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A40520 Sermons concerning grace and temptations by ... Thomas Froysel. Froysell, Thomas, d. ca. 1672. 1678 (1678) Wing F2251; ESTC R1406 217,249 284

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though he damn'd the whole world and cast off Cain for ever Ninthly God makes some sharers in the same deliverance who share not in the same grace as the ten Lepers he gave them the same cure not the same grace he gave them all a cure only to one grace Were there not ten cleansed where are Luk. 17. 17. the nine There are not found that return'd to give glory to God save this stranger So the Sons of Noah were all saved in the same Ark and yet not all made partakers of the same Faith We shall now give you the Application of this Point And first Vse 1. See by what tenure the Saints hold and receive all their grace By gift 1. The first work of grace in the soul is a gift No man can come to me saith Christ except it were given him from John 6. 65. Rom. 5. 5. above and Romans 5. 5 All is given It is grace that we have grace the grace of God that we have grace from God 2. The addition and increase of grace is a gift every little degree of grace is a gift and when he gives more still it is more gift 3. Heaven it self is a gift The gift of God is eternal life Rom. 6. 27. mark the whole verse The wages of sin is death but the gift of God is eternal life Eternal death is a wages eternal life is a gift men deserve it when they are damn'd but they deserve it not when they are saved their sins are worthy of Death but their graces are not worthy of Life And the reason is 1. Because mens sins are their own and therefore deserve death As Christ speaking of the Devil saith When he speaketh a John 8. 44. lye he speaketh of his own Our lyes and our sins are our own works but our graces are not our own we are beholden to God in that we have grace when we serve him with our graces we serve him but with his own 2. Because our sins being perfectly sinful are worthy of death but our graces being not perfectly gracious are not worthy of life Vse 2. Is grace a free gift then serve God freely We cannot be too free in serving him from whom every thing is a free-gift I may rightly apply that Text to the Saints Freely ye Math. 10. 8. have received freely give I am sure you have freely received grace serve him freely with your grace And therefore a Servant is in Greek called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which comes from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Luk. 15. 17. a reward because servants serve not their Master freely as his Sons do meerly because he is their Father but for reward What is it to serve God freely 1. To count it a greater good to serve God than to be saved not as if a man should not serve God with an eye to his salvation for 't were a sin if he should not because the recompence of reward is the great Promise and 't were a sin not to prize and eye and look up to any promise of God I say we are bound to serve God with an eye to the recompence of reward because it is the Promise of God now we are to make the best of every promise to improve the promise and to make the best advantage of it for the quickning of our graces and the cheering up of our spirits The promises are helps and we are bound to use all Gods Helps And therefore Heb. 12. 2. we may set our salvation befor us and aim at it But yet still this we should do and if we serve God freely will do it count it a greater good to serve God than to be saved to glorifie God than to be glorified Indeed the Lord saith Them that honour me I will honour This is his goodness yet Gods Honour is a greater good than our honour It is a greater good that God be glorified than that we should be glorified because the Glory of God is the good of the Creator but our glory is but the good of the Creature 2. To serve God freely is to serve him willingly As we say of a man that doth a thing willingly he doth it freely for that is the very essence of the Will that which is not done freely is not done with the Will Oh observe thy self Thou Professor it may be prayest in thy closet but if thou durst omit it thou wouldest not pray thou art not drunk but if thou durst for shame thou wouldest not be so temperate now thou dost not pray nor abstain from sin willingly and freely 3. To serve God freely is to serve him abundantly to be liberal in his service He that is no niggard but is liberal in his gifts we call him free So he that serves God freely is no niggard of his service he is very liberal of his service to God As we say of a man that 's liberal of his Fare and liberal in his House he is free he cares not what he spends upon his friends he provides bountifully for them he calls for his Wines and Sweet-meats about him and thinks nothing too much for them we say this man hath a free and noble spirit so the Saints that serve God freely think they can never do enough for him he makes abundant Provision to entertain Christ and sets a long Table full of Services like so many dishes before him When Christ said to Zachaeus To day I must abide at thy Luk. 19. 