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A15527 Saints by calling: or Called to be saints A godly treatise of our holy calling to Christ, by the gospell. With the seuerall gifts proper vnto the called: and their counterfeits in the hypocrites which are not partakers of this effectuall calling. Written by Thomas Wilson, minister of Gods word, at S. Georges Church in Canterbury. Wilson, Thomas, 1563-1622. 1620 (1620) STC 25796; ESTC S103067 273,228 442

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And as the woman hath giuen her selfe into the power of the man shee and whatsoeuer is hers be now become her husbands so it is here likewise euery beleeuing soule giues her selfe and all hers againe vnto Christ. The second similitude is of a naturall body wherein the head and the members are well knit and compact together by ioynts sinewes which as ligaments and bands doe so linke the members amongst themselues and to their head as they though they be distant one from another yet being all quickned by one soule they all make but one body So it is betweene Christ and the faithfull his members though they be many and by place diuided amongst themselues and all from Christ their head yet the Spirit of their head by influence from him descending into the members and quickening them with the life of grace they are by that Spirit as a band so fastened to their head through faith and amongst themselues through loue as that their head and they are mystically yet truly but one body as it is saide 1 Cor. 12. 12. As the body is one and hath many members and all the members of the body which is one though they be many yet are but one body euen so is Christ. Where note that to declare the neerenesse and euennesse as I may so speake betweene the beleeuers and Christ hee and they are all termed by one name euen Christ comprehending in this word the head with the members Hitherto also belongeth Eph. 4. 15. In all things grow vp in him which is the head by whom all the body being coupled c. The naturall body then and the head is not more one then Christ and the faithfull Which is further opened by the similitude of the Vine and branches and of grafting and planting grafts into new stockes Iohn 15 verse 1 2. c. Rom. 6. 6. As also of an house and the foundation whereon it stands Ephe 2. verse 21 22. Christ Iesus is the head corner stone in whom all the building c. For Christ is as the Vine we are as the branches he the noble stocke or roote of Iesse we the grafts he the corner stone we the building laide on him planted and grafted into him to be one with him and to grow vp in him The necessity of this vnion with Christ it is very great so as without it wee are for euer accursed For by Adam wee all fell from God lost his grace and fauour his Spirit his communion being through sinne become the very limmes of Satan held vnder his power as vassals and so seruants of sinne heires of hell and damnation thus deuoyded of all true life and bewrapt in the bands of sinne and death and so remaine till by vnion with Christ we recouer our communion with God his grace and Spirit his righteousnesse and life Hence it is so peremptorily auouched that Christ is the bread which came downe from Heauen of which whosoeuer eateth not hath no life in him And againe his flesh which he gaue for the life of the World is saide to be meate indeede his bloud drinke indeede and except a man eate his flesh and drinke his bloud hee cannot liue for euer Iohn 6. 51. In which Chapter these three things are taught about this matter First that we must haue vnion with Christ euen such as is betweene the nourishment and our substance And secondly that this vnion is wrought by beleeuing in him by seeing him by comming to him by hungering and thirsting after him And thirdly that vpon and by this vnion with Christ wee doe partake in the life of Christ which being originally in the Deity as it is written The flesh profiteth not it is the Spirit that quickeneth and againe God is life and that life is in God yet it is conueyed into the manhood of Christ personally vnited to the Godhead and from his flesh as from a Conduite receiuing grace of life from the fountaine of the Diuinity it is by the pipe of faith deriued into all his members To be short not more needfull that a naturall member as hand or foote be ioyned to the head that it may liue haue sense and motion or a branch to the Vine conioyned that it may take iuyce to fructifie then it is needfull for the Elect to bee coupled to Iesus Christ for spirituall life and euerlasting happinesse And now as concerning our last point moued touching the fruits and commodities of this vnion it is euident by this that hath beene spoken that all our good now and for euer dependeth vpon it it being the base and foundation of all the benefits whatsoeuer we haue from Christ whereof we can haue no part vnlesse we haue first a fellowship with himselfe by enioying of whom wee doe together enioy all his graces here and all his glory hereafter as his members are capable but not equally with the head euen as the branch once knit to the Vine partakes in all the life thereof And as the woman being ioyned in mariage to a rich and mighty King together with her coniunction to his person hath his maiesty glory and wealth 〈◊〉 farre as shee is capable of it and may be for her fullest contentment imparted to her Euen so it is heere in this spirituall coniunction that seeing Christ from his gifts blessings cannot be diuided but whosoeuer hath the one doth most certainly communicate in the other therefore the elect being vnited to Christ their head as there flowes from the naturall head to the lowest members power of life sense and motion so from Iesus Christ there is communicated to his spouse and his body the Church and to euery member all his riches and vnsearchable treasures both power of grace and possession of glory Heere of it being saide that Christ is made of God to vs Wisedome sanctification righteousnesse and redemption 1 Cor. 1 30. and that God hauing giuen vs Christ with him will giue vs all things Rom. 8 32. and in Iohn 6 54. All such as eate his flesh and drinke his blood that is haue vnion with himself first with his manhood and then by meanes thereof with his Godhead haue euerlasting life that is haue all his benefits euen to their eternall blisse and glory in heauen Apollos Friend Aquila it is very right so as you speak As a man cannot haue a farme as owner of it but hee hath all fruites commodities immunities royalties yea the treasure also if any happen to be hidde in the field is his so whosoeuer is owner of Christ by beleeuing in him and Christ againe possessing him as his owne the same party cannot but haue all the goodes and glory of Christ euen whatsoeuer is Christs is his his conception his birth his life his doctrine his sufferings his death his buriall his resurrection to glory his ascension his kingdome his Priesthoode his Spirit all the merits fruits profits
fauourable vnto them as being well and throughly resolued that howsoeuer the force of Adams disobedience ioyned to their owne sinnes was very great for the spoiling of them of perfect integrity and filling them full of the infection of sinne to the casting them downe from an happy estate to infinite misery yet the grace of Christ in the merit of his passiue and actiue righteousnesse to wit of his sufferings and doings is of far more exceeding might and vertue for the ouercomming of their sinnes and the restoring of them to a farre more surpassing blessednesse then that they lost grace superabounding aboue sinne So as their hearts be replenished with ioy and glorying not onely because of the glory they looke for in Heauen but also in the vnderstanding and beleefe of that wonderous fauour which God the Father in his Sonne Christ and for his sake beareth to them here in their pilgrimage Aquila Ye are at the length come through this large Sea of doctrine touching Iustification and the nine neerest Effects thereof and are arriued safe at the doctrine of sanctification which followeth next in order to be spoken of but that we haue already by our former discourse exceeded the bounds of our appointed time Therefore it were meete we did now after this recreation of minde repaire