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B15559 A practicall catechisme: or, A view of those principall truths according to godlinesse, which are contayned in the catechisme diuided into three parts: and seruing for the vse, (as of all, so) especially of those that first heard them. By D.R. B. of Divin, minister of the Gospell. D. R. (Daniel Rogers), 1573-1652. 1632 (1632) STC 21166; ESTC S116040 309,840 430

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Church Commonwealth What obnoxiousnesse to Satan to his instruments temptations mischiefe bondage to the vngodly suites seruices dependances with hard conditions crosses streights pursuites losses forfeits death of friends imprisonment accidents and shrewd turnes bad tydings confusion in the state famine warre pestilence and a 1000. waies for him to goe wofully out who came but one way into the world Besides griefe of minde melancholy passions and distempers of the spirit bad conscience ill marriage lewd children ill successe Ruine of estate and at last a miserable death And yet the vpshot of all is worst after viz. A finall separation ●rom God and losse of his eternall presence with the sence of vnutterable intolerable vnauoidable wrath of God in Hell vpon the whole man for euer without the least hope of helpe or redresse Q I partly conceaue this view and mappe of the misery of the fall now conclude the Article with some vse of it A. First heere is confutation of all Papists who flatly deny this Article and tell vs that our Nature is indeed shrewdly Vse 1 may med and wounded much like him who fell among theeues betweene Ierusalem and Iericho Luke 10.30 and left halfe dead But as for vs that maintaine this dying the death this quite and cleane deadnesse in sins and trespasses they cannot abide No say they there be left euen in the vnregenerate such abilities and devotions as may congruously dispose God to pardon them And by some helpe of grace merit also full f●rgiuenesse Yea they boast themselues of their performances and d●ties whereas Paul tels vs that all boasting is cut off And tels vs Rom. 3.27 Baptisme washeth away all originall sinne which yet Paul grones vnder the burden of bei●g regenerate Also all P l●gians or their adherents who affi●me that old Adam is as one in a darke dungeon who by reason of darknesse cannot see but if he haue a light put in hath his eyes very quicke and can see any thing and so wee want but light and then wee are able to discerne and apprehend any truth put into vs of our selues Also such as blanch the matter with the color of Grace added to our nature for by that say they nature being holpen can put on the cordes as Ieremy in the dungeon and addresse himselfe to come forth What hath a dead man with all the light and helpe in the World to addresse himselfe to liue Vse 2 This also reprooues all Naturall Papists that dote upon their ciuill morall or religious duties and deuotions and cannot abide to heare that those who so duly pay all debts all dues who giue so many almes to the poore heare so many sermons keep so many Sabbaths read so many good books keep so much good company commend the Ministers and welcome them and maintaine them should yet bee as the Publicanes and sinners I doe not say yee are but I say this Except ye also deny your selues and behold this misery of your Natures yee will fate wo●se in time euen by your righteousnesse then if yee had non● for ●hy doe ye not graffe upon a rotten stock and guild a rotten post So also such as commend mens natures in the point of religion saying Oh such are so sweetly natured courteous lo●ing mild and harmelesse that there is but little betweene them and Heauen Alas how many of these sweet creatures are as bitter enemies to Gods grace as friends to ciuility and faire carriage Also such as aime at religion onely thus far to colour their wings and tip their tongues or their outward dealings with some outside but as for that heart within and nature they suspect not And to conclude such as being told of their passions defend thē by their nature It 's my nature to be so hot I haue soone done why poore foole thinkst thou thy nature is more excusable then thy passion and yet what is so common with men to say then this If I were an adulterer or drunkard I were willing the Minister should thus sharply rebuke mee but to be so bitter for mens infirmities and against that which we cannot doe with nor heale and auoide and against vnbeleefe or the like me thinkes he might be wiser Oh God would faine draw thee from the open to the secret sins of thy heart lest thy freedome from the grosser should destroy thee He would euen weary and tyre thee by thy cursed nature when thou seest all thy other defences are but dawbings with vntempered morter Thirdly This should cause thee to look vpward and to gage the greatnesse of Christs loue which could finde in his heart to Vse 3 satisfie for such a misery and to fetch happinesse out of the depth of it Euen in this Article is layd the foundation of thy esteeme of Christ in the next p●rt of the Catechisme Christ will be little set by the height and depth of mercy cannot bee sounded till thou take measure of it by a Reede of thy misery Little sinne to forgiue will make Christ little loued As we see at the Assyses that base theefe that thinkes to conceale some of his robberies and is loth to haue all come out at once fearing the mercy of the Iudge when his inditements come to bee read the second time loses his life Let vs beware lest it bee so with vs. Let not vs lessen and minse our sinnes in hope of more easie pardon but if we would magnifie the grace of Christ let vs first magnifie and enlarge our sin to the vttermost if Christ see that we rather hope in our small sin then his great grace we are dead men The way to get pardon is to equall his price to all our misery Say thus If Lord my sin had beene onely a share in Adams eating and no more or in some actuall few euils or if in the meere priuation of some good things or in sin only and not in penalties or if in bodily only and not spirituall or if spirituall onely and not eternall somewhat might seeme to lessen thy loue but surely that loue that would satisfie for all rather then any should condemne me is of vnspeakeable dimensions Oh! learne by this how to esteeme the price of grace If each step of this first part if each of these Articles make thee not miserable● then other no Article of the second part shall be able to comfort thee Be confounded vnder the ruine of thy misery and vow with that good Iabez If the Lord will indeed rid me of all this great euill that it may not grieue me If he will enlarge my coast and bring me out of this heape of woe then he shall be my God and I will make songs of his mercy Oh! let all that haue beene sayd of this misery make thee goe as she Luke 13.11 bowed together vnder an intolerable burden Lay all together to make vp such a loade as may pinch thy shoulders and cry out Who shall deliuer me who could't thinke such