5. house How did Zachaeus entertain him Wondrous liberally saith he Behold Lord half of my goods I give to the poor Verse 8. and if I have taken any thing from any man by false accusation I restore him four-fold Zachaeus was wondrous free Christ Jesus might have any thing of him without speaking A Saint cares not what he spends upon Christ wilt thou have me give away one lust yea saith Christ there it is another saith Christ there it is Lord another yet saith Christ there 't is Lord nay all saith Christ take all then Veniat veniat Verbum Domini saith one Et submittemus ei sexcenta si nobis essent Colla Let the Word of the Lord come let it come and wee 'l submit six hundred necks to it if we had them Nay but not thy lusts only but thy life too saith Christ take it then saith St. Paul I am ready not to be bound only Acts 21. 13. but also to dye at Jerusalem for the name of the Lord Jesus Vse 3. Is grace a gift then count thy work a gift not a burden but a gift not a toyle but a gift look upon every labour and every service and obedience for God as a gift As a Woman though she travel in pain yet counts her Child a gift from God As the Text saith Lo Children are an heritage Psal 127. 3. of the Lord and the fruit of the womb is his reward The mother counts her child a gift for who
ever doubt of I say Satan tempts before Conversion namely to hinder us from entring the ways of grace and to keep us out of Christ For if we be once in Christ we are gone from him he can hurt us no more than he can Christ and you may see how far his malice can reach The seed of the woman shall break the serpents head that is his power The seed of the serpent shall bruise his heel that is his humanity When thou art once in Christ he can bruise but thy heel he may stir up affliction bring thee to thy grave but shall never bring thy soul to Hell At the best pain can but restrain your lusts it cannot heal them A disease can but abate the acts of sin it can never destroy the life of sin Death it self cannot kill sin the sins of wicked men live when they are dead The grave cannot consume them nor the fire of hell waste their strength the sins of unbelievers shall remain not only in their guilt but in their power to all eternity Quest But how does Satan hinder our conversion Answ By kindling a stronger love in us to sin There is in all men by nature a love to sin and Satan comes and blows that fire into a flame and so our love becomes predominant and afterwards it becomes a great work to un-love that sin 2. Satan tempts the unconverted these two ways 1. By inspiring his false Prophets and Ministers Thus he 1 King 22. 22. 1 King 22. 4 5. devised Ahabs destruction I will go forth and I will be a lying spirit in the mouth of all his prophets And again Ahab King of Israel asked Jehosaphat King of Judah who came to see him whether he would go with him to Battel to Ramoth Gilead Well the King of Judah promised the King of Israel and told him saying I am as thou art my people as thy people my horses as thy horses Afterwards Jehosaphat said nnto the King of Israel enquire I pray thee at the word of the Lord to day Then the King of Israel gathered the prophets that is Vers 6. the false prophets inspired by Satan together about four hundred men and said unto them Shall I go against Ramoth Gilead to battel or shall I forbear and they said go up for the Lord shall deliver it into the hand of the King Consider it seriously They that admininister the Oracles of God are the greatest mercies or greatest curses When they drop from their lips nothing but Gods mind they are mercies if not they are curses 2. Satan tempts the unconverted by numbering more false prophets than true For when Satan cannot act for Truth on his side he will act by number He will weigh the balance by number when he cannot by truth he will disgrace truth by the greatness and multitude of number against it for he knows what will take among carnal and ignorant men they are carried with quantity more than quality What are you saith Satan that are but one or two wiser than so many Can truth sit upon the lips of so few If it were truth why should not others know it as well as you Why should so many be ignorant of it Thus he carried his device upon the wings of multitude against Ahab to hatch his design against 1 Reg. 22. 6. Ahab he did sit upon the spirits of four hundred prophets against one Micajah so there are many loose lives against one Christ though there be many now a days that teach men by their words and doings that men may live loosely yet Christ saith Broad is the way to destruction and narrow is the way to life So that the fewness of those that carry on the way to life is a Testimony of the truth of it 3. Satan tempts the unconverted by putting men out of conceit with the godly that they are proud and Hypocrites Secondly Satan tempts men in conversion He can play his part here also he is cunning everywhere to destroy if he cannot keep sinners from conversion he will hinder them in conversion Now Satan temps men in conversion 1. By putting hard thoughts of God himself into them and therefore no marvel if they have hard thoughts of godly men When such a soul is coming unto God he is by Satan way-laid with this namely that God will never pardon him he would repent but dares not he takes God for his Enemy Satan would fain make a poor soul that 's coming unto God think that God is his Enemy and will not save him it is one of his Master-pieces to bring the love and good-will of God into suspition Oh! saith he why should I repent I shall not be accepted and this is no small weapon And thus Satan deals with grown Saints and strong Christians and therefore surely the temptation is a strong Engine it hath more than ordinary strength in it He practised thus against Job 1. 