vs that when we can heare the word without all trembling at God his iudgements when we can pray without all feare before the Maiestie of God when we can come to the discipline of the Church without all reuerence of the ordinance of the Lord all is in vaine Againe let vs heare with too much trembling and we shall learne nothing let vs pray with too seruile a feare and our worshipping of God will be without all comfort and vncheerefull Thus if we neither lessen sinne that is sinne indeede neither make sinne of that which is not sin in truth it is good to proceed to this three-fold examination to lay the edge of this doctrine more neere our affections because many will be sound in this ripenes of knowledge and barrennes of conscience to speake dispute and declaime of all these things very skilfully which flickring in the circumference of the braine and not sitting at the ground of the heart doe seale vp a more iust sentence of condemnation against them To helpe this euill we must meditate deeply of the Law and of the Gospel together with the appurtenances of them both that finding ourselues farre from Gods blessings promised to the keepers of the law and seeing our selues neere to the curses due to the breakers of the law we may raise vp some sense of sin in our selues Yet herein we must not stay our foote but giue a further stride for whereas many by a diligent view of the law haue come to the sense of sinne in themselues and saw plainly their owne condemnation yet because they laboured not to see the guiltinesse acquited by the remission of sinne in Christ they plunged themselues into a bottomlesse sea of sorrowes Others hauing passed these degrees and hitherto made these steps to auoyde the wound of conscience haue come
also too short and missed of the marke when because besides the sense of sinne pardoned by the death of Christ they felt not also the vertue of his passion crucifying sinne in them but saw that with the remission of sinne was not ioyned the mortification of sin they feared that there was no forgiuenesse for them but stil languishing with sorrow they thought themselues to stand charged with their former guiltines Yea and which is more for that such men haue not truely been instructed nor surely haue been grounded in the doctrine of Christs death and resurrection that is for that they saw not as well power flowing from his death to slay sinne in them as vertue to pardon sinne in them for that they felt not as well strength to sanctification streaming from the rising againe of Christ as they were perswaded of iustification righteousnesse therein they haue lien still bleeding at the heart in such sort as the wound of griefe could hardly or neuer be stayed and stanched Wherefore let vs strengthen our weake soules with this sixe-fold corde of consolation against these bitter assaults Let vs first labour to know sinne then to sorrow for sinne after to feele our sinnes in Christ forgiuen further to looke for power to crucifie the same then to lay hold on iustification by his resurrection and lastly hope for strength to proceed from thence to further vs in sanctification and holines of life euen vnto the end And thus much briefly for the second thing which we matched in company with the examination of sinne euen the triall of faith both which rightly vsed shall in some measure sauegard vs from the trouble of an afflicted minde Now let vs hasten to the third part of our diuision to shew how Gods children being fallen into this wound of spirit may be helped out of it which God willing we will also performe after we haue answered a necessarie obiection which in the former part might seeme to incounter against vs. There is no man but will graunt that Dauid Iob and others of the Saints of God had a sight of their sinnes a sorrow for their sinnes and a taste of the remission of their sinnes how then commeth it to passe that these men were so troubled in minde To this I answere that their trouble so befell them either for failing in some of these former things or else they were rather afflicted for triall of their faith than for punishing of sinne in them And therefore be it alwaies prouided that we thinke not euery conflict of conscience continually and chiefly to be for the pursuing of our sinnes but sometimes and principally that it commeth for the triall of our faith and yet secondarily or lesse principally for the scourging of sinne as we may see in Iob. Whereupon let all men be admonished when they see good men thus humbled throwne downe in minde to lay their hands on their mouthes from saying Surely these men are but hypocrites doubtlesse these men be great sinners the Lord hath found out their hypocrisie For good reason there is that such silence should be vsed for that the Lord may as well make triall of their faith as take punishment on their sinnes For if such affliction should alwaies and chiefly be sent for sinne then it should follow that all others as they exceeded them in sinne should also exceed them in the punishment of sinne But now comming to the saluing of this sore I shall seeme very strange in my cure and so much the more be wondred at by how much in manner of proceeding I differ from the most sort of men herein I am not ignorant that many visiting afflicted consciences cry still Oh comfort them oh speake ioyfull things vnto them Yea there be some and those of the most learned who in such cases are full of these and such like speeches Why are you so heauie my brother why are you so cast downe my sister Be of good cheere take it not so grieuously What is there that you should feare God is mercifull Christ is a Sauiour These be speeches of loue indeed but they often doe the poore soules as much good herein as if they should powre cold water into their bosomes when as without further searching of their sores they may as well minister a maladie as a medicine For as nutritiue and cordiall medicines are not good for euery sicke person especially when the body needeth rather a strong purgation than a matter restoratiue and as incarnatiue medicines may for the time allay the paine of the patient but after the griefe becōmeth more grieuous so the comfortable applying of Gods promises are not so profitable for euery one that is humbled especially when their soules are rather further to be cast downe than as yet to be raised vp so those s●gred consolations may for a while ouer-heale the conscience and abate some present griefe but so as afterwards the smart may be the sorer and the griefe may grow the greater hereof insueth this effect that comfort seemeth to cure for a while but for want of wisedome in the right discerning of the cause men minister one medicine for another and so for want of skill the latter fit grindeth them sorer than the former Some there be who without all precept and practise will be their owne Physitions and these so soone as the fit commeth vpon them thinke it the best to chastise and to chase away their sorrow by drinking at tauernes by minstrelsie in merie companie by purging melancholie in taking Physicke all which may seeme to weare away the paine for a while but yet after it biteth more deeply when the burning feuer of their spirits shaketh them with a second recourse and for that before they were not truely searched purged ●eared and launced it commeth to passe that the second relapse is more dangerous than the first impression To come to our purpose we must know that all griefes are either confused or distinct and sure it is that the minde is appalled either for some cause knowne to vs as certaine o● for some thing vnknowne to vs and vncertaine To them which are troubled with such blinde griefes whereof they can see no reason as often it happeneth to Gods children in secret prouidence who either neuer knew God or else had but a generall knowledge of him I answere that as I denie not Physicke to be ministred if it in part proceed from a naturall cause so I require the word especially to shew the principall and originall cause to begin in the soule And this I doe the rather because I would haue wisedome both in considering the state of the body if neede so require in looking chiefly to the soule which so few thinke of If a man troubled in cōscience come to a Minister it may be he will looke all to the soule and nothing to the body if he come to a Physition
from them be glad of such excuse Surely this estate bewraieth a proud heart blessing it selfe with a fulnes and cloyedenes of the meanes and either sheweth vs to lie in some sinne presently or that we are like to fall into some sinne hereafter and that shortly Howbeit being absent i● hauing these or like affections wee can mourne beate our owne hearts and iudge our selues enquiring of the things spoken at their hands that haue been at the congregation if being absent in bodie with an humble sight of our want wee are as present in spirit if euen in time of exercises we bestow the time in prayer in reading or in meditation the Lord will shield vs from sinne and the shame of sinne Againe if wee shall finde our selues subiect to peeuishnes concupiscence or couetousnesse with lesse power to preuaile against them that wee haue had let vs feare least some pride hath gone before If wee cannot recouer our selues out of these euils by prayer or mourning let vs suspect our owne hearts that some securitie in the meanes hath ouertaken vs the Lord for a time hath left vs the diuell hath foyled vs. It is a blessed thing to get the victory of our faults before they be ioyned with the offences of the world with the griefe of the godly with the reproch of our aduersaries with the trouble of our owne consciences with the hazard of Gods glorie And therefore if it be so the good will of God let vs earnestly desire him that our trials and temptations may bee inward that they may bee stayed and stenched when they beginne that they breake not out abroade to the greater dishonour of the Lord and our further discomfort which surely they will doe if by cherishing them and not checking them wee striue not for some safetie against them Let vs humblie therefore long before feare this reproch to come and pray with the Prophet Lorde keepe mee from the reproch which I feare least otherwise the Lord seeing vs make no conscience in these cases bee auenged of vs who surely will dishonour them that sticke not to dishonour him Cease then to gaze at the worke of God and labour to gage the pride of your owne hearts in affection which the Lorde is contrained to shame vs with for the abuse of his graces for the discredit of his word the contempt of his glorie and for the neglect of our owne saluation which being before purposed rather then it should bee vnaccomplished wee shall haue shamefull Sergeants sent vnto vs as fire on our houses warres to spoyle our goods sicknes to weaken our bodies and torment of minde to scourge our consciences which will draw vs out by the eares from the heauie slumber of sinne wherein wee snorted And thus fitlie though suddenly we are slipt into the second point and obseruation of this doctrine which is that wee should not be too hie to enter into the gates of aduersitie nor being entred to behaue our selues vnpatiently as though it would vndoe vs to sit in the house of mourning a while rather wee must reioyce in it and be thankfull for it saying with the Prophet It is good for mee ô Lord that thou hast afflicted me c. because the holy Ghost here telleth vs that lowlinesse goeth before honour and in the schoole of humilitie wee shall learne the way to true glorie and Nobilitie Neither doe I here meane that affliction in it selfe hath of it selfe such vertue as to humble vs truly vnder the hand of God but when the spirit of God worketh with it that then it will breede in vs the fruites of righteousnesse repentance faith and holinesse it will driue vs to seeke comfort in the world to aske comfort by praier to yeeld comfort by compassion on other mens euils And therefore it is necessarie against the policie of Sathan who would discourage the Saints of God in their profession by dressing them with afflictions to stay our selues in this testimonie of the holy Ghost that before glorie goeth affliction and after lowlinesse commeth honor either in this life or in the life to come or in both This must further teach vs to profit by the threatnings of God publikely preached not to threaten them or to murmure against them that lay the iudgemēts of God against vs in the law this must cause vs to make much of them that by sharpe censuring of vs will soonest draw vs out of sinne This must worke in vs a desire to reape some fruite by priuate admonitions yea and to call on others to admonish vs that we may still be kept in some good course of humilitie Further and besides this it is profitable for vs to frequent them that are sicke ready to di● perplexed in spirit imprisoned in chaines and oppressed with miserie that in them we may see our selues as in a mirrour and so with Moses to chuse rather to suffer afflictions then to enioy the pleasures of sinne for a time This acquainting our selues with the iudgements of God will both rubbe off securitie and stirre vs vp to greater thankfulnes for our selues and pitie towardes others Wherefore they are not in the way of humilitie to obtaine glorie who are so tender sighted that they cannot abide to see the iudgements of God they are too daintie eared that cannot or that will not heare the threatnings of the Lawe saying oh I cannot abide to heare one in desperation I cannot away to heare such fearfull speeches to heare the diuell speake in one I loue not to see one lie gasping and panting in death These things would depriue me of all mirth breede melancholy and stirre me vp to m●●●es Nay this delicatenes to flye from the Lord thus drawing neere vs will hasten these things vpon vs which we will not profit by in others Such eyes to see such eares to heare such hearts to be humbled it becommeth Gods people to haue that as they loue nothing more than glorie so they labour for nothing more than humilitie as they shun nothing more than cōfusion so they auoid nothing more than pride of heart Which that we may doe let vs cast down our selues before the throne of mercie in the name and mediation of Iesus Christour Sauiour O eternall God and our most louing father behold vs in thine owne couenant c. FINIS OF THE GOOD EDVCATION OF CHILDREN THE SIXTH SERMON Prouerbs 17. 21. Hee that begetteth a foole getteth himselfe sorrowe and the father of a foole can haue no ioy THE holie Ghost speaking in the Scripture of foolish sonnes as that he that be●etteth such a one getteth himselfe sorrowe and that the father of a foole hath no ioy meaneth it not so much of naturall idiots and such as are destitute of common reason although it is true that this is a lamentable iudgement of God and a heauines to the parents of such a childe as of wicked children such as