a weight as I haue heere described could be carryed with ease especially through so many Sermons of conuiction as many heare Oh! that any should sleepe in such deepe debt so banquerupt as they bee short with such an intolerable weight crushing them Surely except there were a plague of insensinblenesse added to all other misery it could not but affect men otherwise But till sin begin to be out of her element and feele her misery Christ and the soule can neuer be reconciled in one Vse 4 Fourthly this should cause vs to wonder at the goodnesse of Gods dispensation of this misery That both in the sin and in the penalty it should be so mitigated by the prouidence of that God who for vniuersall ends restrayneth the force and violence of this misery why should God so order it that he in whom the fountaine of all sin abideth should yet bee in his particular nature stinted and shortened within the compasse of some ●ew foule sins what hinders in vs why not all as wel● any sin shou●d bee our beloued who much ●o appointed that in this plenty of Plagues the cause wherof of wee car●y about vs so few of these sho●ld light vpon vs H●th not sinne made vs a dunghill of sinne and a sea of sorrow why then see wee so few blinde deafe lame dumbe maymed out of their wits poore a●d miserable crea u●es as wee doe Sh●ll wee by this indulgence bee h●rd●ed to thinke our selues lesse wre●ched and miserable then wee are or rather admire that goodnesse that s●ffers vs not to bee so cursed as wee deserue Q What vse is to be made hereof A. First ●t may teach vs to acknowledge singu●ar patience in God to dispence so merci●ul●y and manifoldly with man huaing incurred this Promunire with the Lord that he did not quite destroy him but al●oweth him so many comforts enco●rag●ments and helpes of nature and life all which hee might b ue stript him of All saue hell being meere indulgence of m●rcy as the support of nature in heal h in strength with wits sences breath of ayre vse of Earth influ nce of Heauen marriage posterity weal●h credit gouernement c. more then hee ●ught to damned Rebels who might haue beene destroyed when borne Secondly to iudge aright of this sin not to sl●ght it as P●pists and prophane men doe To count our selues miserable by it to esteeme it aboue any actuall si●s to iudge of it not by the matter or act of it but by the villany of it against the Vnity of God his Crowre and dignity The little weigh ng of this hath caused men to make such small account of actuall sin to make it a merryment as Forn●cation they will say it is a tricke of youth c. And the truth is from the slender esteeme of sin comes that base esteeme of Christ with many Whereas except Christ had beene made sinne in the roote it selfe by imputation and satisfied for it all the imputation of actuall could not haue profited vs. I● to raze the picture of a Prince bee such a crime what is it to deface the Lords Oh woefull wretches who dare say baptisme doth abolish that which all the grace of Christ cannot wash off till death All other sinnes are committed in a corrupt estate this in a pure one and therefore CHRIST that immaculate Sonne of GOD was faine to lay aside all his holinesse that hee m ght clense the slaine and the guilt thereof as a double dye out of our nature One of the miseries of orignall sinne is that its vncapable of the due conceiuing its owne woe but thinkes it selfe in good case as a drunkard forgets the sentence of death and dreames of great wealth And therefore wee had not need adde thirst to this our drunkennesse by esteeming it slight but desire the LORD rather that hee would awaken vs out of this delusion But more shall bee sayde of the vse of this in the sixt Article Q What is all this misery to vs who neuer sinned his sinne Art 4 A. It is ouerspred as a leprozie of the whole body ouer the whole nature of mankind all sorts sexes states degrees Not one free as all misery is in euery one so ouer all without exception Psal 14.1 2.3 Pro. 20.9 1 King 8.46 Eccl 7 22. Rom. 3.9 Iam. 3.2 1 Ioh. 1.8 Iob 14.4 and 15.14 Psal 51.5 Examine the texts All both Iew and Gentile Barbarian Scythian bond and free noble simple learned and idiots yea all who are to be For as they are in our loines so we were in Adams Adam not beeing a single person but in the whole stead of mankind before hee had issue Q. How doth this trueth appeare more clearly A. Both by the Scriptu●e and reason Paul sayth Rom. 5. that by the disobedience of one sinne entred into the world and by sinne death What is that Sin and curse ceazed vpon all he whole world as well as Adam and Eue. And the like proofes f●llow in all the verses as verse 14. Death reigned from Adam to Moses ver 17. By one mans offence death reigned by one ver 18. By the off●nce of one iudgement came vpon all to condemnation and ver 19 As by one mans disobedience many were made sinners So that this Article remoues all conceite of any man whatsoeuer I say meere man to be exempted from this masse of corruption No Rom. 3.12 All are gone out of the way not one doth good no not one All the sinne all the penalties of sinne belonging to Adam himselfe belong to vs wee may vse Peters choise word 1 Pet. 1.18 By the tradition of the fathers All these are conueyd to vs by the tradition of Adam not example but propagation no one of all these tokens miscarryed but as hee sent them to vs for a cursed memoriall what he had done for vs so were they all and each of them deliuered to vs wee faile not in the receiuing of the whole summe to the vttermost farthing Q. But in what order is this masse of euill deryued to vs A. In this That first the actuall sinne of Adam and Eue eating the forbidden fruit is conueyed and made ouer to vs then originall then actuall then penalties all hanging each vpon other as the lesser boates tyed to the great ship But yee will obiect that Paul himselfe Rom. 5. sayth That others sinned not after the similitude of Adams transgression I answer True not against a set law as Adam did but yet they were held guilty before GOD of Adams sinne as if they had knowne it So then marke although wee did not indiuidually and personally see talke with the Serpent put forth our owne hands and put the fr●ite into our mouth yet wee did eate it as well as hee And why Because the sinne which Adam committed ere hee had be gotten a sonne or childe was the sinne of nature not of a Person As it is sayde Leui himselfe payde tithes in Abraham Heb. 7.9
The difference Secondly The nature the effects and end of it Thirdly The extremiti●s or abuse of it Q What is the difference of it from the former legall workes A. The worke of enlightning casts out ignorance the worke of conuincing resists deadnesse and insensiblenesse But this third of consternation or terror resists that pride and iollity of a sinner ouerbearing himselfe and lifting vp himselfe in his sinne without checke or remorse And this latter is of all other the most proper worke of the Law to tame and beate downe the lofty heart of man setting vp a Law to it selfe to walke as it listeth without law or feare Q. What is the nature of it A. It is a presenting more or lesse of the wrath and pena●ties due ●o sin vnto the whole man by the conscience for the casting of it downe at the feete of God Marke these heads First It s a presenting for the dead bare letter of the ten Commandements cannot doe this by any magicall power No it s the worke of the Powerfull Ministery of the Law which can doe it The Lord who put the former gift or conuiction into it puts this also of subduing and casting downe into ●his Law Ministery Although in appearance it be weake yet God setting it on worke with the authority of his Spirit with power to carry his errand into the soule it shall be able without feare or