16. Job The fire of God saith the messenger is fallen from heaven and hath burnt up the sheep Mark ye why did Satan consume Jobs sheep with fire He stirred up the Sabeans Vers 14 15. to take away his Oxen and Asses and why not the sheep why to provoke Job if he could to be passionate against God and for that was his great design to curse and blaspheme God to beget an opinion in Job that God was now his Enemy as well as Man The fire of God is fallen upon the sheep thou canst not put this off as thou mightst do the other and say this is but the malice or covetousness of the Sabeans that rob me of my goods no thou shalt see now that God himself is angry heaven frowns upon thee the fire of God consumes thee Turn over the Records of all antiquity and see whether ever God dealt thus with any but those cursed Sodomites upon whom God rained fire from heaven Was God their enemy in that punishment Behold he sends such an one upon thee though God hates nothing so much as sin yea nothing but sin yet he would fain save the sinner Now then bring your souls to this either I will be a natural man still or else I will get into Jesus Christ Sirs If you live in sin you will lose your souls if you throw away sin you shall be received into the bosom of Christs love 2. In conversion one device by which Satan tempts is when poor creatures are coming home to God to fright them with fearful blasphemies As for example he will first tempt or suggest to thee that there is no God and this temptation springs immediately from Satans hatred of God he would annihilate God But now to oppose Satan in this his device how shall I encounter him Thou must arm thy self against this temptation thus Answ 1. Tell him Satan thou knowest there is a God thou wouldst have me believe there is no God and yet thou knowest that there is a God The Devils also believe
which are wonderful Thy testimonies are wonderful therefore doth my soul Psal 119. 129. keep them There is peace that passeth all understanding joy unspeakable and full of glory There we have the ways of his Wisdom and his dealings with the Saints which are wonderful as Job saith Things too Job 42. 3. wonderful for me which I knew not To bring us to life by death to glory by shame to perfect his work in abasement to bring it low that he may raise after But how may we know these Mysteries of the Kingdom of Heaven 1. You must use all means you must read and hear and discourse you must study the things of God and converse with the Saints to whom God hath revealed these Mysteries The Ministry of the Word is the golden pipe through which these Divine Mysteries flow down into your Knowledg And then meditate of these things till the heart be warmed fasten your thoughts on them every day It is your Wisdom to spend consideration on them Oh that my people were wise that they would consider their latter end I say it is your wisdom to consider the Excellency of these Mysteries of Religion the Beauty of them in themselves the fruit and sweetness of them in this world and in the world to come An ingredient in the use of means after this Knowledg is that you must search for it The promise of finding Knowledg is only to such as search for Knowledg It is such a precious treasure that it lyeth deep in the bowels of Scripture Thou Prov. 2. 4. shalt find wisdom if thou seekest her as silver and searchest for her as for hid treasures There are two places two veins especially where wisdom is to be found there is the Book of Gods Word and the Book of Gods Works the Book of Scripture and the Book of Providence In these two Books we are to search and study out the Knowledg of the Mysteries of Heaven The Word reveals them the hand of Providence doth dispense them The Word unfolds them Providence makes all things to further them in the soul And let me tell you One great means to irradiate your Knowledg of the Mysteries of Heaven is to know that Mystery of sinfulness that is in you and that Mystery of misery that lieth upon you It is not to be conceived as Jeremy saith How deceitful the heart is and how desperately wickea what a depth of corruption lyeth there The cursed and woful state we are in by nature is not to be conceived Man's apprehension is too little to take in all the Dimensions of it to lye under the eternal wrath of God what head can comprehend it VVhat created soul can fathom in her widest thoughts the wrath of an infinite God Who can tell what Hell is And how hot the fire is which Gods Almighty wrath hath kindled to all eternity As eye hath not seen nor ear heard