true and iust Therefore you shall haue no harme vnlesse you be wicked and vngodly men I am a m●n that feare God Here is a rule of Christian life especially for Magistrates Wee must all feare God All that are in place and authoritie must knowe that they are vnder God Ioseph considered hereof not now onely but also in the last chapter of Genesis when his brethren were afraid of him Reade from the 14. verse of that chapter to the 19. where Ioseph saith Feare not for I am not vnder God And I pray you marke what this consideration wrought in him in the 20. and 21. verses When ye thought euill against me God disposed it to good c. Now if we feare God we must pray vnto him for our Magistrates that he will maintaine his feare among them For it falleth out that we are often times punished by them euen especially because we neuer pray for them Here be rules in this feare of God for religion for praying vnto God and praising God for true keeping of the Sabbath for conuersation of life First when as to the hindrance of the feare of God any lawes shall come foorth contrary to Gods word wee must remember that we forget not to feare God and to stand in aw of his rods if wee swarue from his word Secondly if we doe not on the Sabbath day more than man commandeth we shewe that we feare man more than God And lastly in all our doings and dealings either with the Lord or with men let vs remember to feare God for if wee feare not God what wickednesse is there which wee feare to commit Abraham when hee came to Abimelechs Court he feared adulterie he had no other reason but this Because the feare of God was not in that place Hence euen from the want of the feare of God commeth drunkennes and selling of wares without conscience and oppressing of the poore and heaping vp riches to another end than hee that gaue them or rather lent them hath appointed against all which since man cannot make sufficient lawes it were to be wished that euery man could say truly and from his heart I am a man that feareth God Vers. 21. And they saide one to another We haue verily sinned against our brother in that wee saw the arguish of his soule when hee besought vs and wee would not heare him therefore i●t is trouble come vpon vs. Euery word containeth doctrine vpon doctrine ●irst wee see how necessarie afflictions are to make vs call vpon God By this reason by afflictions we feele our sinne now without we feele our sinnes we call not vpon God For till we feele the burthen of our sinnes lying vpon our conscience as it were a weight to presse vs downe into hell we forget God we foolishly perswade our selues wee haue no neede for we can see none Therefore afflictions are very necessarie for vs to remember God to call vpon him and to bring vs to some assurance also thereby that wee are the children of God That affliction is so necessary to feele our sinnes both daily experience doth teach vs and examples and testimonies of the children of God doe confirme the same vnto vs. Iosephs brethren all the time of their prosperitie forget what they had done to Ioseph but now when they were in some distresse they came to themselues and began to call to account and to lay before them their hard dealing with their brother And Dauid saith in the 119 Psalme Before I was afflicted I went astray the ninth part of that Psalme but saith he now I keepe thy word So then wee may boldly conclude that affliction is a necessarie thing to bring vs to God And here wee may note the great loue and care that the Lord God hath ouer vs and his infinite goodnes towards vs in vsing al meanes for our saluation First the Lord setteth downe his law vnto vs. and hee hath added also threatning and curses to as many as shall neglect or disobey it But now if neither the law preached nor yet those threatnings are able to strike a terror into our hearts thē he vseth yet another meanes he taketh his rods and fatherly correcteth vs by that meanes to moue vs to crie to him himselfe by our crie to pitie vs and haue mercie vpon vs. The preaching of the law is necessarie and the threatnings for transgression of the law must often times bee vsed Iosephs brethren after they were sore threatned they then began to be humbled and to acknowledge their fault The Lord saide vnto Abimelech Thou art but a ●ead man if thou restore not to Abraham his wife againe So that wee may here see the end of threatnings e●her they bring a man to knowe his sinne and so to preuent the punishment due for sinne or else they hasten and heape greater punishment vnto vs if otherwise we doe no● repent After Iosep●s brethren were threatned they were humbled and so God repented him of the plague hee was minded to bring vpon them Abimelech after he was threatned he restored Abraham his wife againe and so the Lord staied from destroying him Now there are two sorts of people which would haue Gods promises preached vnto them and not the law of God The first are they which would continue in sinne As for these they are like to the Horse and to the Mule whose mouthes mus● bee holden with bit and bridle Another sort there is which would not haue the law nor the threatnings therof preached vnto them and these are they which feele themselues moued with the promises of God But we cannot be moued liuely with the promises of Christ except we first by the law and the threatnings of Iohn see the full measure of punishment that our sins haue deserued Therefore it is very requisit we first haue the law preached vnto vs that wee may haue a liuely feeling of our sinnes As those which would not haue the law preached were said to be of two sorts so those that feele their sinnes are also of two sorts for either they see sinne in generall or else they are humbled more specially Those which feele their sinnes and haue a taste thereof and see them in general and not specially these must be cut on both sides they must see sinne on both sides they must enter into the secrets of the heart for they haue not yet learned to discerne of thoughts they must euē haue their very hearts thoughts laid open vnto them In the third to the Hebr. we are bidden not to harden our hearts at the word of God Not to harden our hearts that is not only to heare the law preached vnto our eares to goe no further for so it neuer profiteth vs nay it is the power of death vnto death vnto vs but we must suffer it to soke into vs to haue his proper working to pearce to enter euen to the very secret cogitations of our hearts that not onely
one man cannot possiblie fill the vnlimited desire of the soule So vnquenchable is the thirst of mans soule vntill it bathe it selfe in the riuer of life and in the vnmeasurable Ocean of goodnes and wisedome Secondly they cannot secure the conscience distressed with the apprehension of the wrath of God or preuent his iudgements as wee may see in Nebucadnezzar Dan. 4. and his sonne Belshazzar Dan. 5. vers 6. and Prophecied of Zeph 1. 17. 18. Ezech 7. 19. Obad 4. When our sinnes are ripe and readie to take the flame of Gods fierie indignation then neither the wedge of golde nor the height of place can priuiledge or protect vs. Lastly they cannot stretch themselues to eternitie they all can bring vs no further then our death bed then are they vtterly disappointed of their weake imaginarie sweetnes and are wholly turned into wounds and wormewood into gall and vexation They leaue indeed a sting in the conscience that neuer dies but themselues die all at our deaths and lie downe with vs in the graue Iob 20. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9 10. c. But to come to the blessed man indeede in that when the Prophet would make knowne vnto all the world who are in the happiest estate and in the highest place of account with God he describeth setteth them forth by this property that they are sincere in heart and vpright in life and conuersation in a word such as truely feare the Lord. The point hence to be noted in generall is this that Grace and Religion is the way to all blessednesse This doctrine the Psalmist confirmeth vnto vs in sundry other places as Psalme 1. and 112. c. In the former whereof he declareth who is a man truely religious to wit he that escheweth ill counsels and sinfull practises and on the other side embraceth and delighteth in goodnesse and godlinesse and in the meanes of obtaining and increasing the same and then he pronounceth such a man blessed Blessed saith he is the man that doth ●ct walke in the counsell of the wicked nor stand in the way of sinners c. But his delight is in the law of the Lord and in his law will he meditate day and night And to the same effect is that in the other Psalme before named Blessed is the man that feareth the Lord and delighteth greatly in his commandements c. Throughout which Psalme we may obserue as the true and certaine notes of a righteous man so also his priuiledges which are very many and very great both in regard of himselfe and of his posteritie which shall speed the better for his sake Notable likewise is that place of Deuteromonie where the Lord speaketh vnto his Church in this manner Blessed art thou ô Israel who is like any ● thee ô people saued by the Lord the shield of thy helpe and the sword of thy glorie which speech is not to be vnderstood as pertaining only to that nation but as belonging to all that are the ●●ue Israel of God and that serue him with an vpright and faithfull heart Now what saith he of them Who is like vnto thee O Israel Why if they should haue looked to outward things they might haue answered the Egyptians the Edomites Assyrians nay the very Canaauites themselues are like vnto vs yea farre beyond vs for at that time when this was spoken they were in the wildernesse trauelling towards the promised land and what great matters had they then Moses who was the best of them had not a house to rest his head in none of them could say this is my ground there is my corne thus large are my reuenews by the yeare c. but they were all tenants at will at a daies or at an houres warning or lesse euen as Gods pleasure was yet the Lord maketh a challenge against all the world Who is like vnto thee ô people saued by the Lord meaning indeed that no nation vnder heauen was comparable vnto them in regard of the wonderfull things that God had wrought for them and in regard of those heauenly prerogatiues which he had vouchsafed vnto them the meanest hewer of wood or drawer of water amongst them was to be preferred before the mightiest Monarch in the world and that may be said of all true Christians which was spoken of them Who is like vnto thee O people saued by the Lord The truth of this will more euidently appeare if we well weigh the things that follow Namely 1. What miserie grace doth free vs from 2. What good things it maketh vs to enjoy 1. In this life 1. Estimation 2. Safetie 3. Comfort 2. In the life to come all manner of happinesse 1. First therefore that wee may see what miserie it frees vs from wee must consider that men naturally are the children of wrath vnder the curse and malediction of God subiect to horrible vexations and terrors all their life long they liue in feare of death and of such iudgements as are forerunners of death their table is a snare and their prosperitie their ruine their aduersitie is imbittered and their callings accursed and in a word nothing maketh them better but euery thing a great deale worse all being infected and poysoned vnto them by their owne sinnes and Gods fearefull vengeance vpon the same If they liue it is to the increase of their damnation if they die they goe to take present possession of destruction if they refuse to eate and drinke they are murderers of themselues if they doe eate and drinke they are vsurpers of that which is none of their owne If they come not to the Word and Sacrament they are contemners of Gods ordinances if they doe come they are profaners of the same and so shal be further hardened to their finall perdition and is not this a wretched case Though for their apparell they were cloathed as Salomon in the midst of his royalty though their Robes were as rich as was Aarons Ephod or breast-plate or the most costliest parts of his garments all were of no worth without grace though they fed on the daintiest dishes and did eate Angels foode as the Israelites are saide to doe yet if they be sinfull and rebellious they shall perish as Corah Dathan and Akiron and manie other of them did Though their habitations were as sumptuous delightfull as Paradice was yet they could haue no more comfort therein then Adam had when he had once broken the commaundement of GOD in eating of the forbidden fruite Notwithstanding all things remaining in their excellencie as before yet hee was surprized with the terrours and feares of a guiltie conscience and could take no pleasure in the goodly riuers in the pleasant fruites in the varietie of all the creatures that were in the garden of Eden c. but hee was faine to flie from Gods presence and to hide himselfe among the Trees of the garden And last of all though their dignitie were neuer so great their
