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A20762 A guide to godlynesse or a Treatise of a Christian life shewing the duties wherein it consisteth, the helpes inabling & the reasons parswading vnto it ye impediments hindering ye practise of it, and the best meanes to remoue them whereunto are added diuers prayers and a treatise of carnall securitie by Iohn Douname Batcheler in Diuinitie and minister of Gods Word. Downame, John, d. 1652.; Payne, John, d. 1647?, engraver. 1622 (1622) STC 7143; ESTC S121690 1,341,545 1,134

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14. and aduance vs and inrich vs greatly with all his blessings as hee hath promised So the Apostle saith that in respect of the bare act of his preaching the Gospel he had nothing to glory of because a necessity of performing this duty was laid vpon him and a woe denounced if he performed it not but if he did not by constraint but willingly then hee should 1. Cor. 9. 16 17. haue at Gods hands a reward Finally let vs serue God with this cheerefulnesse because thereby we shall get vnto our selues an infallible marke and signe that we are in the estate of blessednesse For the Psalmist describing a blessed man bringeth in this as one of his speciall properties that his Psal 1. 2. delight is in the Law of the Lord so that hee meditateth in it day and night And therefore let vs not content our selues with cold carelesse and formall seruice but performe it vnto God with cheerefulnesse and delight without which it is neither pleasing vnto him nor profitable vnto vs And seeing this is not a flower which groweth in natures soyle but a gift of God who worketh in vs both to will and to doe of his good pleasure whereof it is that Dauid acknowledgeth the free-will offerings of himselfe and his Phil. 2. 13. people towards the building of the Temple to haue wholly proceeded 1. Chro. 29. 14. from God who had giuen them both these gifts and also willing hearts to returne them therefore let vs begge it daily at Gods hands that taking away our dulnesse and drowzinesse our auersenesse and backwardnesse vnto holy duties he will giue vs grace to serue him in all things with alacrity and cheerefulnesse ioy and delight §. Sect. 3 That we must serue God in all holy duties zealously and deuoutly The second property respecting the heart is true zeale which as wee heere consider it is a deuout consecrating of our selues wholly both in soule and body to the seruice of God and an ardent desire study and indeuour to glorifie him by walking before him in the duties of a godly life So that it is nothing but the intension of our loue and cheerefulnesse vnto these holy exercise and of our anger and mislike against all the impediments whereby wee are opposed and hindred in them And this is commended vnto vs in the Scriptures as an excellent grace the beauty and brightnesse whereof no where shineth more cleerely then in this subiect For if it be good as the Apostle saith to bee zealous in a good matter Gal. 4. 15. where can this zeale more exceed in goodnesse then when it is imployed and spent in the duties of Gods seruice and of a Christian life then the which nothing can be better It is the vitall heate and as it were the very spirits which intendeth all other graces and with the warmth of it increaseth their vertue and vigour giuing vnto them motion and making them actiue and operatiue in their seuerall functions And it is giuen vs of God as a singular Antidote against that cold and killing poyson of carnall formality and that stupid blockishnesse and senselesse dulnesse and deadnesse which naturally hath ouerspred all the powers of our body and minde in performing the duties of Gods seruice And if it bee wanting we will soone grow cold and carelesse either neglecting them altogether or performing them with a luke-warme indifference for forme and fashion sake not greatly regarding whether we doe or leaue them vndone which will make them lothsome in Gods sight But if our hearts bee inflamed with this zeale then will we feruently affect all holy duties of Gods seruice as being notable meanes of aduancing his glory and not suffer our selues to be withdrawne from them by worldly vanities which wee neglect and contemne in comparison of the other And then will we also with an holy anger oppose and ouercome all impediments and hindrances which stop vs in our Christian course and especially make warre against our owne corruptions which dull our deuotion and make vs slacke and backward to holy duties which that we may doe let vs consider that this zeale is the end of our Redemption and an vndoubted signe that Christ hath purchased vs vnto himselfe with the price of his owne blood For therefore gaue Tit. 2. 14. he himselfe for vs that he might redeeme vs from all iniquity and purifie vnto himselfe a peculiar people zealous of good workes So that if we doe not shew our zeale in all vertuous actions and Christian duties we doe not attaine to this end and consequently plainely declare that we are not redeemed by Christ who being God equall with his Father and infinite in wisdome and power cannot faile of those ends which hee propoundeth vnto himselfe Let vs consider also that this zeale is an inseparable fruit of true repentance 2. Cor. 7. 11. as the Apostle plainely sheweth Whereof it is that Christ in his Epistle to the luke-warme Laodiceans ioyneth them together Be zealous Apoc. 3. 19. and repent because they could no otherwise approoue themselues true conuerts till leauing that state of tepedity and luke-warmenesse they were inflamed with feruent zeale of Gods glory For when we soundly seriously repent vs of our sins and especially our sloth sluggishnesse coldnesse and carelesnes in holy duties then bewailing hating our former courses we set our selues with all earnestnesse to reforme these corruptions become zealously deuout in all holy duties that we may redeeme our former lost time which we haue fruitlesly mispent in their neglect wherby it appeareth that our repentance cannot be vnfained vnlesse this zeale be ioyned with it nor any duty of a godly life sincere which is not approu'd by this property CAP. VII Of the properties which respect the whole man And first diligence in all duties of Gods seruice §. Sect. 1 That this diligence must be vsed in all good duties and about the meanes of them THe properties which respect the whole man are two diligence and constancie By diligence I vnderstand that sedulity and assiduitie industry and labour which wee are content to vse and take for the compassing and obtaining effecting and atchieuing of those things whereupon wee haue set our hearts and affections The which property doth alwayes accompany the duties of a godly life if we rightly performe them as God requireth of vs and is an inseparable fruit of those which went before For when wee performe them with alacrity and cheerefulnesse and doe esteeme them our chiefe delight then are wee not onely in our hearts zealously affected towards them but so industrious and diligent in pursuing of them that we thinke no paines or labour too much that we may bring them to good effect And then shaking off all naturall sloth and sluggishnesse all idlenesse and vnprofitablenesse wee will set our selues close to our Christian taske and performe those religious duties and that holy and spirituall seruice which our
the Lord hath done for vs which will make vs thinke that we can neuer be too earnest in seeking his glory nor too intent and feruent in all holy duties of his seruice That it is an inseparable propertie of all grace to be zealous in them and therefore there can be no grace at all where zeale is wanting That is an vndoubted signe of those who are the redeemed of the Lord to be zealous of good works therfore where there is no zeale there can be no Tit. 2. 14. signe of redemption by Christ finally that luke-warmenesse is most lothsome vnto God and that those who are so he will spue out of his mouth Apoc. 3. 17. §. Sect. 3 Of reioycing in God what it is and the meanes wherby we may attaine vnto it The second vertue arising from loue is ioy and reioycing in God when being assured of his loue towards vs and louing him againe tasting for the present how good the Lord is and perswading our selues of the full fruition of him in the life to come we are exceedingly delighted and euen glory in the assurance and sense of Gods fauour For it is the nature of loue to make vs reioyce in the thing beloued and as the more excellent any thing is in our conceite the more our loue exceedeth so according to the measure of our loue such also is our ioy when we inioy it And therefore needes must our ioy and reioycing in God exceed all other ioy because our loue ought to bee proportioned to his goodnesse and excellency and our ioy to our loue In which respect this diuine ioy swalloweth vp all worldly griefe and causeth vs to glory not onely in worldly prosperity but also in persecution and tribulation Rom. 5. 3. And this is that ioy vnto which the Scriptures exhort vs Reioyce in the Phil. 4. 4. 1. Thes 5. 16. Psal 37. 4. Lord alway and againe I say Reioyce Reioyce euermore Delight thy selfe in the Lord and he will giue thee the desires of thine heart Which if we attaine vnto then haue wee euen in this life the first beginnings of our heauenly happinesse For as the Apostle teacheth vs the Kingdome of God Rom. 14. 17. consisteth in righteousnesse peace and ioy in the holy Ghost Now the meanes to obtaine this ioy is to labour after assurance that wee are vnited vnto Christ for we cannot haue it in our selues but in and through him according to that of the Apostle We ioy in God through our Lord Iesus Christ Rom. 5. 11. by whom now we haue receiued the atonement Secondly if we would haue this ioy we must labour after the assurance of our iustification and remission of our sinnes for peace with God followeth our iustification by faith Rom. 5. 1 3. and ioy this peace Thirdly let vs labour after this assurance that wee are the sonnes of God by adoption and grace and to haue it sealed vnto vs in our hearts and consciences by his holy Spirit that so our assurance of our heauenly inheritance may vphold our ioy and reioycing in the middest of temporary crosses and afflictions Finally let vs labour to feele Gods loue shed abroad in our hearts by the holy Ghost which wee shall best discerne by finding them inflamed with feruent loue towards God approoued to bee sincere by our care to flee all sinne which is odious vnto him and imbracing all vertue and goodnesse which is acceptable in his sight And if wee inioy God in this mutuall loue wee shall in all estates glory and reioyce in it and in the middest of all worldly extremities comfort our selues with Dauid in the Lord 1. Sam. 30. 6. 1. Thes 1. 6. our God §. Sect. 4 Of thankfulnes vnto God what is required vnto it and the meanes of it The third vertue arising from the loue of God is vnfained thankfulnes for when in consideration of Gods goodnesse mercy and bounty towards Psal 116. 12. vs our hearts are inflamed with his loue and replenished with ioy vnspeakeable and glorious then doe we thinke with Dauid what wee may returne vnto him for all his benefits and finding no possible meanes of making the least requitall in regard of our impotency and Gods all-sufficiency we doe at last resolue to remaine for euer thankfull debters and to expresse our thankefulnesse both by our words in praysing and magnifying and in all our actions by glorifying him our Benefactour who hath beene so infinitely gracious vnto vs seeing wee haue nothing else to returne vnto him So that our loue of God proceeding from his loue towards vs is the roote of our thankefulnesse and our reioycing in his loue and goodnesse an inseparable companion of it For this thankefulnesse is a vertue whereby knowing acknowledging and reioycing in the sense and feeling of Gods loue goodnesse and bountie towards vs wee are inwardly thankefull vnto him for all his benefits and outwardly expresse it by praysing and glorifying his holy Name both by our lips and liues whereby it appeareth what is required to this vertue of thankefulnesse First that wee apprehend Gods loue and inwardly reioyce in it hauing our hearts thorowly affected with the sense of his goodnesse and bounty towards vs. Secondly that wee doe not ascribe the blessings and benefits which wee inioy vnto any Jam. 1. 17. thing else but onely vnto God as our supreme and chiefe Benefactour who is the principall Author of all our good Thirdly that wee doe not smother our thankefulnesse in our hearts but cause it to breake forth first in our words by praysing magnifying Gods holy name for as the Psalmist speaketh It becommeth the righteous to be thankefull and secondly in Psal 33. 1. our workes by doing those things which are pleasing vnto God in whom our soule delighteth that so the light of our godly liues shining before men we may cause them also to glorifie our Father which is in heauen Mat. 5. 16. The which ought to be performed of vs in all things and at all times both in prosperity and aduersity plenty and penury health and sicknesse according to that of the Apostle But be filled with the Spirit speaking to your selues in Psalmes and Hymnes and spirituall songs singing and making melodie Eph. 5. 18 19. in your hearts to the Lord giuing thankes alwayes for all things vnto God the Father in the name of our Lord Iesus Christ An example whereof wee haue in Iob who blessed the Lord when he was depriued of all his substance Iob 1. 21. and in the Church grieuously afflicted who in the middest of all her calamities did acknowledge Gods mercies in that they were not vtterly Lam. 3. 32. consumed Now the meanes whereby vve may be stirred vp to this duty and inabled to performe it are first to consider that this thankfulnes and thanksgiuing is good pleasant and comely according to that of the Psalmist Praise ye the Lord for it is good
Mat. 12. 50. great honour and be made of Gods owne Priuy Councell by the illumination of his Spirit yea next a kinne to our Sauiour Christ That God will heare all our prayers for the blinde man could see this that if any Ioh. 9. 31. man be a worshipper of God and doe his will him he heareth And if in our Petitions we desire that Gods will may be done in ours we are sure to haue 1. Ioh. 5. 14. them granted as the Apostle Iohn telleth vs. Finally that those onely shall attaine vnto euerlasting life who indeuour in all things to doe Gods will for he that doth the will of God abideth for euer as the Apostle speaketh 1. Ioh. 2. 17. and not hee that saith Lord Lord shall enter into the Kingdome of Heauen Mat. 7. 21. but he that doth the will of our Father which is in heauen as our Sauiour teacheth vs. CAP. VI. Of those properties which respect our hearts and affections §. Sect. 1 That we must performe all duties of a godly life with cheerefulnesse ANd these are the properties which respect the causes of all Christian duties Those which concerne our disposition in doing them doe either more principally respect the heart and affection or the carriage generally of the whole man In respect of the heart this is the property of all the duties of a godly life that they be done heartily according to that of the Apostle Whatsoeuer ye doe doe it heartily as vnto the Lord and not vnto men But of this in the generall I haue before spoken and therefore will heere insist vpon two speciall branches of it the first is alacrity and cheerefulnesse the second is feruent zeale in all good duties Concerning the former we ought to performe all the duties of a godly life with alacrity and cheerefulnesse as being an inseparable property of them if they be sincere and vpright And this the Lord requireth generally in all Christian duties that we be ready vnto euery good worke and more specially in the duties Tit. 3. 1. of his seruice and all the parts thereof For wee must not onely seeke and serue the Lord but also make him our chiefe delight We must serue Psal 37. 4. Psal 100. 1. 95. 1 2. the Lord with gladnesse and come before him with thankesgiuing Wee must come before his presence with thankesgiuing and make a ioyfull noyse vnto him with Psalmes as the Psalmist exhorteth And wee must serue God with a 1. Chro. 28. 9. perfect and a willing minde as hee perswadeth Salomon his sonne Neither must we goe to the place of Gods seruice lumpishly and heauily but bee glad and reioyce when we mutually exhort one another to goe vp to the Psal 122. House of the Lord. For as in the time of the Law God could not indure a dead oblation but would haue a liuing sacrifice or the life of it and especially the inwards and heart offred vnto him so can he not abide that we should tender vnto him a dull dead and heartlesse seruice without any spirit life and cheerefulnesse which is no more pleasing then a dead carrion in his sight More especially we must not onely serue God on his Sabbaths but we must account them our delight In our prayers we must Esa 58. 13 14. with the Apostle make our requests with ioy We must in our thankesgiuing Phil. 1. 4. reioyce before God according to that of the Psalmist O come let vs sing Psal 95. 1. 33. 1 2. vnto the Lord let vs make a ioyfull noyse to the Rocke of our saluation And againe Reioyce in the Lord O ye righteous praise him with harpe c. Our preaching must be not by constraint but willingly not for filthy lucre but of 1. Pet. 5. 2. a ready minde Our oblations towards the building of the Tabernacle and Exod. 35. 5 29. furthering the meanes of Gods seruice must like the Israelites be offered with a willing heart And this alacrity and cheerefulnesse must bee vsed in all other Christian duties if we would haue them acceptable vnto God Our Almes must be giuen with cheerefulnesse and not as wrested from vs 2. Cor. 9. 7. by importunity because the Lord loueth a cheerefull giuer Our benefits must be bestowed not grudgingly and slowly but readily and with alacrity Philem. v. 14. for it is a double benefit when the heart goeth with the gift and as the Heathen man sayd Hee giueth twice that giueth speedily and readily Seneca Finally seeing if wee be seruants and doe our duty aright wee Eph. 6. 6. serue God and doe his will therefore also we must doe it cheerefully and from our hearts §. Sect. 2 Reasons which may mooue vs to this cheerefulnesse Now that we may thus serue God with alacrity and cheerefulnesse let these reasons perswade vs. First because it is most acceptable vnto God and in much more high price with him then the worke and duty it selfe be it neuer so excellent in outward appearance For if euen mortall men who neede the duties and seruice of others are much more delighted with the kindnesse and loue of the giuer then with the gift it selfe And if Parents and Masters are better pleased with the willing cheerefulnesse of their children and seruants then with their duties which they performe being done with grudging and repining then much more is the Lord delighted with our alacrity and readinesse in the duties of his seruice rather then with the outward workes and actions seeing we can in nothing bee profitable vnto him yea as we haue shewed before hee esteemeth no bodily seruice which is not en-liued with this soule of cheerefulnesse whereas contrariwise though our duties of his seruice be full of manifold imperfections and corruptions yet if they be performed with ready and cheerefull hearts he doth accept of them for perfect obedience For hee accepteth in the seruice of his children the will for the deed and if there be 2. Cor. 8. 12. a willing minde a man is accepted according to that he hath and that power of performance which God hath giuen and not according to that he hath not as the Apostle speaketh Secondly this cheerefulnesse and alacrity maketh our otherwise vnperfect seruice like vnto that which is performed by the blessed Angels who are alwayes ready as soone as they heare Gods Psal 103. 20 21. voyce to doe his pleasure as the Psalmist speaketh they stand about his Throne continually and no sooner receiue his Commandements but hasten to execute them with winged speed Thirdly because cheerefulnesse and delight in Gods seruice as it is most highly esteemed so is it aboue all other most richly rewarded for if wee delight in the Lord hee will giue vs the desires of our hearts if wee delight in him and call his Sabbaths which Psal 37. 4. are consecrated vnto his seruice our delight also hee will greatly honour Esa 58. 13