flattery to doe it and to doe that which no Law of Princes can effect euen to flait and gaster the conscience Lawes of men are absent but this law is p●esented by God to the soule From him it first came and by him it was giuen in terror and earth quakes by strong Angels to master the proud heart of man and is still pronounced and presented to the same vpon the mount Ebal of the legall Ministery in the open assembly as it came therefore from God so it is supported in her power by God and serues for his vse in all places to arrest and cast downe all sinners and carry them to prison vnder sentence at the Iudges pleasure Secondly It doth present the wrath and penalties of sinne especially Till these come sinne is at peace Euen as while the Iudge is reading his Commission or giuing his charge or calling a Iury or hearing the crime debated but when the thiefe sees more that hee hath power to giue oath take euidence and verdict and pronounce sentence of death presenting the messengers of it to the eare the knife the hatchet the fire the halter then his courage comes downe The law in her Ministery is this voice of God and Iudge of a sinner Rom. 4.15 therefore called the Ministery of the letter the messenger of wrath the Law of sinne and death Rom. 8.2 Not of the wrath of a man against a man but of God against a sinner not able to kill the body but to cast body and soule into hell This law curseth from Gods mouth euery stale sinner soked in his lees Cursed be euery one that abides not in all things to doe them cursed from God be euery lyer swearer adulterer hypocrite worldling Desolation and destruction tribulation and anguish be vpon euery soule that sinnes high and low without baile or main prise and if God curse cursed they are and who shall blesse them It is no curse of a sinne vpon a sinner no Popes curse with booke bell and candle which yet made Kings to tremble and made them as blacke as soote in the opinion of fooles no not the curse of a father which may turne to a blessing as Iacobs did to Simeon and Leui but the curse of the eternall God whose wrath is the messenger of death and blasteth indeed wheresoeuer it lighteth and whatsoeuer resists it This wrath I say marke well in the penalties of it temporall spirituall and eternall the law presents to a sinfull soule Temporall in this life Leu. 26.24 2 Cor. 15.6 read Deut. 29. setting God against the soule in all h●r course walking contrary to her because she hath walked so to him vexing her withall aduersity and suffering nothing to goe currant either in one kinde or other marriage crosse children cursed state vntoward successe naught God against me in all Spirituall and farre worse penalties in the soule deserting it and leauing it to her owne impenitency security hardnesse obstinacy which is Gods curse vnder seale Lam. 3.65 as a Baylif holding vnder arrest euen till hell eternall at death euen a separation from the presence of God and a tormenting of it for euer in hell in the fulnesse of this wrath which indeed is the dying the death and yet neuer dead without hope ease or remedy Thirdly Ceazing vpon the whole man by the Conscience for as the law is the worker so the conscience is the immediate obiect of this wrath God hath made it the lawes obiect created it with a marueilous power of sensiblenesse aboue all parts to record and to apprehend all sin and wrath for it if God had not so ordeined it could neuer receiue into it selfe so infinite wrath of Gods Iustice as now it can It exceedes the apprehension of any the tendrest part when it s stung with an Adder scalt with water or boyling oyle burnt with fire cut with a sword the sence of conscience ceazed with this wrath of God is vnspeakeable and cannot be vttered by man it cannot enter into man that feeles it not to conceaue the sting and vexation of conscience being thus wounded for sinne in which it s differenced from all other consciences eithe● first Ignorant erroneous and superstitious conscience not fearing or fearing amisse Secondly defiled conscience dallying with God halfe conuinced and halfe whole hypocritically feeling God in some of his Law but preuailing by subtilty against the rest that so it might shunne the dint ●hereof Thirdly Seared and hardned conscience which by long rebellion and resistance of the Law hath got the mastry of the Law and is waxen senslesse and vselesse forgetting her office I say these are cursed neither shall they auoid the dint of this law at the length earlier or later their dog shall awake one day and howeuer they sleep yet 2 Pet. 2.6 Their damnation sleepes not Onely this conscience of which Salomon speakes Who can beare the load of it this wounded conscience differs from all these and is the obiect of the Law thus presenting wrath to it that by how much the more it seemes in worse case then the other three yet by this feeling of God she might in due time prooue better then the best of them And I say conscience is so the next obiect that yet the whole man thereby partakes of this wrath As Iob speakes of himselfe Thy feares are vpon mee day and night The arrowes of the Almighty stick fast in me Thou scarest mee with dreames and visions no rest in my flesh for thee And chap. 33. My bones clatter and stick out all dainty meat is
his deity alway in a manner restrained so that hee appeared not to bee that hee was to his dearest friends And therefore hee concealed his glory further then it made for the discharge of his Office of Mediator as a Prophet or a King for then hee stept out of his basenesse See Matth. 11.12 Luke 1● 3● Q. And what may bee said touching the Passion it selfe A. Somewhat touching the parcels of it and yet somewhat also touching the necessity of moderation For the parts first he endured the forsaking of his dearest Disciples to be taken by his owne seruant Iudas by his own special Officers at the hands of his own Deputies to suffer most intolerable indignities to be accused arraygned endited and sentenced as the vilest malefactor and that at the Gaole deliuery of felons and murtherers After that besides their barbarous spitting vpon buffeting mocking with a Robe Crowne of thornes and reeden Scepter to be put to that shamefull accursed death of the Crosse a death for such as not onely men compted villains but God himselfe in a sort held accursed To which adde the greatest of all both in the Garden and vpon the Crosse that most bitter Cup of wrath which hee dranke from the hand of his Father which made him in an agony of Spirit to sweat drops of blood to pray That the cup might passe from him from feare of drinking it and to cry out My God my God why hast thou forsaken mee And so in that deep anguish of his Spirit to giue vp the Ghost all the Diuels in Hel banding themselues in that houre of darknesse to pull him from his stedfast confidence Q. What meane you by the moderation of it A. That in all this abasement yet that measure was impozed and no more which suted to the dignity of the person suffring and to such a one as in suffring merited and could not be ouer come by suffring Hence was it that hee had intermissions of his agony and feares so that he could goe to and fro to his Disciples to admonish them was vpholden in his sences vnderstanding memory affections in the midst of his dolours shewed his power and God-head euen then in the consternation of his enemies conuersion of the theef