prayer doe wee come before his Maiestie as pricked with a feare thereof are wee pressed with feeling our wants doe wee feare the repulse Oh let vs craue by prayer that we may not come in fashion but in feare not on custome but of conscience and with a free spirit If the spirit make vs free saith Iohn then are we free indeede wee are so captiuated of our selues that we cannot be free but by the spirit When then we see vs in this dulnes and custome in hearing reading or praying we must pray with Dauid Psal 51. 10. Create in mee a cleane heart O God and renue a right spirite within mee 12. Restore to mee the ioy of thy saluation and stablish me with thy free spirit Where hee hauing lost as it were the freedome of the spirit the cleannes of his heart and the ioy of his minde prayeth to haue them all restored againe And thus much for our admonition Now for our comforts I am sore afflicted accept my free offerings How could hee before afflicted and yet free when he desired to be quickened he felt not this freedome Neuertheles he ceased not to offer his sacrifice whereby we are taught to offer our prayers to God although through perplexitie of the spirit wee know not how to pray nor what to say but speake sighing and groaning for this is a sacrifice acceptable to the Lord. For though wee cannot pray with comfort yet we must craue of the Lord euen by mourning and complaining of our owne estate and bewailing our case this also is an acceptable sacrifice For a sacrifice of sacrifices is a contrite heart saith the Prophet And as wee said before out of the last of Esay to an humble heart will I looke saith the Lorde When wee cannot then finde free ioy let vs come with free sorrow and when we know not how to pray Gods Spirit will teach vs how to craue how to sigh and how to pray and the Lorde will know the meaning of his owne Spirit crying in vs. The meaning of the man of God in effect is I powre out my prayer in the aboundance of my griefe and from a full heart we see when a man wanteth a thing though he cannot intreat his friend to obtaine it of him yet hee may freely mourne and lament his estate Let vs then when we cannot pray not cease to mourne and to make a noyse as Ezechias who chattered like a Crane or Swallow wherein he sheweth that he was so pressed with sorrow that he could doe nothing but sigh and groane When wee growe therefore in languishing grieses this is not the thing which pleaseth the Lord but it nourisheth still in vs mistrust Wee may see in the word of God the vnperfit speeches of Gods children and dearest Saints vttering in their griefe their patheticall affections For what was the remedie in this confusion but euen to powre out freely before the Lord their griefs and in opening them to their friends yea and when they could doe neither of both yet would they reueale their sorrowes to the trees of the fielde His offering we see were his griefes The Lord is God and not an Idoll hee will heare thee when thou criest vnto him It may be thou art ashamed to confesse thy faults before man thou needest not be ashamed to confesse thy sinne before God Man may cast thee in the teeth with thine infirmities the Lord will neuer vpbraide thee Man will not keepe counsell neither can giue thee counsell the Lord will both keepe and giue thee counsell Man may prescribe some means of deliuerance but the Lord will both tell thee the means of thy deliuerance and will deliuer thee So the Prophet in his owne example Psalm 42. 3. offereth his griefe vnto the Lord in teares for when one waue went ouer another and his reason and his soule had made a tumult within himselfe yet he said Why art thou cast downe my soule vnquiet within me waite on GOD c. Let vs then consider of the promise made Rom. 8. 26. The spirit helpeth our infirmities for wee know not what to pray as wee ought but the spirit it selfe maketh request for vs with sighes which cannot be expressed Let vs then though wee know not how to pray in freedome of ioy pray in freedome of sorrow Let vs beginne to offer in sorrow and in time wee shall offer in ioy For Psal 30. 5. Though weeping may abide at euening yet ioy commeth in the morning And Psal. 126. 5. Though we shall sowe in teares yet we shall reape in ioy Vers. 109. M● soule is continually in mine hand yet doe I not forget thy law Vers. 110 The nicked haue l●ida snare for me but I swarued not from thy precepts BY this phrase is meant that hee was at the point of death as it may bee seene by other places of the Scriptures as when the Ephramites were angrie with Iephtha because he went to warre without them he answered I put my life in my hand c. The Witch likewise which spake to Saul vseth the same speech and I haue put my soule in my hand c. And Iob saith why should I rent my flesh with my teeth or carry my soule thus in my hand c. Where he meaneth that he was at deaths doore My soule sainteth mine eyes faile I wither like a bottle and such speeches declare his miserie This great danger wherein hee is hee vseth as a third reason to moue the Lord to heare his prayer for by this meanes it came to passe that his praier was more earnest The greatnes of his griefe he amplifieth in the 109. and 110. verses And in this extremitie of griefe we shall see that he had good cause to pray earnestly if we do consider the reasons which flesh and blood would put in to his minde For first when he saw that he was in such streights that he could not see meanes or waies to be deliuered then his reason would perswade him to leaue the light of the word as a thing that in this case shewed no light and to vse policie for to helpe himselfe This is a great temptation and if God had not assisted him he might haue fallen hereby For we see that Saul when the Lord gaue him no answere by Vrim and Thummim nor other ordinarie meanes hee thought good in policie to aske counsell of a Witch which he before time had punished with death Thus would corrupted iudgement haue carried him to vse policie and vnlawfull meanes and to haue forsaken the lanterne of the word if the Lord had not stayed him and therefore this was one cause to moue him most earnestly to pray Secondly if he looked to his affections he should find them as corrupt for they would haue carried him to reuenge when hee sawe himselfe to bee vnreasonably and vnconscionably dealt withall and therefore to restraine the headstrong affection of reuenge it was very needfull
that hee should pray feruently For wee see that when Nabal dealt churlishly and vncurteously with him because hee wanted this helpe of prayer to keepe vnder his affection therefore hee straightwayes sware hee would kill him and would haue done so had not Abigail stayed him and pacified his wrath whereas at other times when Saul dealt iniuriously with him and the Lord might seeme to haue giuen him into Dauids hand yet because hee had prepared his heart by prayer hee abstained from reuenge and committed vengeance to the Lord. This then might bee a second reason to moue him to pray Thirdly when hee saw all meanes taken away that he must vse no meanes of his owne neither yet reuenge himselfe then would the diuell bee busie to driue him to despayre of helpe and safetie therefore great neede he had to pray that the lanterne of the word might light him against the darknes of despayre As man cannot beare too much prosperitie so he cannot beare too much aduersity and not onely extreame prosperitie and aduersitie but euen some little affliction or prospetitie will cause our corruption to breake out Wee are then to accuse ourselues of vnbeliefe that doe breake out in little things more than this man in his great troubles And to remedie this wee must set this and such examples before vs to strengthen vs that as God helped others so he will helpe vs. If God dealt so with them that had not such spirituall promises as wee nor so cleere light of the Gospell as wee and they so many wayes pleased God and wee haue so many wayes sinned and they had so plentifull promises of this life and we haue spirituall then we must not thinke to escape troubles but must correct our womanish affection Vers. 111. Thy testimonies haue I taken as an heritage for euer for they are the ioy of mine heart THis is the amplifying of the first verse This is a true signe that he loued the word because he loued it as well in trouble as in prosperitie This is a rare signe of faith for many are like Iobs wife who in trouble forg●t the commandements and slided from them but the contrarie was in Iob. We shall not then haue a sure triall of our faith before our troubles trie vs yea and sore troubles that our soule is in our hand But if in the greatest we can say the Lord is our strength our faith is strong but if little troubles make vs faile our strength is weake Therfore we must meditate of these things before they come that we may stand when they come If this man in trouble forsooke not Gods word how ought we to be ashamed ●●● in prosperitie cannot stand stedfast yea we may feare his iudgements because that seeing we be led away with vanitie now when trouble commeth we shall fail away For the continuance of sinne doth either brawne the hearts or worke sore griefe to them that haue it Then must we looke to the benefits we haue receiued for they are not otherwise good but as they are sanctified by the word prayer c. and when we seeke the glorie of God and the profit of our brethren He first protesteth his loue to the word in that he maketh it his inheritance which he proueth because his heart is set on it for where the heart is there is his treasure By testimonies is meant the couenant betweene God and his people wherein he bindeth himselfe to them and them to him Some thinke that the excellencie of the word is here set out by many names but we must look to the proprietie of euery word as before by iudgements so by this word testimonies is meant the couenant not the commandements because they cannot be our inheritance for they cannot comfort vs because we cannot fulfill them but faile in them and cannot therefore take comfort but it is rather a killing letter It is the Gospell that bringeth peace and comfort The law when it is taken generally containeth all the word particularly the commandements so the word generally both law and Gospell but particularly the promises as Rom. 10. So likewise by the testimonies when they are opposed to the law is meant the promises of the couenant as Esay 8. and this testimonie is confirmed to vs by the Sacraments as to them by sacrifices The couenant is called an inheritance First because it is excellent Secondly because it is proper to them Thirdly because it cannot be lost but by their owne default It is his first because God hath promised to write his law in his heart Secondly because he hath promised to him life by it Thirdly because God will performe his promise This couenant is excellent because hereby we are made the sonnes of God and hauing our sinnes for giuen vs we shall be enabled in some measure to keepe the law and that trouble and griefe where with many are destroyed yet shall turne to our good Againe it is excellent because it is permanent 1. Pet. 1. where it is called vncorruptible All things compared with this are vile I count all things but dung saith Paul Men will in danger make shipwracke of all that they may saue their liues so Paul did euen willingly part with all things and counted them but dung for this Phil. 3 8. 9. We must examine whether we make this account of our saluation and of the word which is called milke meate siluer and all things that we should seeke all things in it This inheritance is proper to the elect as Iam. 4 Rom. 12 and Iohn saith that This is our priuileage to be the sonnes of God For riches are common to the good and euill so is glorie c. for both haue these things therefore they are no true inheritance because they are common to many and these things cannot get vs heauen nor deliuer vs from hell It cannot be lost but by our owne default for that that some lose their inheritance without default is the corruption of the world but forgiuenes of sinnes and such like which are our inheritance cannot be lost for though Princes may be driuen from their kingdomes yet cannot the gates of hell preuaile against vs so that though the mightie can take away our life yet they cannot take away the loue prouidence and good will of God The things and inheritance are most esteemed which are of longest continuance and haue longest indured as to esteeme leases better than to be tenants at will copies better than leases heritages better than copies because there is no collusion and cauill of law can take it from vs. This is most excellent and such is our inheritance for wee were elected thereto before all worlds and looke to goe the same way that all the faithfull before vs haue gone and haue it confirmed with the Law Prophets and Gospell and with the godly death and holy life of his seruants This word bringeth to vs the things that eye cannot see c.