thither where we may haue some refreshing to our bodies and if it please you Sir to goe with me wee shall finde little fare and great welcome Apollos Agreed friend Aquila so ye will passe your word to me that at our next conference ye will doe as much for my sake I had rather feede with you of your little with such great loue as you will sawce it with all then to haue great aboundance of good cheere with little sound good-will The eighth Dialogue Entreating of Sanctification the third maine fruite of Faith Aquila SIR I am glad ye are come I had so long waited for you that I began to doubt lest you had been someway letted that you could not haue kept appointment which I would haue beene sorry for Apollos No good friend not so I would haue sent you word of it if there had beene any such matter my late comming was occasioned by some vnlooked for affaires It is not with men of my function as it is with you and men of your condition who hauing lookt to your selues and some few which depend on you or haue to deale with you there is an end of your care but our care stretcheth further and is publike not priuate onely Wee know not when wee haue done so many sundry occasions of employment offer themselues so many soule cases so many soule necessities there be Sathan will find vs worke enough wee must be faine to wake when others sleepe and though I will not mention any party to you yet the matter about which I haue been stayed from you I will impart vnto you It was of one that did acknowledge himselfe to beleeue truly vnfainedly in Christ for the remission of his sinnes and yet doubted of his sanctification he found his heart so encombred and toyled with the vile corrupt motions of finne which arise vp in him as hee saide euen like sparkes out of a burning Furnace or as vapours out of a low moist and waterish ground Aquila See the notable malice and subtilty of that old Serpent when hee cannot preuaile against Gods Children in the maine to make them doubt of their faith and whether they haue their sinnes forgiuen them he troubles them about the bye and wil stirre vp doubting about their sanctification whether they be renewed If hee cannot come directly to strike at the heart yet he will haue a blow at the thigh or the leg so as hee may wound any where it is enough to him but with his malice he couples vnmatchable policy for by breeding scruple about our renewing by the Spirit of sanctification his purpose is to draw the temptation vnto this That therefore they haue no faith they are not forgiuen their sinnes they are none of Gods Children Apollos Ye say right and very truly touching Sathans drift in this temptation but herein Sathan declareth himselfe a sot to seeke to perswade one that hath his faith whole and vncrackt and doth beleeue himselfe iustified and pardoned that hee is not sanctified For whomsoeuer Christ iustifieth them at the same time he doth sanctifie These two workes in the soule of a Christian can no more be diuided then the two natures of God and man can be diuided in Christ for that death of Christ which hath merited remission of sinnes to the beleeuer the same hath merited the holy Ghost to be giuen him for the creating of holinesse in his heart And that faith which apprehends the merit of Christs death and obedience for iustification doth also lay hold vpon the vertue and power of his death and resurrection for the renewing of the minde and will vnto Gods Image of holinesse and righteousnesse Faith doth as well purifie the heart from filthinesse as deliuer it from guiltinesse of sinne Acts 15. And God the Father which gaue his Sonne to be righteousnesse made him also to be sanctification to vs not onely in that his holinesse imputed couereth all our prophanenesse of nature and life but for that the effects of his most holy Nature powred into our corrupt nature changeth both minde and will from darknesse of ignorance and sinne to the light of knowledge and holinesse Therefore Iustification and Sanctification be ioyned in Scripture as Chickens of one broode 1 Cor. 6. And Paul when hee had named the Ephesians Saints by calling and presently addeth the faithfull in Christ Iesus he would teach not onely who be worthy to be entitled Saints but also how the Elect come by this grace euen through faith in Christ Iesus faith as an Instrument receiuing as well the Spirit of Christ vnto sanctification or making vs Saints as his righteousnesse vnto iustification that wee may stand iust And thus faith of the truth and sanctification of the Spirit are put both together 2 Thes. 2. because they cannot be seuered but it is of necessity that he that beleeueth the truth of the promise for forgiuenesse of sin hath a power from the Spirit applying the vertue of Christ dead and raised for the destruction of sinne that he may walke holily And now we are thus put vpon this argument of sanctification if it please you wee will consider of it more distinctly and throughly Let me heare of you by what names this gift vseth to be called in Scripture and amongst Diuines and then how ye doe describe sanctification what be the causes and parts of this benefit in what measure we hold it how it is to be discerned in a mans selfe by what markes and such other things as doe concerne this doctrine Aquila As vnion with Christ incorporation into him engrafting or coniunction or communion with Christ doe all import
effected by force of Christs death applied vnto vs for that same diuine power of Christ which sustained his manhood in the suffering of death and gaue it merit to deserue for vs remission of sinnes the same godhead and diuine power worketh in the members of Christ thereby the death and mortification of sinne that it should be lessened in force as well as it wipeth away the guilt of their sinnes Hence it is saide Our sinne is dead by his body and againe Our old man is crucified with him because the body of Christ crucified did deserue for vs that his diuine power should kill and crucifie sinne in them which beleeue in his death The second part of Sanctification is the buriall of sinne which is the continuall proceeding of mortification euen as buriall is the proceeding of death sinne wasting in the Elect touching his vigour and strength euen as corpes waste and moulder in the graue this is wrought by Christ buried whiles that diuine might which preserued the body of Christ in the graue without putrifaction doth effect in the members of Christ by meanes of his buried body a greater degree of mortification euen to the burying and casting mould as it were on their sinnes then they are saide to be buried with him The third part of Sanctification is the quickening of the new man which consists of two parts to wit holinesse containing all vertues and duties whereby we are fitted for the loue and worship of God 2 Righteousnesse which hath all such vertues and duties as enable to loue and profit our neighbour in all things which concerne him This proceedeth from Christ raised againe from the dead that same diuine vertue which wrought in Christs body for the quickening and raising it being dead working also in the soules of his members in whom sinne is already wounded by his death and buriall for their raising vp and quickening vnto godlinesse that they may liue to God hauing strength to practise and doe the workes of God as before they did the workes of sinne For the Elect being coupled to Christ by faith and being one with his manhood touching the substance of it yet spiritually are also one with the godhead touching the efficacy thereof whence it is that the godhead which vttered force and might in Christ to vphold him in his death preseruing him from corruption in his graue and to raise him againe the third day the same godhead powerfully effecteth in Christs members the mortification of sinne by his death and buriall and newnesse of life by his resurrection As the graft which is set in a new stocke taketh iuyce and life from that stock into which it is newly planted so the faithfull partake of the vertue and power of Christ dead and raised with whom they haue communion being grafted into him by his Spirit through faith But this power of Christ communicated to the beleeuers to the killing of sinne and to the quickening of them to God and all