Sect. 9 That the duties of a godly life must spring from the fountaine of loue The fifth thing required is that all the duties of a godly life which we performe doe spring from the fountaine of loue which is a fruit of a liuely faith wherby being assured of Gods loue towards vs in Iesus Christ we begin to loue him againe and our neighbours for his sake and receiuing the bright beames of his fauour into our hearts haue them illightened and warmed thereby and so reflect them backe againe towards God in our loue of his Maiesty and zeale of his glory abhorring whatsoeuer is displeasing and louing and practising that which is acceptable in his 1. Tim. 1. 5. Matth. 22. 40. Rom. 13. 10. sight For this loue is the end of Gods commandements and compriseth in it the whole summe and substance of the Law and therefore it is the base and foundation of all true obedience and whatsoeuer proceedeth not from loue cannot be accounted any seruice vnto God seeing it is not done for his sake but out of selfe-loue and for worldly respects which being sinnefull and corrupt doe pollute all the actions which doe spring from them §. Sect. 10 That the duties of a godly life must proceede from thankfulnesse The sixth thing required vnto a godly life is that we performe all holy and Christian duties out of our thankefulnesse towards God as for all his benefits spirituall and corporall bestowed vpon vs namely our election creation preseruation and the rest so especially for that maine benefit the great worke of our redemption by Iesus Christ whereby he hath made vs of the slaues of Satan his owne seruants of the children of wrath his owne children by adoption and grace of the seruants of sinne the seruants of righteousnesse and of the heires of hell and condemnation coheires with Christ and inheritours of heauenly happinesse The which benefits being rightly considered must needs make vs truely thankefull vnto him of whom we haue so great saluation and out of this thankefulnesse truely zealous of his glory to whom we are so deepely indebted and to expresse both the one and the other by our earnest indeuour and conscionable care to glorifie his holy name by shining before men in the light of a godly life And that this ought to be the maine motiue to incite vnto the practice of an holy conuersation it appeareth heereby in that the Apostles doe so frequently vse it as a forcible argument to prouoke vs vnto it You are bought with a price therefore glorifie God in your body and in 1 Cor. 5. 20. your Spirit which are Gods Ye were sometimes darkenesse but now are ye light in Eph. 5. 8. the Lord walke as children of light And therefore we must take heede that we doe not performe holy duties out of an opinion of merit to make God beholding vnto vs or to satisfie his iustice which is onely done by Christs perfect righteousnesse and obedience or to leaue our workes of supererrogation as a treasure vnto the Church to be sold vnto those who most wanting them will buy them at the highest price or to purchase by them Gods heauenly Kingdome which is a free inheritance and the meere gift Matth. 25. 31. Rom. 6. 23. of grace which God hath of his sole bounty and good will giuen vnto vs in and for Iesus Christ but let vs doe what wee are able and be sorry in our hearts that we can doe no more out of vnfained thankefulnesse vnto God for the many and inestimable benefits which of his free grace and vndeserued goodnesse he hath multiplyed on vs. §. Sect. 11 That the duties of a godly life must bee done in humility The seuenth thing required vnto a godly life is that all the Christian Esa 57. 17. duties which we performe bee done in humility and lowlinesse of spirit for this is a grace most acceptable vnto God which will mooue him to inhabite in vs as his Temples by his holy Spirit for hee dwelleth with him that is of a contrite and humble spirit to reuiue the spirit of the humble and to reuiue the heart of the humble ones It mooueth him to bestow all other graces and inlargeth our hearts that they may be fit to receiue them for the meeke will he guide in iudgement and the meeke will he teach his way And Psal 25. 9. this Argument the Apostle Peter vseth to perswade vs to bee clothed with 1. Pet. 5. 5. humility Because God resisteth the proud and giueth grace vnto the humble It is the ornament and signe of all other graces and of all Christian duties whereby we may know whether they be counterfeit and hypocriticall or in sincerity and truth for the oyle of sauing grace and the water and winde of pride will not mixe together and therefore we must bee emptied of the one before we can be replenished with the other According to the song of the blessed Virgin He hath filled the hungry with good Luk. 1. 53. things and the rich he hath sent empty away So that if we would be inriched with Gods graces and be strengthened by his Spirit vnto the duties of a godly life we must as we increase in them increase also in humility and as our Sauiour hath taught vs When we shall haue done all those things which are Luk. 17. 10. commanded vs we must acknowledge that we are vnprofitable seruants who haue done nothing but that which was our dutie to doe To which purpose let vs often meditate of the imperfections and corruptions of our best actions which might iustly mooue the Lord to reiect them and vs also for them if in the seuerity and strictnesse of his iustice he should looke vpon them Let vs thinke not onely of the good we doe but also of the euill which we commit and the good which we leaue vndone and then there will be no place for pride but rather for that bitter and lamentable complaint of the Apostle That which I doe I allow not for the good that I would I doe not Rom. 7. 15 19 24. but the euill which I would not that I doe O wretched man that I am who shall deliuer me from the body of this death Let vs consider not so much how farre we haue proceeded in the Christian race but rather how much remaineth and how farre we yet come short of the goale of perfection according to the Apostles example I count my selfe saith he not to haue apprehended but this one thing I doe forgetting those things which are behind Phil. 3. 13 14. and reaching foorth to those things which are before I presse towards the marke for the price of the high calling in Christ Iesus Finally though we had attained vnto some perfection yet there were no place for pride but rather for the greater humility seeing wee are the more indebted vnto God for his aboundant grace and bounty for as the Apostle saith
they are regenerate and hold place in all our actions and indeuours Neither will God in his seruice accept of a heart diuided whereof one part is giuen vnto him and another to the world nor of a double heart one while ayming at his glory and another while at the glory of the world sinister and earthly respects Neither can we after this sort serue God and Mammon nor with an vnsettled resolution which now inclineth to Gods seruice and soone Matth. 6. 24. after to the seruice of Satan for the base wages of sinfull profits and pleasures nor with such a lame indeuour as maketh vs halt betweene gaine and godlinesse Religion and worldlinesse the praises of men and the approbation of God and a good conscience But we ought with such firme resolution goe out of the Sodome of sin that we must not cast a looke backward Luk. 17. 32. as relenting in our purpose and seeming loth to leaue it and so set our hearts and hands to the plow of Gods husbandry that we neuer giue it ouer till we bring foorth plentifull fruits of holinesse that so after we may reape the haruest of heauenly happinesse In regard of the obiect Luk. 9. 62. also they must be intire and haue respect vnto all Gods Commandements desiring Psal 119. 6. resoluing and indeuouring to please God in all things both in flying and forsaking all manner of sinne which he hath forbidden and imbracing and practising whatsoeuer duties he hath inioyned and commanded So that it is not enough if with Herod we serue God in some things and take libertie to serue the deuill the world and our owne lusts in others that wee leaue some sinnes which are lesse pleasant or profitable and retaine others which bring more profit or delight nor that wee imbrace and practise some vertues and Christian duties which are more easie and lesse costly and neglect others which are more chargeable and require greater paines and diligence And when we are commanded by God to slay all the cursed Canaanites and Amalekites of sinfull corruptions wee must not put some only to the sword and keepe others aliue to pay the tribute of pleasure or profit to our carnall lusts neither kil and mortifie the leanest of this cursed cattell which serue vs for little or no vse and let the fattest liue as best seruing to feede our fleshly appetite but wee must deuote them all vnto God as an accursed thing and desire and resolue as much as in vs lyeth not to leaue any one aliue to carry tidings to the deuill of the slaughter of the rest Yea if there be an Agag which is more potent and powerfull in vs then any other we must take our first and chiefe care how that may be subdued and killed or such an Herodias and darling sinne that our flesh more doteth on then any other of our corruptions we must with most care and circumspection yea with most hatred and detestation in respect of our part regenerate put that farthest from vs as most hurting our Christian growth and hindring our proceedings in the wayes of godlinesse According to the exhortation of the Apostle Let Heb. 12. 1. vs lay aside euery weight and the sinne that doth so easily beset vs and let vs runne with patience the race that is set before vs. As on the other side the more difficulty wee finde in any holy duty by reason of that auersenesse which we feele in our corrupt nature vnto it the more vehement must our desires resolutions and indeuours be to imbrace and practise it euen as the trauailer taketh willingly most paines in going vp the hill that lieth in his way homewards and the Water-man imployeth the more strength and indeuour in handling his Oares when as he roweth against wind and tide then when they both fauour and further him §. Sect. 5 That our desires resolutions and indeuours must aime at the meanes as well as the end Thirdly that our desires resolutions and indeuours may bee sincere and acceptable vnto God it is required that we as well ayme in them at the meanes whereby they may bee accomplished as at the end and take all occasions and vse all helpes which may inable vs to Gods seruice and with like diligence auoide all lets and impediments whereby we might be hindered in it as we desire and indeuour to performe the seruice it selfe which God requireth For where he inioyeth any duty there he no lesse requireth the meanes and opportunities which inable vs thereunto and to thinke that we can performe the dutie and neglect these helpes is to imagine that wee can liue long and eate no food or come speedily to our iourneys end and neuer trauaile in the way that leadeth vnto it As therefore it was a vaine wish of Balaam to die the death of the righteous when as he neuer tooke care to leade a righteous life so is it no lesse vaine to desire that we may leade the life of the righteous when wee doe not desire resolue and indeuour to vse the meanes that inable vs to doe it And such are the desires and resolutions of those who out of blinde deuotion indeuour to leade a godly life continuing in their ignorance and neglecting all good meanes whereby they might come to the knowledge of Gods will and so conforme their liues in obedience vnto it who thinking it enough to haue a good meaning doe tyre themselues in their owne superstition and spend all their labour in vaine offering vnto God in stead of his pure seruice which hee hath commanded their owne will-worship and humane inuentions and traditions which he hath so often in his Word forbidden and condemned But quite contrary was the course and carriage of holy Dauid in his desire and resolution to leade a godly life for as he longed and had his heart euen broken with the vehemencie of his desires to keepe Gods Satutes and Lawes so with like earnestnesse hee hungred and thirsted after the meanes which might inable him vnto it which was to come into Gods Courts the visible place of his presence to heare his holy Word read and preached vnto him As the Psal 42. 1 2. Hart saith he panteth after the water-brookes so panteth my soule after thee O God my soule thirsteth for God for the liuing God When shall I come and appeare before God And againe O God thou art my God early will I seeke Psal 63. 1 2. thee my soule thirsteth for thee my flesh longeth for thee in a dry and thirsty land where no water is to see thy power and thy glory so as I haue seene thee in the Sanctuary §. Sect. 6 That they must not be lazie and idle but diligent and painfull Fourthly our desires resolutions and indeuours to leade a godly life must not be lazie and luskish idle and slothfull but exceeding industrious painfull and diligent in the vse of all good meanes whereby wee may attaine vnto it For being
thou Daquod iubes iube quod vis commandest and then command what thou wilt §. Sect. 2 Reasons moouing vs to imbrace piety first because it is most excellent And thus we generally see what piety is Let vs in the next place consider briefly of some arguments which may mooue vs to imbrace and practise it in the whole course of our liues The first is that piety and the duties of it are most excellent and to be preferred before righteousnesse both in regard of our iudgements which ought to esteeme them aboue the other in respect of the obiect God himselfe vnto whom immediatly they are to be performed who infinitely exceeding men the duties which wee owe vnto him are incomparably to bee preferred before those which are due to them In regard also of our hearts and affections which ought to imbrace with greater loue and desire those things which our iudgements doe most highly value and in respect of our indeuour and practice wherein we ought to giue priority and precedencie in regard of time and place vnto the duties of piety aboue all earthly things according to that of our Sauiour First seeke the Kingdome of God and his righteousnesse c. Againe Mat. 6. 33. Christ calleth the first Table inioyning piety The great Commandement Mat. 6. 38. vnto which the second is like but not equall For piety is the fountaine of righteousnesse and the alone sure foundation vpon which it standeth which if it wanteth or is built vpon any other ground as it were vpon a quagmire or the sands it will soone fall and come to ruine seeing the building can stand no longer then it hath a foundation to rest vpon as we daily see in the Morall and meere ciuill righteousnesse of worldlings which resting vpon their credit or profit or feare of humane Lawes doth last no longer then they lust It is the heart and head of Iustice which giueth life heate and motion vnto it without which it is but a dead trunke yea the very soule which doth informe it without which it is but a lothsome carkasse in Gods sight And therefore in the practice of a godly life we are more highly to esteeme and answerably with more care earnestnesse and delight to put in practice the duties of piety which concerne God immediately then the duties of righteousnesse which respect our neighbours As for example we must loue and feare and obey God more then men and when both will not stand together we must neglect the one in comparison of the other as wee see in the example of the Apostles who when men forbade that which God commanded obeyed him rather Act. 5. 29. then them But yet seeing all duties both to God and men are commanded of God and in that regard we ferue or disobey him mediately and indirectly when wee doe or neglect the duties which concerne them therefore in performing the duties of the first Table in our iudgement affection and practice we are to obserue a due proportion betweene them comparing like with like the greatest with the greatest middle with middle and the least with the least neyther are the ceremonies and circumstances and meanes of pious duties to be preferred before the maine and substantiall duties of righteousnesse as we see in Gods owne choice vvho preferred mercy before sacrifice and the duties of righteousnesse Hos 6. 6. Esa 58. 3 6. Mat. 12. 1 2. c. Leuit. 24. 9. Exod. 29. 33. mercy and loue before an externall fast or the outvvard rest of the Sabbath vvhich is but a meanes of the seruice of God and of our spirituall resting from sinne §. Sect. 3 The second reason is taken from the profit of Piety The second reason is taken from the profit of piety vvhich may much induce vs to the imbracing of it For if mens hearts are set chiefely vpon Psal 4. 6. gaine and are ready to enquire after it vpon all occasions according to that of the Psalmist There be many that say Who will shew vs any good And if their affections and desires are inflamed and inlarged according to the greatnesse of the profit vvhich they pursue then vvhen our iudgements are conuinced and persvvaded that there is most gaine in godlinesse there is great reason why our hearts should be set vpon it as our chiefest treasure But the Apostle telleth vs that godlinesse is gaine yea 1. Tim. 6. 6. great gaine with contentation where he maketh not the gaine of godlinesse to depend vpon the condition of our contentment as though there were no profit in it vnlesse wee be contented with it but that it is the effect and an inseparable companion of godlinesse to make vs contented with all estates and therefore not gaine onely if it be ioyned with content but because it alwaies bringeth with it contentation Euen as the Sunne is said to bee comfortable not if it giue light but because it giueth light it doth bring vs comfort with his beames and brightnesse Now this profit of piety is incomparably greater then the gaine of the whole world for this is profitable but for some purposes but the other for all things that onely for the present but this also for eternity according to that of the Apostle Godlinesse is profitable vnto all things hauing promise of the life that 1. Tim. 4. 8. now is and of that which is to come In this life it assureth vs of Gods grace and fauour that we are his children and heyres of his promises who are continually vnder his protection and thereby safe from all danger that though we haue but little yet there is cause of great contentment seeing our small pittance is better then the riches of many wicked it being a pledge Psal 37. 16. of Gods loue and an earnest penny of our heauenly happinesse That we are blessed in all estates prosperity and aduersity pouerty and riches health and sicknesse life and death because God that loueth vs will by Rom. 8. 28. his wisdome and power cause all things to worke together for our good In the life to come also godlinesse will be most gainefull for when all worldly profits are vtterly ceased and the glory and beauty of them withered and vanished out of sight then shall we finde most profit in our piety and reape a ioyfull haruest of all our holy indeuours Then shall we with confidence approach into Gods presence when as we expect that Crowne of glory which he hath freely promised to those who haue serued him in holinesse and righteousnesse all the daies of this life and hauing on this wedding garment we shall be admitted into the Bridall chamber of our Head and Husband Iesus Christ and there eternally solace ourselues in the fruition of his loue and of that heauenly happinesse which he hath prepared for vs. Whereas contrariwise all worldly things without piety are vnprofitable to all in many things and in all things to many giuing