helpe them nor their opinions comfort them This then may commend vnto vs the word of God that it onely maketh vs safe and staieth vs in all troubles wherefore it is said port 12. 4. Except thy law had beene my delight I should haue perished in mine affliction So the Prophet Ionah hath a notable sentence worthie to be written in letters of gold and of all men to be remembred Ionah 2. 18. They that waite vpon lying vanities forsake their owne mercie Whereby he sheweth that they which depend on any thing saue on God alone refuse their owne felicitie and that goodnesse which otherwise they should receiue of God So that the Prophet himselfe in not going to Niniuie waited on vanitie and could finde no comfort in himselfe We may for a time trust to Idolatrie or vngodlinesse but when the touch-stone and triall of Gods law comes they cannot stay vs nor saue vs for they will deceiue all vsers of them as false and vaine 1. Sam. 12. 21. Samuel exhorting the people to repētance willeth them to follow the Lord and not to turne backe saying also If ye turne backe that should be after vaine things which cannot profit you nor deliuer you for they are but vanitie Where he teacheth vs that when miseries come our delights are but vaine and therefore cannot helpe vs. The Scriptures also applie this to ill manners as Ephes. 5. the Apostle setting downe a bedrow of many sinnes addeth this Let no man deceiue you c. where because some thinke that for such sinnes God would be entreated he saith nay not so be not deceiued vnlesse ye repent God will not be entreated Likewise Gal. 5. the Apostle hauing taught them to prouide temporall things for them that minister spirituall saith be not deceiued where he hath this sense ye may haue many reasons with your selues against this doctrine but when God commeth to tread downe the wicked then your reasons will not stand before his maiestie for the truth onely there preuaileth doe not deceiue your selues your hope will abuse you And here all flattering of our selues in sinne will prooue deceiueable wee walke in a nette and deceiue our owne consciences but this must make vs feare we must not reckon without our hoast nor make our account without our auditour for if we doe we will beguile our selues or flatter our selues Let euery man therefore looke to the fleights of sinne in himselfe and to the deceit of his owne conscience and he shall see that all the wayes of man are euill but the Lord is for euer true Wee must thus examine our selues Good Lord will this thing stay mee in the day of trouble will this thing comfort mee in the houre of death then it is a sure thing then it is comfortable otherwise it is vaine and cannot stay me it is deceitfull and will not comfort me Now if we trust in the word wee shall in death knowe that it is no imagination howsoeuer the world would now perswade vs that we liue too precisely and Sathan lyeth to get vs at a bay we shall then know our labour was not lost and when the Lord commeth to iudgement if we haue laide a good foundation when the tempests arise the windes arise and the raine fall we shall be sure and not beguile our selues that we shall be on the rocke of Gods word and built in faith wee shall bee sure as mount Sion and safe as Ierusalem when the floods of vengeance come Vers. 119 Thou hast taken away all the wicked of the earth like drosse therefore I loue thy testimonies MArke the proprietie of the word he saith not thy statutes doe I loue but thy testimonies he saith here thus much seeing O God thou hast summoned the wicked I will embrace more ioyfully the record and couenant of my saluation made vnto mee in thy word For when we see Gods iudgements on the vngodly this ought wonderfully to commend Gods mercie in free sauing vs from the like that whereas wee were in the like condition of sinne he might haue measured the like to vs and yet vouchsafed to make his couenant in force vnto vs. Was it not a great mercie to saue Noah and his when all the world besides was washed away with water Did it not wonderfully commend the goodnesse of God that in the great destruction of Sodome he should deliuer Lot What a thing is this that the Lord will make a couenant with vs as with Noah that if wee shall trust in Christ we shall neuer be confounded Againe when the man of God seeth the wicked deceiued because they trusted not in the word this maketh him to loue the word and assureth him that there is an end of all perfection but the law of God is exceeding large that it neuer failes in trouble nor deceiueth any in death Wherfore this must make vs to loue it also And if wee compared this word with other vanities of the world and felt in it such ioyes and most specially in death and in troubles and that when all failes this doth minister sufficient comfort surely the perswasion hereof would mooue vs pathetically to expresse our mindes and say with the Prophet Oh how loue I thy lawe it is my meditation continually Then when our strength shal faile our breath draw short our friends depart our goods countrie and life shall forsake vs the word will be so sweete so deare and so pretious that when all these are gone this will yeeld vs great comfort We haue also learned here a further thing in the minde of the Prophet who reasoneth thus Seeing thou hast troden downe the wicked as earth and scoured them as drosse therefore will I embrace thy couenants and records of thy iudgements therfore the euidence of thy couenant which thou hast made to me is most holy and pretious For when the iudgements of God were so seuere against others was it not the great mercie of God to make a couenant with him Was it not a wonderfull grace of God that being conceiued and borne in sinne like vnto the other hee should escape Gods iudgement Was not it a great mercie that when all flesh should perish Noah and his familie should escape Was it not the great goodnesse of God when Sodome was consumed to saue Lot When the Lord had left all to ignorance was it not his great mercie to preserue Abraham When the Lord ouerthrewe the Egyptians was it not free mercie to saue the Israelites Was it not the great grace of God to leade forward Caleb and Iosua into the promised land when to so many he had denied it Our Sauiour Christ gaue thankes to his Father as for a speciall mercy of God that he had reuealed those things to babes and little ones which he had concealed from many mightie of the world If we consider how many are left in ignorance giuen ouer to superstition and remaine vnder the heauie hand of God what a mercie of God
for want of this feare we see how impudent sinners are in those things which ciuill Lawes doe not restraine fearing euen punishment more then Gods iudgement He that feareth God is no theefe why because mans lawe saith that he that stealeth shall be hanged no but because Gods Law saith Thou shalt not steale Though the place be neuer so secret where he may sinne although i● bee no manifest vnrighteousnesse and grosse iniurie yet if it were but to denie the last thing which were right and due the childe of God both feareth punishment of God if hee had done it or if he haue not done it he trembleth to doe it And Saint Iames hee reasoneth thus that hee that hath commanded one thing hath also commaunded another and hee that forbiddeth one thing hath forbidden another And surely howsoeuer mans law punisheth one and dispenseth with another sinne yet the word of God rewardeth all obedience and punisheth all disobedience So that he that hath saide as well Thou shalt not commit adulterie as Thou shalt not doe murder hath as well pronounced the shutting of the kingdome of heauen against adulterers as against murderers 1. Cor. 6. which thing Gods childrē knowing make as great a conscience of swearing banning cursing breaking of the Sabbath drunkennesse adulterie and lying which in mans law escape scotfree as of theft which by Ciuill law is adiudged worthie of death because that God that saith Thou shalt not steale hee also saith Thou shalt not take the name of the Lord in vaine thou shalt keepe holy the Sabbath c. Suppose they that those things are not forbidden by the law of God which are not prohibited by the law of man Then no maruaile though there bee so fewe theeues and so many Sabbath breakers why there bee so fewe murtherers and so many swearers because men abstaine from theft and murther for feare of temporal punishment and men haue no care to eschue swearing prophaning of God his Sabbath because they feare no externall punishment See here is mens conscience here is their religion this is their deuotion Well haddest thou neuer su●n gifts outwardly without this reuerent feare of God thou shalt neuer enter into God his kingdome But peraduenture when thou shalt come to answere before the tribunall of God thou wilt say O Lord I knewe not by mans lawe that breach of thy Sabbath or swearing were such great sinnes heare what the Lord will answere I gaue thee my law whereby thou shouldest bee gouerned neither did I giue any commandement in more ample and flat words than the lawe of my Sabbath wherefore seeing thou hast manifestly cast my law behinde thee and made lesse account of my commandements and iudgements than of mans law and threatnings I adiudge thee to eternall damnation Great indeede is the benefit of mans lawes to restraine sin and to bring to repentance yea often the punishment of man and shame thereof preuenteth the iudgement of God and shame of hell fire because wee see many haue been more ashamed of sinne at the gallowes than others that haue died vpon their beds Howbeit where this law is not executed and sinne seuerely punished or where there be any sinnes which come not within the precincts of mans iurisdiction it is most certaine they shall not escape the punishment of God Wherefore we must otherwise stand in awe of Gods law than mans law doth punish if we will with the man of God from our heart stand in feare of his word This feare maketh seruants as faithfull in their maisters absence as in their presence because it keepeth vnder the most secret sinnes For hypocrites flie sinne before men but sinne greedily behind their backs and they sinne not because mans law will punish them not because Gods law doth forbid them But God his children abhorre sinne as wel priuie as manifest and that because sinne is sinne and not in that it is punishable by mans law For they considering that Adam H●siah Ezechiah and others were punished for small things dare account no sin to be small in the eyes of God It is the whip the rod and the scourge that causeth the hypocrite as an asse a foole and a slaue to leaue sinne but it is loue conscience and obedience that moueth Gods children willingly to abhorre it Vers. 162. I reioyce at thy word as one that findeth great spoyles AS he hath spoken of his feare so now he speaketh of his ioy Great is the ioy of them that finde spoyles for spoyles bring victorie and victorie makes the triumph so that spoyle brings profit and the victorie pleasure both then must needes cause great ioy His meaning then is that what battaile soeuer he did fight what towne soeuer he spoiled his ioy was nothing so great as it was in taking pleasure in God his word Heere then is a true note to discerne vs from hypocrites when we take comfort in nothing so much as in the word of God But some will say that this extraordinarie ioy appertaineth to the Prophet rather than to vs wherfore let vs heare what the holy Ghost speaketh hereof in the Gospel as Rom. 5. We haue peace towards God and reioyce vnder the hope of the glorie of God And Philip 4 he calleth it The peace of God which passeth all vnderstanding and the Apostle 1. Pet. 1. shewing how in the mercie of God wee are begotten againe vnto a liuely hope by the resurrection of Iesus Christ from the dead to an inheritance immortall and vndefiled reserued in heauen for vs biddeth vs to reioyce with ioy vnspeakable and glorious And Paul 1. Cor. 2. 9. sheweth what cause we haue to reioyce because the things which eye hath not seene neither eare hath heard neither came into mans heart are which God hath prepared for them that loue him These things we see are such as are common to all why then doe Gods children so much reioyce in the word First in consideration of their owne vile and miserable estates then in consideration of God his loue and Christ his merits for them For they considering with themselues that by nature they are nothing but vassal of sinne the bondslaues of the diuel the enemies of God and fire-brands of hell and that by Christ they are freed from their sins set at libertie from Sathan ransomed from hell and reconciled vnto God and that he will bring vnto them the fruite of his death and benefit of his resurrection by killing sin in them and quickning them vnto righteousnes remembring Colos. 2. 14. that Christ hath taken away the hand-writing and fastened it vnto his crosse and that euery member through him hath spoiled the principalities and powers and led captiue the world the flesh and the diuel and hath made a shew of them openly and hath triumphed ouer them in the same crosse feele such a ioy as neuer any earthly conquerors felt the like For looke how farre greater the victory of sinne and Sathan is aboue