godlinesse it doth not effect this worke all at one time but after a long time bringeth it to perfection They therefore are in a dangerous errour such as tendeth to the making of such swel as do beleeue it for truth and others to tremble which feare it may be a truth namely that the grace of Sanctification doth perfectly deliuer from sinne in this life so as thereby one shall be able to liue here without doing any sinne which is the next way to pitch downe headlong to despaire such as find not this perfection or to lift vp vnto hellish pride such as dreame they haue such a perfection Besides the falshhood of it all Scriptures both examples and testimonies crying the contrary and euery mans owne conscience and experience proclaiming aloude that we neuer ceasse to sinne till wee ceasse to liue and that the breath of sinne and our breath be both at once stopped In so plaine and vndoubted a matter proofe is needlesse yet the forme of prayer by Christ appointed to all Christians to be vsed of them as a prayer and patterne of all prayers to be made by them in their pilgrimage enioyning them to aske forgiuenesse of sinnes past to craue deliuerance from temptations of Sathan and sinne for the time to come and the Sacrament of the Supper which belongeth not to men which want nothing but to such as hauing many and great wants do in the sence of them hunger after Christ and his graces and finally the chastisements of God common to all his children which are corrected of God to preuent future faults and offences especially that iudgement of death which taketh hold of all doe demonstrate to euery one that is not wilfully blind that there is none of all the Saints which here in this World doe or can liue without sinne Therefore it will be good to spare this labour and in stead of prouing this which were as if one would bring a candle to giue light to the Sunne to declare rather the ends of Gods counsell therein and withall seeing sanctified persons haue still sinne stirring and striuing in them and bringing forth most loathsome fruites how they may perceiue that they haue the grace of Sanctification Apollos Friend Aquila I doe well allow of your purpose for I am of this minde that for many proofes in matters not darke nor doubtfull nor of great profit it is but waste time and rather bewrayes the vanity of the speaker his indiscretion at least then any whit auailes the hearer may it please you then to goe to those points which you haue propounded and sithence it is so that it had beene as easie for God in the regenerating of his Elect to haue freede them vtterly of sinne and put into them absolute holinesse as he did at first create man righteous voide of all corruption and this had beene much better for vs as one would thinke at once to be rid of such an enemy and had also more expressed Gods power to haue quelled it at one blow rather then by many strokes what might therefore be the reason why it is otherwise that his children after sanctification not onely haue sin still abiding but more troublesome to them then before Aquila That it hath pleased God to haue it thus the matter it selfe speaketh and being he is most wise therefore he will haue it so for most iust causes For touching his power there is no doubt but thereby he could haue caused it to be otherwise for how could not he quit the soule and body from sinne in the time of life that can doe it at death in one instant and his goodnesse is such that had it been more expedient for his children to haue had it so it had surely beene so But the truth is Gods way as in all other things so in this is the best way For as it was Gods wonderful mercy at all to giue them sanctification in any measure and so to put them out of that 〈◊〉
Sathan outward troubles inward temptations yet especially those last and greatest euils and afflictions which at and about the time of his crucifying and sacrifice were for mans sinne inflicted vpon him in soule and body either immediately from the hand of his most irefull highly offended Father or mediately from the Diuell and wicked men Iewes and Gentiles outragiously conspiring and working him all the smart and shame possible could be put vpon him whatsoeuer euill diuine iustice would or hellish malice could heape vpon him and he was capable of that and all that he as our surety in humble submission to his Father did endure for our iniquities The which his passiue righteousnesse consisting in his willing and constant obedience of his manhood vnder the Crosse hath receiued such sufficiency of merit and worthinesse from his godhead to which it is personally vnited for the deseruing and purchasing for all his Elect that most notable benefit which the Scriptures commonly call remission or forgiuenesse of sins Which is an vtter acquitting and deliuering of all beleeuers from all guilt come vpon them by their owne or Adams sinne imputed and from all punishment due to them for the same either in this World or in the next So as West is not so farre remoued from East the highest heauens from the nethermost earth as guilt and paine fault and curse be remoued from the faithfull by this passiue obedience of Christ Iesus Wherevnto belong all those Scriptures which affirme that we haue remission of sinnes by his bloud and that hee died for our sinnes and redeemed vs from alliniquity by his death This being his last and greatest suffering by a Synecdoche of the part for the whole comprehends all other sufferings which being endured of him with most hearty obedience haue freed all beleeuers from extreme euill from damnation in hell and the whole wrath of God for sinne Insomuch as howsoeuer many and great tribulations doe chance to befall them in their life time and death in the end seaze vpon the godly yet these happen vnto them as no part of Gods curse for sinne or as fruites of his fury and hot indignation but quite contrary the crosses of their life being sanctified by Christ his Crosse they are great furtherances to mortification and amendment of life and good trials of their faith patience and nourishments of their hope and death when it comes hauing lost his sting there is nothing remaining in it which is not beneficial to them it being but as a bridge or gate to carry them ouer and conuey them into their heauenly Countrey And as the faithfull doe escape all euill by the passiue righteousnesse of Christ his suffering of euils being their acquittance and discharge as a surety hauing answered a debt for thee enfreeth thee as if it had beene satisfied with thy owne money the most iust God neuer exacting one debt twise so they find entrance into life by his actiue iustice for none must liue but the iust which haue perfect conformity with the strict iustice of the Law The iust shall liue This exact righteousnesse all flesh lacketh for No flesh can be iustified in his sight Psal. 143. 2. Therefore no more surely was Adam shut out of earthly Paradise then we his posterity for lacke of perfect iustice are excluded out of the third heauens the Paradise which is aboue Therefore as Iesus Christ our Mediatour by bearing the whole punishment due to the breach of the Law with most sincere obedience hath enfreed vs from the curse and destruction of hell so by keeping doing all duties toward God and man required in the Law and that in most perfect loue he hath by this his actiue obedience merited and obtained for his people a right and title to the Kingdome of Heauen This actiue righteousnesse is doing and keeping the whole Law it is the absolute conformity and agreement of the man Christ in his life vnto the perfect rule of righteousnesse giuen of God in the Decalogue or ten Commandements Of this actiue righteousnesse there are two parts one is the conformity of his nature to the wil of God all the powers and faculties both of body and soule being rightly framed according to the most exact iustice of the moral Law he being conceiued by the holy Ghost the lumpe of flesh which hee tooke and whereout his manhood was framed was so seuered from all spot of sinne as there was not to bee found in him the least taint of sinne and corruption no inclination in minde or will against God but a through-disposition to all good Hence called the immaculate Lambe vndefiled separate from sinners