haue before spoken and now it remaineth that wee speake of the hauing of God in our hearts and affections wills and resolutions Of which we will intreate first generally and then more specially The generall duty which compriseth all the particulars is that knowing and acknowledging the Lord to be in himselfe the chiefe Goodnesse and infinite in all perfection and our most gracious and louing Father in Iesus Christ we doe adhere and cleaue vnto him with all our soules and wills hearts and affections resoluing to consecrate our selues wholy to his worship and with the vttermost of our indeuour to please him in all things by conforming our liues in all holy obedience vnto his reuealed will leauing and forsaking whatsoeuer he condemneth as euill and imbracing and practizing all that he commandeth as good And this the Lord requireth in the first place of all those who serue him Thou shalt feare the Deut 10. 20. 13. 4. Ios 22. 5. Lord thy God him shalt thou serue and to him shalt thou cleaue And againe Yee shall walke after the Lord your God and feare him and keepe his Commandements and obey his voice and yee shall serue him and cleaue vnto him So Barnabas exhorteth the new Conuerts of Antioch that with full purpose of Act. 13. 23. heart they would cleaue vnto the Lord. And the Apostle perswadeth not to the bare practice of good duties but that wee cleaue vnto that which is good Which holy resolution was in Dauid who purposed in his heart that Psal 17. 3. his mouth should not transgresse and fully resolued that if the Lord would teach him the way of his statutes he would keepe them with his whole heart and Psal 119 33 34. vnto the end The which resolution is necessary vnto all those who intend to leade a godly life wherein there are so many lets difficulties and discouragements that if wee be not fully resolued to passe by or ouercome them wee shall eyther not beginne or soone giue ouer to proceede in the Christian course And therefore our holy desires to please God in all things must be armed and confirmed with strong resolutions that we will do our vttermost indeuour to attaine vnto our desires or else they will be but like those idle and vain desires of the sluggards of which Salomon speaketh who desire and haue nothing because they are but bare wishers neuer Pro. 13. 4. purposing to take any paines for the satisfying of their desires Neither can such be said to serue God with their whole hearts but with a part only For as Philosophy teacheth vs there are two faculties in the heart of man the one called concupiscible which desireth and imbraceth that good which reason discouereth the other the irascible faculty which being displeased with those lets and oppositions that hinder the fruition of the good desired armeth vs with resolution to set vpon and ouercome them And with both these we must serue God cleauing vnto him and his will with the desires of our heart as the chiefe good and resoluing to inioy him at any price and to doe that which is pleasing vnto him notwithstanding all difficulties and dangers which oppose vs in the way §. Sect. 3 The properties of sound resolution As first that it must be vniuersall c. But seeing many men deceiue themselues with shadowes and shewes of good purposes and resolutions of cleauing vnto God and pleasing him by their seruice it will not be amisse to set downe some properties and signes whereby we may know that vnto which the Scriptures so earnestly perswade vs. And first this resolution ought to be generall and vniuersall extending it selfe not only to some few of many duties but vnto all without exception We must with Dauid haue respect vnto all Gods Commandements Psal 119. 6. Col. 110. Heb. 13. 18. and walke worthy of the Lord vnto all pleasing being fruitfull in euery good worke and hauing a good conscience in all things as the Apostle speaketh Secondly it must be diligent and painefull in the vse of all good meanes whereby we may attaine vnto our end like vnto the resolution of worldlings in compassing earthly things who spare for no paines for the atchieuing their purposes but labour night and day by Sea and land for the compassing of their riches pleasures and preferments So as wee may say with Dauid My soule followeth hard after thee and neuer rest in our Psal 63. 8. pursuite till with the Spouse in the Canticles we inioy him whom our soule loueth Thirdly it must be so magnanimous and couragious that nothing may be able to daunt or dismay it and the greater the difficulties and dangers be which crosse vs in our Christian courses the more must wee double and redouble our resolutions to withstand and ouercome them though it be with the losse of riches friends yea euen life it selfe And such a resolution was in good Ioshua who though all the people did leaue Ios 24. 15. Ruth 1. 16. the Lord vowed himselfe and his family vnto his seruice And in Ruth whose resolution of adhering to Naomi and her God could not bee hindred by any disswasion And finally in the Apostle Paul who when hee was perswaded by his friends that he should not expose himselfe to the perill of persecution by going vp to Ierusalem breaketh through all difficulties in the strength of his couragious resolution What meane you to Act. 21. 13. weepe and breake my heart for I am ready not to be bound onely but also to die at Hierusalem for the name of the Lord Iesus Yea when the holy Ghost himselfe witnessed that in euery Citie bonds and afflictions did abide him his resolution made him constant in his course But none of these things saith he moue Act. 20. 23 23 me neither count I my life deare vnto my selfe so that I might finish my course with ioy c. Fourthly it is the property of this resolution of adhering vnto God to ioyne with this fortitude and magnanimity true humility not grounding our courage vpon our owne strength as Peter did who trusting to the ardencie and vnchangeablenesse of his loue towards Christ resolued that though all men should forsake him yet hee would Mat. 26. 33 34. not For if we leane vpon this weake Reede it will most faile and deceiue vs when we most rely vpon it but being humbled in the sight and sense of our owne weakenesse and frailty wee must wholly rest vpon the power and promises of God and like the child in the mothers armes wee must cling vnto him with all our strength but not so much trust to the firmenesse of our hold as to his clasping of vs knowing that if he withdraw his strength and leaue vs we shall soone cease cleauing vnto him and fall into those tentations which the deuill the world or our owne flesh shall suggest vnto vs. Wee must say with the Apostle Paul I am able
bring him to the King of terrours §. Sect. 3 Of hope in God what it is and wherein it consisteth From this affiance in God ariseth hope for when knowing and beleeuing God and his sauing attributes wee trust in him for the accomplishment of all his gracious promises then doe we by hope expect the accomplishment of them euen when they are deferred with patience and comfort knowing that God is immutable in his loue and most true of his Word with which hope we are sustained in all afflictions that wee doe not faint vnder their burthen seeing we hope for deliuerance in Gods due time are armed against all assaults of our spirituall enemies with this helmet of saluation in expectation of assured victory and stayed with this anchor in our Christian course notwithstanding all the tempestuous stormes and boysterous blasts of trialls and tentations The which anchor is not fastened on the fleeting and fayling sands of our owne worth workes and merits but vpon the firme ground of Gods immutable loue mercy goodnesse power and truth which will neuer faile those that rest vpon them according to that of the Psalmist They that know thy Name Psal 9. 10. will put their trust in thee for thou Lord hast not forsaken them that seeke thee And thus Abraham hoped against hope being fully perswaded that what Rom. 4. 18 21. God had promised he was able also to performe And the Apostle exhorteth vs to hold fast the profession of our faith without wauering because hee is Heb. 10. 23. faithfull that hath promised The obiect of this hope are future good things which God hath promised as fruition of good and freedome and deliuerance from euill which are not yet seene for then there were no place Rom. 8. 24 25. for hope but certainely expected in Gods good time But the mayne and Ps 62. 1 2. 121. 1. principall obiect of our hope is heauenly happinesse which wee shall inioy in soule and body at Christs comming to Iudgement whereof it is Tit. 2. 13. called the hope of saluation and the hope of eternall life The chiefe properties 1. Thes 5. 8. Tit. 1. 2. of this hope are First that it be patient Secondly that it be certaine and assured of the first the Apostle speaketh If we hope for that wee see not then doe we with patience waite for it and in this regard calleth it Rom. 8. 25. the patience of hope in our Lord Iesus Christ Of which patience he telleth vs 1. Thes 1. 3. that we haue neede because God oftentimes delayeth to accomplish his promises as though he had forgotten both vs and them Secondly it Heb. 10. 36. must be certaine and assured whereof it is compared to an anchor which if it fayleth in a tempest it putteth the ship in great danger of foundring and perishing And therefore the Apostle desireth that the Hebrewes might haue full assurance of hope vnto the end which if wee haue it will Heb. 6. 11. make vs neuer to be ashamed seeing God vpon whom we waite will neuer faile to accomplish his promises And this is that hope vnto which the Rom. 5. 5. Scriptures exhort vs. So the Psalmist Waite on the Lord be of good courage Ps 27. 14 37 7 and hee shall strengthen thine heart waite I say on the Lord. And againe Rest in the Lord and waite patiently for him §. Sect. 4 Of the meanes of hope Which that we may labour after let vs consider that it is most profitable and necessary vnto all that will leade a godly and Christian life For it is not onely a part thereof as being one of the three principall vertues which the Apostle commendeth vnto vs but a notable meanes whereby 1. Cor. 13. we are mooued and inabled to labour after all other vertues and to put in practice all other duties because we are assured of the fruit of our labour and hopefully expect the obtaining of it without which hope we would be vtterly discouraged sit still and doe nothing Againe this hope maketh vs not to bee ashamed in middest of all reproches and disgraces which we suffer for Christs sake and causeth vs with him to runne with patience Rom. 5. 5. Heb. 12. 1 2. the race which is set before vs in expectation of that ioy which is set before vs. It maketh vs not onely patient but ioyfull in afflictions yea euen to glory Rom. 5. 2 3. in our reioycing in hope of the glory of God in all our tribulations It confirmeth our faith from which it springeth and maketh vs cheerefull in all Christian duties It quickeneth and reioyceth our drooping hearts and not onely maketh the way of godlinesse delightfull vnto vs but vs also pleasing and accepted of God It is an helmet of saluation to defend vs Psal 147. 11. against our spirituall enemies yea it selfe saueth vs as the Apostle speaketh 1. Thes 5. 8. Rom. 8. 24. because it moueth God to saue vs for as the Psalmist saith He is the Sauiour of them that hope in him Finally it maketh vs blessed in the assured Psal 17. 7. expectation of our blessednesse For happy is hee that hath the God of Iacob Psal 146. 5. Ier. 17. 7. for his helpe and whose hope is in the Lord his God Whereas contrariwise without this hope we are as the Apostle telleth vs of all men most miserable 1. Cor. 15. 19. hauing neither the comforts of this life which worldlings inioy nor expectation of better in the life to come Let vs therefore labour after this hope and vse carefully all good meanes whereby we may attaine vnto it And seeing it is the gift of God and grace of his holy Spirit let vs in the 2. Thes 2. 16. first place beg it at his hands by frequent and feruent prayer assuring our selues that he who is the God of our hope will not deny to giue it vnto Rom. 15. 13. vs. Secondly let vs meditate often vpon Gods sauing attributes of power mercy goodnesse truth c. and so our imperfections and vnworthinesse will not make vs despaire nor weaken our hopes in expectation of his promises Thirdly let vs often heare reade and meditate in the holy Scriptures which were purposely written that wee through patience and Rom. 15. 4. comfort of them might haue hope Fourthly let vs in all the seruice which we offer vnto God auoid hypocrisie and serue and worship him in sincerity and vprightnesse of heart For the hypocrites hope shall perish and Iob 8. 13 14. be cut off like a Spiders web as Bildad speaketh Lastly if wee would haue hope in God let vs leade a godly life and serue him all our dayes in holinesse and righteousnesse for the flesh of Gods holy ones shall rest in hope Act. 2. 26. whereas when a wicked man dieth his expectation shall perish and the hope of Pro. 11. 7. the vniust men
perisheth as the Wiseman speaketh CAP. V. Of the loue of God and diuers vertues which spring from it §. Sect. 1 Of the loue of God what it is and wherein it consisteth and of the measure and meanes of it THe next mayne and principall dutie is the loue of God when as knowing beleeuing and remembring his infinitenesse in all goodnesse excellency beauty and all perfection and his inestimable loue grace and bounty towards vs we doe loue him againe with all our heart soule minde and strength aboue all things and all other things in him and for his sake So that the causes of our loue towards God are his goodnesse excellencie beautie and perfection in himselfe and his goodnesse grace and benignity towards vs. For goodnesse is the onely obiect of loue neither doe wee loue any thing which is not either truely good or at least appeareth good vnto vs. And therfore seeing God is the summum bonum and chiefe goodnesse when his nature appeareth to be so we should loue him chiefly and place our chiefe happinesse in his fruition But yet because in this state of corruption we are full of selfe-loue therefore wee cannot loue God perfectly and absolutely for himselfe as we ought till wee bee assured of his loue towards vs and haue it shed abroad in our hearts by the holy Ghost for we loue him because he loued vs first as the Apostle speaketh Now the Rom. 5. 5. 1. Ioh. 4. 19. measure of our loue wherewith we are to loue God ought to be without measure both because he is immeasurable in goodnesse in his owne nature and also because his loue towards vs hath exceeded all measure the which appeareth not only in our creation whereby he hath giuen vs vnto our selues and made vs his most excellent creatures but also in our Redemption wherein he hath giuen himselfe vnto vs euen his onely begotten and dearely beloued Sonne of the same nature with himselfe to die for our sinnes and rise againe for our iustification and that when we were not friends but of no strength strangers sinners enemies vnto him and his grace the slaues of Satan and children of wrath as well as others And therefore if he thus loued vs when we merited no loue yea when we deserued wrath and hatred how much more if it were possible should wee loue him who is most louely and infinitely deserueth our loue But because our nature being finite we cannot loue him infinitely wee ought therefore to loue him as much as is possible for vs with all our hearts soules and strength Or if we cannot thus doe in respect of our corruption yet at least we must loue him in sincerity and vprightnesse of heart as much as we can and be heartily sorry that wee can loue him no better We must loue him aboue all things in the world as house lands parents children wiues yea our owne liues and be ready with all cheerefulnesse to lay them downe for him as he hath first laid downe his life for vs. For if we ought to loue all things in him and for him then ought wee to loue him much more preferring his glory euen before our owne saluation when as they come in comparison the one with the other And this is that loue of God which is to be imbraced of vs as being in it selfe a most excellent vertue and in diuers respects to be preferred before faith and hope 1. Cor. 13. 13. and to vs most profitable feeing it assureth vs of Gods loue and remission Luk. 7. 47. of our sinnes transformeth vs after a manner into the diuine nature for where is loue there is likenesse and it is the nature of it to change the louer as much as may be into the party beloued and finally weaneth our hearts from the loue of the world and earthly vanities and lifteth vp our affections and thoughts vnto God and heauenly things maketh all that we doe or suffer for Gods sake easie and tolerable yea sweete and comfortable for it seeketh not her owne beareth all things endureth all things it inableth 1. Cor. 13. 6 7. vs to offer vnto God cheerefull obedience and to performe all duties of holinesse and righteousnesse required vnto a godly life with ioy and delight which without it are irkesome and vnpleasant yea intolerable and impossible vnto flesh and blood Now the meanes whereby our hearts may be inflamed with this diuine fire of Gods loue are first that we often meditate vpon Gods infinite goodnesse excellency beauty and perfection which make him worthy of all loue and how hee hath exercised these sauing attributes towards vs in our creation and preseruation in our redemption giuing his only Sonne to die for vs and for his sake forgiuing vs all our sinnes and in bestowing vpon vs all the good things which wee inioy in this life or hope for in the life to come §. Sect. 2 Of the zeale of Gods glory what it is and wherein it consisteth Now the vertues and graces which arise and issue from loue are diuers as zeale of Gods glory ioy and reioycing in God thankefulnesse and obedience Zeale is the fruit and effect of our feruent loue towards God and as it were a flame arising from this diuine fire whereby we are made most carefull and earnest in seeking Gods glory both in aduancing and furthering all meanes whereby it is furthered and in opposing hindring and remoouing all the impediments whereby it may bee hindred And this is to be shewed in all other vertues as being the intension of them and in all duties which we performe vnto God So the Apostle telleth vs generally that it is good to be zealously affected alwayes in a good thing Gal. 4. 18. Our loue towards God and hatred of sinne must be zealous and hot and not cold or luke-warme our repentance must bee ioyned with zeale Bee zealous and amend We must zealously worship and serue God according Apoc. 3. 19. to that of the Apostle feruent in Spirit seruing the Lord. Wee must not Rom. 12. 11. Tit. 2. 14. 1. Thes 3. 10. onely doe good workes but be zealous of them Wee must pray with zeale exceedingly and powre out our hearts like water before the Lord with Lam. 2. 19. zeale we must preach the Word and be inwardly affected with that wee speake that so also we may affect others and we must with zeale heare the Word and euen hunger and thirst after this spirituall food of our soules 1. Pet. 2. 1. that we may grow vp thereby But yet our care must be that our zeale be guided with knowledge and not shew it selfe in all things but as the Apostle speaketh onely in a good matter and also that in aduancing of the Gal. 4. 18. meanes of Gods glory and remoouing the impediments wee keepe our selues within the limits of our callings Now the meanes to attaine vnto this zeale is to consider often and seriously how great things
his owne good the preseruation of his life the welfare and health of his body the chastity of himselfe and his wife the prosperity of his estate and his owne credit and good name so ought we vvith like loue to seeke by all meanes the good and preseruation of our neighbours in euery of these and all other respects The speciall and spirituall loue vvhereby a man loueth himselfe causeth him chiefly to seeke the inriching of his soule vvith all sanctifying grace and to further by all meanes his euerlasting saluation and vvith such loue also vve must loue our neighbours doing them all the good vve can both in respect of their bodies and states but principally in seeking their spirituall good and the eternall saluation of their bodies and soules §. Sect. 10 That we must loue our neighbors as Christ hath loued vs. But because our loue of our selues by reason of our naturall corruption is whilst we continue in this life weake and imperfect and therfore no fit rule for our loue towards our neighbours to be squared by therefore our Sauiour hath propounded vnto vs a much more perfect patterne for our imitation euen that most admirable and diuine loue wherewith hee hath loued vs This is my Commandement that ye loue one another as I haue loued Ioh. 15. 12. you As therefore Christ hath loued vs first before we loued him or any waies deserued his loue and hereby moued vs to loue him againe so 1. Ioh. 4. 19. ought wee to preuent one another with our loue and thereby prouoke them to returne vnto vs the like dutie Secondly as Christ loued all his Rom. 5. 8. elect freely without any respect of merit yea when we were strangers sinners and enemies not because of any goodnesse in vs but that by his Loue he might bring vs to good so ought our loue to be free and not mercinary so farre foorth as it may redound to our owne profit but we must loue strangers that thereby we may make them our familiar acquaintance Our enemies that we may make them our friends and euen those that are now euill and sinners that we may bring them to grace and goodnesse Thirdly as Christ loued all the elect without respect of persons both old and young rich and poore base and noble wise and simple so ought we to loue all sorts and conditions of men in whom we finde already or may hope to finde heereafter the signes and markes of Gods election Fourthly as Christ loued vs perfectly in respect of the manner with a sincere and ardent loue and not in tongue and profession onely but in deed and truth so as no waters of affliction nor death it selfe could Cant. 8 6. drowne or dampe so ought we striue to loue one another and to be ready according to his example when iust occasion is offered to seale and approoue 1. Iohn 3. 16. our loue towards them euen with the shedding of our blood Fifthly as Christ loued vs who were in him elected of his Father in a speciall and peculiar manner aboue all others and out of this loue hath giuen himselfe for vs according to that of the Apostle Who hath loued me Gal. 2. 20. and giuen himselfe for mee so ought we to loue all with a generall and common loue but Gods elect with a peculiar and speciall loue aboue the rest and be ready as the Apostle speaketh to doe good vnto all but especially Gal. 6. 10. vnto those who are of the household of faith Lastly as Christ loueth vs with a constant loue and to the end and will not reiect vs for our frailties and infirmities because in his loue he respecteth not his owne profit but our saluation So ought our loue to be constant towards our neighbours and not to languish and faint vpon slight occasions respecting herein not our owne profit but their benefit and aboue all the euerlasting saluation of their bodies and soules CAP. X. Of the reasons which may moue vs to imbrace charity §. Sect. 1 Of the excellency of charity ANd thus haue I shewed what is that charity both towards our selues and our neighbours which is required in the second Table In the next place I will set downe some reasons which may moue vs to imbrace it all which will reduce vnto these their heads the excellency vtility and necessity of it The excellency of this charity herein appeareth in that our Sauiour Christ maketh it the summe of all other duties and vertues required in the second Mat. 22. 39. Table so that if we haue charity we haue all morall vertues if that bee wanting we are destitute of them all Yea the Apostles not without the direction of his holy Spirit doe seeme to goe further making this charity the epitome and summe of the whole Law He that loueth another saith Rom. 13. 8. Paul hath fulfilled the Law If ye fulfill the royall Law saith Iames according to the Scripture thou shalt loue thy neighbour as thy selfe ye doe well Where either by a Synecdoche of the whole for the part we are as some doe to vnderstand the second Table onely or because true obedience to it doth necessarily inferre our obedience to the first in that it is an inseparable fruit and vndoubted signe of it it may not vnfitly comprehend our totall obedience to the whole Law Secondly in that the Apostle preferreth 1. Cor. 12. 31. 13. 13. it before those chiefe and fundamentall vertues Faith and Hope and that both because if we consider them meerely in themselues it is of a more excellent nature and also in respect of the extent both of latitude and time for whereas they respect our selues only and our owne saluation this extendeth to the good and saluation of many others and whereas they continue onely for this life charity attaineth to its greatest perfection in the life to come and shall euer remaine as a principall part of our euerlasting ioyes And thus also the Apostle Peter commendeth charity vnto vs aboue all other duties Aboue all things saith he haue feruent 1. Pet. 4. 8. charity among your selues for charity shall couer the multitude of sinnes Finally the Apostle sheweth the excellencie of charity whereas hee exhorteth vs aboue all things to put on Charity as being the bond of perfectnesse or the most perfect bond seeing wee are thereby vnited vnto Christ our Col. 3. 14. Head and as fellow-members one with another For howsoeuer we are thus vnited first and principally by the Spirit of God and a liuely faith yet this bond of vnion is perfected and made more firme and strong by this grace of charity which transforming and changing vs into the very nature of the things beloued doth cause vs to become one with them and so inseparably vnited that nothing in the world no not death Cant. 8. 6. it selfe is of sufficient force to pull vs asunder §. Sect. 2 Of the profit of charity in