his loue and prouidence for his Mother and Disciple rece●ved comfort by the Angels in the want of self-support was dispenced with as touching the measure of torments not being capable of those which reprobates in Hell suffer because they can neuer satisfie the Duration the Disorder and disguisement of these Hellish terrors being accidentall to his Passion and to dying the death onely infinite displeasure of GOD and true separation of Soule and Body which were essentials he endured So also it was impossible the graue should hold him Act. 2.24 Yea and the period of three daies nights of 72. houres were abridged to 40. Q. What did he effect heereby A. Hee being our surety in all this did for vs purchase a full satisfaction of which in the question after and withall first all those benefits Article fourth Then the ratification of his Legacies and Testament Heb. 9.16 17. Col. 2.14 Ephe. 2.16 Heb. 10 2● abolishing of enmity by Law Sinne Satan VVrath Hell and Death As wee know if a Court bee quite put downe all the Officers belonging to it are downe also So also liberty to enter Heauen by a liuing way not the blood of a beast with sundry others Q. Why doth the Scripture so much dwell vpon the Passiue and so little vpon the Actiue obedience in point of our satisfaction A. As I intimated before the Holy Ghost doth more vsually not alwaies See Phil. 2.7 8. Esa 53.11 Mat. 20.28 Rom. 5. ver 18 expresse it this way First because in this curse taken away all the whole satisfaction began to take effect as wee say that the effect of a Prisoners release is deliuery from prison not as if that were all his release yet thence it s denomin●ted because though the debt bee paid before yet this must follow Secondly because the end of a thing is better then the beginning and the consummation of a thing is from the end Perseuerance hath wee know the preeminence of all obedience not as if it were any more then a part of it but it● the finishing and making all out of question Each moment of a Glasses course is part of the houre though the last dust of it be the hou●es end B●t Thirdly and especially beca●se the P ssi●n wa● the greatest hardest and fullest part of the whole satisfaction As fortitude carrieth the name of vertue not ●x●●uding any Q. Well I am satisfied Proceed to the fifth branch and so to the vse of both ioyntly A. The fi●th ●s the Passiue obedience of the LORD Iesus not in other passions and penal ies of his who●e life onely but especially that one vpon the c●osse the most immediate ob●ation and sacrifice of himselfe ●or sinne and it consists in the free yeelding vp himselfe to the wrath of his Father in his soule and body in the one bearing the incomprehensible anger of GOD though according to the limitations requ●site for a person that was GOD and merited and in the other the exhaustion of his life-●lood and separation of body and soule by that accursed death that heereby sinne with all the penalties inward outward and eternall with all the power which the Law and enemies had against vs thereby death and Hell not excepted might perfectly be abolished a●d the iustice of God infini●ly satisfied R●ad Rom. 3.25 Heb. 9. ●3 14 1. Pet. 1.19.1 Ioh. 17. Heb. 12.24 Q What are the vses of the Actiue and Passiue obedience A. F●rst the doctrine heereof may affoord vs a swer● meditation which as there are few a●cient or godly writers ●uch aue obserued so it is pitty we should neglect viz. T●e excellency of the grace of the Gospell purchased by ●his Satisfaction which will appeare by a comparison of ●he wo●ke of Creation with this of Redemption The form●r I gra●t was a solemne worke when the Eternall Word made of Earth the body of Adam inspiring it with the the breath of GOD not onely to be a liuing Creature bu● to beare the Image of God in holinesse And the truth is Moses describes euen this worke more solemnely then the Creation of any of the other to shew the emi●ency thereof ●boue them But when the same eternall Word creates man the ●econd time Lo not a breath not a f●w words will serue himselfe rather must be made a worme and no man God himselfe must empty himselfe of his f●lues and glo●y his loue his teares his miracl●s his prayers the basenesse of his condition will not all serue the turne no other price will bee accpted for this saue both the actu●ll fulfilling of all righteousnes and the shedding not of drops or ounces of other blood but th● last heare and life blood that was in his Holy Body the blood of the
our iustification and that else God cannot in Iustice acquite vs. They say The elect doe sustaine one person with Christ in all his acts and suffrings and they are all made theirs But thus they make Christ serue to no other ends but to become our owne Mediator and to destroy his owne The error of this conceit arose from a confounding of the valor or worth of this righteousnesse with the substance of righteousnesse it selfe For although wee cannot be iustified without imputation of the fulnesse of the merit yet wee are not capable of that which merited except wee will become infinite Branch 3 Thirdly it confutes those Sectaries who affirme that God seeth no sin in any of his if hee haue once imputed Christs righteousnesse to them This error arizes from not distinguishing these two Imputation of perfect righteousnesse and perfect imputing or accepting of imputed righteousnesse No man is iustified without the former but our faith fayling in the acceptance must needs bee looked vpon by God I confesse hee sees no sinne but hee pardons it to his in Christ vpon Faith and Repentance but hee punishes it for their good in mercy Againe what if we grant God sees no sinne in them in respect of their iustification Is therefore their sanctification perfect Why then did Dauids adultery displease the Lord Or why doe we pray Forgiue vs our debts or why saith our Sauiour Say when all is done yee are vnprofitable Fourthly it confutes all such as cut off the Actiue obedience Branch 4 of Christ from the satisfaction 2 Sam. 10.4 as they cut the garments of Dauids seruants by the middle I blame them not as Papists for denying Christ to bee our price but for their curious diuiding of one member of it from another It may bee granted them that the Passiue is the more immediate cōsummation of the satisfaction but to conclude the Actiue is most audacious They say Christ was bound to the obeying of the Law as a man made vnder it I answere Yea but except hee had beene so made purposely for vs hee needed neuer to bee so at all therefore his willing being so made the merit the greater and although being a man he must obey yet seing his being a man was that hee might obey for vs it must bee of greater desert Againe as the Passiue is the neerer merit in respect of the estate in which we stood accursed So the Actiue is as essentiall in respect of recouering that Image of righteousnesse which makes vs like GOD and in which wee were created Neither was it Hell could haue hurt vs without sinne Besides to say truth if Adam after his sinne had not beene accursed yet in sinning onely he had beene miserable It is therefore as essentiall to Iustification that hee bee made iust as rid of guilt and brought to Heauen as rid of Hell But of this before Q. Bee there any other vses b●sides confutation Vse 3 A. Yea. And first to teach all Gods people to abhorre the slauery of hypocrites who if they could