and so he behoued to be that hee might offer himselfe a spotlesse sacrifice to God who vnder the Law would admit no blemished oblation Had ought in his nature been neuer so little crooked and vnright his death had no more auayled for remission or his life for righteousnesse then the death or life of Peter Paul or any other Saint for then himselfe needing a Sauiour should not haue beene ours The other part of his actiue obedience is the conformity of his actions with the holinesse of the Law which in the course of his life hee kept and fulfilled doing all that was commanded in both Tables doing it in a perfect manner and measure with perfect loue of God his Father whom he obeyed to the death and of men his neighbours whom hee loued as himselfe yea more then himselfe giuing himselfe to a cruell infamous death for them Also doing all this to a right end that he might honor his Father whose glory he sought in all things And lastly being constant vnto the end continuing in his loue obedience vnto the last breath Hence it is saide He did all things well he knew no sinne no guile found in his mouth and is called that Holy one and iust and righteous one who indeede alone hath that iustice which is able to abide the touch-stone euen the most rigorous examination of the most seuere diuine iustice which hauing thorowly and narrowly sifted it cannot not onely finde nothing what to blame in it but of right must allow it and crowne it with eternall life Hence it is that this righteousnes which Christ in his manhood hath thus performed as we haue saide is often in the Epistles of Paul termed the righteousnes of God as Rom. 3 〈◊〉 22 26. 2 Cor. 5 verse last Phil. 3. Not onely because that person which wrought it was very God the Sonne of the eternall God though it were wrought in the humane nature assumed but especially to teach vs that this righteousnes of the man Christ it is that and that alone which the most iust God approoueth and rewardeth not as hee doth approoue the vnperfect obedience of his children in fauour pardoning what is wanting and accepting the will for the worke but
with Christ and his afflictions suffering and dying with him they haue the Lords owne worde for their warrant that they shall also liue and reigne with him in glory So as with consideration of these things namely their conformity with Christ and that their light and momentany sufferings shall be turned into a glory immortall and weighty hence it is that looking for it looking vpon it and not vpon their temporall calamities they are very comfortable and coragious the ioy of good things to come swallowing at lest mitigating much the greefe of euil things present Aquila Sir you might now as I thinke proceede vnto the two last pointes of Iustification but that I would intreat you to loose two or three knots One is whether Gods children may imbrace worldly comforts And the second is sithence the hope of glorie breeds in them such ioy euen to the solacing gladding of their hearts in most irkesome and painfull sufferings how commeth it that sometimes some of the best and most faithfull men do strangely despaire and are not onely without hope and ioy but exceedingly appalled and danted despairing and full of discomfite Apollos Good friend albeit something hath by occasion bene said to this point twice or thrice heretofore if ye remember when wee spake of peace of conscience and of standing in grace and else-where yet I will answer your demand touching the despaires of the faithfull if first I speake somewhat of worldly comforts which as it pleaseth God sometime to afford his owne children and that in a good measure giuing them also power to apprehend them so there is great feare and danger of being deceiued by them as we see in the wofull examples of Salomons fall and Ezekiahs sinne and sundry others which haue lost the sense of spirituall ioy by being too much caried away with worldly ioyes not keeping a measure in them Therefore Gods children are to bee admonished of these few things about their ioy in earthlie comforts 1. First that simply considered it is common vnto them not onely with the vngodly but euen with sensuall beasts who are delighted when they haue things liking to their nature Thus wee see the Calues and Lambs to skip and sport themselues the very horse reioyce when he hath good prouender 2. Secondly too much worldly ioy when the hart is much and often cheered with pleasures of life is very perillous a great enemy to godlinesse hauing bene the baite wherein many a good soule hath bin caught so as there needs great caution to be taken about the well vsing of it especially it being so hard for vs to gouerne either our passions of greefe or ioy of feare or loue 3. Thirdly therefore prayer is to bee made vnto God to guide them in their mirth and to enable them to obserue a due measure therin that the heart be not deceiued thereby 4. Fourthly in the midst of mirth and worldly ioy when the heart beginnes to cheare much some sin of our life committed or some iudgement of God which we haue bene vnder for sinne or some threatning of the word against some of our sinnes would bee called to minde to checke the immoderatenesse of our affection and so to temper and take down our mirth that it be not with excesse 5. Fiftly as Chirurgeons are faine in some cases to diuert the course of blood for the healths of their patients so let Christians endeuour to turne theyr worldly mirth into a godly spirituall mirth by considering with themselues seriously that those earthlie pleasures and worldly comforts wherein their heart is delighted are the fruites of their redemption pledges to them of better things to come and so to learne to reioyce in the vse of them as testimonies of Gods loue and fauour in Christ. 6. Sixtly it would do well in their ioy for worldly things to thinke how sodainly and soone they may be lost and all turned quickly into the contrary Also to remember the afflictions of the Church of some chiefe members therof which mourne now when they reioyce that by a fellow seeling of others miseries their owne ioy may be layed and brought into better compasse 7. Seuenthly let them further call to mind how often they reade of Christs teares and sighings for sins miseries of others how sildome or neuer they reade of his laughter and mirth Which though no doubt he had and did partake of it being a man like to vs in all things saue sin and to reioyce is in it selfe no sinne yet likely it was sparingly and surely no mention is made of it in the story of the Gospell He was at some feasts indeede but no word of his mirth there 8. Lastly our mirth as it would bee by all good meanes moderated so there would care be taken that it be referred to a good end which hath a great stroke in the goodnesse of any action namely to take our worldly comforts with this purpose and mind that we may be the more apt to praise God with cheerefulnesse of heart and to goe through the laborious and irksome trauels of our calling with more alacrity and liuelinesse Thus there will not onely bee no harme in our worldly mirth whereof to repent but it will proue an helpe to vs vnto godlinesse and be as an hand-maide to that spirituall reioycing vnder the hope of glory Now to your other knot how it falleth our that beleeuing Christians notwithstanding their hope and ioy in God yet are sometime filled with despaire and discomfort if I should say no more but that they may often thanke the abuse of worldly ioy as the cause of those heauy gnawings of despaire which come ouer their stomacks I should say something and which were too true howbeit I will deliuer to you more fully what I iudge of the despaire of the beleeuers And first I iudge it a very strange worke of God that it should fall out that a true beleeuer should despaire considering that the hope which is put into his heart as an anchor sure and stedfast hath such firme ground-worke as the constant truth the omnipotent power the vnchangeable mercies of God the Father also the precious death perfect obedience powerful resurrection of Christ our Mediatour finally the sanctification and graces of the holy Spirit which as the first fruites of the Spirit as the earnest of our inheritance the beginnings of life eternall the peculiar ornaments of Christs Spouse serue to be as vnder helpes and props of hope there being also the Ministry of the Word and Sacraments and many other meanes to confirme hope I say that for all this they should be sometime in that case as if they had neuer heard of God of life euerlasting or had not known what hope had meant it is very strange indeede Yet all experience both old and new telleth vs that as in the Elect before their calling there is a meere want and priuation of hope so after their