his gracious promises whereby he hath assured vs that he will turne all things euen our troubles Rom. 8. 28. Psal 84. 11. and afflictions vnto our good that he will be a Sunne and a Shield and will giue grace and glory and withhold no good thing from them that walke vprightly that if we first seeke the Kingdome of God and his righteousnesse hee will Matth. 6. 33. Heb. 13. 5. giue vs all other things as aduantages to the bargaine Vnto which if we adde the consideration of Gods infallible Truth in making good all his gracious promises we may well be contented in all estates seeing hee will neuer faile nor forsake vs as the Apostle speaketh And lastly if we would haue this contentation in all estates wee must cast our eye as well vpon that which we haue as vpon that which we want and thinke vpon those innumerable blessings which we inioy the least whereof we haue not deserued as well as vpon those things wherein we are defectiue wee must not so much looke vpon those few that are preferred before vs as vpon those multitudes that come farre behinde vs who want many of those good things which wee possesse though it may bee they haue deserued them better then we And if by these and the like meanes we nourish this contentation then shall wee haue a salue in readinesse fit for all sores a medicine against all maladies and cordiall water which will reuiue and comfort vs against all those qualmes of earthly discouragements that hinder our proceedings in the waies of godlinesse and make the seruice of God displeasant and irkesome vnto vs. Wee shall goe on cheerefully and ioyfully in our Christian course without murmuring and repining when we finde a foule passage or stumbling blockes in our way and the better please God in all things when as in all things we are well pleased with him CAP. X. Of the last maine duty of the daily exercise which is Prayer §. Sect. 1 That we must pray daily and continually THe last daily duty to be performed of vs is effectuall and feruent prayer from which not any day nor any part of the 1. Thes 5. 17. Ephe. 6. 18. Luke 18. 1. 21. 36. 2. Tim. 4. 2. day is to be exempted for we must as the Apostle speaketh pray without ceasing alwaies watching thereunto with all perseuerance To which end tendeth the parable of the vnrighteous Iudge propounded by our Sauiour Christ In which regard that may be said of prayer which the Apostle requireth in preaching namely that it must be done in season and out of season if at least any time may bee said vnseasonable for this holy duty whereby we are not to vnderstand with those ancient Heretikes that we must spend our whole time in prayer and doe nothing else for the Apostle Paul himselfe spent much of his time in preaching writing disputing and in other duties of his calling and yet as hee exhorted others so hee often professeth that it was his owne practice to pray continually and without ceasing And our Sauiour Christ also who requireth this at our hands and propounded Rom. 1. 9. Col. 1. 3. Eph. 1. 16. himselfe as a patterne of his owne precept spent much of his time in other exercizes as preaching conferring doing miracles and such like But that wee alwaies bee ready and haue a disposition to prayer at all times that we thinke no time exempted when any fit and good occasion is offered whether it bee night or day or any part of either of them nor any place excluded if there bee cause and opportunity for we must pray euery where lifting vp holy hands 1. Tim. 2. 8. without wrath or doubting at home and abroade in our businesses and vacancie from labour And thus hee expoundeth himselfe interpreting these words without ceasing and alwayes of euery opportunity and Ephes 6. 18. seasonable time when God either ordinarily or extraordinarily giueth vnto vs any fit occasion §. Sect. 2 Of ordinary prayers at set times and how often to bee performed Concerning our ordinary prayers they are for the most part limited to set and ordinary times although we are not to be so strictly tied to our howres but that they may be changed from one to another vpon necessary occasions And they ought to be performed in a solemne manner with due preparation conioyning together the parts of prayer confession petition and thankesgiuing with due respect both of place and time Neither are these prayers to be continued throughout the whole day but in the seuerall parts thereof as shall best fit with our occasions and also with our zeale and deuotion Notwithstanding we are to pray euen after this manner not once onely but often according to the examples of the Saints in former times So Dauid professeth that he praied vnto God in Psal 55. 17. Dan. 6. 10. the morning at noone and in the euening and Daniel so stinteth himselfe to solemne prayer vpon his knees three times a day that he would not neglect it vpon any occasion And howsoeuer no man can stint these set times of praier vnto a certaine number but it must be left to be measured out according to seuerall occasions leisure opportunity and the proportion of euery ones gift of grace faith zeale and deuotion which they haue receiued which being so various diuers and different it is no more possible to appoint a certaine measure vnto them then a size of apparell to fit euery ones body or a proportion of meate which should satisfy euery ones appetite Or if we should what were it but like the Tyrant that would haue one bed to serue for men of all statures to racke out and torture the ouer-short deuotion of those that are children in Christ and to mayme and cut theirs shorter who are men growne and come to a perfect age Yet seeing all Scriptures are written for our learning me thinks these examples should not bee in vaine but well-befitting for the most of Gods children to follow and imitate especially in this light of the Gospell and when the gifts of the Spirit doe so abound And therefore I would perswade all good Christians that besides their prayers and 1. Tim. 4. 4 5. thankesgiuings before and after meales whereby Gods blessing is obtained and the creatures sanctified to their vse they would at least thrice a day make their solemn and set prayers vnto almighty God that is first betimes in the morning priuately by themselues before they go about their ordinary affaires and workes of their calling And then in the family some time in the forenoone when as the houshold may with most conueniency meet all together and either before or after Supper when as we are to goe vnto our rest or if wee be vnder gouernement and in such families wherein these duties are neglected then must we performe them priuately by our selues wherein we are to pray in especiall manner for all those who
Lord keepe the City the watchman waketh but in vaine It is in vaine for vs to rise earely to sit vp late and to eate the bread of sorrowes not affording our selues a good meales meate out of our earnest desire to become rich For if wee neglect Gods seruice the Lord will blow vpon our labours and then though we sow much we shall bring in little wee shall Hag. 1. 6 9. eate but not haue enough we shall drinke but not be satisfied clothe our selues and not bee warme and earning wages for our worke we shall not bee the richer but put it all into a bag with holes Or if our labours prosper for the increasing of worldly wealth yet Gods blessing being wanting it shall doe vs more hurt then good bringing with it no sound comfort and contentment but carking care feare and griefe whereas the blessing of the Lord maketh rich and hee addeth no sorrow with it as the Wiseman speaketh Pro. 10. 22. And if we thus performe the duties of our callings in loue towards God and in obedience to his commandement and desire by prayer his blessing vpon our labours and yeeld him praise when he hath vouchsafed to giue it then shall we therein doe seruice vnto God though our condition and the workes of our vocation be neuer so meane and base as well as in hearing the Word or receiuing the Sacrament or in performing the most excellent duty which he hath commanded seeing though they differ in the matter yet not in respect of our minde and manner of doing them And so we may be assured not only that the Lord will prosper vs in them and giue them such good successe in this world as shall be most fitting for his glory and our spirituall good but also will richly reward them among other duties of his seruice with euerlasting ioy and happinesse in the life to come The which argument the Apostle vseth to perswade seruants to walke faithfully in their calling obeying their masters according to Col. 3. 23 24. the flesh and herein performing their duty with all cheerefulnesse and singlenesse of heart as vnto the Lord and not vnto men knowing that of the Lord they should receiue the reward of the inheritance because in seruing their masters they serued him §. Sect. 8 Of the vertues which must accompany vs in the duties of our callings The next thing to be considered is the vertues which ought to accompany vs in the right and religious performance of the duties of our callings For howsoeuer all vertues and graces are necessary vnto the person that must thus walke acceptably before God and scarce any can bee wanting to the well-performing of any good action yet there are some which more specially and properly belong to these duties of our callings and doe so immediately concerne them that they can in no good sort bee done of vs vnlesse in some measure we be qualified with them As first knowledge and iudgement whereby we must be inabled to discerne betweene good and euill right and wrong which must be our light to guide vs in all our wayes and our loade-starre to direct vs in all our courses which if it bee wanting we shall walke in darkenesse and be apt to fall into many errours Secondly affiance in God whereby we cast our selues vpon his promises and prouidence in the vse of lawfull meanes the which the Psalmist requireth of vs Commit thy way saith he vnto the Lord trust also in him and Psal 37. 5. he shall bring it to passe The which we may more easily doe if wee rightly consider our Sauiours argument which he vseth to the same purpose for if the Lord take care to feede the fowles of the aire which take no care for themselues and clotheth the lillies of the field which neither toyle nor spin how much more will hee prouide for vs all things necessary who rest vpon him in the vse of all lawfull courses and take moderate care and Mat. 6. 25 28. conuenient paines to serue his prouidence which affiance if it bee wanting we shall be subiect to innumerable discouragements macerate our selues with carking care and rush vpon all occasions into the vse of vnlawfull meanes when lawfull are wanting thereby shifting for our selues because we haue no assurance that God will prouide for vs. Thirdly wee must be accompanied with a good conscience both towards God and towards men and willing with the Apostle to liue honestly wee must with Act. 24. 16. him keep it in all things For hauing alwayes in our company this Monitour Heb. 13. 18. and Iudge it will notably preserue vs from all secret sinnes and craftie conueyances whereby we are naturally apt to wrong our neighbours that we may benefit our selues from all halting dissembling and double dealing when as it may be so cunningly and closely carried that respect of our credit worldly shame nor legall punishment are no sufficient bonds to restraine vs from them and from sloth and vnfaithfulnesse in performing our duties when no eye of man can take notice of it Fourthly we must haue contentation for our companion whereby we are in all things contented with Gods good pleasure and thinke that estate and condition best for vs in which he hath placed vs giuing indifferent welcome to prosperity or aduersity pouerty or riches gaine or losse because they are messengers alike of his sending and though some more then others doe in rougher tearmes deliuer his message yet when we doe entertaine them aright they all assure vs of his loue as being meanes to further our saluation And of this we haue an example in the Apostle Paul Who had learned Phil. 4. 12. both how to be abased and how to abound to be full and to be hungry to exceede and suffer want Vnto which if we attaine then shall we not be discontented with the basenesse of our callings nor enuie others their greater preferments their lesse labours and more gaines we shall not bee set vpon the racke of ambition aspiring daily after higher dignity seeing the place in which we are being of Gods appointing is most fitting for vs. Neither can any calling be thought too base for vs wherin acceptable seruice may be offered vnto God yea wherein he ioyneth with vs as our helper and assistant and rewards the paines which we take in them with no lesse wages then an heauenly inheritance We shall be preserued from that deadly dropsie of vnsatiable auarice for our conuersation may bee without Heb. 13. 5. 1. Tim. 6. 6. couetousnesse if we come to thinke godlinesse the greatest gaine and can bee content with such things as we haue And consequently we shall walke honestly in our callings when being contented with our estate and condition we will vse no indirect and vnlawfull meanes nor fraudulent violent or vniust courses to inrich our selues with other mens goods And goe on in our duty with much comfort and inward peace when
ouer-measure we are to take speciall care that wee vse them with due moderation For seeing recreation in the vse of things indifferent is not simply and absolutely good but only as it is rightly vsed according to the rule of reason and that is superfluous which exceedeth this rule and defectiue which commeth short of it therefore wee must carefully conforme our selues vnto it and not recreate our selues more or lesse then nature requireth or then is necessary for the preseruing of our health and strength and our better fitting for more serious imployments More specially this moderation in our recreations must extend both to our minds and hearts and to the time which is spent in them Wee must moderate our mindes that we doe not too highly value them but esteeming them in the number of things indifferent wee must cause them to Dandum est aliquod interuallū animo ita tamen vt non resoluatur sed vt remittatur Senec. Epist 15. giue place vnto duties which are simply good and of greater importance when they cannot conueniently stand together Our hearts also must bee bounded with moderation in respect of our affections and passions so as we burst not out into anger and rage when we are crossed in our sports a vsuall fault that accompanieth the pleasure of hawking and gaming and neither wax proud of our owne skill and actiuity nor be enuious against those which doe excell vs in them But especially wee must watch ouer our selues that they doe not steale away our hearts for this were with Salomon in seeking pleasure to lose our selues in a labyrinth of delights 1. King 11. 4. and for the inioying of trifles to forgoe that Iewell wherein God chiefly Pro. 23. 26. delighteth and desireth aboue all other things to haue in his keeping And though wee vse them for our delight yet we must take heede that wee make them like seruants to waite in the out-roomes to come at our call and to depart when we haue no further neede of their seruice and not like our best beloued admit them to keepe residence in the priuy Chamber of our hearts so fixing and fastning our loue and affection vpon them that we cannot indure to haue them out of our sight For then wee shall not onely be in danger of spending too much time about them but after wee haue done with them they will so vnsettle our hearts and weane our affections from all good duties that we shall not without much labour reduce them into good frame nor make them fit without distraction to performe any religious duty as hearing reading praying meditating or else the workes of our ordinary callings And therefore though we vse pleasures yet we must take heede that we doe not with Salomon giue our selues vnto Eccles 2. 2 3. them for of such laughter we may rightly say it is mad and of such mirth we may demand what good it doth vs §. Sect. 2 Moderation must be vsed in respect of time In respect also of our time which is spent in our recreations we must vse great moderation making them serue like sawces to our meate to Sint exercitationes faciles breues qui corpus sine mora laxent tempori parcant cuius praecipuè ratio habenda est Quicquid facies citò redi à corpore ad animum c. Sen. Epist 15. 1. Cor. 10. 7. sharpen our appetite vnto the duties of our callings and not to glut our selues with them and so to make vs the more vnfit for any necessary imployments We must remember that they are but recreations to refresh vs and not occupations to tyre vs and that they are allowed vs to cheere our spirits and repaire our strength that we may bee made more fit for the well-performing of the duties of Gods seruice and of our callings and not that wee should by toyling our selues in them spend and consume them and so be disabled for any necessary imployment We must consider that God hath not created and redeemed vs that we should wholly follow our pleasures and with the Israelites sit downe to eate and drinke and rise vp to play but that we should spend our time and strength in the duties of his seruice or in the meanes whereby we may be fitted for them Neither hath he appointed recreation to be the end of our liues but onely as a meanes to preserue them for more high and holy imployments tending to the glory of God and the saluation of our owne soules We must esteeme time the most precious treasure and that the consumption of it is the most dangerous disease and desperately vnrecouerable that it exceedeth all other losses and that the wasting of it is the greatest vnthriftinesse And therefore wee must not turne our recreations into pastimes as the English name importeth making onely this vse of them to cause idle houres seeme lesse tedious for this were but to set spurres to a running Horse which of it selfe posteth away speedily and when it is once past can neuer be recalled Let vs not foole and trifle out this our most precious treasure vpon euery base vanitie or if we haue done it in the dayes of our ignorance when we did not know the worth of it let vs according Eph. 5. 16. to the Apostles counsell redeeme it at any price and recouer our losse by redoubling our diligence in all good duties Let vs learne to set a right value on these wares and to this end let vs not goe to enquire of worldly Impostors who will set a base price of this Iewell to coozen vs of it not to inrich themselues with our spoile but to spoyle themselues also with our losse but rather let vs thinke how they prize it in hell and how willing they would be to giue millions of worlds if they had them in their possession for the purchase of one day to repent of their former courses especially the prodigall mis-spending of their time Finally let vs remember that our workes and labours which must be here dispatched are waighty and manifold seeing in this world euerlasting life and happinesse is either gotten or lost and that our time is so short that we are in danger to be benighted before wee haue ended our businesse and so as the Apostle speaketh to come short of the promised rest That this short Heb. 4. 1. Mark 13. 35. time is also vncertaine seeing we know not at what houre our Lord will come and call vs to our reckoning and therefore if we bee wise vnto our owne saluation we will not spend much of this short and vncertaine time in sloth and idlenesse sports and pastimes but rather in making and keeping straight our accounts and in preparing our selues with ioy and comfort to appeare before our Iudge Especially considering that hee hath assured vs before-hand that he is most righteous and without respect of persons will reward euery man according to their workes that hee 2.