shun Hell would neuer care for righteousnesse Gods people although they could sinne vnseene and vnpunished yet would loath it They take as deep thought for God as for their owne welfare 2 Sam. 14.30 When Absalon was pardoned yet he set Ioabs corne on fire because hee might not bee admitted to the Kings presence chuzing rather to dye then to hang in such suspence And shall a beleeuer rest in his pardon more then in the righteousnesse of God which may make them accepted and beloued Eph. 1.5 No the liuery they weare is The Lord our righteousnesse Oh till I be restored to my blood to my dignities to stand before the Lord to please him to feele his Spirit of peace ioy and righteousnesse and my Conscience purged to serve God in holinesse I can feele no comfort Vse 4 Secondly let it raise the price of the Lord Iesus his loue in the hearts of all his children Should he that was glory and holinesse bee content not onely to become a worme base and vile to his enemies but to lose the repute of holinesse and become sinne rather then sinne should not become righteousnesse and glory how great is this loue then and how deare should he be in the taking of our imputed sinne and blemish vpon him Vse 5 Thirdly to touch his Passion a little how should it teach vs to abhorre all enemies of the Crosse Atheists Papists Iewes and Pagans to whom it is eyther a stumbling block or foolishnesse yea all such as hold vpon a Christ in profession but farre from an humbled suffring and crucified Christ carrying themselues rather so in their haire fashions and oathes the loftinesse of their stomacks as if their Christ were rather some great Epicure Libertine or Champion of the world Fourthly If this death of the Lord Iesus be our satisfaction Vse 6 and the freedome from sinne and curse our pardon peace and Heauen where is the dwelling of our hearts vpon it the delight of our soules in it Commonly wee will weare our choise Iewell neerest our heart and why is this Iewell which cost the blood of the Sonne of God so farre off it Surely except this be our soules crowne more then the crowne of the aged are their children or the Ministers crowne his people or the husbands his deare wife not to speake of gold pleasures or outward welfare how can it bee well with vs If the perfection of loue be ioy and the perfecter the obiect is the greater the loue How is it that each base shadow of ioy can affect vs when this can not If our hope were heere onely in Christ of all others 1 Cor. 15.19 we were most miserable Nothing heere can keepe thee from misery what is then thy happinesse This satisfaction onely Let it be all in all to thee the seasoning of thy blessings supply of all wants if thou wert left as an owle in the desart Hab. 3.17 if no calf were left in the stall yet let God be thy saluation Let thy life be bound vp in it as Iacobs in Beniamin Fifthly and especially let the chiefe streame of this points Vse 7 vse be this To all Ministers to teach it and the people to apply it to themselues in all their feares yea the greatest agony yea death it selfe whatsoeuer thou forgoest hold this For Ministers let them remember their office as hee to Archippus and fulfill it Paul presses it compare 2 Cor. 5.21 with 20. Him that knew no sinne hee made sinne that wee might bee his righteousnesse And what of this We being Embassadors of God as if Christ by vs did entreate you so we vrge Bee reconciled to God Be no Idols non Preachers bee no Preachers of any thing before this Preach not with a veile as Moses stand with open face and hold this mirror to poore sinners that they may behold The Lord their righteousnesse 2 Cor. 3 1● If the worth of a
daylie life so doth the soule all her workes in Christ Christ in her prayes preaches prospers suffers and in a word doth all her workes in her as Esay 26. Q. What is the life of faith in estates and first in Prosperity A. The cleauing of the soule to God in the promise of his Al-sufficiency Gen. 17.1 and 1 Cor. 3. end Al things are yours and ye Christs It s the Lord Iesus our head who being Lord of all made himselfe no body that we might haue right to all promises Faith then cleaues to this promise First That if God hath made vs a feast in the mountaines much more hee will in the valleyes Esay 25. And looke what blessing so euer he see good it 's mine life good daies good marriage children family health successe recouery credit wealth it 's mine A childe of God beleeues no temporall promise otherwise than a spirituall both purchased by Christ alike although if he see them vnfit I am to beleeue a supply otherwise as good or better but else faith cleaues to a temporall in the full right to Christ without ifs or ands as well as the other And not onely so but serues Gods prouidence for them with holy confidence setting the Lord aboue his owne labours in the secret blessing of a promise going to worke without indirect courses without sinne or sorrow beleeuing that whatsoeuer his portion be more or lesse it 's his giuen him by his father and therefore best and any other should be worse and to conclude accounting the commonest blessing to be no common loue to him but vouchsafed in kindnesse to his seruant and therefore not snared thereby and nailed to the earth but raised vp rather as by wings to the giuer to serue the Lord with a good and cheerefull heart for all his blessings Q. What is the life of faith in the estate of aduersity A. It is the cleauing of the soule to God in the promise of his protection and redemption 1 Cor. 1.30 The poore soule saith with David on his death-bed The Lord liueth who hath deliuered my soule out of all aduersity sword of Saul pursuit enemies in battell and now will deliuer me in deat● And how first as it was with Christ that no trouble nor yet one houre sooner befell him than God preordained so shall a poore soule beleeue that no enemy shall hurt or afflict in any kind then or vntil the Lord see meet but as he so thou shalt passe through all so also 2. If any doe assault thee sickenesse poverty suits prison malitious enemies thou shalt say with Christ This is their houre they are come in season they are meet read 1 Pet. 1.6 they are no accidents they are the allottings of my Father for speciall good 3. When they doe lye vpon thee yet the Lord shall bee thy light in darkenesse and shall bee thy defence and couer thy head in the day of battell See Micah 2.7 Psal 84. end hee shall make thy bed in sicknesse and walke with thee in the Fornace hee shall be thy peace of heart thy strength to endure hee shall purge thee by them and bring thee out as gold out of the Fornace So that thou shalt say Perhaps the Lord shall doe me good for this crosse this day make me better than if I had not had it It is good for mee that I was afflicted And after a tolerable passage read Ier. 29.6 7. he shall deliuer me out of all one way or other so that the spirit of glory and the conquest of Christ rests vpon me and by his promise Ioh. 16. vlt. I haue ouercome the world I shall take good courage and say Micah 7.8 I shall rise when I am fallen and afterward I shal with the Lord Iesus be out of the gunshot of all afflictions yea as the estate of a beleeuer is through his whole life so shall it be comfortablest at death and the last day shall be his best a rest from all labours Q. What is the life of faith in meanes vsing A. It is the cleauing vnto God by the promise