neither have entred into the heart of man the things which God hath prepared for those that love him so neither hath eye seen nor ear heard nor can the heart of man conceive those depths and treasures of misery that men are in by nature Here we may cry out Oh the depths Therefore the more transparent Knowledg we have of the Mystery of Corruption and of the dreadful misery we are in by sin the more we shall wonder at the unparalell'd goodness of God in the Mystery of our salvation the one will sharpen the appetite of the other Truly Sirs if you are yet in the state of sin consider how little there is between you and eternal Death you are ready to drop into Hell immediately and irrecoverably Did these things sit sadly and seriously upon your spirits how would it advance the Knowledg of the Mysteries of Heaven 2. That you may know the Mysteries of the Kingdom of Heaven bring Humility and self-denial Humble reason and make her give place to Faith for the humility we here speak of is a Denial of our own Parts and Wits though they be never so capacious In this case the Intellectus must be rasa tabula I say the understanding must be as a Table scraped all the Writings and Notions of humane Wit and Reason must be scraped out It must be like the Wax that hath no Character that it may receive the Impression of the Seal That which reason should do in supernatural things is to stoop to Faith to believe the things of God upon the sole Authority of God Here it is the greatest reason to yield to Faith In Divine Mysteries Faith is the reason of reason and the highest reason is to yield to God that hath revealed them And therefore Faith stands with the greatest reason that can be for is it not the greatest reason in the world to believe him that is Truth it self Reason it self saith It is the greatest reason to believe God who is the first Truth 3. Wait upon the spirit Give the spirit that Honour to reveal these Mysteries to you For your eyes are blind you have an inward darkness upon you the Gospel takes away the Vail from the things but the spirit takes away the Vail from our souls The Jews had a Vail of types and shadows thrown over the things themselves now I say Our Gospel takes away the Vail from the things but the spirit must take away the Vail from our hearts In Nature there is need of a double light that we may behold Objects 1. A light someness upon the Object it self through the Medium and therefore men cannot see in the night because the air which is the Medium is dark 2. A light besides in the Organ that is the eye and therefore blind men cannot see in the day because though the Sun shines and things may be seen in themselves yet they want a light in the eye So though the former darkness which lay upon the Mysseries of Heaven be taken away those legal shadows and curtains are removed and the Sun of the Gospel shines full upon our faces yet we are blind within there lyeth an inward darkness upon our faculty and the spirit must open our eyes and give us a vital light to joyn with the outward light 4. Send up your prayers to Heaven The holy Vapours of Prayer ascending the spirit comes down in showres upon the soul The earth must send up Vapours before the Clouds can give down rain And therefore Paul prays for the Ephesians That God would give them the spirit of Wisdom and Revelation Eph. 1. 17 18. that the eyes of their understanding being enlightned they might know what is the hope of his calling and what the riches of the glory of his inheritance in the saints 5. He that would find the knowledg of Divine Mysteries must seek it with a sanctified mind That which enables us to know and understand aright the things of God must be a living principle of Holiness in us As Plotinus saith The eye cannot behold
appear admirable in beauty and comeliness That which Paul speaks to Timothy bidding him do the work of an 2 Tim. 2. 15. Evangelist bidding him shew himself a work-man that needs not to be ashamed is most true concerning the great God he will do all his works so that he needs not to be ashamed AN ACCOUNT OF GODS TEMPTATIONS Gen. XXII 1 2. And it came to pass after these things that God did tempt Abraham and said unto him Abraham And he said Behold here am I. And he said Take now thy Son thine only Son Isaac whom thou lovest and get thee into the land of Moriah and offer him there for a burnt-offering upon one of the mountains which I will tell thee of THIS Chapter presents you with a story that hath no parallel all ages have stood amazed at it not knowing whether they should more wonder at Gods Command or Abrahams Obedience Here is an admirable composure or mixture of joy and sadness sadness and joy you may so we do it with holy reverence liken it to a Comedy whose property as some have said is to begin with trouble and end in cheerfulness The subject-matter of this story is Abraham tempted to sacrifice his Son Isaac or if you please God tempting Abraham to sacrifice his only Son You have here 1. The Temptation 2. The effect of it First The temptation is that Abraham must sacrifice his Son Secondly The effect of it was an Obligation upon Abraham to perform this service and