Cor. 5. 10. Math. 12. 36. will take an account of vs for euery idle word which wee esteeme as winde and therefore much more will call vnto a reckoning our precious time spent in idlenesse and vanitie and will make vs exceede in euerlasting punishments as wee haue in this life exceeded in momentanie pleasures Apoc. 18. 7. Luk. 6. 25. §. Sect. 3 That they must be so vsed as that they may refresh the body not pamper the flesh The third caution to be obserued in our recreations is that wee vse them so as they may refresh the body but not pamper the flesh and Gal. 5. 17. Rom. 8. 12 13. 1. Pet. 2. 11. Gal. 5. 13. that wee so indeuour by them to cheare our friend as that wee doe not strengthen our enemie For the flesh lusteth against the spirit and the spirit against the flesh and therefore wee must not vse such recreations or after such a manner as may feede and fat it with carnall delight neither are wee debters vnto it to liue after it seeing this life bringeth death but rather as the Apostle exhorteth let vs abstaine from fleshly lusts because they fight against our soules and so vse this gracious liberty which God hath giuen vs that the spirituall part may take occasion of doing good duties and not the flesh of plunging vs into sinne §. Sect. 4 That in our recreations we must auoid giuing of offence The fourth caution is that in all our recreations wee doe not giue any scandall and offence neither vsing such before our weake brethren 1. Thes 5. 22. though lawfull in themselues whereat they sticke or stumble with some scruple of conscience nor yet carrying our selues offensiuely in such as they approue either by spending vnseasonably our time in them or too much of that which is in moderation allowable or with any lightnesse and vanity or by giuing our selues ouer to some vnruly passion Yea as much as in vs lieth wee must abstaine not onely from these faults themselues but also from the least shevv and appearance of them and not onely take care to doe those things which are true and iust pure and louely Phil. 4 8. Pro. 22. 1. Eccl. 7. 1. but also which are of good report not onely taking care to be vertuous but also to bee so esteemed and haue the reputation and praise all pride and vaineglory being auoided which as the shaddow the body doth attend and waite vpon it And seeing recreations are things indifferent we are rather vtterly to forbeare them then to giue vnto our brethren any iust cause of offence because the greatest danger that can heereof come vnto vs is but the hazard of our health whereas by offending them wee may indanger the losse of their precious soules for which Christ hath shed his blood In which regard if the Apostle was so charitable that he would Rom. 14. 15 21. refraine from his lawfull foode rather then offend his weake brother then how small is our charity if we will not forbeare for this cause or at least in offensiuely vse our sports and recreations §. Sect. 5 That all due circumstances must be obserued in our recreations and what they are The fifth caution is that we obserue in our recreations all due circumstances As first that it be decent and beseeming our person place and calling neither is it fit that age and youth Magistrates and common people should vse the same recreations lest for the gaining of a little vaine sport they lose their grauity and with it their authority and that reuerence which is due vnto them from their inferiours in respect of their age and gouernment Secondly that it be apt and fit for our callings and to refresh and make vs more able for the well-performing of the duties belonging to them For that recreation is best which commeth neerest to the end for which we vse it and best fitteth vs to attaine vnto it as rest of the body and exercise of the minde for those that are wearied with corporall labours and bodily exercise for them whose callings doe wholly stand in the study of the minde Or at least some easie exercise after the greater labour of the body or some slight and pleasant imployment of the minde after that it is wearied with more serious and earnest studies In which regard I haue always thought the play at Chests most vnfit for Students and Schollers because it as much occupieth and wearieth their intellectuall faculties as their other studies and on the other side violent exercises vnmeete recreations for those vvho ordinarily spend their strength in painefull labours of the body because both these faile of their proper end which is to refresh the body and minde but contrariwise doe more weary and tyre them and so make them vnfit for the duties of their callings And although as I confesse there is some recreation and delight in change and variety of imployment both of body and minde yet it tendeth not greatly to the refreshing of either but rather deludeth men with a false shew and remedieth not the euill but onely depriueth them of the sense of it whilst their pleasure lasts and causeth them to spend and consume themselues with more delight Thirdly in respect of the circumstance of time there is required that our recreations be seasonable according to the saying of the wise Salomon To euery thing there is a season Eccl. 3. 1 4. and a time to euery purpose vnder heauen a time to weepe and a time to laugh a time to mourne and a time to dance In which regard there is required that first our recreations doe not goe before but succeed the labours of our callings vnlesse in case we may thereby be the better inabled for the performance of them as when they shake off dulnesse and drowsinesse and make vs more actiue and cheerefull for imployment which rarely happeneth in the labours of the body but sometime falleth out in the studies of the minde as we see in the example of Elisha who by musicke 2. King 3. 15. was better fitted for prophecie whilest it made him more apt to receiue diuine reuelations For wearinesse is a kinde of disease and recreation is of the nature of a medicine and therefore as it is preposterous that the cure should precede and goe before the malady or the medicine the sickenesse vnlesse it be such as is fit to preuent it so that wee should refresh our selues with recreation before labour hath caused wearinesse for this were to apply the salue to a sound place which doth no good but if it hath any great strength and attractiue vertue will rather cause it to pimple and draw off the skin And therefore as Salomon saith of the vse of wine Giue strong drinke vnto him that is ready to perish and wine vnto those Pro. 31. 6 7. that are of heauy hearts that he may forget his pouerty and remember his misery no more so
vnto him by thankesgiuing as not acknowledging the Author of these benefits the which also the Lord threatneth against his people of Israel in the same place Secondly vnto this inward thankfulnesse there is required not Vers 9. 10. 11. onely that wee know and acknowledge the Lord to be the Author of our food and nourishment habitually but that we also actually remember this his bounty and goodnesse and hauing them in fresh memory that vpon all new occasions we blesse his name for them According to that commandement When thou hast eaten and art full then thou shalt blesse the Deut. 8. 10 11. Lord thy God for the good land which he hath giuen thee beware that thou forget not the Lord thy God c. Outwardly vnto this thankfulnesse is required that wee expresse it first by our words in returning thankes and praise vnto God for our food and nourishment and for all other good blessings spirituall and temporall which wee haue receiued at his hands the which in companie is to be performed by one as the mouth of all the rest and most conueniently by the master of the family and feast and ioyntly together as occasion company and other circumstances will permit by adding hereunto singing of a Psalme according to the example of our Sauiour Christ himselfe at his last Supper with his Apostles Secondly we Matth. 26. 30. must expresse our thankefulnesse outwardly in our workes in imploying that strength which wee haue renewed by our nourishment in the seruice of God by performing the generall duties of Christianity and the speciall duties of our callings that by both wee may glorifie his most holy name who hath so graciously fed and nourished vs. For if wee expect this at the hands of our seruants that being nourished at our cost and finding they should not waite vpon themselues and spend their time about their owne pleasures but in our seruice from whom they haue their maintenance which if they neglect we are ready to turne them out of the dores as vnprofitable drones good for nothing but to liue vpō the spoile of our goods thē how much more wil the Lord who is a much more absolute owner then we iustly require at our hands that after he hath refreshed vs with his creatures we doe not spend our strength in fulfilling the lusts of our owne flesh and the pleasures of sinne but imploy it in all such good duties as most tend to the aduancement of his glory from whom we haue all our maintenance And so much concerning the second kinde of cessation from our labours of the third and last kinde which is taking of our rest by sleepe I will not here speake hauing a more conuenient place for it when wee haue finished all our day labours and are come to speake of the duties in the night CAP. XXVI Of the duties which wee ought to performe when we are solitary and alone §. Sect. 1 That when we are alone we must not be idle and vnfruitfull BEsides those Christian duties which are ordinarily and constantly to be done in some part of euery day there are others which are more accidentall vnto which wee are not tyed euery day or any certaine time of the weeke but to be done when as we shall haue fittest occasions and best opportunitie offered vnto vs. And which belong not to all persons or to the same persons at all times but waite vpon vncertaine occurrents variety of estates and such like circumstances As for example wee are sometimes by our selues alone and sometimes in company with others sometimes in prosperity and ioy and sometime in aduersitie and trouble and vncertaine it is in what day or what part of the day any of these shall happen notwithstanding there are diuers duties which belong to these seueral conditions which with no lesse conscience constancy are to be performed then the other of which we are now come to intreate And first wee will shew what are those Christian duties which belong vnto vs when wee are alone and then what those are which wee ought to performe in the company of others Concerning the former wee must when we are solitary and alone keepe a narrow watch ouer our selues that wee be neither idle and vnfruitfull nor ill imployed and taken vp with bad exercises We must not suffer our mindes to be slothfull and sluggish and so to languish for want of spirituall exercise nor our hearts to remaine in vs dull and dead barraine and empty of all good desires and holy resolutions neither yet must we in respect of action and bodily imployment giue our selues ouer vnto ease and sloth for if we thus as it were lye fallow without any seede of grace sowne in vs the diuell knowing vs to be fit grounds for his husbandry will sow in vs the cockle and tares of all sinne and wickednesse if hee finde vs thus swept and empty of all good wee shall bee fitly garnished for his dwelling as our Sauiour hath taught vs. If wee be not imployed in some good dutie of Matth. 12. 45. Gods seruice the deuill will take vs vp like masterlesse men and allure vs with the pay of worldly vanities to serue him in the workes of darkenesse As wee see in the example of Dauid who spending his time 2. Sam. 11. 1 2. in sloth when Kings went out to warre and the Armie of God was in the field the deuill taking him at this aduantage put his presse-money of carnall pleasure into his hand and so imployed him for the time to fight his battailes euen to the shedding of the blood of innocent Vriah and other of his faithfull seruants §. Sect. 2 That we must spend our solitary houres in good exercises shunning vaine thoughts and intertaining Christian meditations And as our care must bee that we be not idle so much more that wee do not spend our solitary houres in doing that which is ill the which notwithstanding inseparably accompanieth the other For no sooner doe we cease to doe good but we begin to doe euill no sooner doe we leaue the Oare as we are rowing towards the hauen of rest but the winde and tide of our corruption carrieth vs downe the streame towards the dead sea of death and destruction And therefore if we would not be drawne vnto ill we must still be imployed in good exercises keeping alwayes a narrow watch ouer our minds hearts and actions that on the one side they be not ouertaken with any euill nor prostituted vnto any sinne and on the other side that they be wholly taken vp and exercised in all Christian and holy duties First aboue all obseruations wee must looke to our deceitfull minds and hearts that they bee not stolne from vs by the subtilty of the deuill when we are alone and that they doe not as naturally they are apt wander in this solitarinesse and goe astray from the way of Gods commandements and so losing themselues like Lambes in the Desart
much more light by compassion and fellovv-feeling and by bearing of it vpon many shoulders Finally they stirre vp Gods graces in one another both by word and good example helping to remooue impediments that lye in the way and exhorting one another to cheerefulnesse in their iourney they hasten their speed towards the Kingdome of heauen §. Sect. 2 That we must not rashly rush into all companies but with good choyce and aduice and also with due preparation Now if any of these benefits bee wanting in societies or the contrary euils fall out through this conuersation and mutuall conuersing one with another the fault is not in the things themselues but in their sinfull corruptions vvho peruert them from their first institution and grosly abuse them to ill ends For as it is generally obserued that the more any thing excelleth in excellency the greater is the difficultie in attaining vnto it and the greatest benefits in temporall things are most lyable vnto abuse so cannot it bee denyed but that it is much more hard to attaine vnto the right vse of society then of solitarinesse and lamentable experience teacheth vs that those who make conscience of their vvayes and desire to carry themselues in all places as in Gods presence doe more often forget him and their duty when they are in company then when they are alone and fall into many more errours and sinnes because they haue more occasions and doe lye open vnto many tentations of the world if they doe not make the better choyce of their companions or at least keepe not a strict watch ouer their words and wayes that they bee not ouertaken In which regard it is necessary vnto this Treatise of a godly life that wee set downe some directions which may serue to guide vs in our course when we conuerse vvith others And these either generally respect the duties that concerne society vvith all men or more specially those vvhich belong to our ovvne families The duties that concerne society vvithall either respect our preparation before wee goe into company or bee such as wee ought to perfome when wee are come into it The first generall dutie in our preparation is that vvee doe not rashly rush into all companies but seeing there are amongst men many more bad by vvhose society vvee may be made much vvorse then good by vvhom vvee may in our conuersing vvith them receiue much fruit and benefit that therefore before vve resort vnto them vvee make carefull choyce of such as may either in all likelihood doe vs good or at least receiue some good from vs. And because we are often mistaken in our choyce not knowing the course and conuersation and much lesse the hearts and affections of men before we haue had some tryall of them therfore it is fit that we pray vnto God that he will direct vs in our choice and make our meeting and society profitable for the aduancing of his glory and our good The which is to be vnderstood when as we are free and left to the choice of our companions and not when they are put vpon vs or we vpon them by some vrgent necessity the duties of our calling some waighty businesse or other vnlooked for accident Secondly let vs pray also vnto God that hee will by his grace and holy Spirit so assist vs as that our meeting society may tend to the aduancement of his glory good one of another Thirdly seeing the enemy of our saluation doth in all places lay so many nets and snares to intrap vs and especially in our companie if it be not well chosen whereby it commeth to passe that we are often caught at vnawares and depart away worse then when we came into it therefore we must resolue beforehand that wee will arme our selues against all these dangers and keepe a narrow watch that wee be not ensnared or ouercome of any euill Fourthly we must not propound this as the end of our society to passe away the time with lesse tediousnesse or to delight our flesh with carnall pleasure but goe into it with this resolution that we will doe our best indeuour either to receiue some good thereby especially to our soules by gayning more wisdome and knowledge or better our desires and affections or more power and cheerefulnesse in the seruice of God and in the performance of all Christian duties or to doe some good vnto those who consort with vs by our words examples and actions either by keeping them from sinne when they are ready to fall into it and pulling them as the Apostle Iude speaketh like firebrands out of the fire Iude vers 23. or instructing them that erre from the truth in the right way or performing vnto them some other Christian dutie which may further their saluation either as a meanes of their conuersion whereby they may bee Vers 20. gained vnto Christ or for their further building in their most holy faith the which we are chiefly to intend as an excellent worke for hee that conuerteth Jam. 5. 20. a sinner from the error of his way shall saue a soule from death and hide a multitude of sinnes as the Apostle Iames speaketh And if wee be not thus resolued before wee come into companie but rather goe with a purpose to fit our selues to euery bodies humour and rather to please then to profit either them or our selues like reedes that will bend with euery breath or writing tables which being newly made cleane are fit to receiue any impression of good or euill it were much better to refraine companie and to be alone seeing there is more danger of hurt then hope of being made ere a whit the better Finally wee must be no more carefull in putting off our rags and old clothes in making our selues handsome in our outward habit and attire before we goe into respected company then in putting off and casting from vs turbulent passions and disorderly affections and in decking and adorning our selues with the contrary graces of Gods Spirit As for example wee must subdue our pride which maketh all meetings vnprofitable by stirring vp heart-burnings and contention amongst men either about preeminence and precedency or when they are crossed in their proud humours and conceits so also our wrath and frowardnesse of nature which is prouoked with euery small occasion enuy towards superiours and disdayne towards our inferiours And contrariwise we must put on brotherly loue which is the best ornament to fit vs for Christian society as freeing vs from many corruptions which make company vnprofitable and inabling vs vnto many duties which are necessary vnto it For charity suffereth long and is kinde enuieth not vaunteth not it selfe is not puffed vp doth not behaue it selfe vnseemely 1. Cor. 13. 4 5 6 7. seeketh not her owne is not easily prouoked thinketh no euill reioyceth not in iniquity but reioyceth in the truth beareth all things hopeth all things endureth all things And with it wee must put
malice will not allow vs as commendable So the Apostle exhorteth vs to doe all good duties without murmuring and disputings that we may be blamelesse and harmelesse Phil. 2. 15. the sonnes of God without rebuke in the middest of a crooked and peruerse nation among whom we should shine as lights in the world Heerein indeede like the Sunne which though wicked men may at some times hate because it discouereth their workes of darkenesse yet are they so conuinced with its beauty and excellency that they cannot for shame speake against it Thus also he exhorteth Titus to shew himselfe in all things a patterne of good Tit. 2. 7 8. workes in doctrine shewing vncorruptnesse grauity sincerity sound speach that cannot be condemned that he who is of the contrary part may bee ashamed hauing no euill to say of him And thus the Apostle Peter perswadeth vs not onely to sanctifie the Lord in our hearts but also to make profession of the hope that is in vs vpon all good occasions hauing a good conscience that 1. Pet. 3. 15 16. whereas they who speake euill of vs as of euill doers they may bee ashamed that falsly accuse our good conuersation in Christ Secondly it is not enough that we be vnblameable in our cōuersation and without the spots blemishes of knowne sins but we must also walke worthy our high calling and adorne Eph. 4. 1. our profession by our practice of holinesse and righteousnesse that so wee may not only stop their mouthes but also if it be possible may be meanes of their conuersion when they shall see the light of our holy conuersation So our Sauiour requireth of vs that our lights should shine so before men that they seeing our good workes may glorifie our Father which is in heauen Matth. 5. 16. And the Apostle Peter exhorteth Christians to abstaine from fleshly lusts 1. Pet. 2. 11 12. and to haue their conuersation honest among the Gentiles that whereas they spake against them as euill doers they might by their good workes which they should behold glorifie God in the day of visitation And though wee cannot bring forth alike fruits of piety when we are in company with them that will not ioyne with vs in holy exercises yet at least let vs not neglect ciuility and morality as the Apostle speaketh prouide things honest in the sight of Rom. 12. 17. all men Thirdly though they will not be reclaimed neither by our words nor example yet we must not for this mingle spleene and choller with our zeale but carry our selues in all meekenesse and mildnesse patience and forbearance and though wee cannot by all our indeuours vnite them vnto vs in the bonds of loue yet let vs by all good meanes mooue them to keepe the peace and binde them to their good behauiour whilest they are in our company assuring our selues that if meekenesse and loue ioyned with strong reasons and good perswasions will not preuaile with them then much lesse will rough words and chollericke speeches for heere the Apostle Iames saying is fitly verified The wrath of man doth not accomplish Iam. 1. 20. the righteousnesse of God And this the Apostle presseth with great vehemency If it be possible saith he as much as in you lyeth liue peaceably with Rom. 12. 18. all men But yet we must not be so zealous of peace that we doe cowardly betray the truth nor for peace sake forgoe our owne piety For wee must so follow peace with all men as that we follow holinesse also without which no Hab. 12. 14. man shall see the Lord or hereby lose any opportunity of furthering our neighbours saluation For we must by the Apostles direction so follow Rom. 14. 19. after the things which make for peace as that wee by no meanes neglect the things whereby one may edifie another And therefore if those with whom we conuerse be not desperate sinners and more likely to hurt vs for our good will then to receiue any good to themselues by our reproofes we may admonish and rebuke them in the spirit of meekenesse and loue for their sinnes that we may reclaime them or at least if they be such as in Christian prudence we may not make so bold with them yet at least let vs shew our dislike when wee see God dishonoured by our countenance or some other signes that wee doe not become accessaries to their wickednesse Neither let any man account it Christian meekenesse and patience to sit by and say nothing when Gods holy Name is prophaned Religion scorned and the banners of wickednesse displayed seeing the Angel of the Church of Ephesus which was so much commended for patience had also this praise annexed that he could not beare with them which were euill And Apoc. 2. 2. therefore it is no patience when we let men goe on in their wickednesse and giue them neither by word nor countenance any signe of our dislike but want of zeale and Christian courage yea dastardly cowardize and too much loue of the world which maketh vs more carefull to please men then God himselfe Finally we must not by such wicked company bee out-countenanced in any good nor be mooued to neglect any Christian duty which present occasion maketh necessary For if they be not ashamed to serue the deuill by their professed wickednes let vs not be ashamed to serue our gracious God by performing such duties as he requireth of vs If they with all boldnesse glory in their prophanenesse let not vs bee bashfull in the profession and practice of religious and pious actions But as the Apostle Paul gaue thankes and blessed the creatures in the middest Act. 27. 35. of Infidels before he would feede on them so let vs with like boldnesse vse good communication reade the Scriptures sing Psalmes performe all other Christian duties notwithstanding that prophane men bee in the company Seeing thereby we shall keepe a good conscience before God and men and may if God giue a blessing to these holy exercises not onely edifie those who are alike minded with vs but also gaine them likewise vnto vs by our good example who are as yet otherwise disposed By all which good duties if we preuaile nothing at all our best course will be as soone as wee can to quit our selues of such company and more carefully afterwards make choyce of better For consorting with such companions longer then we neede indangereth vs to be tainted and corrupted with their euill manners and if we continue with such as we can by no good meanes make better we are in great hazzard to be made worse as hereafter we shall more fully shew CAP. XXVIII Of Christian conferences which we must vse when we are in company for our mutuall good §. Sect. 1 That our speeches must bee gracious and prudent AND these are the duties which generally concerne our whole conuersation in company The speciall duties respect either our