one thing or being one with Christ and as iustification and imputation of righteousnesse remission of sinnes be often vsed to signifie one thing the absolution of a sinner before the tribunall of God so there be certaine words as regeneration renewing or renouation and sanctification which import one selfe-same action and worke of the Spirit euen that whereby the corruption of sinne as touching the dominion and the power which it doth exercise before our calling is destroyed till it selfe at length bee wholy abolished and in stead thereof a new quality of holinesse put into the faculties of the soule that it may begin to loue and doe such things as are pleasing vnto God till it come at last to perfection by certaine degrees This worke or action of the Spirit it is called renouation or renewing because of that new grace and quality powred into the mind and will the former corruption which is called the olde man being killed As in the first worke of creation hee that was nothing before was made a man so in this worke of renouation or new creation hee that was naught before is made good as if a new man were borne Hence also it is called Regeneration or new birth indcede not properly nor fitly for our regeneration is the same with our incorporation or vnion with Christ wherby we become his members euen one body with him For as by generation we haue our being in this World and take the essence or nature of our Parents to become their Children so by regeneration wee haue our being of Christianity to become the members of Christ sonnes of God being before children of wrath and members of Sathans kingdome sonnes of Adam Thus doth our Sauiour himselfe teach vs to vnderstand it for hauing saide Iohn 1. 12. That such as beleeue in Christ are the sonnes of God he presently addeth Which are borne not of bloud c. but of God To declare this vnto vs that our new birth or regeneration is the making of vs the sonnes of God by faith and not the furnishing vs with such qualities and properties as belong to such as bee already sons Howbeit for as much as most Diuines and best learned men doe confound regeneration and sanctification I doe therefore follow that commonly receiued iudgement and by regeneration vnderstand that framing of the heart to Gods Image in righteousnesse and true holinesse which because it is an immediate consequent of our new birth wherein wee are begotten to be sonnes and daughters of God and as it were the putting of another and new nature into vs euen that diuine as Peter calleth it therefore is vsually called by the name of new birth Now for the last word of sanctification whereas that word is somtimes generally vsed in Scripture to signifie all that euen whatsoeuer it is that we haue from or is done in vs by Christ and is as much as our 〈◊〉 from the rest of this sinfull World to remaine and be vnto Christ as a thing consecrate to him yet in this argument where we distinguish it from vnion with Christ and iustification it is that speciall worke of the Spirit renewing vs in the spirit of our mind vnto a new man which after God is created in righteousnesse and holinesse of truth as Saint Paul speaketh Ephesians 4. 23 24. Or more briefly it is that worke of God whereby our corruption by little and little is abolished and holinesse perfected by degrees For in this worke though Christ minister a power to the beleeuer by his Spirit against sinne to master it and to doe the will of God yet it is not absolute at the first so as by it all sinne should be vtterly done away not at all to be in the soule and a strength giuen perfectly to worke good for then the Law might be fulfilled of vs in this life and then wee should iustifie our selues and 〈◊〉 died in vaine and we neede not his mediation to make our workes accepted But whereas in sinne beside the guilt and condemnation wherein we are wrapt and from which our Iustification hath freed vs and in stead thereof hath put vpon vs righteousnesse vnto life there is also in it a tyranny dominion and power which by the iust iudgement of God it exerciseth euen ouer the very Elect who are the seruants of sinne and doe willingly offer the faculties of their soules and parts or members of their body as weapons and instruments to fight and warre 〈◊〉 corruption that the will and lusts the desires and motions of sinne may be done as it is to be seene Rom. 6. 13. 17 c. Now in this worke of our Sanctification there is strength force giuen to the beleeuing soule against this tyranny of sinne to beate it downe and subdue it to keepe it as vnderling that howsoeuer it dwell and remaines there egging to euill and still soliciting and prouoking against God yet it wants now much of his former vigour and might so as it cannot reigne and rage with full swinge as it was wont to carry vs headlong after all vngodlinesse vnrighteousnesse this we get by our Sanctification Apollos Now let me entreate you to open the seuerall parts of it with the causes and hereafter wee may consider of the measure Aquila This is it which I was minded to doe in the next place after I had shewed what the whole worke of Sanctification is then to lay it out into his parts and by the members laide out particularly the better to discouer the whole body of this worke Diuines vse to make two parts and that according to Scripture The first is 〈◊〉 or crucifying of the old man which hath two degrees First the death of sinne Secondly the buriall of sinne which is the progresse of the death of sinne In respect hereof the faithfull are saide to be crucified with Christ and their body of sinne to be crucified with him Rom. 6. 6. And also to be dead to sinne to be baptized into his death to be dead with him to be buried with him Rom. 6. 2 3 8. The second part of our Sanctification is our walking in new nesse of life or quickening the new man or liuing to God Rom. 6. 4. In which respect wee are said to be raysed vp together with Christ and to liue with him Phil. 3. 1. Rom. 6. 8. Here then we haue with the parts of Sanctification the true cause thereof deliuered to vs which I will for better vnderstanding thus declare and set forth according as I conceiue of it The first part of Sanctification is the death of sinne or dying to sinne which is when that the strength of our sinnefull corrupt Nature is taken downe and by degrees weakened as the body of Christ languished by degrees vpon the Crosse so as sinne cannot bring forth such euill fruites in thoughts words and deedes as it did while wee were vnder the power of it This is
God that seeing Christ 〈◊〉 by his 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 put into him hath subdued his corruption giuing to it a deadly wound by his death so as though it still liue yet it can neuer recouer former 〈◊〉 and hath planted the image of God in his heart that he may beginne to be like vnto God in true holinesse and 〈◊〉 therefore it stands him vpon not to bee wanting to this grace of Christ but by all diligence and good endeuour to be an helper to it keeping 〈◊〉 vnder now Christ hath pulled it downe and 〈◊〉 it in the euill motions and desires that it neuer get a kingdome againe Being assured that he is bound as carefully and willingly to striue against sinne and to serue Christ as before his regeneration he semed sinne greedily fulfilling the lusts thereof And here of also fully assured that his resisting shall not bee in vaine but through the blessing of God shall further him to the vtter conquest rooting out of sinne at length Vnto which hee is animated nor onely vnder Gods 〈◊〉 promise of a full victorie in the end but also of a blessed fruite in this life and glorious reward in the next For if we serue 〈◊〉 by doing the will of Christ then our fruite shall be in holinesse and end in euer lasting life Wherfore the sanctified