spent they say in sleepe which thē we may well detract from the great number then there remaines but 35. yeeres From these we may deduct 14. yeeres in our youth wherein we are vnfit to glorifie God or doe good to man and so there remaines sixteene yeeres and of these sixteene to set downe the dayes of sicknesse or those times which we sinfully spend in yeelding to anger to our lustes or to worldlinesse wherein we are as vnprofitably occupied as though we were not halfe of the number would be cut off and so we should leaue but seuen or eight yeeres But now we haue the summe from whence we might take out but not that time out which is past we know seeing now it is nothing what is to come we know not and it cannot be added time is but short and therefore great neede we haue of God his spirit to teach vs. To this we know how suddenly death doth take from vs time to come Iobs children in the middest of their banket were stricken dead Ishbosheth died before night could come vpon him neither hath the strongest liuer any surer charter of his life The best way then to recken aright is to make the number which we may take out and that which we would substract all one and that is none If in the way we haply finde something we may take it for our aduantage and see that we vse it to God his glory For this being set downe that our daies past are none and the daies to come none neither so that no daies past or to come can be counted part of our life and consequently haue none but the present time which is very little and as little as a thought vnlesse we could haue a lease of our life as Ezekiah in some so●t had of his by Esay wherein he had very ill successe And so finding our time to be none we shall be most bent to labour to attaine to wisedome And here we must vnderstand what manner of wisedome this skill of counting brings vs there is wisedome of health and there is wisedome of sicknesse and this is it which we shall learne And what is that wisedome surely by a continuall thinking that death is nigh and perswading our selues that death is within a minute what no lawe prince parents or punishment could do that death wil easily dispatch By this they that before had no delight in the word if once they take this account that euery day they thinke they drawe their last breath the word will be full of comfort to them And then the meditation of death working aboue the hope of long life the wisedome of sicknesse will be found to be aboue the wisedome of health In this case men will giue counsell that before could take none and this is that wisdome of the point of death nothing can teach vs better We see the effect of this in Ezekias when the talie of his daies was left him we see his meditation which was such as the holy Ghost hath put it in perpetual record we see his behauiour most worthy our meditations Neither is this in Ezekiah onely a well disposed man but euen in the wicked as Baltashashar who seeing the number of his dayes and that hee was found too light begun to quake and his knees did shake presently and so began to bee wise Thus wee see an effect both in the wicked and in the godly of this meditation most necessarie 2 The readiest way to obtaine life is to be content either to liue or die and to commit our selues to the Lord knowing that nothing euer perished which was committed to him Let vs be content with the vse of life which the Lord giueth vs to repent in and account it a great benefite that the Lord graunteth vs a great time of repentance knowing that it is a greater benefit to be a liuing dog than a dead lion for while we liue there is a place for repentance but after death there is none And therefore those that account it not a benefit to liue are vnworthie of life or any benefit therein all these things must serue to teach vs patience and to refraine our murmuring nature whensoeuer by any temptation our flesh is prouoked thereunto 3 As it is a maine point of wisedome to learne to die so there be many vnder rules proceeding from this First it helpeth our procrastinating and putting off of the euil day and our kind of repentance which is euer in purposes and promises neuer in practise performance We see that men in their iourney if they thinke they haue day enough they are sl●ck enough but if they see they haue but little day so that they begin to nūber they ply themselues Wherefore seeing time goeth away when we lay no hold on it yea when most sure hold that can be is laid on we must labour for heauenly wisdome and a compendious rule thereunto is to number our daies There is another thing and it is like the great Dragon in the Reuelation it hath drawen away and deceiued the third part of the world and that is want of wind and fainting of heart in affliction to the remedying whereof it is good to consider that as we suffer daily so we are dying daily that which the world afflicteth is drawing to corruption which shall exempt vs from their tyrannie And here in wee take our mortalitie for an aduantage against them that seeing wee are subiect to so many euils we are also mortall and after death we shall be immortall when nothing shall hurt vs. For as we would not be immortall now being subiect to sinne and misery so we shall then not be mortall when we shall be recompenced with righteousnesse and felicitie Now by considering of this shorte time of mortalitie and of the glorie of our immortalitie wee suffer without fainting we fancy not many daies here which might discourage vs but we thinke our yeere may want moneths our moneth daies our daies houres and so we are encouraged Another thing is this It is sure we loue this life by a rule of follie in trusting to this life that it will be long for our estimation of a thing growes by the continuance of it and therefore if we could be perswaded of the shortnes of this life it would draw vs to the contrary rule of wisedome But wee are all Damas his disciples wee commend things present howbeit it were better to haue Moses our Master who in his time began to number and yet we know that he might haue beene sure that the day of iudgement would not be in his time for that the promised Messiah was not yet come we feare it lesse number nothing so fast vpon whom the day it selfe may as suddenly come as vpon them who tarie for nothing to it but for the fulfilling of the elect the accomplishmēt of the number of them that shall
thunderbolts And if we consider it well if one be slauish the multitude is as a waspe the great man like a Lyon with bloodie ●eeth and therefore of greater force If we vrge the multitude a man may caution against them they are but sculles without braines authority is a great scholler if such a Rabbi be of the opiniō it is not like they should be out of the way Men commonly say that there are but the great matters of the Church and common-wealth to be cared for other matters are but rattels for children to play with But Dauid prayeth as well for the little hils as for the great mountaines and Christ saith we must be faithful in little and if we cannot better one talent the Lord should do iustice if he shuld put no moe into our hāds Elihu supposeth that in the Rabbins must needs be wisedome yet after he perceiueth that the greatest is not the wisest but the inspiratiō of the Almighty giueth wisdome Kimkie writeth that in their colledges they suffered the younger schollers to speake first to shew their opinions that they might not be oppressed with the authoritie of the elders and then afterwards the Rabbins and this order is kept in diuers Vniuersities vntill this day Many will say I had rather erre with Plato than speake truth with another a most prophane sentence And marke how these men going thus against the holy Ghost doe euen destroy Logike it selfe For what argument is this such a one saith it therefore I may doe it It is not against reason And to doe that which is nought and then to affirme it by authoritie young schollers haue learned to hisse it out and yet our Rabbins vse it themselues and cannot learne to denie it when it is vsed of others Againe in authoritie we know that it is required both that the author be not deceiued for if he be blind the blind followeth the blind also that we be sure that he will let vs know the truth But the holy Ghost saith all men are lyers therefore they will deceiue and our knowledge is in part euen in that part of our ignorance may the controuersie fall out and all our goodnesse is as a stained cloth and therefore no warrant is for vs in men but in God onely who hath all skill goodnes and therefore him we may follow not men and vnlesse Christ come down and worke among vs we may follow no mans example Cursed is the man saith the Lord Ierm 17. that maketh flesh his arme This Axiome and error was once in diuinitie The Pope cannot erre therfore the curse of God was on it we at this day denie it and say Pope Councels Church may erre This we say and hold in diuinitie but in morall matters wherein are most slippes wee haue let in the former Axiome Here Protestants will set themselues vp a Pope yea many Popes but the curse of God remaineth on it for flesh is their arme With great reason therefore the holy Ghost setteth it downe This were plaine enough if men had not a prodigious spirit of errour in them but for all this this is the fig-tree still and they that haue eaten the forbidden fruit come hither for fig-leaues Rabble such a one Looke through the bookes of the Prophets and you shall heare the people alwaies answere our fathers did it our Princes gaue vs leaue our Prophets defended it Let vs resume the argument of the Eunuch to Micheas he saith behold all speake good to the King for therein lieth the force of his argnment for it is as forcible to a carnall man to say the King would haue it so as all the Prophets to denie it Now I will shew you how a King was moued with this argument that you may see the force of it 1. Sam. 29. Dauid must be gone from Achish to morrow before day saith the King looke you be gone Why saith Dauid what haue I done thou hast done good in my sight saith the King neither haue I found any euill in thee Why then must I goe my Princes fauour thee not saith the King they thinke thou art not good Is that enough Dauid proceedeth and defendeth himselfe The King replieth thou art in my sight as an Angell of heauen but the princes of my people will haue thee gone Here the King is carried away with his Rabbins A strange thing that the King should thrust him out whom his owne heart iustified for two or three sonnes of Beliall Ioh. 7. they send to Christ two or three to entrap him in his speech they returne and say we neuer heard man speake as hee doth this was it onely that caried them Doe any of the Scribes and Pharisies or of the rulers fauour him But Ioh. 19. yee shall see the strangest thing of al they would haue Christ to be put to death wee haue a law say they by which he must dye The maior followeth for he made himselfe the sonne of God the law is Leuit. 