for the power and blessing of and vpon all his ordinance which point seeing it will fall into Article 4. vse 3. therefore thence fetch direction Q. What is the life of faith in duties A. It s the cleauing of the soule to God by a promise for strength to giue vs the grace to doe what hee commandeth of which also seeing I treat in Article 3. vse 4 there looke Q. What is the life of faith in Graces A. It 's the soules cleauing to God in the promise and in the grace of the Lord Iesus for a supply of grace conuenient for it selfe both for number and measure Ioh. 1.17 from his fountaine we receiue grace for grace like for like so many for so many In the strength of this promise a poore barren soule comes to the Lord and hearing what treasure is in Christ and for whom comes with confidence and pleades for it selfe Oh Lord as empty a wretch as I am of mercy of compassion of righteousnesse of loue of patience thou hast put all into the nature of Christ Emanuel though I am pestred with a peeuish froward proud worldly spirit yet thou hast sayd where sinn hath abounded grace abounded much more thou delightest to honour thy Sonnes grace in purging such sinfull ones from their cursed qualities thou wilt haue thy grace pointed at Oh! who would haue euer haue looked to see such a proud wretch humble so worldly an one heauenly minded Nay the Lord can vse those weapons of sinne to bee weapons of righteousnesse choler to turne zeale for God prodigality to turne bounty to the poore members of Christ I see where the Lord creates the new creature hee also creates the graces thereof where he marryes he giues the marriage Ring beset with all Iewels of faithfulnesse humblenesse and the like Why then should a poore member pine away for want when the head is full and full for his members Oh! I see all things are mine in Christ all meanes duties yea and graces mine Didst thou not say so Lord and causedst me to trust thee for it that out of thy Fountaine I should haue for both number those that are most wanting and for measure that which may strengthen a feeble heart Euen as Haman hearing what should be done to a fauorite answered he meanes me whom else so the poore soule heere The Lord hath renued mee and whom should he bestow Graces vpon to beautifie sooner Q. Goe forward to the second branch of our Communion with God wherein doth it consist A. In the exercise of the graces of his spirit For looke how Merchants and Chapmen haue the policy and traffike for wares and mony so the godly haue their commerce with the Lord for grace Read Phillip 3.19 But our conuersation is in heauen And this stands in these three things First in the encrease of their graces for the experience of the sweete
into the fire As Iob for his sonnes so be thou for thy selfe Sacrifice daily for mercy of preuention remouing of vanities which might annoy thee especially naturall ones or if offered yet for grace to defie them and goe to worke by a promise Iealousie and feare are blessed from heauen to preserue thee as the eye-lids are made moueable and winking by nature to keepe out any mote or annoyance If this watching heart against obiects were kept and no roguish stragler suffered to passe without stop and examination whence and whither how sweet should our course be Q. What is the third duty of wisedome A. Not to bee kept in bondage by Satan in point of our recouerie out of our falls if wee bee slipt into any but speedily to gather vp our selues ere wee bee hardened Ier. 8.4 Shall a man fall and not arise Be not sullen as the loaden iade in the slowe that will not stirre to get out If Satan get thee at this bay hee hath his hearts wish But rather goe backe wound thy soule for thy reuolt seeke to the Lord for staying of thee if thou haue beene bold with the Lord recall thy selfe let thine heart smite thee and say I will doe so no more Iob 40.4 and so lay hold upon the Promise repent and doe thy former works be zealous and amend Doe not soder vp thy breaches with a dead heart weighing good actions against bad which will harden thee but returne to him whom thou hast sinned against Eph. 5.29 If thou haue beene angry and sinned adde ●ot drunkennesse to thirst wrath and malice and reuenge to thy passion but ere the Sunne goe downe goe to God for mercy and put it to an end that the next Sun rise finde thee not hardned Q. Proceede to the second next what course is to bee taken against the other two enemies Satan and the World A. Briefely to put them together besides what I haue said already put on the compleate armour of proofe appointed there by the Lord in this case and keepe it close to thee weare it and walke in it as the Armour of a child of light as the harnesse of the militant Church and each member of Christ blessed by him to that purpose They bee not as Pope holy swords or armour blessed by a sinnefull wretch to no purpose but blessed by God and they shall be so They bee no charmed weapons but strong in God to cast downe holds and forts of strong enemies First therefore let me giue thee some generall counsell and then a few particulars about the pieces of the armor For the generall these two first get wisedome to discouer and discerne his temptations Then secondly Branch 2 be armed against them First I say discouer them The Apostle thought hee spake a great word when hee said 2 Cor. 2 11. you know his deuices as if a man warned were armed To say the truth it is a great thing to bee warned Get wisdome then discerne him in his properties discerne him in his first onsets in thy first calling begin this act betimes for it is long and be assured he wil not so let thee passe but be the more eager against thee in thy faith thy comfort thy obedience He wil set wife husband children thy betters thy equals in aray against thee Know him ere hee come himselfe by his messenger and think not it will be answer sufficient that thou knewst nothing Aske poyson if it will not hurt because vnknown or an enemy if he will turne from thy Castle because he hath surptiz'd it ere thou wert aware Was it not supposed thou shouldst haue knowne Let the Lord say of thee Thou knowest his deuices And so know them as being of a different kind and nature not all alike Some temptations are not like to be durable because so hideous as to Atheisme against the Scriptures to blaspheme deny God and prouidence These will wanze Here learne two things First Take heed lest being rid of these thou be secure of the next know these fore-run others And secondly know that seeing these being meerely or mostly Satans and not thine thou oughtest to dispatch them as fast as they come by abhorring them and being abased by them but not dismayed by their hidiousnesse Then againe there are temptations on the left hand and on the right hand both may not be taken for alike For temptations on the right hand to sensuall euils admit not that parley nor plodding upon in thy minde which some others doe the thought whereof is fearefull But rather the more they are thought of the more they share a man Doe as the Prophet to Iehoram Answer roughly 2 Kin. 6.32 Like to the breaches of two brethren which the more ript vp the more they exulcerate And so I might say of many more Let the conclusion bee Learne wisely to iudge of temptations deuils or worlds and let thy long acquaintance with his method make thee skilfull praying for the spirit of discerning and confessing