words and conferences or our workes and actions In all our conferences with our brethren wee are to obserue two things First that our speech bee gracious Secondly that it be wise and prudent Both which are required by the Apostle Let your speech saith he be alwayes with grace seasoned with salt that Col. 4. 6. is wisely fitted to the time persons occasions and other circumstances and vttered prudently in due season Our speech is gracious when it sauoureth of grace and goodnesse and appeareth to proceed from the Spirit of God dwelling in vs as though he vsed our tongues to deliuer by them that which hee suggesteth and inspireth into vs whereby it becommeth gracious and acceptable in the eares of God and all good men And vnto this there is required that it be not onely gracious in it selfe but also to all that heare vs. In it selfe it is gracious when as it is either holy and about spirituall and heauenly things points of diuinity and religious matters our saluation it selfe or the meanes whereby we may attaine vnto it Gods mercies and blessings multiplied vpon vs or his iudgements and chastizements inflicted for sinne and such like or else when as it is honest and ciuill about the things of this life appertaining to our temporall profit or our comfort and delight Our speech is gracious to the hearers when as it tendeth to their profit either in respect of their soules or bodies and states It is profitable for their soules when as it is referred to edification and to the inriching of them with spirituall grace and the strengthening and inabling them vnto all Christian and holy duties Vnto which kinde of speech the Apostle exhorteth Let saith he no corrupt communication Eph. 4. 29. proceed out of your mouth but that which is good for the vse of edifying that it may minister grace vnto the hearers And againe Comfort your selues together and edifie one another The which dutie is diuersly performed first by instructing those which are ignorant in the knowledge of God and his truth that so seeing the way of life and saluation they may walke in it In which those especially faile who like rich misers barrell and hoord vp the treasures of knowledge in their owne braines but enuying their brethren Dan. 12. 3. the vse of it will neuer communicate it in their conferences nor let any be the wiser by their speeches that come into their company Secondly by informing erroneous iudgements and reducing them out of their errours into the way of truth The which the Apostle Iames commendeth vnto vs as an excellent worke Brethren saith he if any of you doe erre from the truth and one conuert him let him know that he who conuerteth a sinner from Iam. 5. 19 20. the errour of his way shall saue a soule from death and shall hide a multitude of sinnes Thirdly by giuing good counsell vnto those that want it and prudent aduice how they shall carry themselues in all their courses so as they may in all particular actions please God and preserue the peace of a good conscience Fourthly by exhorting and pricking those forward whom we see sluggish and negligent and to slacken their pace in the wayes of godlinesse according to that of the Apostle Exhort one another daily whilest it is called to day lest any of you be hardened through the deceitfulnesse of sinne Heb. 3. 13. Fifthly by comforting those that want consolation in respect of their afflictions temporall or spirituall inflicted vpon their body mind or state So the Apostle exhorteth vs to comfort the feeble-minded and to support the weake And againe Comfort your selues together and edifie one another And 1. Thes 5. 14 11. the Prophet Esay likewise Strengthen yee the weake hands and confirme the Esa 35. 3. Heb. 12. 12. feeble knees The which duty was performed by holy Iob as Eliphaz testifieth of him Thou hast instructed many and thou hast strengthened the weake hands Thy words haue vpholden him that was falling and thou hast strengthened Iob 4. 4 5. the feeble knees And is highly commended by the Prophet as a speciall Esa 50. 4. gift of God The Lord saith he hath giuen mee the tongue of the learned that I should know how to speake a word in season to him that is weary §. Sect. 2 Of Christian admonition and what is required to the right performing of this duty Sixthly by admonishing those who are ready to fall that wee may vphold them and such as are already falne through ignorance frailty and infirmity that wee may raise them vp againe And this the Apostle requireth Brethren saith he if any man be ouertaken in a fault ye which are spirituall restore such an one in the spirit of meekenesse considering thy selfe lest thou also be tempted Vnto which dutie that it may be well performed diuers things are required First wisedome and knowledge in him that admonisheth So the Apostle saith of the Romanes that they were filled with Rom. 15. 14. all knowledge and able to admonish one another And first we must know that the thing whereof we admonish our brother be a sinne and not either lawfull or indifferent and rightly vsed of him In which the Israelites failed when they sent to admonish the Reubenites about building the Altar Ios 22. 16. and Eli in admonishing Anna to put away her drunkennesse Secondly 1. Sam. 1. 14. we must know that being a sinne it is indeed committed by our brother either vpon that sure notice which our selues haue taken or by the credible testimony of others who are men of credit and not when wee haue a 1. Sam. 2. 22. blinde iealousie or vngrounded suspition nor when we haue heard it from busie-bodies and talebearers who will not stand vnto any thing they say vnlesse out of loue and tendernesse of his credit wee speake of it to this end chiefly that he may the better cleare himselfe of these false imputations or that we may take occasion to admonish him if we finde them true Thirdly we must haue knowledge and wisedome to doe it after a right manner with obseruation of all due cautions and circumstances As first we must make choyce of a seasonable time not when our brethren are at their feasts and desirous to be cheerefull and merry not when they are cast downe with afflictions the which themselues sufficiently admonish vnlesse we see that they make no vse of them nor are brought by them to a sight of their sinnes but rather in their prosperity when as they thriue in their euill courses Not in the company of others if the fault be secret and not open and scandalous in which case also Christian wisedome will finde priuate admonition best for many persons who out of their greatnesse and naturall pride will burst out into rage and impatiencie when as in company we take notice of their faults Especially we must take heed that we doe not
their carriage and gouernement but behaue themselues in all things grauely and with a kinde of Christian Maiesty and authority according to the example of Iob who obserued such grauity in his carriage that when the young men saw him they hid themselues and the aged arose and Iob 29. 8 9. stood vp the Princes refrained talking and laid their hand on their mouth The which as it gaineth authority to gouernours so the contrary leuitie and lightnesse of behauiour doth expose their persons to scorne and their gouernement to neglect and contempt Thirdly there is required that piety iustice and sobriety doe shine in the whole course of their conuersation that so they may become examples vnto their inferiours of an holy righteous and vnblameable life then the which nothing is more powerfull and effectuall to draw inferiours to imitation of those vertues which they obserue in them And therefore Dauid intending a strict reformation of his house beginneth first with himselfe that hee might be an example vnto all the rest and resolueth that he will behaue himselfe wisely in a perfect way and walke within his house with an vpright heart and then that hee will banish out the wicked from his family and entertaine and countenance the religious and faithfull of the land Whereas contrariwise if they take neuer so much paines in teaching them their duties yet if they doe not make their owne liues examples of their rules but run a contrary course in their practice they shall not so much further them in the wayes of godlinesse by their instructions as discourage and hinder them by their bad example Fourthly they must not insult ouer their inferiours with tyrannicall pride and cruelty nor doe all they may by reason of their power and authority to keepe them vnder as base vnderlings out of a fond and false opinion raysing the pitch of their absolutenesse and greatnesse out of their slauish deiection who are vnder their gouernment but they must mixe with their power and authority parent-like loue brotherly humanity and Christian mildnesse and modesty that their inferiours may honour them as fathers as well as feare them like Lords and may yeeld vnto them free cheerefull and voluntary obedience subiecting to their gouernement Rom. 13. 5. not onely their bodies and outward actions but also their hearts wills and inward affections For if the hearts of Kings themselues must not bee lifted vp aboue their brethren then much lesse should the hearts Deut. 17. 20. of inferiour gouernours in families bee thus exalted Fifthly they must gouerne in the Lord as his Vice-gerents and Deputies and chiefly ayme therein at Gods glory remembring that from him they haue all their authority and that they exercise not their owne but the iudgements of the Lord according to the saying of good Iehoshaphat to his Iudges Take 2. Chro. 19. 6. heede what yee doe for ye iudge not for man but for the Lord who is with you in iudgement And this must make them chiefly to aime by their gouernement to containe their inferiours in the duties of piety and righteousnesse that God may be glorified both by themselues and also by all those which are in the family And finally they must make it appeare in all their gouernement that they doe not wholly ayme at their owne particular and priuate profit but also at their ioynt good which is the chiefe cause why the Lord hath made them superiours vnto others not that they may serue their turne of them and looke no further but that they may like the head the members of the body gouerne them for their benefit And this argument the Lord vseth to perswade inferiours to honour their superiours that it might goe well with themselues in the land which the Lord gaue Deut. 5. 16. them And the Apostle mooueth them to doe that which is good vpon the like reason because their gouernours were the Ministers of God to them for good if they did well Rom. 13. 4. §. Sect. 2 Of the iustice loue which are required in gouernement The things required vnto the administration of their gouernement are iustice and loue the which must be tempered the one with the other that loue may moderate and sweeten iustice and iustice may keepe loue vnpartiall and vpright lest our actions sauouring of nothing but iustice seeme rigorous and expose vs to hatred and loue not guided nor backed by iustice degenerate into doting fondnesse and so expose vs to contempt whereas both rightly mixed the one with the other will cause reuerence and obedience The which mixture must bee vsed in all our actions towards all vnder our gouernement although these vertues are to bee exercised diuersly and the one to be more manifested then the other according to occasion time persons and deserts For though we ought to loue all yet those especially who excell in Gods graces and profit most in all religious Christian and ciuill duties and to such our loue must bee most manifested to incourage them to go on in their good courses and to draw others to follow their example The which was Dauids practice as he professeth who though he were indifferently iust towards all his subiects yet his loue exceeded towards the faithfull of the land and those which walked Psal 102. 6. in a perfect way But especially our loue and iustice must appeare in our rewards and chastisements which are the mayne bonds and very sinewes of gouernement We must reward those who deserue well partly by our words commending their good actions which is a great incouragement to well-doing as the Apostle implyeth when hee vseth it as a reason to perswade inferiours to their duty Doe that which is good saith he and thou shalt haue praise of the same the which our Sauiour will vse to Rom. 13. 3. his seruants at the last day Well done good and faithfull seruant thou hast Mat. 25. 23. beene faithfull ouer a few things c. And partly by deeds the which must sauour both of iustice in giuing them their due wages and of loue and bounty by giuing according to our ability gifts to incourage them in their well-deseruing Chastisements also must be vsed towards them who will not otherwise be reclaimed from their faults nor kept in due order either in words only by gentle or more sharpe reproofes according to the quality of the offence or by stripes when nothing else will serue For otherwise we shall offend against God in neglecting being his Deputies to glorifie 1. Sam. 2. 29. him in his Iustice against our selues by becomming accessary to their sins against the parties offending whom we reclaime not but suffer them to go on in their wickednes to their destructions against those of the same family whom by this impunity we incourage to follow their ill example and the whole society which is hereby made obnoxious to Gods Iustice But this correction is only good when it is necessary being like
little leauen will sowre the whole lumpe or a little Coloquintida will imbitter and poyson all our seeming vertues and obedience They will on all occasions open the doore of our hearts and let in all manner of wickednesse as pledges and hostages giuen to Satan to warrant his re-entry when he pleaseth §. Sect. 2 That we must performe obedience to both Tables ioyntly and to the Gospell as well as the Law Which dangers if we would auoyd wee must resolue to yeeld obedience to all and euery part of Gods will reuealed either in the Law or Luk. 1. 74. the Gospell In respect of the Law we must obserue both Tables and performe all duties of piety righteousnesse and sobriety which God hath commanded in them And if wee would approue our selues to bee in the number of those who are the Lords redeemed wee must resolue to worship him both in holinesse and righteousnesse If wee would be reckoned among those good scholers vnto whom the grace of God hath appeared that bringeth saluation we must approue our selues to bee so by learning that whole lesson which he teacheth which is to deny vngodlines and worldly Tit. 2. 12. lusts and to liue soberly righteously and godly in this present world And if we would be accepted of God we must not onely religiously feare him but Act. 10. 35. also worke righteousnesse as the Apostle Peter speaketh For if wee seeme to make conscience of the first Table and neglect the second our obedience will make vs no better then glorious Hypocrites or if wee will obserue the duties of the second and not regard the first wee shall bee no better then ciuill worldlings and honest Infidels Againe wee must obserue this vniuersall obedience as in respect of the parts of the Law and duties of both Tables so also of the degrees desiring to keepe with all care and good conscience the small Commandements as well as the greater not thinking any duty so small that we may wittingly and willingly neglect it nor any sinne so slight and veniall that wee may commit it For small neglects will make way for greater and lesser sins being wilfully entertained will open the doore of our hearts to let in greater It is true that there ought to be a proportion obserued and as duties are of greatest excellency and necessity so they must haue priority and precedency and as sinnes are more hainous and grieuous so they must be resisted and forsaken with greatest zeale and indeuour But yet true and sincere obedience dispenceth with no degree of sinne or the neglect of the least duties in their due place and time and though it respecteth chiefly the waighty things of the Law yet it doth not voluntarily omit the least duties Though it chiefly abhorreth whoredome sacriledge and periury yet it yeeldeth not to wanton dalliance petty thefts and idle oathes And thus also if our obedience be sound and sincere then haue we also respect to the Commandements of the Gospell as well as the Law and in them make like conscience of the one as well as of the other desiring and indeuoring with no lesse care to repent vnfainedly of our sinnes then to beleeue in Christ and apply the promises of grace and saluation and no lesse striuing to be freed from sinne in respect of the corruption by vertue of Christs death and to rise againe vnto newnesse of life by the power of his Resurrection then to be deliuered from the gilt and punishment of it and to rise at the latter Day vnto glory and happinesse For if wee diuide these we shall doe neither aright If wee beleeue onely and doe not repent we are but carnall Gospellers and presumptuous worldlings and if our sorrow for sinne be neuer so great yet if we haue not faith in Christ this griefe is to be grieued for seeing it is the fore-runner of despaire and 2. Cor. 7. 10. a worldly sorrow which bringeth death So that though wee should bewaile our sinnes neuer so much and euen melt and be wholly resolued into teares yet should we perish in our infidelity seeing it is not our teares but the precious blood of Christ applyed by faith which purgeth and purifieth our soules and bodies from the guilt and punishment of our sinnes §. Sect. 3 Reasons perswading to vniuersall obedience 1. Because God requireth it The reasons which may moue vs to yeeld this vniuersall obedience to the whole reuealed will of God are diuers first because God commandeth Deut. 11. 32. it Neither doth he require that wee should keepe his Law in some things and breake it in others or in most things and neglect it in some few seeing no Prince will accept from his subiect such obedience but all and euery of his Commandements without exception Hee bindeth vs strictly to obserue all his Statutes and Iudgements which hee setteth before vs that whatsoeuer he commandeth vs we obserue to doe it neither adding thereto and 12 32. and 32. 46. and 28. 14. nor diminishing from it that we set our hearts to obey all the Words of his Law turning not therefrom to the right hand nor to the left So our Sauiour Christ inioyneth his Disciples to preach vnto all nations teaching them to obserue all Math. 28. 20. things whatsoeuer he commanded The which the Apostle obserued in his owne practice keeping in all things a good conscience before God and liuing Heb. 13. 18. honestly before men And vnto this totall obedience to all Gods Law doth he restraine all his promises If saith he thou wilt hearken diligently vnto Deut. 28. 1. the voyce of the Lord thy God to obserue and to doe all his Commandements then I will aduance thee and all my blessings shall come vpon thee c. Whereas that which is but in part can expect no reward but rather deserued punishment For as it is in this case betweene the Prince and his subiect so also betweene God and vs. Though a man obserue the whole Law of his Soueraigne and committeth onely one hainous and capitall crime his obedience is not rewarded seeing therein hee doth but his duty but for his offence he is iustly punished §. Sect. 4 That our obedience cannot be sincere vnlesse it bee vniuersall Secondly if our obedience be not vniuersall to the whole will of God it cannot be sincere and vpright for if in the integrity of our hearts wee yeelded obedience to any of Gods Commandements out of our loue towards him and because he requireth our obedience vnto them then would we vpon the same ground and reason obey all the rest seeing hee is the Authour of all alike and by the same diuine authority bindeth vs to one as well as to another And vpon this reason the Apostle Iames doubteth not to affirme that he who breaketh any one Commandement is guilty of Iam. 2. 10 11. all though he keepeth all the rest for he that said Doe not commit adultery said also Doe not