therefore you shall find at the third verse that Abraham rose up early in the morning and sadled his ass to dispatch quickly what he was commanded Gods Command and Mans Obligation are Relatum Correlatum Relatives Indeed Gods Command and the Creatures Obedience are not Relatives for where God commands obedience doth not always follow but his command and our obligation to obey are Relatives secundum esse the one doth necessarily put the other in being In the temptation you have 1. The efficient God 2. The act did tempt 3. The subject of the Temptation Abraham God did tempt Abraham 4. The means whereby God did tempt him by giving him an extraordinary command such as was never before nor since given to any man for the Father to sheath his sacrificing knife in the throat of his own son verse the second Where the Hebrew words are wondrous emphatical 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Take now thy Son thine only one or thy only begotten one unigenitum so some render it whom thou lovest even Isaac Rabbi Salomon observes a Gradation thus Take thy Son but saith he that is Abraham I have two Sons therefore saith God 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 thine only son saith Abraham either of them is the only son of their mother therefore saith God 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 him whom thou lovest saith Abraham I love both therefore saith God Isaac whom thou lovest so well But how was Isaac his only son when he had Ishmael also because he had Ishmael therefore the septuagint render it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 thy beloved one so at the 12 and 16 verses the septuagint render 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 But Isaac was his only Son remaining in his Family for Ishmael was gone Thy only son by thy wife thy legitimate Son as opposed to Ishmael begotten of the Bond-woman thy only son to whom the promise is made and of whom the Messiah is to come 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 take him now do thou thy self take him and offer him for a burnt-offering do thou do it by thy self not by another by thy own hand not by anothers This Command of God was just and no ways contrary to that standing Law 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 thou shalt not kill For though it be unjust and against that law for any man to take away the life of a party not guilty of a Capital Crime deserving death yet just it is and God may justly command man to take away the life of a person never so innocent for these reasons 1. Because that law thou shalt not kill did not bind God 2. And chiefly a potestate Dei from the Authority of God because God is the supream Lord and hath jus vitae necis in omnes an absolute Dominion of life and death over all which no creature hath or can have 3. A potentia Dei the power of God And that 1. Because God could restore life taken away and raise up Isaac again which man cannot do nay it is above the sphere of all created activity 2. God if he never restore the life on earth that he takes away yet he can give a better life an everlasting life in the room of it You see then the command was just and this was the Medium or the means whereby God tempted Abraham 5. The end of this Command was 1. To try Abraham and make proof of him whether he loved God or his Son Isaac more 2. And to manifest unto Abraham himself his faith and love to God 3. And to make him a rare example and pattern of both to all future generations 6. You have the circumstance of time when God tempted Abraham or if you will the order and succession of this temptation at the first verse After these things 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Indeed 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifies words But that signification cannot stand here it signifies as 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the Greek also things and matters Which will give occasion to explain a Text to you Psal 65. 3. Iniquities prevail against me as for our transgressions thou shalt purge them away Where by iniquities you must by no means understand Davids iniquities or sins as if he had said My sins or iniquities prevail against me but the iniquities or unjust courses of his adversaries they prevailed against him But the words are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 words of iniquity words put for things things or matters of iniquity not Davids own but his Adversaries practised by them against him that is their unjust courses prevailed against him to the trouble and vexation of him and of Gods People yet saith he as for our transgressions which had given their Adversaries such power against them thou upon our serious seeking of thee hast purged them away that is hast pardoned them Well then to return to my Text God tempted Abraham after these things that is those things that went before but how long this was after it appears not by the Text save only that Isaac was then of sufficient age and strength to carry a burden of wood for sacrifice being then as Josephus saith five Antiq. lib. 1. cap. 14. and twenty years old Abraham one hundred and twenty five and Sarah one hundred and fifteen though the Hebrews some of them say that Isaac was thirty seven years old After these things God tempted Abraham after all the preceding passages of his life more particularly after so many and so great promises made to him