how much thou art mis-matched Secondly be armed accordingly Branch 2 and stand so against him daily and constantly for this battell hath no truce Salomon saith well Prov. 1.17 In vaine is the net laid for that which hath wing for the Bird mounts vp aboue the snare It s said of the sonnes of Iehonadab the sonne of Rechab Ier. 35.7 8. that when the Prophet set pots of wine before them the● were tyed by their fathers vow upon his blessing that they should drink none This is the tye of God euen our Cou●nant and oath in and since Baptisme that wee would cleaue to 〈◊〉 as his faithful souldiers against all enemies Shal a man s●c●●●ly ingage his children shal not our Couenant tye vs Sh●● 〈◊〉 dare to be loose to God or rather when the diuels cups are before vs shall we not say I am tyed to God in Couenant how dare I be loose run away from my colors oh to be armed is all in all David armed was able to beare down a Shimei vnarmed not able to beare Mephibosheth much lesse Nabal Let vs know it is not the greatnesse or smalnesse of the temptation but our armour against it which preserues vs shall God giue vs armour and we not vse it Shall it hang vp a rusting by vs we pierced with darts to death for want of it They say of great Souldiers they are shot-free The Lords armed ones are all so while armed else as other men Therefore let this teach vs not to commit our selues to this world naked and vnarmed vnder hope of shot freedome Charles the 5. taking his horse to rush into the maine battell was requested to forbeare but he answered an Emperour was neuer shot through with a bullet This confidence hath an armed souldier of Christ neuer was beleeuer shot to death by a diuel or a wicked world To discouer these enemies is good but to stand in our dayly armor and to be strong in the Lord to
mysteries and in the Corporations of great Townes they haue certaine immunities and royalties which others want in common towns yea such as those want who though they dwell by them yet are no free men so here it fareth The Company and great Family or Corporation of the Lord Iesus his body I meane the Church once truely gathered into one mysticall fellowship by calling and the worke of the spirit hath many honours and prerogatives annexed unto it which not onely they want which are heathens but also euen they who are visible members of the Church in point ordinances and outward worship See for this 1 Cor. 3.22 23. All things are yours and yee are Christs and Christ is Gods Heb. 12.15 16. But yee are come to mount Zion to the Citie of the living God c. read it at large 1 Pet. 2.9 But ye are a chosen generation an holy nation c. Psal 73.23 Thou shalt guide mee by thy grace and shalt receiue me to glory Psa 84.21 The Lord God will giue grace and glory no good thing shall he with-hold 2 Pet. 1.3 His Diuine grace hath giuen vs all things pertaining to life and godlinesse Q. Why these seeme no other then were spoken of in Part 2. Article 4. in the Benefits of Christ A. Yes for although both sorts are benefits from one Fountaine yet the difference is this of those former wee consist and are 1 Cor. 1.30 Of him are we who is made to vs c. But by these wee doe not properly consist but wee are much the better for them and the one concernes our being as Reconciliation Adoption the other our wel-being as That Gods Angels are our Ministers and Guardians all things befall vs for the best with a thousand such more It is one thing to be a man another the Lord of Creatures Q. But are they not the same with the meanes A. No doubtlesse The meanes although they are rich bequests of the Church and in respect of strangers priuileges also yet they are no such prerogatiues in themselues saue in their efficacie to the elect but are given to all as ordinances either for begetting or building vp and therefore concerne them who are as yet vncalled by the right of Baptisme But these belong to the Beleeuer onely Q. What differ they from Commandements for many of them are things which God requires of vs as to grow in grace to abstaine and keepe themselues from open offences c. A. True yet the things being the same the respect is divers they are not priuileges properly as commanded but as they are allowances from God to enable and qualifie the soule to performe the things which God commandeth Q In what doth their nature consist A. In these two First in their price and worth Secondly in their peculiarity If we seuer either for other we destroy a priuilege For the former First Their price is in this The least of them cost the blood of the Lord Iesus and flow from his sides their nature is excellent gracious and glorious their vse is sutable for they attend the well-fare of the best creature in the world and the instrument of obtaining them is no lesse than that whereby Iustification is gotten Lastly they are the Legacies of the last Will and Testament of Christ sealed with his death and pledges of his presence till wee enioy himselfe seruing to conduct vs homeward in a tolerable manner as many bayting places to refresh vs till wee come thither Secondly they are peculiar things as well as precious so ours that no others portion besides vs we know peculiarnesse doth greatly beautifie a precious thing As then these belong to the whole Body of Christ to one as another and to each member from the whole body so no other but she can enioy it A stranger shall not enter into her ioy For as the Lord doth at the first make his Church a peculiar garden of a meere thicket and queach of bushes a dunghill a wildernesse in which there is no delight as if a man should take such an vnshapen place and build himselfe a sumptuous Pallace with Gardens and Orchards and dwellings of pleasure and fruit so hauing once done so and set his delight thereon hee pitches there and delights to take it vp as his habitation Psal 132.13 Hence those phrases which the holy Ghost Mark 4.10 To you it is giuen not to others Ioh. 17 9. I pray not for the world 1 Pet. 2.7 A peculier people Exod. 19.5 Deut. 7.6 You shall bee my peculiar ones though all the World is mine They are called his iewels and pretious ones Malach. 3.17 Q. In how many kinds doe these preuiledges benefit the Church of Christ A. In two For as all peculiars and liberties doe either concerne either some indemnity and freedome from annoyance or some right and title to benefits so doth the whole body of priuiledges either concerne her riddance from the burdens which lye vpon others as to find no blessing to bee theirs but to answere for them or an enlargement to those good things which others cannot come by as to bee kept from euill in streights c. Q. Distinguish them into their seuerall heads and sorts A. Generally first they belong to the beleeuer either first heere or secondly hereafter Heere either in life or at death In this life we enioy priuiledges either accompanying conuersion or following it Those that accompany our conuersiō are righteousnesse peace and ioy in the holy Ghost Ro. 14.17 Q. What are the consequent priuiledges hereupon A. Either they concerne our persons or our estates Our persons or the persons of ours for God so esteems them thus That God it ours and theirs in couenant and will be so for euer Esay 54 This is to me as the waters of Noa c. He will be our God reconciled yesterday to day and for euer Heb. 13.8 and our God all-sufficient so that in nothing wee need to take thought for hee takes thought for vs Philip. 4.6 and 1 Peter 5.7 So also No good thing shall bee wanting light or defence grace or glory Psalme 84. All things shall worke together for our good Rom. 8.28 All things are ours inright 1 Cor. 3. and in right vse Titus 1.15 His Angels are Ministring Spirits for our watch and good Matth. 4. Hebr. 1. No euill danger Deuill enemy shall hurt vs Psal 92. Wee are deere and precious to him in life and death and hee preserues his Saints Psa 97.10 Psal 116.15 and we shall walke safely vnder his protection all the day Deut. 33. That we are alway before him and goe in and out with him Psal 73.22 Hee will bring vs well through and give us Glory Psal 73.23 And as for ours hee will shew mercy to thousands of them that loue him Exod. 20. and will not take his Word from our Seed and our seeds seed for euer Esay 59.21 Q. What priuiledges concerne our estates A. They are temporall or spirituall