man thinkes all that he can doe to hinder the reigne of sin and to further his perfection in obedience to God to be all too little Apollos I thanke you good friend Aquila for helping me to spend the time so well and now our allowance and houre-glasse being run out we will close this conference For if you should enter vpon that hard combate which is in euery sanctified person betweene his old man and his new man I doubt you would sooner finde an entrance into it then a way out of it So wee will keepe that in store till our next meeting in this or some other conuenient place and now I challenge your promise for resorting home with mee where you shall haue little meat and a great deale of cheere Of the Spirituall combate betweene the Spirit and flesh Grace and corruption Aquila SIR I doe much thanke you for my yester-nights cheere and especially for the sawce that I had with my meate feeding me with the fruits of your lips as well as with the fruites of the earth Me thought wee had a Theologicall supper wherein our mindes were no lesse refreshed then our bodies so as I went from you well apaid with more then ordinary comfort But to see how that cunning and vigilant enemie which espieth and 〈◊〉 all our good and endeuoureth to bereaue vs of it did attempt to ouerthrow the ioy and gladnesse of my soule For within soure houres after I was gone in my first sleepe I had such a sodaine and bitter conflict as I haue had many yet to my remembrance neuer any so sharpe for the time But I thanke God for his helpe whereby the assault was repulsed ouercome Apollos Good friend Aquila I perceiue that olde enemy of yours and of all good men hath not done with you nor indeede will he till either you be dead or he cast and chained vp in hell I am not so sorrie for your greefefull combate as I am glad of your ioyfull victory ouer it But thus it falleth out that as after a great calme sodainly ariseth a rough storme and then returnes a calme againe so our ioyes euen when they are of the best sort are broken off with some greeuous euents inward or outward after which commeth matter of gladnesse againe So all things heere are vneertaine and keepe an vnsteddy and vneuen course euen as the Kings highway where it is sometime lowe as a valley sometime ouer hils and then downe againe into the bottome Thus is our way of Christianitie not all plaine and pleasant but some rugged stonie and cragged pathes we haue to passe through ere wee can come well to our iournies end But tell mee Aquila was your assault all outward in temptations from the fiend or felt you inward motions concurring your self aswell as satan combating against you Aquila Nay Sir it was a mixt combat Satan found friends in my owne bosome to helpe him euen mine owne corrupt heart which troubled me as much and more too neerer it was to me then that that damned dogge did but both together vnited their force and put me to the more molestation When all is well at home that I get the mastery of my sinfull affections I find my battle with Sathan more easie and my victory more easie but when my corruption rageth and ioynes side with the enemy then it goes harder Apollos The last time of our conference you did truly affirme that the worke of Sanctification is vnperfect during this life and that the diuine power of Christ by his death hath crackt but not wholy crusht the strength of the olde man which by mortification is left as a Souldier that hath his braine pan crackt with a blow who yet liueth and strugleth still with his aduersary or as a serpent that hath his head brused but wriggles still with his tayle and yet by his rising vp the heart is quickened and made a new man yet left as a weake babe or young childe who is in processe of time to gather strength and to grow vp to the age and stature of a man till hee come to a ripe age Now this truth Sathan knoweth as well as you or I by long obseruation as also being present in the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 where it is taught and being a subtill Spirit hee knowes that the old man howsoeuer daunted by grace and much taken downe yet is still ready to play his part to arise vp against that new creature which by the Spirit is framed in the heart And though he can neuer hope to heale his wound againe and to set him in former plight yet hee is content to conspire with remaining corruption and to vse it as an instrument to vexe and hurt the Children of God whom hee doth so extremely hate yea though he oftentimes be not afraide onely but assured to take the foyley yet that accursed fiend such is his malice will be doing and giuing enterprizes and onsets But now we are entred thus farre in this talke of the combate of a Christian and you Aquila doe so well know by experience what it meaneth I will put you to speake of it what you know and feele for my better instruction for one experimentall Teacher is better then ten other Aquila Indeed Sir my owne experience being holpen with that which you taught vs when you handled this point amongst other the workes of grace doth enable me to say somewhat of this argument and to fetch it from the beginning I doe well remember that you haue shewed both by Scripture and common experience especially that of Paul Rom. 7. 16 17. vnto the end of the Chapter a battell there is in euery
workemanship of God created to good workes c. Ephe. 2. 10. His owne Spirit framing them to doe good inspiring them with the motions and will and enabling them with the power to doe them As it is written The will and the deede are both of God Phil. 2. 13. Hence are good workes called Fruites of the Spirit Galat. 5. 22. Thereby to teach vs that good workes being wrought in the regenerate by the operation of the Spirit therefore they are accepted and pleasing to God euen as fruite is pleasant to the taste Secondly he liketh them as parts of his owne Image which he loueth wheresoeuer he findeth euen as a father doth loue a sonne that is like himselfe Beside as they are done of his faithfull children in whom he is pleased and be testimonies of their faith and tend to the setting foorth of his owne glory so they are gratefull to him And to the end that he may take delight in them he purgeth away all the spots which through our corruption doe sticke vnto them wiping them away by the effectuall application of the bloud and death of Christ which hath the force of intercession in Heauen comming between the iustice of his Father and mans 〈◊〉 which still abideth in his members So as being cleansed by the imputation of Christ his sacrifice and perfect obedience to the working beleeuer hereof it commeth to passe that God beholdeth in their workes nothing saue that which is his owne being all forgiuen and couered the rest being his he is maruellously delighted in it yea so farre as to crowne it with an euerlasting reward First hee giues the power to doe good then crownes his owne gift The places of Scripture are well knowne to euery one exercised therein where the Lord promiseth reward yea great reward not alone to the greatest workes of Christianity as suffering reproaches scornes losses death for Christ but euen to the meanest and lowest as to the feasting of the poore Luke 14. 12. to the giuing of a 〈◊〉 of cold 〈◊〉 to a Disciple or Prophet for Christ his sake Mat. 10. 42. And at the last day the feeding of the hungry clothing the naked visiting the imprisoned Christians shall haue the Crowne of immortall glory and blessing Mat. 25. awarded to them no lesse then to the feeding and guiding the Church which is the weightiest and worthiest worke of godlinesse 1 Pet. 5. 