24. So that their syllogisme might seeme very good but their minor was naught Well the law would nothing moue Pilate therefore they seeke a new argument for Pilate and that is If you let him goe Pilate you are not Caesars friend Presently against his owne conscience hee condemneth him to death Will you not doe it why Caesar will haue it so yee see then what force is in this Logicke argument and no doubt it will moue vnles wee put off both Pilates and King Achish nature 12 Euery sin hath two reasons for it an open and a secret reason the open is to blind the world withall yee shall see it in Iudas his open reason was the poore better it is the poore should bee prouided for than waste should bee made his secret argument was the bagge hee carried the bagge and paid himselfe for the carrying So that whatsoeuer they pretend the secret reason is the bagge The second argument is made out of the Smiths forge but schollers cannot answere it By Diana wee get our gold saith Demetrius and therefore great is Diana So that Diana shall be great if wee can get by het This is their secret argument profit makes it honest Thirdly we set downe with our selues euen to consume our selues so we may get And for this looke 1. Sam. 23. in Sauls oration Hearken yee sonnes of I●mini can this sonne of Ishai giue you fields and vineyards and make you captaines ouer hundreds and thousands No no it is I that can doe it and will yee then follow him So that he that can preferre you or giue you a field or a vineyard either in Church or Common-wealth him yee follow So Balaac saith to Balaam Why come ye not when I sent for you am not I able to preferre you So that is alwaies their inward argument whatsoeuer is pretended outward Their fourth reason is this It is foolish to stand against him the King
without sense of the conflict of the lawe of the members and the spirit as Rom. 7. 24. Sixtly hee is stirred to doe well by some worldly reason liking his fancie and fleshly appetite not constrained by the mercie of God as Psalm 1 30. 4 Rom. 12. 1. or by the loue of Christ as 2. Cor. 5. 14. Seuenthly he doth more often regard the feare fauour and praise of men than of God and his priuate commoditie than that of his brethren These are his characters and yet eightly hee hideth many things vnder the cloake of popularitie and guilefull affected clemencie So did Absolom hide his vnnaturall treason So did the troublers of the state of Rome with their Leges Agrariae Ninthly vnder the cloake of keeping companie with those vpon whom wee may beare our selues bolde and which may back vs when we haue done euill Tenthly vnder the cloake of clinging to their companie which are good men and are wel thought of not to better our selues but to credit our doings the more and to make vs more commended to the people as Nouatus did vpon his confessions Eleuenthly vnder the cloake of lawe and execution of iustice when some other wicked affection is the cause of their doings and the law but their pretence as Iezabel in putting to death Naboth did it not for the vineyard but to see iustice kept and as the Lords of Persia against Daniel Twelfthe vnder the cloake of religion zeale and conscience when deepe in their hearts they hide some other meaning as Simeon and Leui in procuring the Sichemites to be circumcised as Absolom in making the shadow of his conspiracie the performing of his vowe in Hebron as Iezabel making the way to bloodshed on the innocent by the proclamation of a fast as Caiphas adiuring Christ in Gods name to make them knowe who hee was that way to take him 11 Hypocrisie is seene when sinne most lieth dead vnder a cloake and most lieth in a closet wherewith God is displeased that when wee make no conscience of sin in close places our priuie sinnes shall breake out in publike places 12 The holy Ghost Ezech. 24. 6 compareth hypocrites to a pot that outwardly seetheth but within the scumme remaineth And Hoseah in his 7. chapter compareth them to a cake whereof the one side is well baked and the other side is plaine dow And Christ compareth them in his daies to such as wash the outside of the cup and platter but leaue the inside filthie Our common similies whereby wee resemble these men is a course cloath hauing a fine list 13 When two gentlemen ride on hunting it is hard to discerne each others houndes because they are mingled together which afterwards is more easilie done when the hunters are seuered euen so so long as God and the world walke together it is hard to distinguish betweene the heires of the one and of the other but when they are seuered by the crosse it will surely bee seene who be the children of God who be the heires of the world 14 In naturall men wee finde these markes first that naturall men measure others by themselues so did these brethren iudge of Ioseph So doth the world iudge hardly of Gods children because they are vngodly themselues so those that thinke to correct or admonish in anger think that others do so too because they come of fashiō to the Church they thinke so of others When we are readie then to thinke euill of others let vs take heede we be not so our selues and let vs learne to leaue this for the sinne is great For first wee beare false witnes against our brother Secondly wee be enemies to the grace of God in them because in this our corruption wee cannot iudge well of them The readie remedie is to pull out the beame out of our owne eye and to iudge charitably of others Secondly a naturall man doth more abstaine from euill for man than for God and so will it bee till the feare of God be setled in vs to teach vs Gods prouidence in things to come and his iudgements in things past This was with Esau because the daies of his father were at hand So many are now restrained by the magistracie which otherwise would do euil so long as it is with vs thus wee are but hypocrites and not regenerate The remedie is to consider Gods prouidence to commit vengeance to him to ouercome euill with goodnesse and then shall wee doe things for conscience sake and not for feare Thirdly the torments of an euill conscience is the punishment of sinne the wicked shall flie when none pursueth whensoeuer then our conscience doth trouble vs let vs knowe that our sinnes are in vs whereof we are not purged When we feare men it is either for the want of the assurance of Gods mercifull prouidence or forgiuenes of our sinnes or for that wee haue done the like to others as Caine thought euery one would slay him because he slew his brother If wee haue not done them harme and yet feare as Abraham did Abimelech then it is the want of Gods prouidence which riseth of the want of the forgiuenes of our sinnes for if wee feare the creature it is because wee are not reconciled to the Creator The remedie of this feare of men is to learne faith in Christ for the free forgiuenes of our sinnes and the assurance of his prouidence then shall we say wee feare not what man can doe against vs yea then shall wee deale vprightly with others so that if then others deale euilly with vs and we pay them the things which we neuer took we haue the comfort of our conscience and are blessed because we suffer for wel-doing 15 In manners men will first listen to wicked counsel then take pleasure in their companie till at last they communicate with them in their euils an● as they grow in liking of those euill counsellers so doe they loathe those that giue good counsell and despise them yea when the Minister speaketh priuilie to them by admonition or openly out of the word they thinke hee speaketh of purposed malice and hatred against them and so shut their eares and harden their hearts when any thing is spoken for their amendement but if a word be spoken which concerneth another or else may cherish them in their sinnes that doe they greedily snatch and lay hold of All which sheweth that men are the cause of their owne hardnes for when the Lord cannot preuaile by his word then leaueth he men vnto themselues which stay not till they come to hardnes This must teach vs with feare to examine our hearts to proue what loue of the truth remaineth in vs and what liking we haue of lies what hearts we beare to those which giue vs wholesome counsell to reclaime vs from sinne or whether wee rather incline to those that feede our eares with such wordes as may
but will be led headlongly caried away with popish seminaries and such wicked guides as sowe false doctrine and leade them into all errors and heresies The Sorcerers could not take away the plagues of the Frogges c. but indeed they caused moe to come wherby the King and his people were the more troubled so is it in all false religion they will bring men ●●to many troubles but they cannot helpe them out of one they will helpe to perfect sinne in men but they cannot rid men out of one sinne It is proper to the word of God onely and to the true doctrine deliuered out of the same that ministreth comfort to Gods people in their troubles and stayeth them in their distresses as Dauid saith Except thy law had been my delight I had perished in my troubles Psalme 119. 92. Wherefore if in death and in troubles wee will bee quickned and comforted let vs delight in the statutes of the Lord and wholy depend vpon the doctrine of his word 12 Moses was not so well when he was in Madian as if hee had beene in Canaan yet better than when hee was in Aegypt for though Iethro had not the worship of God pure in euery respect yet was not he an Idolater For then Moses would not haue dwelt with him nor yet haue sacrificed with him if he had offered to a strange God Whence we learne two things the first that if we haue the chiefe and principall points of religion with vs although there may be some wants and defects yet that we make much of Gods great blessing therein and labour carefully diligently to vse them shewing our selues thankful to God for them so wil the Lord in his due time bestowe moe blessings vpon vs minister that which is wanting vnto vs Secondly that the Lord will alwayes haue some to keepe his truth to the glorie of his own name and the condemnation of the wicked Iethroes religion may be tried by these notes 1. That he reioyced more for the deliuerance of Gods people than for the promotion of his sonne 2. Because he was carefull to confirme his faith by the experience of them which had receiued greater graces 3. Because his ioy did breake out into an open profession of sacrifice 4. His diuine speech and good counsaile which he gaue to Moses doth testifie that he was a pure worshipper of God at the least he held the chiefest and was not a nouice in religion By Iethro his example we may learne to trie our religion if it bee pure then it worketh in vs a care to vse all the meanes 2. We take ioy in them 3. We expresse the fruites of it in our life 4. We reioyce more at the prosperitie of Gods people than at our owne preferments or commoditie CHAP. LXVII Of Regeneration and Sanctification IT is a greater miracle that a man should become a new creature than a man should be cured of neuer so strange a disease Hereunto agree the Prophets as Esay 11. where it is shewed that men as sauage as wilde beasts shall change their nature and become tame so that the Prophet counteth this a miracle yea if wee our selues saw the wilde beasts tamed we would count it a miracle The Fathers thinke that the regenerating of a man is more miraculous than to turne water into wine for the wine is of the grape the grape is of the tree the tree is nourished by the water so that wine after a sort doth come of water so that the one is more common the other is to bring out one contrary out of another a thing of that which haue no cause going before and he that marueileth not at the conuersion of men he hath not tasted of the gift of regeneration and new birth 2 Men must first bee made by feeling of their sinnes to seeke after Christ then by an holy faith to finde Christ and then by newnes of life to dwell with Christ. 