kill Now if thou commit no adultery yet if thou kill thou art become a transgressour of the Law For there is a chaine of vertues and vices whereby they are so fast and inseparably linked together that he who imbraceth and practiseth any one vertue and Christian duty out of his loue and obedience to God imbraceth and performeth all the rest hee that willingly liueth in the neglect of any one duty or maketh no conscience of committing any knowne sinne neglecteth all and is prepared to commit any wickednesse In which regard it may truly bee said that the vnregenerate man breaketh all Gods Commandements euen those which hee seemeth to keepe and that the sound Christian obserueth all euen those which he seemeth to breake For howsoeuer the one doth not actually transgresse euery Commandement yet there is in him an habit of sinne and a naturall disposition and readinesse to breake all when opportunity serueth and when hee is tempted thereunto with the alluring baits of worldly vanities And though the other doe not actually keepe the whole Law but faileth in many particulars yet there is in him an habit of holinesse and righteousnesse and a disposition and desire resolution and indeuour to obserue all for with the Apostle they consent vnto the whole Rom. 7. Law that it is holy and good and being in their hearts delighted in it they striue to keepe one Commandement as well as another and when they faile of their purpose doe heartily bewaile their imperfections It is true that a wicked man may not onely forsake many sinnes but may also in some sort loath and detest them but this is not out of his loue towards God or because he hateth or forbiddeth them but caused by some common restraining grace or done out of some corrupt passion and disposition not because he hateth sinne but because some contrary vice being predominant in him doth draw him vnto another extreme And thus the couetous man hateth prodigality and the prodigall couetousnesse the presumptuous man melancholike despaire and the despairing sinner bold presumption the coward bloody quarrell and the desperate backster Plerique metu peccare cessant non innocentia profectò tales timidi non innocentes dicendi sunt Seneca cowardize Yea thus may a man outwardly shun all sinnes which make him liable to legall penalties out of selfe-loue that hee may gaine rewards or escape punishments not out of loue to vertue and innocency but feare of running into danger §. Sect. 5 That without totall obedience we cannot attaine to heauenly happinesse Finally vnlesse we performe totall obedience in the desire purpose and indeuour of our heart vnto the whole Law of God wee can neither attaine vnto heauenly happinesse nor escape hellish death and condemnation though we imbrace and practise many vertues and duties and flee from many vices and sinnes For as a Mill-stone will keepe vs from mounting aloft as well as a Mountaine and the one as well as the other would cause vs to sinke into the bottome of the Sea if it were fastened vnto vs so if any one sinne haue taken such fast hold of our hearts that we will by no meanes be moued to leaue it the waight thereof will bee sufficient to keepe vs from ascending vnto heauenly happinesse and to drench and drowne vs in the sea of perdition So the Apostle saith that he that liueth not in all or many sinnes but in any one shall neuer enter into the Kingdome of heauen Neither fornicators nor idolaters nor adulterers nor effeminate c. shall inherit the Kingdome of God And the Apostle Iohn saith that 1. Cor. 6. 9 10. Apoc. 22. 15. euery sort of sinners as sorcerers and whoremongers and murtherers and idolaters and lyers shall be excluded from this place of blessednesse So that as for the losse of corporall life it is not necessary that the body should be wounded in euery place but a mortall wound in any of the vitall parts is sufficient to let in death and giue it seisure of the whole man so is it in this case And as particular sinnes depriue vs of happinesse so they plunge vs into death and destruction as appeareth by that distinct enumeration which the Prophet maketh of particulars If saith hee hee Ezek. 18. 10 13. beget a sonne that is a robber a shedder of blood and doth the like to any of these things and that neglecteth any of the duties there mentioned hee shall not liue but surely dye And the Apostle Iohn saith that sinners of euery kind shall Apoc. 21. 8. haue their portion in the Lake which burneth with fire and brimstone which is the second death Now if any will say that if for any one duty wilfully neglected or sinne committed they shall lose the ioyes of heauen and be cast into hell torments then it were as good to bee outragiously wicked and to liue in all manner of sinne let one of the Ancients make answere to such an obiection This saith he is the speech of an vngratefull and reprobate Ingrati serui est his sermo c. Chrysost in Eph. cap. 2. serm 4. seruant yet let not such an one let the reines loose to all impiety for his owne profit For though all impenitent sinners are excluded out of heauen and throwne into hell yet all in hell doe not suffer equall torments but some greater and some lesse according to the quality and number of their sinnes CAP. V. Of the properties of Christian and holy duties which respect their causes efficient and finall §. Sect. 1 That all duties should spring from the loue of God AND these are the properties which respect the duties themselues The properties which concerne the manner of doing them are diuers and respect either the causes that mooue vs to performe them or our disposition in doing them The causes are either efficient or finall The efficient cause mouing vs to performe all the duties of a godly life ought to be the loue of God which is the fountaine of true obedience and should bee so powerfull in vs that we should thereby be moued to serue like children our heauenly Father though there were no reward promised to our seruice which is the motiue that induceth mercenaries and seruants rather then children to doe their duty For howsoeuer we may in our obedience haue an eye with Moses to the recompence of reward yet the chiefe argument Heb. 11. 25. that preuaileth with vs ought to be not the loue of our selues and out of it the desire of our owne saluation but the loue of God who is the chiefe Goodnesse whose glory is much to bee preferred before our owne good Neither is it enough that the loue of God accompany our actions and that they be done in and with it as running together as it were in the same streame but also that it be the fountaine from which all our obedience doth spring and flow Consider we therefore when wee vndertake the
heauenly Lord and Master requireth of vs. The which diligence we will shew not in doing some or many duties neglecting the rest vsing our industry and labour about one as a vaile to couer our sloth in omitting another but in the generall performance of all and euery of those Christian duties which God in his Word imposeth vpon vs and like the good Widdow described by the Apostle wee will diligently follow euery good worke yea wee must approoue our diligence not onely 1. Tim. 5. 10. in performing those good duties which offer themselues vnto vs but in seeking all good occasions and opportunities of this Christian imployment that we may not stand idle and be vnprofitable for want of worke which indeed is neuer wanting if we want not eyes to see it and hearts to vndertake it in due time Neither must our diligence and laborious indeuours bee onely spent in the duties themselues but also about the meanes whereby wee may bee inabled to performe them For in vaine hee pretendeth diligence in attaining to the end who neglecteth the meanes which conduce vnto it seeing the meanes and end doe inseparably goe together And therefore as no man can bee truely said to bee diligent in his iourney to a Cittie who goeth not in the way that leadeth vnto it or in attaining to riches who neglecteth the meanes whereby they are gotten or in preseruing of his life who doeth not vse the helpes of Physicke or diet whereby it may be preserued so neither can any be diligent in the maine duties of a godly life who sheweth not the like industry and labour in the vse of all good helpes and meanes which by Gods Ordinance and appointment inable vs vnto them Neither must wee content our selues with the vse of some meanes and neglect others but we must shew and approoue our diligence in vsing of all good helpes which God hath giuen vs to further vs in our Christian course And as for the preseruing of our naturall life and strength we doe not eate alone or sleepe alone or onely keepe our selues warme or vse good exercise take profitable Physicke but vse all these meanes ioyntly in their fit season so seeing the Lord hath appointed vnto vs variety of good meanes for the preseruing of our spirituall life and growth in grace as praying hearing receiuing the Sacrament reading conferring wee must not thinke it enough to pray or heare or reade or to single out vnto our selues any other meanes vnto which we haue best appetite but wee must approoue our diligence in the ioynt vsing of them all in their due time For as in nature God hath not ordained one thing as sufficient for all purposes but meate to feed vs and not to keepe vs warme clothes to couer vs and hide our nakednesse and not to nourish vs sleepe and exercise to refresh vs and the like so also for the preseruing of our spirituall life it is not enough that we vse one of those meanes whereof God hath giuen vs great variety seeing he hath not made any one of them sufficient for all vses but will haue them seuerally vsed for their seuerall ends and all ioyntly together that we may be made perfect to euery good worke Yea this diligence must shew it selfe not onely in the vse of all the best and chiefe meanes but also in wise obseruing of all circumstances as time place person and such like which may further vs in the well performing all Christian duties Neither must we imploy our diligence and labour in such meanes as are of our owne chusing and best fit our appetite but in those which God hath appointed and sanctified for the better inabling vs vnto his seruice For as it is not enough to be painefull in trauelling vnlesse we chuse the right way which will bring vs to our iourneys end nor for the nourishing of our bodies and preseruing of our naturall strength that we may bee fit for all ciuill imployments to eate any thing that commeth to hand but only such meates as God hath created for this vse and hath made them effectuall vnto it by his holy Ordinance and blessing vpon it so we must not chuse wayes of our owne if we will trauell to our heauenly home but the right and straight way which God in his Word hath prescribed vnto vs we must not for the nourishment of our soules that they may be vigorous strong vnto the duties of a godly life choose food that fitteth our carnall appetite as Images Crucifixes Pilgrimages superstitious Penance which torment the body but doe not at all humble the proud flesh for these being not ordained of God nor sanctified to this vse but inuented and appointed by the skill and will of man haue no more power or vertue to nourish the soule or to strengthen it to vertuous actions then earth or chips haue to nourish the body Neither must we spend our diligence in good meanes vnseasonably out of their due time and place as those which are inferiour lesse powerful when we may imploy our selues in those which are superior and through Gods Ordinance more effectual As in priuate exercises at home when we should ioyne with the Congregation in Gods publike seruice reading a Sermon in our owne houses when wee should heare the Word preached in the House of God for though it be a good exercise at another time and though the Sermon which wee reade may be as good or better then that which wee should heare yet cannot it bee so effectuall vnto vs for the begetting and increasing of our faith and other sauing graces no more then Abana and 2. King 5. 12. Pharpar for the clensing of Naamans Leprosie though as good waters as Iordan because God hath not ordained and sanctified reading to bee so ordinary and effectuall a meanes for the begetting of his graces in vs as Rom. 10. 17. the Word preached and the meanes themselues haue no other vertue and vigour in them but as they are his ordinances which are made effectuall by his blessing Finally as wee must vse all diligence in all good meanes which may strengthen vs to Gods seruice so also in shunning or remouing all lets and impediments whereby wee may be hindred in holy duties and the meanes become vneffectuall or lesse powerfull to those good ends for which we vse them For as he who would be rich is not only diligent in all good meanes which may improue his state but also in shunning the contrary as prodigality excesse in diet and apparell and the company of wastfull and riotous persons and as hee who desireth to preserue his health is not carefull alone to eate wholsome meate but shunneth also the meanes with like care which would hinder good concoction so must we take the like course if wee would thriue in our spirituall estate and haue our soules healthy and strong in sauing grace that they may bee fit and able for the well performance of all
Christian duties §. Sect. 2 Diuers reasons which may moue vs to diligence First because God requireth it And thus we see what diligence and labour wee are to vse in leading a godly life Let vs now consider of the reasons and motiues which may Deut. 6. 17. Psal 119. 4. Ezra 7. 23. perswade vs hereunto And first this diligence must bee vsed in the duties of Gods seruice because God requireth it at our hands You shall diligently keepe the Commandements of the Lord your God and his testimonies and Statutes which he hath commanded thee Of which Commandement Dauid taketh notice Thou hast saith he commanded vs to keepe thy precepts diligently And Ezra like a good Gouernour backeth it with all his authority Whatsoeuer is commanded by the God of heauen let it be diligently done c. Vnto this diligence the Apostle exhorteth in whatsoeuer office or duty we vndertake Rom. 12. 6 7 8. and contrariwise disswadeth from being slothfull in any busines vers 11. especially in the seruice of God vnto which hee requireth feruency of spirit More especially this diligence is required in all good meanes whereby we may be inriched with all vertue and sauing grace So the Apostle Peter Giuing all diligence adde to your faith vertue and to vertue knowledge 2. Pet. 1. 5. vers 10. c. and in getting thereby assurance of our saluation Giue diligence to make your calling and Election sure And aboue all in the religious duties of Gods seruice according to that of our Sauiour Take you heed watch Mark 13. 33. and pray And of his holy Apostle Pray continually in euery thing giue 1. Thes 5. 17. 18. 1. Cor. 15. 10. thankes and againe Continue in prayer and watch in the same with thankesgiuing Of which laborious diligence and vnwearied industry we haue them for examples of their owne precepts For not onely in the painfull labours of his Apostolike ministery this holy Apostle exceeded all the rest but also in attaining vnto spirituall graces and in the exercise of a godly life For forgetting those which were behind hee reached forth vnto Phil. 3. 13. 14. those things which were before and pressed towards the marke for the price of the high calling of God in Iesus Christ But aboue all examples of this diligence is that of our Sauiour Christ whose time was wholly imployed in the duties of Gods seruice spending the day in preaching and working miracles and the night in praying yea with such vnwearied diligence he performed these functions of his office that the wearinesse of his trauell could make him weary of these workes Yea hee preferred the doing of these duties before the satisfying of his hunger and esteemed it as his meate and drinke to doe the workes of him that sent him Now as God requireth Ioh. 4. 34. this diligence and paines in all duties of his seruice so doth hee much approue it wheresoeuer he finds it As in the Angell of the Church of Ephesus I know thy workes and thy labour and thy patience And in the Apoc. 2. 2. seruant who had well imployed his Masters Talents Well done good and Math. 25. 21 26 faithfull seruant c. So doth he much abhorre sloth and negligence in his seruice as appeareth in his sharpe reproofe of the vnprofitable seruant who had hid his Lords Talent in a napkin Thou wicked and slothfull seruant c. branding him with the name of wickednesse because of his slothfulnesse and not because he had riotously mispent his Talent or spoyled his fellowes of those Talents which were committed vnto them but because through his idlenesse and negligence he had been vnprofitable to his Master § Sect. 3 Of the rewards promised to the diligent Secondly the manifold and great benefits wherewith the Lord rich in mercy towards all who diligently serue him will liberally reward their labours may serue as an effectuall reason to incite vs to this duty For wee cannot serue a more bountifull Master nor imploy our labours to better aduantage then in performing vnto him our duty with all diligence seeing he will suffer none of our paines to be spent in vaine but will proportion our wages according to the greatnesse of our worke In this life hee bestoweth vpon those who are diligent in the duties of his seruice not onely a large measure of his temporall benefits and his blessing vpon them whereby they become truly profitable for their vse according to those many and gracious promises which in his Law he hath made vnto Deut. 28. 1 2. c. them but also inricheth their soules with the treasures of his spirituall graces For we can be no more ready to vse the meanes then the Lord is to giue his blessing vpon them whereby they become effectuall vnto those ends for which we vse them Neither is hee euer in this kind wanting to any who are not through their negligence wanting vnto themselues In which regard that may be truly said of our spirituall estate which is spoken of our temporall He becommeth poore that dealeth with a slacke hand Prou. 10. 4. but the hand of the diligent maketh rich Hereby also we attaine vnto the assurance of our Election and effectuall calling which is no otherwise to be had then by this diligence in labouring after it as the Apostle implyeth in those words Brethren giue diligence to make your calling and election 2. Pet. 1. 10. sure and that we shall perseuere in the state of grace vnto saluation for if we giue all diligence in adding one grace and vertue vnto another the same Apostle assureth vs that we shall neuer fall And the Apostle in the Epistle to the Hebrewes remembring the workes of piety and mercy which had been performed by some of the faithfull desireth others to shew Heb. 6. 11 11. the same diligence to their full assurance of hope vnto the end and that they would not be slothfull but followers of them who through faith and patience inherited the promises §. Sect. 4 That this diligence in all Christian duties is in many respects most necessary Thirdly the necessity of this diligence in holy duties may mooue vs to imbrace and vse it For if in ciuill and worldly things no great matter is atchieued without paines and diligence how much lesse in spirituall and heauenly which are so high aboue our reach so excellent aboue all other things and so contrary to our corrupt nature and disposition And if no man can reasonably hope to attaine vnto riches of his owne purchase who gathereth with one hand and scattereth with the other or playeth the good husband at some times and at another neglecteth his businesse and wastfully mispendeth his time and substance nor vnto any great learning if he be slothfull and negligent in his studies or to get the glory of famous victories and glorious triumphs if hee lye idly in the Garison and neuer exercise himselfe in feats of armes
mine heart to performe thy Statutes alway euen vnto the end Concerning the former it is not sufficient to intitle vs vnto true godlinesse that we be religious by fits hauing our good and bad dayes or that wee spend some time in religious exercises and then thinke that we are set at liberty to liue as wee list and to follow the lusts of our owne flesh that wee sometime performe Christian duties when our worldly profits or pleasures will giue vs any leasure and neglect or slightly performe them when wee haue other imployments or as it were in some religious humour and pang of deuotion caused by feare of some approching iudgement or by smart of some present affliction For inconstancie which is a fruit of folly will not stand with true godlinesse which is the head and prime part of spirituall wisedome the which as it inableth vs to choose that which is best so also Psal 111. 10. to be constant in our choyce Whereas folly and impiety are full of vanity and lightnesse causing men according to that sway which they beare in them to be vnsettled and inconstant in all their wayes if at least they haue any inclination vnto religious duties and be not wholly settled vpon their dregs and like Meteors hanging in the ayre sometimes moouing towards heauen and soone after falling backe againe towards the earth But no further progresse hath any made in piety then hee hath profited in the constant practice of religious duties and they who are sometimes hot and sometimes cold and sometimes betweene both luke-warme who one while performe seruice vnto God and another while neglect it now deuout and seemingly zealous in good things and soone after cold and negligent carnall and prophane haue iust cause to suspect themselues that as yet they haue made no sound entrance into the practice of godlinesse §. Sect. 2 The former point illustrated by some comparisons For the course of Christianity in the Scriptures is compared to the Kings high-way and they who goe on in it to trauellers going on in their iourney towards their owne Country and therefore to be sometime seene in this way is no signe that in good earnest wee trauell in it if wee sometimes goe forward and sometime backward but rather that wee are walking for recreation and will giue ouer when we feele any wearynesse Euen theeues and robbers doe sometimes crosse the high-way though their ordinary haunt be in the woods and mountaines yea will trauell in it for a while that they may be thought true men and so get the better aduantage by being vnsuspected of executing their designes but it is onely the honest traueller that goeth constantly in his iourney and trauelleth in it from morning to night It is compared likewise to the running of a Race wherein none get the Garland but they who runne as they 1. Cor. 9. 24. ought and as runners doe not sometime run and sometimes stand still one while hold the right course and another while leauing it spend their time and trauell in by-wayes or in going by fits forward and backward for so they should be Non-proficients ridding no ground and after much labour lost be as farre from the Goale and Garland as they were at the beginning when they first set foorth so none get the Garland of glory who doe not runne constantly in the Race of godlinesse and they who runne by fits and starts sometimes going forward and sometime standing still or going backeward or out of the way become heereby Non-proficients in Christianity and after that by much vnsettled rambling vp and downe they haue tyred themselues in this course they are like the blind Horse in the Mill in the same place and case they were in the beginning no more mortified to sinne nor richer in sauing graces no more expert and actiue in Christian duties no neerer the Goale nor surer of the Garland at the end of their liues then when they first entred into the profession of Religion Yea oftentimes hauing wearied themselues in this fruitlesse labour and seeing the small benefit that they haue reaped of it for want of hope and assurance of euer getting either the Garland of grace or the Crowne of glory they quite giue out and ceasing any longer to run in the Christian Race doe returne backe againe like the Dog to his vomit and run as fast as euer they did in their old wicked courses that so they may not lose all but may gaine at least the prizes of worldly vanities which Satan offereth vnto those who run swiftest in the wayes of wickednesse Finally the Christian life is our spirituall Husbandry in which there cannot be without losse any intermission of our labour but one businesse being finished another presently is to bee vndertaken After breaking vp of our fallow grounds and plowing there must bee sowing and harrowing after seed time weeding and then reaping and carrying into the barne Neither must the spare time between these maine imployments bee spent in idlenesse but in tending of our cattell which are the helpes of husbandry in making and mending of our fences in lopping and topping plashing and pruning threshing out of the Corne that it may be fit for our owne vse or carryed out to the Market with many other imployments of like nature So is there no intermission of our paines in the spirituall Husbandry but after one duty performed we must set our selues about another and spend our whole time either in preparing our hearts that they may be fit grounds to receiue the seede of Gods Word or about the art of sowing or couering the seede that it may not be stolne away or in weeding it from vices and corruptions when it beginneth to grow or in preseruing and strengthening all the good helpes and meanes which will inable and further vs in all our Christian labours or in making or repairing our spirituall fences which may keepe out the beasts of the field and enemies of our Christian thrift or in reaping the present crop of Gods sauing graces which will comfortably sustaine vs in the full assurance and expectation of the euerlasting Haruest of heauenly happinesse §. Sect. 3 A complaint of mens vn constancie in performing the duties of a godly life And yet alas how many of vs who seeme most forward in the profession of Christianity that haue not in the greatest part of their life come to any settled constancie in performing the duties of godlinesse How many professe themselues trauellers towards our heauenly Countrey and yet are vnconstant in all their wayes and vnsettled in all their courses sometime performing the duties of a godly life and sometime neglecting them altogether seruing God one day or in some small part of it spending the rest of their time in seruing Satan the world and their own lusts How many that make a faire shew as though they would run the Christian Race who one while go forward and another while as out of breath