interpretative tempting of God when though we intend not to tempt him yet we do the same thing which he doth who hath a design and desire to tempt God So that this sin may be committed when you do not intend it you may tempt God when you have no express purpose to do it when you do that which is ordinable to nothing else but to make a tryal or experience of God and to prove his Power or Goodness or Knowledg As when a man goes on in a wretched course of life and yet hopes to find mercy at the hour of death he intends not it may be to try Gods mercy yet he doth that which is good for nothing but to make an experience of his mercy 3. You must know that 1. There is a good or lawful tempting of God 2. There is a sinful tempting of God There is a commendable and there is an unwarrantable tempting of God 1. There is a good and commendable temptation of God which is lawful which is so when it springs 1. A bono principio from a good principle or an holy heart and purpose 2. When it is done in a lawful way or by a good action 3. When it is bottomed upon a good ground that is 1. When we have a call from God to it his command and promise to bear us out 2. When we have a just necessity to do it 4. It is a lawful tempting of God when it tends to a good end This is a lawful tempting of God when it proceeds from a good principle and is done by good means and tends Tentatio bons est quae ex principio bono seu animo sancto ac bono medio seu mode●●● bonum finem tendit to a good end and as you heard also is bottomed upon a good ground a lawful call and a just necessity to tempt and try God 1. To make our tempting and trying of God lawful and good it must spring from a good principle or an holy heart that is a love of knowing the Truth or Power or Justice of God When we make a Tryal of God out of love to God and his glorious Attributes that we may be ravished with the beauty and splendour of them 2. It is a lawful tempting of God when we have a command to try him and then we sin in not tempting God Isa 7. When the Lord had promised what he would do for Judah and the house of David and what he would do against Syria and Ephraim saith he to encourage Abaz faith in ver 11. Ask thee a sign of the Lord thy God ask it either in the depth or in the height above As if he had said For the confirmation of thy faith and the assurance of the truth of Gods word ask a sign that is try God by asking somewhat to be done some unusual and extraordinary thing to be done by him thus make a tryal and experience of him whether he means as he saith whether his heart agrees with his word to know this ask a sign make a tryal put him to it No saith Ahaz I will not ask neither will I tempt the Lord. You Vers 12. would think this was Religiously but it was Hypocritically spoken he pretended he would not sin that if he ask't a sign he should go against the Command in Deut. 6. 16. Ye shall not tempt the Lord your God as ye tempted him in Massah As if a man should tempt God by doing that which he is invited by God himself to do Ahaz here had a Command to try God it was Gods gracious indulgence and kind condescent to Ahaz to bid him ask a sign that is if thou art hard to believe me ask a sign and try me I give thee this offer but he would not it was his rebellion not to tempt or try God when he had a Command to tempt and try him And herein was his sin also the greater because God would have given King Ahaz a sign not for himself only but for the edification and instruction of the whole people and therefore he is reproved as an hinderer of the common good and publick salvation in that he would not ask a sign 3. It is a lawful tempting or tryal of God when there is a just necessity when we really stand in need of his extraordinary appearance when ordinary means fail then to trust in him and expect his unusual presence it is not unlawful Thus when Pharaoh pursued Israel and his Army was in the Rear of them and the Red-sea before them Moses said unto them Stand still and see the salvation of the Lord which Exod. 14. 13. he will shew to you to day And when the children of Israel were in the wilderness and could have no bread nor could meet with water then they were to try what God could do for them and to expect relief from him out of the ordinary course they were called by God into the wilderness and therefore had a call to try God and seek experiments of his mercy and power for them 4. It is a lawful tempting of God when it is to a good end 1. As for confirmation of our faith thus Gideon tempted or proved God Judg. 6. 