3 Wee haue nothing to doe with God the Father the Sonne or the holy Ghost vnlesse we be regenerated 4 As wee haue taken a vaine delight in the vaine course of this life so wee must sigh and pray to be delighted spiritually in spirituall things If the blood of Christ hath washed vs from the guiltinesse of our sins then the holy Ghost hath purged vs from the filthines of our sinnes 5 The reason why the graces of God are sweetest in our new birth is because wee doe after the same fall somwhat to the flesh againe otherwise it would not bee so And regeneration Ioh 3. is the worke of the spirit only although in respect of vs it seemeth contrarie betweene vs and the world for the world thinkes the pleasures present alwaies sweetest so doe not the children of God euen of their spiritual delights nay they are contrary in another thing to themselues for they thinke their present corruptions and temptations euer greatest as in sicke men the last sicknesse is the sorest but they thinke the present feelings of the spirit euer least though it may be they be as great as euer they were before but who knoweth the cause of these things seeing it proceedeth wholy from the spirit of God who as the winde bloweth here and there and in what measure it pleaseth him 6 Seeing we are the temples wherein the Lord will vouchsafe to dwell it is good reason we should cleanse our selues In respect wherof first the Prophet Esay 52. 11. and then the Apostle 1. Cor. 6. 17. building the exhortation of cleansing presuppose this that where God will dwell there is a place cleansed and indeed a temple 7 There is no man of iudgement that though in other places he thinkes many things lawfull or at the least indifferent in their owne nature to be done yet he will not doe them in the temple So consequently if wee be Gods temple as euery Christian ought to bee wheresoeuer he goes we must be cleansed Againe for that the Lord hath made vs priests and we must carry the vessels of the Lord therefore we must be cleane Reuel 1. for priests were to cleanse others and therefore good reason it was they should be cleane and wee if we will be cleansers of others necessarily we must be cleane our selues Yet there is a third argument Iere. 31. 1. which is most effectuall and that is because our heauenly father is holy And if this moue vs not we are rather as seruants holy for feare of the whip or we are mercenaries we will cleanse our selues for hope of reward God our father is cleane therefore we his children must be also cleane God is of pure eyes and no defiled thing must enter into the new Ierusalem wherefore we must cleanse our selues because wee be the Lords Temple because we be priests because our father is cleane and holy A thing is filthy in the Law either by touching another thing that is
and to giue a greater light vnto the same As we see in Moses who came to bring the Law vnto this people not a new Lawe nor contrarie to that which was before but hee renewed it confirming and making it more cleare and that which they had before deliuered from hand to hand that hee gaue in Tables and that which they afore had practised he giueth forth vnto them now in Precepts For by the whole story of Genesis it is soone perceiued that not onely the morall Lawe contained in the two Tables but euē the Ceremoniall the Iudiciall law were knowne vnto Abraham and others that liued before the law it was neuer lawfull for them to haue any more gods but one only and true God and so consequently that his pure worship which was according to his will The Sabbath was obserued and kept not onely in Paradise but euen of the Israelites when they were in Aegypt before they came to the wildernes which they could not haue done had they not receiued it by traditions The duties also in the second Table were as common and as well knowne as any others were And when we reade in Genesis of Priests and Altars and sacrifices differences betweene cleane and vncleane beasts c. it doth easily appeare that the substance of the Ceremoniall law was long before Moses his time the death of adulterers and the punishment of murtherers doe plainely declare that they had the politicall Law before the dayes of Moses that he was not the first giuer therof vnto the people he taught therefore no new or strange doctrine nor yet contrary to that which was before He was only the means to confirme it and to make it more easily to be vnderstood for he deliuered it in plainer māner than it was deliuered vnto the Fathers The Prophets did expound it more plainly then he and as euery Prophet was more nere the time of Christ so did he bring greater light to that which went before Iohn Baptist had cleere reuelations than any of the Prophets For our Sauiour doth prefer him before them not in respect of his person but in respect of his office and calling but the Lord Iesus euen our God and Sauiour our onely Prophet of al others hath brought most cleere light which hee hath reuealed and made knowne vnto the world both by himselfe and the Apostles whose Epistles and writings are by many degrees more plaine and manifest than the writings of the Prophets which were before them And do we not see that since the time that the Lord began to renue the light of the Gospell and to deliuer vs as it were from the darknes wherewith we were well neere oppressed Doe we not see I say that greater light doth more and more appeare that many things are now more manifest than they haue beene in former times and ages Moreouer the law had testimony from the couenāt made with Ahraham Isaac and Iacob The Prophets did proue their doctrine by the law and the couenants and our Sauiour hath his witnes out of the law and the Prophets and his Apostles did draw their proofe from all The law is in the Gospell and the Gospell in the law and therefore whosoeuer shall not make their doctrine agreeable to the law the Gospel they may nor ought not to be receiued but in the boldnesse of Gods good spirit we may say with S. Paul Let them be accursed For the Lord is not contrary nor vnlike to himselfe As the spirit spake in old time in the Patriarkes and Prophets so spake he in the Apostles of our Sauiour Christ and so will he speake in his true seruants and ministers to the ende of the world there is with him no variablenes nor shadow of change but hee abideth euer the same most like vnto himself and so doth his word which is of the same nature Whosoeuer then shall b●ing vnto vs any doctrine not warranted by Gods word or contrarie to that which before hath beene deliuered yea if he bring it in harder and more darke speeches than the word of God is or if hee deliuer it more strangely or obscurely and yet wil beare vs in hand and make vs beleeue that he hath cleerer reuelations we may then iustly suspect him of vntruth and vtterly refuse him further than by certaine grounds reasons out of Gods word he doth confirme his Doctrine And as we may rightly hold all the doctrines of men accursed when they speake or write any thing contrary to the holesome word of truth or else doe adde anything thereto So likewise if any shall take away from the word of God one iot or tittle we may in the feare of God and in the zeale of his truth pronounce against him that sentence wherewith God in great wisedome hath closed vp his holy Scriptures The Lord will take his part out of the booke of life and out of the holy citie and out of those things which are written in this booke 2 Iohn saith the Spirit bloweth where it listeth so also as much as it listeth sometime breathing softly like the coole ayre and sometime like the whirle-winde for man is full of wandring thoughts and imaginations especially when he heareth the word but nothing is more dangerous than the yong mans heart which is in all places of the world at once if you speake not what he thinketh he doth not attend if hee be not astonished and for this cause doth the holy Ghost often offer galling concessions and pinching permissions as Eccl. 10. God seemeth in such speeches at the first to fauour sinne But as we lift vp a thing high to driue it the harder so God vseth such speeches to throw them to eternal destruction to breake them to fitters Yea we would thinke the Lord to be a proctor of euill if hee should not sometimes be very vehement The bitterest kind of deniall is to bid vs go yet so ●●ine would God worke on our heart that he vseth such vehemencie 3 It is as farre from God his nature to deride any man as it is for him to repent but our sins are so great that if it were possible yee should make him a scoffer But as when saluation is wrought in the highest measure it is wrought in greatest compassion so the highest point of reuenge is derision Wee know the nature of God is full of pitie and vnlesse it be to very euill persons his speeches are full of compassion Speake my people saith he Micah 6. And Esay 5. What haue I not done that I could doe to thee And Oh that my people would haue heard Psal. 81. And when they would not heare he speaketh to the dumbe creatures Heare heauen and earth Esay 1. And Christ saith O Ierusalem Ierusalem c. These are good and royall speeches which are very sweete and sweetnes it selfe But when he speaketh to the desperate and wicked he changeth his