5. Whereby it is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 well God liketh of the voperfect good deede of his Children when for a few workes done in a moment and of no great value he is content to render glory euen an immortall weight of it Aquila This it is that moueth many to thinks that there is in good workes a power to merit because a reward is promised to them but what may be the reason that seeing there is no merite in any mans worke yet workes should be rewarded Apollos Besides the consideration of imperfections spiritual pollutions which be in our best workes as we haue heard which hath caused the godly that they would not trust to their owne godlinesse but haue euer appealed to the mercy seate of Christ Iesus furthermore our workes are not our own but come from his free Spirit and are a due debt which wee owe to God our Creator and Redeemer so as we haue done but what we ought when wee haue done all Luke 17. There being also no equality betweene the infinitenesse of heauenly blisse and our finite labours in well doing therefore there can be no merite in them neither is there any cause to looke for any merite from them there is sufficiency enough of merit in the works and passions of our Lord to deserue for vs eternall glory Howbeit it pleaseth God to make vnto our workes a gracious promise of reward in his Word which speaking according to our capacity who giue rewards to men in the end of the day after all their labour and worke is finished as in them who wrought in the Vineyard Mathew 20. Thence it is that eternall life being bestowed on the faithfull after all their labours and trauaile taken in the seruice of their most good God in the end and euening of their life is called a reward and a reward it is not a merite A reward freely giuen for his goodnesse promise sake to them that beleeue in his Sonne there being not any temporall benefit no not a peece of bread which otherwise commeth to their hand then by free mercy and not a reward of debt and desert as if either the worthinesse of the worke simply considered or as it is dipped and died in the blood of Christ could binde God to vs make him a debter it being that which Christ hath done in himselfe and not that which he hath wrought in vs that hath merited our saluation in heauen and all things which belong thereunto Yet such is the bounty of our heauenly Father that as naturall Parents by promised gifts and rewards stirre vp their children to do what otherwise is their duty so hee prouokes and quickens the slow dulnesse of his children and by rewards as spurres in their sides egges and excites thē to the doing of that which otherwise by duty they are manifoldly and strongly bound to doe And these rewards they are neither meane nor few but both worthy and many yea sundry and of diuers kinds first bodily or worldly for godlinesse hath euen the promises of this life secondly spirituall to wit encrease of spirituall graces as it is written To him that hath more shal be giuen and he shall haue abundance Lastly eternall euen the Crowne of life the Paradise of God rest from labour the tree of life which are promised to such as ouercome Reuel 2 7. and 3 5. and 14 13. Now the intention of God in offering such great manifold recompence being this to quicken his owne vnto all manner of loue and obedience towards him it is therefore very meete and lawfull yea necessarie that Gods children should by such encouragements hearten themselues in their course For howsoeuer it be fit and requisite that the will of our heauenly Father and his glory be first lookt vnto that our loue to his word and to the praise of his name do set vs on worke to do our duties as we may haue this testimony that in our seruice of God and in all the good workes which wee do we seeke not our selues but the pleasing and praise of God by doing that which he commandeth yet afterward and as it were in the second place we may turne our eyes vnto the reward promised vs thereby to helpe our slacknesse and slownesse to good considering that our labour in the Lord shall not bee in vaine but bring foorth a great haruest of comfort and blisse in the end wee reaping eternall ioyes of those things which heere we did sow to the spirit As Moses encouraged himself to care
Pharaeh was afraide of God and therefore prayed Moses to entreate for him to remoue the plague from him Exod. 8. 8. Ahab as lewd as he was being a man sold to doe wickednesse yet was not voide of the feare of God which enforced him to humble himselfe in sack cloth and ashes I Kin. 21. 27. And infinite others which belong not to God but were strangers to him yet their hearts were not wholly estranged from his feare Apollos Many euill men which liue in the Church vnder a standing Ministery doe attaine by the power thereof vnto a shadow of Sanctification such as shall worke a certaine reformation in them but a sleight and light one not sound and thorow such as seasoneth and changeth the heart and vnto a resemblance of repentance so as they doe many workes of repenting persons they haue a certaine greefe and seare of sinne they in a sort humble themselues confesse their sinnes leaue many sinnes touching the outward act and worke but neuer come to purpose in their heart to endeauour an vtter forsaking of all and euery sinne with a true hatred and loathing of sinne as it is the offence of a good and righteous God and they doe many workes which for the matter and substance of the worke done are good but yet they are not done in a good manner and to a good end out of a heart purged by faith respecting Gods glory so they haue a shew of loue to God and of fearing God Howbeit they are but counterfets in all and namely in their loue which is not of God himselfe but of his good things where with their loue doth arise and fall They are likewise hypocrites in their feare which is seruile onely in regard of Gods power and strict iustice and of that punishment which his powerfull iustice hath either threatned or already inflicted vpon them Their feare is not towards God for his mercies and because hee is vnto them a gracious God and Father but because hee is righteous armed with might to hurt and plague them as the Apostle speaketh of circumcision of the Israelites and of Abrahams seede there is not one kind of these so it is of the feare of God it is not single and of one kind but it is diuers There is an Israelite and an Israelite one in heart another according to the flesh a circumcision inward and in truth another after the letter and outward in the flesh So there is a feare and a feare a good feare which wee are exhorted vnto and an euill feare which we are called from Feare not saith Moses for God is come to proue you that his feare may be in you that ye sinne not Exod. 20. 20. See in this one short sentence that they are bid not to feare and yet charged to haue Gods feare in them for there is a feare slauish and seruile arising out of the gultinesse of sinnes and strengthened with dread of punishment from the righteous power of God This feare correcteth not sinne inwardly it may well bridle some sinne and restraine from the externall worke of sinne but it doth not at all reforme the sinner inwardly who is the more driuen from God by it and we are dehorted from such a feare And there is another feare which is filiall and child-like which proceedeth from Gods mercies in Christ and bringeth sinners neerer in heart and affection to God holding them closer to him in all lawfull respects not to offend him but in all things to obey and please him This difference of feare may be expressed by this comparison There doth at one time stand in the presence of a Iudge his owne sonne and a male factor the one loth to misbehaue himselfe in his fathers presence for the loue and reuerence hee hath towards him whom he hath alwayes found a benigne tender father to him the malefactor for beareth also all lewd and disordered actions in feare of the Iudges power which he doth hate and of the sentence of death which he abhorreth So it is here euill men being in Gods presence are restrained and kept from many euils but it is through dread of his reuenging hand as seruants are brought to doe well through dread of the whip whereas the godly howsoeuer the infinite power and iustice of God be dreadfull to them and they often meditate of his fearefull iudgements against sin to enure their hearts the more to awe and trembling their flesh or old man hauing great need of such terrour to bridle them yet it is the sweete mercies of God in the forgiuenesse ofso many sinnes and calling them to so great glory which worketh in them a reuerent regard of Gods will not to transgresse it no child being so loth to displease his most kind father as the godly are to displease their louing Redeemer To this purpose they doe endeauour to set themselues as it were in the presence of God considering that his eye which is the Iudge of the World and their heauenly Father is euer vpon them and in this consideration they labour to carry themselues as becommeth them who are euer before the face of such a Maiesty abandoning that which is contrary to his Word and may prouoke him and carefully doing such duties as are liking and gratefull to him This is the ingenuous feare of Gods Children which bringeth forth these effects in them first it restraines them from sinne euen as touching the inward affection as it did Ioseph from incontinency the Israelites Midwiues from cruelty 〈◊〉 from exaction and oppression of the people yea it hoideth backe from all sinnes great and little secret as well as open and that because they are sinnes and offences of God whereas the feare of the wicked keepes him from grosse and open but not from small and priuate sinnes and that for the paine onely and not for conscience to God Secondly it constraines them to doe good things commanded out of a care to please God When Abraham offered his Sonne that which moued him was this for that he feared God Gen. 22. 