36 37 38 39 40 verses And Gideon said unto God If thou wilt save Israel by mine hand as thou hast said Behold I will put a fleece of wool in the floor and if the dew be on the fleece only and it be dry on all the the earth beside then shall I know that thou wilt save Israel by mine hand as thou hast said And it was so for he rose up early on the morrow and thrust the fleece together and wringed the dew out of the fleece a bowl full of water Where faith he at the 39th verse 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 let me tempt or prove I pray thee but this once with the fleece Gideon being conscious of his own infirmity and weakness and out of a desire to obey God and for the confirmation of his faith and his more cheerful obedience in a most dangerous design which God had set him upon asked and obtained a sign I suppose he ask'd this sign by an instinct and impulse from God himself 2. When it is for Gods glory and the publick good for the salvation of souls and the progress of the Gospel and the splendour of Christs name And thus the Apostles prayed that God would be with them in their Ministry by stretching forth his hand to heal and that signs and wonders might Acts 4. 29 30. be done by them 2. There is a sinful tempting of God A sinful tempting of God is which wants those conditions or ingredients spoken of before Briefly thus Quae principio medio aut fine peccat a sinful tempting of God is that which fails in principle means or end You shall see an instance of this sinful tempting of God in Matth. 22. 15. to 22. Then went the Pharisees and took counsel how they
live godly in Christ Jesus they derive it from him and direct it to him they breath for him and bring forth all their actions for him for this is essential to an Evangelical life to do all in the strength of Christ as their root and to do all for Christ as their end And if this be a godly life to live to Christ then let us so think of him and so do that from henceforth our hearts and mouths may neither speak nor think but of him that all things else may be of no savour to us that nothing enter our spirit which resenteth not the Spirit and Odour of Jesus Christ and respires not his honour and glory I say let us be vigilant and faithful to do and desire nothing but the honour of Christ to regard nothing but his pleasure and glory so as to have no eyes but for Jesus no more life but what is consecrated to the honour of his Soveraignty and Greatness Vse We have shewed you what a godly life is and how you may attain a godly life Let us now stir you up to attain this godly life 1. Let me take St. Pauls word to Timothy that which he recommends to him is Piety Exercise thy self unto godliness 1 Tim. 4. 7. Truly all virtues are good and all suitable to the state of a Christian the acquisition and practise of them all useful and necessary but he would have his prime and chief care be To exercise thy self unto godliness for godliness is the Ornament and Mistress of all other virtues it leads us to God and makes use of all virtues to conduct us thither and having no Object but God teaches us the worship and honour that we must render to him and like a good mistress puts us into a ready and easie practise of virtues and entertains us in the exercise of actions that honour God and are acceptable to him 2. Godliness is profitable as Paul saith in the same place Bodily exercise profiteth little but godliness is profitable to all 1 Tim. 4. 8. things having the promise of the life that now is and of that which is to come True godliness is one of the principal foundations on which Christian perfection stands and is supported In the conduct of men all actions and exercises of their life are ruled according to the Piety and as we commonly say according to the Devotion they have If their Piety be not well-laid the rest of the Christian life will be unconstant and its exercises very uncertain and superficial as we see in the devotion of many which is only in the exterior Who as the Apostle saith having the form of godliness deny and despise the power thereof In such souls we see nothing solid nothing but inconstancy in their lives imperfection in their actions disquiet disturbance and adherence to several creatures in their spirits a small blast of adversity over-turns them Object But it is an hard thing to be godly we have Satan opposing us and he is too hard for us besides our own corruptions and strong temptations Answ While we strive to be godly we may safely expect the Presence of God he is never wanting to those that seek after him and never fails those that engage in his quarrels As he who plots sin shall be sure to find Satan standing at his right hand so he that pursues after God and Holiness shall find God nearer to him than he is to himself God hath not forsaken the earth but as he sustains the whole universe much more those who are seeking grace and participation of himself Are you then striving to be godly and aiming at a Divine life His almighty arms will bear you up and he 'l cherish you with his own goodness Wheresoever God beholds any breathings after himself he gives life to them as those which are his own breath in them where there is any serious and sober resolution against sin any real motion towards God there 's the blessing of heaven in it He that planted it will also water it and make it to bud and blossom and bring forth fruit Object But a godly life is an afflicted life Answ You have heard that grace in us is the life of Jesus in us We ought