for all those which receiuing the first fruites of thy holy spirit walke before thee in vprightnesse of their heart wee thy vnworthy children come vnto thee in the name of thy onely begotten sonne Iesus Christ our Lord beseeching thee to renue and encrease thy holy spirit in vs and to purifie our hearts more and more by faith that we may haue a clearer sight and a surer perswasion of thy fatherly goodnesse vnto vs and that wee may more readily performe our dutifull obedience vnto thee For wee doe acknowledge and confesse vnto thy sacred Maiestie that we haue yet neuer hitherto worthily esteemed thy mercies towards vs nor sufficiently expressed the fruites of our bounden dutie towards thee but that still we remaine ignorant and forgetfull of many good things which wee ought and might know And we confesse Lord wee are slacke vnto those things which thy holy sp●●t offereth to our mindes vnapt to doe them soone wearie of wel-doing and wherein we please thee something we please our selues too much Moreouer wee likewise confesse that we are ignorant of many euill things that wee haue done doe or may doe forgetfull of diuers things which sometime wee haue hadde knowledge and remorse of And now the things which come to our remembrance and are in our sight doe not appeare to be so●sinfull in any measure as they are and ought of vs to be regarded Yea wee are beguiled ere euer we are aware with our present corruptions and they cleane so fast vnto vs that wee can hardly leaue them but most hardly bee brought to true repentance of them We beseech therefore thy sacred Maiestie to worke in vs by thy holy spirit a wise and carefull searching out of and into our sinnes that by the lawe wee may be conuinced of them awakened by thy threatnings rebuked for them by thy iudgements executed vpon the wicked and exercised toward thy children seruants and friends that so wee may feare and tremble for them And by the serious premeditation of the vncertaine houre of a most certaine death of the day of thy generall ineuitable and dreadfull iudgement of the horrible and euerlasting paines of the wicked in the helles and their losse of the inestimable ioyes of the heauens stirre vp our dead hearts to seeke thee O Father in thy Christ and thy sonne our Lord and Sauiour in the Gospell And finally we pray that we may bee euen confounded in our selues by the fruitfull remembrance of thy blessed sufferings the most precious blood-sheading and death of our Lord Iesus Christ that so we may be humbled after that manner and measure thy children should bee beseeching thee that wee may so aforehand accuse our selues before thy blessed Maiestie that our aduersarie may haue no power hereafter to accuse vs so iudge our selues that we be not iudged by thee so with shame sorrow feare and trembling acknowledge the vilenes of our sinnes wholely before the throne of thy iustice that wee finde it to be a throne of grace and mercie vnto vs in Iesus Christ our Lord. Now O Lord the searcher of the hearts and reynes thou knowing this to be the humble and single desire of our hearts wee flye vnto thee for refuge beseeching thee by thy holy spirit to worke in vs a clearer sight of the wisedome of our Lord Iesus Christ wherby our minds may be further cleared from blindnes and we haue a clearer sight of the whole ministerie of our saluation in him and graunt vs God a fuller perswasion of the discharge of all our sinnes in his death and of the imputation of his righteousnesse vnto vs in his resurrection that the guiltinesse of our conscience may daily more and more goe away from vs and peace of the same be confirmed in vs especially in the time of our temptation and trouble the day of our death and the hou●e of iudgement And next most mercifull Father graunt vs a more powerfull experience of his death killing sinne in vs and of his resurrection raising vs vp vnto a new life that daily we may be lesse sinful and more holy righteous and sober in this present life that so also wee may haue a more sure and stedfast hope in his redemption and may more strongly resist the vanities of this world in false pleasures profits and glories and more patiently endure all manner of miseries of the same which may befall vs vntill his glorious appearing when hee shall come to be glorious in his Saints and made maruellous in al those which beleeue in him Amen Furthermore O Lord whereas we are priuie to our selues ere it is knowne vnto others or vnto thee that thereby any sinne or sinnes more strange in vs through our corrupt nature or custome or the temptation of others or of the tempter wee beseech thee that there we may labour to finde the precious death of our Lord Iesus Christ more powerfull in subduing the same and whereas through vnabilitie of nature want of meanes or grace we are weaker in any duties of well-doing there we may striue to finde the vertue of his glorious resurrection more effectuall in raising vs vp in meanes of life so that our familiar corruptions being cured and our speciall infirmities being relieued wee may be also endued as with generall graces meete for all Christians so with such peculiar graces as may be meete for our callings and inable vs to glorifie thy holy name build vp others in well-doing and treasure vp the fruites of a good conscience for our selues at all times and especially in our neede And in this behalfe the desire of our heart is that thy holy spirit worke in vs the renouncing of our reason so farre forth as it is blinde and the crucifying of our affections so farre forth as they be corrupt that so we may offer them vp with soule and bodie in sacrifice of humiliation and that hauing receiued these graces we may also offer them vp in sacrifice of obedience vnto thy gracious Maiestie And wherein soeuer we haue doe or shall with thy graces obey thee we desire to offer vp thy graces our obedience and our selues in a sacrifice of thankesgiuing and praising of thy holy and blessed name through Iesus Christ our Lord Amen All thy waies O Lord we acknowledge to bee mercie and truth we beseech thee therfore giue vs the holy fruites of al the good meanes thou hast heretofore wrought our good by as thy holy and sweete promises preached vnto vs read of vs meditated vpon by our selues or conferred of with others the prayers thankesgiuings Psalmes Hymnes of our selues our friends and thy Church thy sacred Sacraments the ministrie of thy holy Angels the communion of thy Saints and admonition which hath beene giuen vs for our good most humbly entreating that wee may haue sanctified vnto vs the remembrance of thy former mercies bestowed vppon thy Church vpon any member therof or vpon our selues either in benefits or in crosses and albeit our nature is
it must be ioyned with the word 775 ●36 with faith and knowledge 711 it must be seruent 56 wee must stirre vp our selues in prayer 84 how to pray against enemies 5●● rules thereof ibid. how many waies God heareth our prayers 409 why God heareth not our prayers alwaies at the first ibid. in the soule 317 what the Lord requireth of vs therein 237 hard to performe 238 circumstances in prayer 240 taken for the whole worship of God 8●9 Predestination 764 popish 770 Preferments how often bestowed 668 Preparation to holy exercises 709 Presumption a remedie against it 40. what it is 141 two waies of presuming 765 difference betweene it and faith 622 Pride 212 4●0 how it is corrected 34 priuie pride 269 it consumes many good gifts 80 it is the last sinne 306 it is in foure things 711 spirituall pride 272 Profession double 801 verball 819 Promise 12● Gods promises vnder the Gospell 481 Gods promises ought to stirre vs to obedience 753 ●81 how hard to rest on Gods promises 490 Prophets why called Seers 6●7 what prophecie is 7●0 the dutie of a Prophet 771 three kindes of false Prophets 771 prophecies tried notes betweene the true and false Prophets 772 what they respected in their teaching 519 Prophanenes 54 Pro●perity hath no feeling of good things 27 not to desire it too greedily 272 in it to think on aduersitie 710 766 it should draw vs neere vnto God 770 it is dangerous vnto some 116 Protestants most bound to good workes 827 ignorant 807 carnall Protestants 70● 464 4●5 false Protestants 119 Prouidence ●●● 184 4●6 5●● 316 faith in it is a remedie against murmuring 252 it is generall and particular 253 in it is a trial of our faith 644 it is admirable 677 the worldlings know it not 731 how to depend on it 774 God in his prouidence wil watch ouer vs 486 God is iust in it 5●5 how great it is towards mā 850 Seuerall punishments for seuerall sins 500 R RAce how the Race of Christianitie is ●unne by Christians 413 Reading 38 ioyned with preaching 15● publikely 225 directions for the reading of Scriptures 174 175 176 who should reade Scripture 6●4 Reason naturall is against faith ●43 645 18● it must be renounced 298 to fight with it a hard matter 299 how to striue against it 467 4●7 Rebuking of sinne 257 who ought to be reproued 633 Reconciliation 798 Recreation 169 on the Lords day vnlawfull 839 840 Regeneration 6 good natures doe not further it nor euill natures hinder it 29 it can neuer be vtterly lost ●45 feeling of sinne an earnest thereof 11● farre more excellent than our first creation 4● meditations of the regenerate 453 482 how wonderfull it is 803 strife in the regenerate 785 Relapse cautions obserued therein 13 58● the state of men after it 249 how to rise againe 64● Religion not to haue it in respect of persons 119 we must not be of a darke religion 801 a singular grace to loue it whē it is commonly hated 515 triall of it 803 better to be religious than seeme 305 to be truely religious is to haue the meanes in due estimation 384 Religion is the way to happines pag. 380 Religion corrupt life cānot be vncorrupt 454 the true religious and irreligious discerned in temptations 455 Remedies against troubles of minde 102 See conscience afflicted Against vncleane lusts 635 Remission of sinne and mortification 105 See pardon Repentance 282 what it is how to begin it and to continue it 281 282 283 284 285 286 6 7 87 notes of it 780 it must be speedie and continued 781 it is the gift of God 782 fruites of it 796 the necessitie of it 46 48 61 late repentance 799 Reports euill the vse that is to be made of thē 64 65 how an euill report should be staied 161 how it should be borne 652 two occasions of euill reports 266 false reports the vse of them 267 Reproches trials in it 29 Riches 624 no argumēts of Gods fauour 251 the nature of them how they are thornes 643 their vse 644 they haue two ends 735 their abuse 783 how to haue earthly and heauenly riches 784 the vnworthie possession of them daungerous 78● Righteous markes of a righteous man 613 118 680 839 See Iustification Rule for a man to examine himselfe 516 Restitution 78 Resurrection 252 178 cōforts arising frō it 85 few doe truely beleeue it 180 of the rest of Enoch and Eliah 180 Gods iudgement and mercy require it 183 Reuelation ordinary or extraordinarie 770 Reuenge 68● remedie for it 727 against desire of reuenge 481 S SAbbath inconueniences and commodities in keeping it 128 how it is prophaned 138 what it is to sanctifie it 132 809 when first ordained 133 not a signe onley 134 no ceremonie yet rest as needfull for vs as for the Iewes 132 a Sabbath daies iourney 14● workes of the Sabbath 144 prophaning of it in haruest 146 the speciall vse to remember three benefits 156 priuate exercises before and after the publike 157 158 workes forbidden on the Sabbath 162 whether all callings ought to rest 306 609 c. the breach of it punished 810 8●9 meanes for the sanctification of it Ibid. Sacramēts 30 687 825 in time of the Law had two ends 133 neglect contempt punished with death 787 sacramentall phrases why vsed 788 We renew our couenant so oft as we come to the Sacrament 478 Sacriledge of our time to be spokē against 749 Sadnes 29 not to be sad 782 Saffron not to be gathered on the Sabbath 167 Saluation 36 notes thereof 171 the golden chaine therof 207 ioy thereof how great 293. See Ioy. A desire thereof 610 assurance see Assurance Sanctification euident tokens thereof 13 241 246 247 it cannot be vtterly lost 245 how wonderfull 803 it must not be of one part 80● it must be continuall 806 Sathan is maister of all sinners ●9● their seruices to him their reward for their seruice ibid. Satan and his practises 35 796 55 ●11 ●12 in temptation ●99 hee is a Surgeon to cure the faithfull 618 how to answere him in temptation 111 112 Sathan and melancholie disquiet afflicted soules 86● 868 how he fighteth 90 his policie 801 of diuers names giuen him in scripture 845 Schisme 39 37 647 796 Scorners who are scorners 623 112 ●01 Scripture a generall rule concerning it 153 directions for reading of it publikely in the Church 173 priuatly euery day 174 generall obseruations for it 7● abused 757 the certaintie of it ●71 scripture for a weake conscience 854 ap● similitudes for all degrees therein 844 why we profit not in them 519 Secret corruption threatneth a downfall 103 hindreth successe in good actions 27 comfort for Gods children when they feele it 681 Carnall securitie 46● Securitie a forerunner of grosse sinne or of some crosse euē the causes of it 30 how daungerous 274 116 659 79● in publike calamities 767 a signe of securitie 792 heresie or prophanenes like