12 Iob was a righteous man and did iust things for he was a man fearing God Iob 1. 1. Thirdly it seasons the worship of God that is to say the seruice of God Psal. 5. 7. I will draw neere to thy Temple in feare c. Insomuch as often the whole worship of God is thereby signified as in Acts 10. In euery Nation he that feareth God c. Fourthly it seasons our loue to God as in a Subiect that loueth his Prince for his excellent goodnesse and bounty his loue towards his Soueraigne is beautified by a reuerence of his Princes Maiesty so it is here Fiftly it driueth away security it awakes slothfulnesse and makes watchfull And lastly it beates downe pride and high mindednesse as it is written Be not high minded but feare Rom. 11. 20. These seuerall fruits and effects of the feare of God are so many
nor of God Againe we are commanded to keepe our selues from Idols I Iohn 5. 21. and in the second commandement we are forbid either for any religious purpose to make or serue any Image Exod. 20. 5. 3. Also our bodies being created redeemed and sanctified of God their seruice is due to him not to Idols which rather then godly men would honour with their presence and seruice but of their bodies they haue chosen to die Dan. 6. 15 16. Because it hath in it both offence of God and his Church and for the losse of house goods or lands there is this comfort against it that the Saints shall receiue a house made without hands for their earthly Tabernacle 2 Cor. 5. 1 and an Inheritance in Heauen immortall and vndefiled 2 Pet. 1. 5. For the losse of friends we shall be ioyned in fellowship with the Angels and spirits of blessed men Heb. 12. 23. For wife and children the care of them must be eased with meditatiō of Gods prouidence who is our God and the God of our seede Gods prouidence is his childrens inheritance and howsoeuer it be greeuous to part from them yet it is more greeuous for their loue to hate and for sake Christ for whose sake and loue wee are commanded to hate all Mat. 10. 37. Besides we part from them for a time to be ioyned with them for euer I Thes. 4. 18. Comfort your selues with these things Aquila But death is terrible and very fearefull saith our flesh to vs. Apollos Flesh that is carnall and corrupt reason is an euill counsellour as well as carnall friends let men rather thinke how fearefull eternall death is for natural death we owe it to nature to which wee must pay it let vs pay that to Christ to whom we much more doe owe it and who can preserue it for vs in another world And how should death be fearefull to beleeuing Christians to whom it is an end period of all their sinnes and sorrowes an entrance and beginning of endlesse ioy perfect righteousnesse at a word a passage from death to life from mortality and misery to immortality of blisse and glory wherein hee that hopes to liue cannot greatly feare to die Aquila But the paine of burning is too sharpe and greeuous we could be content to die so it were not in the fire that is most terrible Apollos Yet whom God calleth to that or any other violent and terrible death he can enable them to endure it the power of his might can strengthen them Secondly he will enable them for he hath promised neuer to exceed the power of the tempted I Corinthians 10 13. Thirdly he hath enabled sundry to beare it yea such as feared it most when they came to suffer were made valiant as Master Sanders Lastly consider a while how terrible hell fire is being incomprehensible and euerlasting Aquila But wee cannot abide death with torment Apollos Torments of Tyrants in earth haue both measure and end so haue not hell torments Aquila May we not dissemble or denie for a time the Doctrine of the Gospell without danger of denying Christ himselfe Apollos The Scripture saith Ye cannot Mat. 10. 33. Luke 11. 26. In the former place it is saide He that denyeth me in the latter is added or is ashamed of my words I will denie him and be ashamed of him To deny Christs Word is to denie himselfe who is knowne to vs by his Word Aquila But when wee feele our selues too weake to stand to it to the death what then is to be done Apollos Such as cannot endure violent death let them suffer exile let them liue a while out of their countrey which cannot giue their liues to Christ let them be Martyrs in desire that cannot be so in deede and effect yet hearty prayer may obtaine that strength which is lacking In the meane time such weaknesse is to be confessed and bewayled Aquila We know not what to say when we come before the persecutors Apollos Christ Iesus will giue you a mouth wisedome against which they shall not be able to resist therefore trust in him and relie vpon him Remember poore men and women in Queene Martes time Aquila Their threatnings are very full of terrors Apollos Yet God is to be feared more then all tyrants which can but kill the body God can send body and soule into hell fire Againe of all threatnings feare these Luke 12. 9. Aquila Their faire promises if we wil yeeld doe allure much for wee haue their word for life and preferment to be giuen vs vpon our yeelding Apollos They promise these things as the Diuel their master promised the World to Christ to corrupt him and yet he could not performe it The issues of life are in Gods hands and for preferment he lifts vp one and pulles downe another I Sam. 2. 6 7. and it is the greatest misery to be great without God Secondly if God should spare life what is the gaine of a transitory life to the losse of eternall life Thirdly consider that Christ maketh better promises and surer to such as cleaue to him in life and death 2 Tim. 2. 11 12. Rom. 8. 17 18. Mar. 16. 28. Luke 9. 24. Marke 8. 36. Luke 12. 8. Mat. 10. 32. Thus farre of such good workes as containe our duty to God which yet are to be practised with respect of edification to men as all duties to men are to be done with desire and regard of pleasing and honouring God in them The eleuenth Part of the Dialogue Of such good workes as concerne our Neighbour Aquila SIR ye are well met here shall I tell you what I feele in my selfe Me thinkes it fareth with me as it vseth to doe with a trauelling Horse which the neerer hee drawes to 〈◊〉 eyes end the more he takes heart to him 〈◊〉 more couragiously in hope to come shortly 〈◊〉 baiting and resting place so it is with me I find myself now more eagar and sharpe set vpon this 〈◊〉 then when we began for I haue good hope that wee shall at this our meeting and conference draw it to a conclusion We are come now to those workes of grace which the true beleeuers are to doe towards their Neighbours I pray you Sir which are these and amongst these being many what shall wee first take vp to deale in Apollos I could be well content our hands were eased of this labour for I begin to feele my selfe scarse well but it wil not be laide out of hand I doubt so soone as you make reckoning of for with my good will there shall not be one peculiar grace of Gods Elect but some thing shall be saide of it My desire is as much as lyeth in vs that this our glasse shall discouer to a Christian all his dignity by his calling and all his duty being called towards his Caller To proceede therefore in our purpose all our duty to man is comprehended in this one word Righteousnesse as