then to know what his life was The life of Jesus is Divinely Humane and Humanely Divine he is God and Man and therefore lives a life Divine and a life Humane As God he lives the life of God in the bosom of his Father a life of Glory Power and Majesty As Man he lived the life of Man in lowness humiliation in impotence in sufferings so that at the same he is living in the bosom of his Father and dying on the arms of the Cross There he reigns and governs and judges all the world here he is accused and accursed condemned and crucified at the same instant he is in the exaltation and greatness of his Majesty and in the lowness and humiliation of our Humanity Such also ought the Christian life to be on the one side it is great seeing grace makes us the Children of God elevates and unites us to God On the other side the same life is obscured dejected wholly in the spirit of humiliations and privations for grace cannot reign in the soul without operating therein annihilation death and humility Again The Saint by his Union to the Son of God is raised Eph. 2. 6. up and made to sit in heavenly places in Jesus Christ And at the same time the life of a Christian is exposed here to Temptations derided by men and condemned by the world at the same time it is in the greatest cherishing of God and under the fiercest agitation of the Cross So that an afflicted godly life should be no wonder being compared with the life of Christ Besides God enlightens the soul by grace 't is granted but 't is in annihilation he upholds her but 't is in confounding her he unites her to him but it is in separating her sometimes from himself and she remains separated from God as long as she remains upon earth While we are in the body we are absent from the Lord 2 Cor. 5. 6. so she is at once united and separated Again This is the Conduct of God over his Church If we reflect upon the highest works we shall find he puts not on the Ornament of Grace he lays not the foundation of her estate but in lowness his grace his gifts his spirit and his communications When did he come down from heaven and give her his law with such appearance of glorious Majesty as never the like was but when he had brought her into a wilderness When the Lord Christ instituted the Sacraments which are Conduit-pipes to convey his graces to his Church he chose bread water such things as are mean little or nothing esteemed among men In the Birth of the Church he took the Cross for the Throne of his Empire a Calvary for his Seat-Royal he rejected an estate by Poverty Sufferings and Martyrdom and at this day he doth the same in the Regency of his Church And according to Gods proceedings in the Conduct of his Church is likewise his carriage in the sanctification and government of our souls he leads them by the Cross he retires from them he hides himself he leaves them in privations he humbles them annihilates them smites them overthrows them Whereby is discovered how they are as I think deceived who in their devotions and religious exercises seek resentments enjoyments content and satisfaction and would know and feel the excellency and elevations of grace I call it a deceit as I suppose for Christian grace consists chiefly in privations in lowness in rigours and that is it they stand most in fear of and avoid But as the life of Jesus began in poverty and ended on the Cross so a perfect Christian who would live a life of grace must resolve to walk among Thorns to bear privations and sustain desertions for the Cross and Thorns are things proper to Christian-grace and to the love of Jesus Let us not so much seek after assurance of heaven as a thing to come as after heaven it self present in us For where Heaven comes into a heart it will bring its own light comfort and assurance along with it Get Heaven into your soul and you will easily have the assurance of Heaven Let us have a fire in a room and we shall quickly have the light and warmth of it there also Men seek the assurance of Heaven as a thing to come but neglect the present power and possession of Heaven it self in their souls Oh! let us get the Sun it self into us and then we shall not be without its shine and smiles within us FINIS Books Printed for and are to be Sold by Tho. Parkhurst at the Bible and Three Crowns in Cheapside near Mercers-Chappel PResent State of New-England Burges's Husbandmans Companion Burges's Englands Bond. Adams's Catechism Survey of Quakerism A view of Antiquity by J. Honner Abyssus Mali or Man's Corruption by Nature by W. G. England's present and most great incumbent Duty by Robert Perrott The Ark of the Covenant opened or a Treatise of the Covenant of Redemption Janewayes Life Meads Almost Christian Mr. Cawtons Funeral Sermon Preached by Mr. Vincent and Mr. Hurst Phelpes Caveat against Drunkenness Wadsworths last Warning unto secure Sinners Kidder on the Sacrament Wells Funeral Sermon by Mr. Tho. Watson Mr. Wadsworths Funeral Sermon Preached by Mr. Bragg Bishop Reynholds Meditations on the Fall and Rising of St. Peter Practical Divinity of the Papists proved to be destructive unto Christianity and Mens souls Burroughs's four Treatises Dr. Collins on the Canticles