Aaron and Hur that the poore soule might bee propped vp on both sides against the enemies of a good conuersation Let no paynes seeme too great 1 Cor. 1.7 hauing such precious promises let vs purge our selues of al filthines As Paul spake of one so I say of all these 1 Thess 4.18 Comfort your selues and one another by these priuiledges If the most common blessing become peculiar to you through Christ what shall the best become How should that hope of glory after your toyle and trauaile ended encourage you when the glory of the Moone shal be as the glory of the Sun and the light of the Sun ten times greater and the Saints shall worship from Sabbath to Sabbath to all eternity Oh! count all your troubles tolerable in the hope heerof and deceaue all the world in their opinion of your misery Let this hope make ye as farre aboue the miseryes of this life as your treasure is aboue the earth But especially let not death be vnwelcome as that old man sayd Thus long haue I serued God and it yrketh me not to dye for I haue had a good Master Secondly let it hearten vs to our worke to see what good vayles we haue better then al the wages of an hireling Priuiledges are commonly held by Seruice and we see how the guilt of soule Treasons or riot and misdemeanor doth forfeict the liberties of Cities and companies Honors are best mayntaind by loyalty by labor and diligence It s hard to renue a Charter once lost by Rebellion Therfore hold our selues close to our holy conuersation and walking with God by such Priuiledges It s a great matter that we haue them vnder Gods seale but when we see that they do concerns vs alone how should this cheere us Let all the braue spirits of the world and all the fauorites of Princes at death hold vp their heads as a beleeuer may vnder one of all these promises and we will embrace his choice But the Spirit of this Treasure and these priuiledges the ioy peace and welfare of a Christian can hardly be counterfeited a stranger shall not get into his ioy Thus much also of this Article The seuenth and last Article of the third part Question VVHat is this last Article A. The vse of the whole part in generall Euen the very text of the Apostle may comprehend it Eph. 4.23 If yee haue learned the truth as it is in Iesus put off the old man and put on the new As we haue felt Iesus in the truth of his Reconciliation so let vs put on the same Lord Iesus in the truth of Renouation for the one intimates the other Shew thy selfe to vnderstand how the spirit by fayth breeds Repentance in the heart and life As the poore childe hauing the mothers cost about it dainty fare money in purse fine cloathes carries them to shew in euery corner of the house so let vs warmed and adorned with the Lord Iesus our righteousnesse 2. Cor. 2.14 vtter his loue and shew forth the sauor of it in all our course Let vs abhorre the thought of such a Iesus as will keepe within our bosomes and lye still no his loue will burne within vs and wee shall not bee able to smother it It will giue vs the spirit of Dauid 1 Kin. 1.30 who cryed As the Lord liueth who hath deliuered my soule from all aduersity Salomon shall raigne signifying that this loue of Gods redemption and deliuerance was kept as the perpetuall sacrifice burning vpon the Alter of his heart alway ready at his call to set him about euery good duty with resolution Hee speaks as a Gyant refreshed with wine ● Cor. 5.14 as if this loue of Christ compelled him and was as strong as the spirits of wine to encourage him to his seruice when hee would do any thing to purpose he cals for this Spirit of Gods loue that deliuered him Let this Spirit carry vs to preach to meditate to deny our selues to bee patient to beare our crosses to dye in peace If any duty more then common offer it selfe let this mayne motiue be drawne forth and bee as the necessity of an armed man Ephe. 3.16 That the Lord hath deliuered vs from all aduersity Then we put on the Lord Iesus when his loue is put into and vpon our soules to enlarge and widen them to goe thorow our conuersation with holy resolution His length and depth and breadth and height must enlarge vs to the length or continuance of a sweete course to the depth and hardnesse of the most difficult duties to the height and pitch of the most heauenly affections the bredth and measure of the most plentiful and fruitfull obedience that is to whatsoeuer is godlynesse Not our pangs not our good affections not all encouragements blessings or examples no not all meanes ordinances and performances without which this will do it As that good Latymer to some that asked him why one that preacht his Sermon did not preach it as he did answered Hee had his Fiddle and sticke but wanted his rozen so vndoubtedly will it be heere when wee goe to worke without this loue of the Lord Iesus warming vs as an inward principle of life and motion we may thinke we haue harped vpon the right string and admire our selues but the true stroake of the musique the rellish and sauor of the worke will bee to seeke and all returne vpon vs with fulsome distaste in respect eyther of Gods account or our own content Still that of poore Isaac will be wanting Lo heere my Father is the Altar and the wood ready Gen. 22.7 But where is the Sacrifice Let all I haue spoken end in this All true sight of sinne sence of mercy ends in the life of fayth in obedience Goe ouer the second Article of conuersation in thy thoughts get a view of it and conclude It must be no small loue must driue such a course no little stocke that will carry such a trade currently and the cause why the wheele of conuersation cracks and breaks in so many parts why it driues on so heauily and is so vnequall in her motion is this it wants her spokes to ioyne her to the Nave such a wheele wee know as wants her staues must needs split and the wheele of that conuersation that is full of loding and duties being yet vnsupported with these staues of loue from the Naue of the Lord Iesus his deliuerance and redemption must of necessity cracke in sunder The Lord Iesus we read commended two persons admirably Luke 7.9 Luke 7.47 the one that Centurion of whom hee sayd I haue not found such fayth in Israel The other was Mary out of whom he had cast seuen deuils and sayd She loued much because much was forgiuen her Let both be ioyned together if we get such fayth as is rare to finde let vs bewray it by such loue as is so too and both will carry vs forth to this