imitate we must carefully auoyd two vices as notable hindrances of this constancie the first is carelesse sloth in spirituall duties arising from our ouer-much minding and affecting of worldly things which maketh vs either to neglect them altogether or to performe them vnconstantly and onely by fits which kinde of intermission is a temporary defection and if it be not reformed will bring vs at last to a full and finall neglect of them The other is fickle vnconstancie in our courses proceeding from carnall lothing of spirituall exercises which causeth vs to bee soone weary of performing any good duty and therefore to shift and change as the sicke man turneth from one side to another vnto a new exercise before we haue finished that in hand and brought it to any good effect like the vnruly Patient who hindreth the cure by often changing of medicines before any of them haue had time to worke or the foolish Gardener who euery hand while transplanteth his trees from one soyle to another and letteth them not haue any conuenient time to be settled and rooted CAP. IX Reasons which may mooue vs to be constant in all Christian duties of a godly life and the meanes of it §. Sect. 1 That constancie is an inseparable companion of integrity ANd thus we see what that constancie which is required in the duties of a godly life and the vices which wee are to shunne as opposite vnto it The arguments which may mooue vs to this constancie are many some whereof I will briefly touch The first reason is because it is an inseparable companion of integrity and vprightnesse of heart For if in sincerity and truth wee performe seruice vnto God out of our loue and obedience to his will then these motiues alwayes remayning will make vs constant in doing of it Whereas if in hypocrisie we formally performe any duties being mooued thereunto by worldly respects then doth our obedience last no longer then they last and as they are variable and subiect to many changes so shall wee likewise change with them according to that of the Apostle Iames A double minded man is vnstable in all his wayes Secondly if we be Iam. 1. 8. not constant in the duties of a godly life all the paines which wee take by fits will be spent in vaine seeing we shall vndoe that one day which wee did the day before and like foolish builders one while setting vp and another while pulling downe we shall not be edified in our faith and sanctification and after much time spent bee neuer the neerer the finishing of our worke For though at some times we row neuer so strongly against the tyde and streame of our corruption yet when wee intermit our labour and giue our selues to sloth and negligence they will carry vs downe againe as farre from the Hauen of our hopes as we were at the beginning Of which we haue lamentable experience in many ancient professors who through this inconstancie in religious duties stand at a stay like dwarses whose age brings no growth neither increasing in knowledge faith and other sauing graces nor in bringing foorth of the fruits of them in their liues and conuersation If therefore wee would spend our paines to any purpose let vs not onely begin well but continue the worke of our sanctification till we haue perfected our holinesse in the feare of God as the Apostle 2. Cor. 7. 1. exhorteth If we would be true Nazarites consecrated to Gods seruice we must not be holy by fits but fulfill the dayes of our sanctification and separating Num. 6. 5 8. our selues from all sinfull pollution we must be holy to the Lord. For as in legall purifications though a man obserued neuer so strictly some Num. 19. 11 12. dayes allotted to his clensing yet if hee failed in any one though it were the very last and defiled himselfe with any legall pollution all his former labour was spent in vaine and the worke was new to begin againe so is it also in our spirituall purifying and in our sanctifying and consecrating our selues to Gods worship and seruice Thirdly the benefits which arise from this constancie may perswade vs to imbrace it for by continuance in Ioh. 8. 31. the Word of Christ we approoue our selues to be his Disciples indeed Wee shall with much ease performe all Christian duties when by our constancie we haue brought our selues to an habit And as all things which are put into a state of motion doe continue moouing with great facility and little helpe and if it be intermitted requireth much more strength and paines to begin it againe then it would haue required to haue continued it in that state so if we be continually inured to the duties of a godly life they will be easie and familiar vnto vs whilest this spirituall motion continueth but if it be broken off and intermitted it is a new worke to begin againe and will not be renewed to the former state without much indeuour and great difficulty It is easie to keepe that armour bright which is daily vsed but vse it onely by some fits and hang it by the walls till it be rusty and it cannot without much labour in skowring it be restored againe to its former brightnesse If the Instrument be daily played vpon it is easily kept in tune by the skilfull Musician but let it but a while be neglected cast in a corner the strings and frets breake and the bridge flyeth off and no small labour is required to bring it into order And thus also it is in spirituall things which are kept in an easie and orderly course with one halfe of the paines if wee continue them with a settled constancie Finally this constancy in holy duties giueth vs assurance of all Gods promises according to that of the Apostle We are made partakers of Christ if we hold the beginning Heb. 3. 14. of our confidence stedfast vnto the end and that couenant made with Dauid in the behalfe of his sonne Salomon I will establish his Kingdome for euer 1. Chro. 28. 7. if he be constant to doe my Commandements and my iudgements as at this day and by Gods gracious and free promise giueth vs iust title to spirituall and heauenly rewards For he will render to euery man according to his deeds To Rom. 2. 6 7. them who by patient continuance in well-doing seeke for glory and honour and immortality eternall life as the Apostle speaketh §. Sect. 2 The manifold euils which accompany vnconstancy in good duties Lastly the manifold euils which are caused by vnconstancy may effectually moue vs to be constant in all good duties For this various and often changing of our spirituall estate vpon euery slight occasion maketh our seruice odious vnto God and all our actions vncleane in his sight The which is implyed in the ceremoniall Law wherein the Chamelion was forbidden among the beasts which were vncleane whose property is to hold constantly no
14. if we hold out the beginning of our confidence stedfast to the end And therefore if we meane to haue any part in Gods promises we must constantly perseuere in the profession and practice of true godlinesse and the Christian duties of an holy life The second meanes of perseuerance is carefully to The second meanes of perseuerance is to auoyd the causes and meanes of apostacy and defection auoyd the causes and meanes of apostasie and defection And these are diuers first voluntary liuing in any knowne sinne which will harden the heart and dead the conscience and so make way for many others till wee be wholly carried away from God in a streame of wickednesse Secondly we must carefully take heed of the least declinations in Christian graces and holy duties for if we be once going downe the hill wee shall hardly keepe our selues from running headlong to the bottome vnlesse wee stop speedily in the very beginning And as for the preseruing of our bodies in a sound estate we labour with seasonable physicke to preuent diseases and when we finde our health to decline a little doe vse all good meanes at the first because if the sicknesse seaze thorowly vpon the vitall parts it will hardly be remoued and indanger our liues so must we take the same course for the good of our soules carefully obseruing the first declinations of our spirituall health that we may stop them at the beginning before they breake out into any extremities And considering that those diseases both of body and soule are most dangerous and desperate not which come suddenly with some sensible violence but which steale vpon vs by degrees vpon no apparant causes and impaire the health by little and little because they are hardly discerned and when they are knowne not easily cured as in the outward man the consumption hectique feuer and the like and in the inward and spirituall part carnall security hardnesse of heart and others of like nature let vs not therefore neglect the least declinations in sauing grace and holy duties but keepe a carefull watch ouer our selues that none of these diseases of our soules steale vpon vs and become desperate before we discerne them Let vs bee as good husbands for our soules as wee are for our clothes houses and grounds mending little holes before they teare out into great rents repairing the first decayes ere they become rotten and ruinous and making vp the breach as soone as wee discerne it before it come to an inundation and carry vs away in a floud of wickednesse And this counsell the Apostle giveth vs. Lift vp saith he the hands which hang downe and the feeble knees and make straight paths to your feet lest that which is lame be turned out of the way but let it rather be healed c. Looking diligently lest any man faile of the grace of God lest any root of bitternesse springing vp trouble you and thereby many be defiled A third cause of apostasie is a great opinion of our owne strength which causeth God to leaue vs that we may see our weaknesse as we see in the fearfull defection of the Apostle Peter And also a fond conceit that we are so rich in grace that we may spend vpon the stocke and labour for no more and that we haue already so well profited in religious duties that we need not take any care or paines to make any further progresse For there is no standing still in the wayes of Christianity but when we cease to goe forward wee begin to goe backward when in our owne opinion we are at the full we will begin to wane and decline towards a change and when our godlinesse is come to a standing water it presently declineth and neuer ceaseth vntill it be come to a low ebbe For the preuenting whereof let vs not measure our vertues and good proceedings by the false mete-yard of pride and selfe-loue which will make vs ouerweene our owne gifts and good parts nor compare our selues with our selues or others that come behind vs and haue not attained vnto Gal. 6. 4. our measure but with the perfect Law of God which like a looking-glasse will discouer our blemishes and imperfections and with our Sauiour Christ the perfect paterne of holinesse and righteousnesse according Ephes 4. 13 14 15. to whose Image we ought to be conformed A fourth cause of defection from God and godlinesse which we must shunne is the immoderate loue of the world and worldly vanities which cooleth and quencheth in vs the loue of God and of spirituall and heauenly things and so choketh in vs all good desires and indeuours of seeking after them that wee may obtaine them For as our Sauiour telleth vs we cannot serue God and Mammon Math 6. 24. Jam. 4. 4. And the Apostle saith that the amity of the world is enmity with God and therefore whosoeuer will be a friend of the world he is Gods enemy Which argument the Apostle Iohn vseth to disswade vs from this carnall loue Loue not the world saith he nor the things that are in the world If any man loue the world the loue of the Father is not in him A fifth cause is slacknesse 1. Ioh. 2. 15. and negligence in the vse of those meanes which both beget and begin Gods graces in vs and also nourish and preserue them when they are begun as the hearing of the Word reading prayer meditation the Sacraments and such like For as the strength of the body languisheth and consumeth if we refuse our bodily food whereby it is preserued so must also our soules needs fall into a consumption of all grace and goodnesse if we neglect that spirituall nourishment by which onely they are sustained in vs. A sixth cause is the grieuing of Gods Spirit dwelling in vs by quenching the good motions of it and defiling our soules with sinnes Ephes 4. 30. 1. Thes 5. 19. that waste the conscience being committed wilfully against the knowledge which loathsome filthinesse polluteth our soules and bodies and maketh this holy Ghest weary of his lodging going away to withdraw also with him his gifts and graces by which alone wee are inabled vnto all good duties And therefore if wee would not fall away from all grace and goodnes let vs louingly entertain the Author of them and not grieue Gods holy Spirit by resisting those good motions which he putteth into vs and by making our hearts and bodies which should be his holy temples and place of residence a loathsome stie of sinfull vncleannesse A last cause of apostacy is neere and inward familiarity with prophane and wicked persons who will corrupt vs with their euill examples and poyson vs with the contagion of their sinnes alluring and drawing vs by degrees Deut 7. 2 3 4. to accompany them in their euill courses vntill at last wee runne on Pro. 22. 24 25. with them into the same excesse of outragious wickednesse and so giue a
finall farewell to all grace and goodnesse 1. Cor. 6. 14. §. Sect. 3 The 3. meanes is to consider that we can no otherwise be accepted and approued of God The third meanes of perseuerance is to consider that there is no other way to be approued of God either in our persons or actions For Heb. 10. 38. though our workes make neuer so glorious a shew in the sight of men and our first beginnings and proceedings seeme most excellent and giue great contentment both vnto our selues and all others yet if we continue not vnto the end the Lord will take no delight either in vs or them according to that of the Apostle If any man draw backe my soule shall take no pleasure in him Fourthly let vs remember that our begun and continued righteousnesse will not at all profit vs if wee desist in our course and returne againe to our former wicked wayes For so the Lord hath plainly said That the righteousnesse of the righteous shall not deliuer him in the day of Ezek. 33. 12. his transgression and for the wickednesse of the wicked he shall not fall thereby in the day that he turneth from his wickednesse neither shall the righteous bee able to liue for his righteousnesse in the day that he sinneth c. And therefore as the sinner hath no cause to goe on in his sinne despairing of pardon so Nec sanctus ergo securus esse debet quandiu in huius vitae agone versatur nec desperare peccator c. Hier. ad Celantiam the righteous hath no reason to desist in his righteousnesse presuming of reward for that which he hath done already The fift meanes is to consider that if wee perseuere not in the profession and practice of true godlinesse all our former labour will not onely be spent in vaine but also to our great losse seeing we shall be in farre worse case after our apostasie then we were before we made any profession of Religion For Satan hauing bin once beaten out of possession vpon his returne taketh surer hold as our Sauiour speakes One euil spirit taketh with him seuen other worse then himselfe Mat. 12. 44 45. and reenter and dwell there the last state of that man is worse then the first So the Apostle Peter telleth vs that it had bin better for apostates not to haue 2. Pet 2. 20 21. Heb. 6. 4. 10. 26. knowne the way of righteousnesse then after they haue knowne it to turne from it like the Dog to his vomit and the Sow being washed to her wallowing in the mire The sixth meanes is to haue alwayes in our remembrance the fearefull punishments which are inflicted vpon Apostates both in this life and the life to come For the backslider in heart shall bee filled with his owne wayes and a Pro. 14. 14. 1. 31. good man who perseuereth in his integrity shall be satisfied from himselfe More especially he that forsaketh God and the wayes of his Commandements the Lord will forsake him giue him ouer vnto himselfe to go on in his owne sinfull courses to his euerlasting perdition and destruction according to that of Dauid to his sonne Salomon If thou forsake him he will 1. Chro. 28. 9. cast thee off for euer And that of Azariah to Asa The Lord is with you 2. Chro. 15. 2. while you be with him and if yee seeke him he will be found of you but if you forsake him hee will forsake you So the Lord threatneth to stretch out his Zeph. 1. 4 6. Luk. 17. 32. hand and to cut off them that were turned backe from him and those who had not sought him nor inquired after him In the life to come Apostates shall be depriued of heauenly happinesse for he only that indureth to the end shall be Mat. 24. 13. saued And he that putteth his hand to the plough and looketh backe shall not be Luk. 9. 62. thought fit for the Kingdome of God Yea they shall not only lose these heauenly ioyes but also haue their portion in hellish torments For they that Heb. 10. 26 27. sinne willingly after they haue receiued the knowledge of the truth and perseuere in their sinnes without repentance there remaineth vnto them no more sacrifice for sinnes but a fearefull looking for of iudgement and fiery indignation which shall deuoure the aduersaries as the Apostle speaketh §. Sect. 4 The last means of perseuerance is Prayer Lastly if we would perseuere in the duties of a godly life vnto saluation we must remember that it is not a thing in our owne power but the free gift of God and therefore if we would haue it we must continually beg it at his hands by feruent and effectuall prayer For as it is he alone that giueth vnto vs the spirituall life of Grace who were naturally dead in trespasses and sinnes so it is he onely that can preserue vs in it And if he openeth Psal 104. 18 19. his gracious hand we shall be nourished and filled with all good but if hee hideth his face from vs wee shall presently be troubled and perish in our former state of sinne and infidelity It is he that worketh in vs both to will and Phil. 2. 13. 4. 13. to doe of his good pleasure and wee who are able to doe nothing of our selues are inabled to doe all things through Christ which strengtheneth vs. It is hee that beginneth the good worke of grace in vs and hee onely can performe and finish it vntill the day of Iesus Christ It is he alone Phil. 1. 6. that is able to keepe vs from falling as the Apostle Iude speaketh and to preserue Iude v. 24. vs faultlesse before the presence of his glory with exceeding ioy We can no more walke in our owne strength in the wayes of godlinesse then Peter could vpon the waters but it is the power of Christs Word that supporteth vs and keepeth vs from sinking and his gracious promises of his helpe and assistance by which we are stayed It is not our apprehending him but his apprehending vs and holding vs in his hand that preserueth Phil. 3. 12. Esa 41. 13. vs from falling for our weake and childish hold would soone faile though we cling vnto him by a liuely faith if he tooke not surer hold of vs and as it were carried vs like a louing Father in the armes of his prouidence Neither doe we chiefly perseuere because wee are faithfull vnto God but because he is faithfull vnto vs and will stablish and keepe vs from all euill Our 2. Thes 3. 3. 1. Cor. 1. 9. 1. Thes 5. 24. Mat. 28. 18. Iob. 10. 28 29. owne strength would not stay vs from being forcibly carried away with the violent tentations of our spirituall enemies but it is our Sauiour Christ that keepeth vs who hauing receiued from his Father all power in heauen and earth is stronger then all
horse full of courage which being well backed may doe good seruice but if he be ill managed carryeth his rider into headlong danger But zeale ioyned with prudence is most necessary for our well proceeding in all vertuous actions seeing like the spirits in the body it giueth to our soules liuely heat wherby they are moued in the course of godlinesse and are made actiue in all Christian duties laboriously vsing all good meanes whereby they may bee furthered and couragiously opposing and remouing all lets and impediments which crosse vs in our way And therefore if we would deserue the name of true Christians wee must take heed that wee incline not to that damnable errour of carnall worldlings who make zeale and prudence flat opposites thinking those that are most feruent most foolish and with Iehu his companions censuring them as mad fellowes that with 2. King 9. any zeale performe their duty seeing holy Dauid who in wisedome exceeded Psal 119. 100. and 69. 9. his teachers and ancients was so zealous in Gods seruice that scoffing Michol condemned him of folly yea our Sauiour Christ himselfe 2. Sam. 6. 20. Col. 2. 3. who is the Wisdome of his Father and in whom all the treasures of wisedome are hid as the Apostle speaketh as hee excelled all men in prudence so also in holy zeale seeing he was not onely thorowly heated but Joh. 2. 17. euen consumed in this diuine flame as hee professeth Neither can true prudence be more seuered from holy zeale then zeale from prudence being Calor innatus humor primogenius siue radicalis herein like the naturall heat and radicall moysture of the body which preserue mutually one another and both faint and faile when either languisheth and decayeth For prudence without the warmth of zeale like frozen waters loseth its motion in Christian duties and like the parts of the body from which the animall spirits are stopped becommeth senselesse and benummed falling as it were into a dead Palsie Yea if zeale doe not put into it Christian courage it groweth so wary and full of caution that it attempteth nothing because in all things it foreseeth danger and so at last degenerateth into worldly wilinesse and irreligious policie Finally we must decke our selues and all Christian duties with true humility ascribing all the glory of them vnto God alone from whom onely we had power and will to doe them and reseruing nothing vnto our selues but the shame of their imperfections and corruptions let vs acknowledge that we are sufficiently rewarded if our frailties and infirmities be graciously pardoned But of this also I haue spoken in the beginning of this Treatise §. Sect. 9 That we must chiefly esteem chuse affect the duties of godlinesse according to their worth and excellency The fifth rule is that in our iudgements we esteeme in our wills chuse with our affections desire and imbrace and in our actions practise and exercise Christian vertues and duties according to their worth and excellency profit and necessity keeping as much as in vs lyeth a due proportion betweene them in our iudgements esteeming and preferring in our wills chusing in our affections louing and desiring and in our actions seeking after and practising euery good grace and duty in their due time and place preferring in our estimate choyce desires and practice the chiefe and principall vertues and duties before the meane and the meane before others that are inferiour vnto them Not that we may neglect the least grace of God or Christian duty or so regard the greatest and most excellent as that we dis-esteeme the least and meanest for as our Sauiour saith Whosoeuer breaketh one of these least Commandements and shall teach men Mat. 5. 19. so he shall be called the least that is none at all in the Kingdome of heauen but that we must when they may all stand together giue the priority and precedencie in iudgement desire and practice to the chiefest both in time and earnestnesse of indeuour spending our first and best time the feruour of our zeale and chiefe vigour and strength both of body and minde about them or if wee are brought into such straights of necessity that all cannot bee done but some must necessarily bee omitted that then the lesser giue place to the greater till wee can get fit opportunity of performing both Thus wee must preferre Theologicall vertues as faith affiance hope charity humility and the feare of God before those which are humane and ciuilly Morall as temperance chastity ciuill iustice almes-deeds and such like and generally our duties towards God before our duties towards our neighbours and our selues the Commandements of the first Table before those of the second a due proportion being obserued Morall duties being compared with Morall degree with degree as the greatest with the greatest middle with middle and least with least more desiring and zealously indeuouring to get the chiefe graces and performe the religious duties of Gods seruice then those which meerely concerne our selues or our neighbours Thus wee are more feruently to effect and diligently to practise Morall and substantiall duties then those which are ceremoniall and circumstanciall yea to reiect these latter when both will not stand together according to that I will mercy and not sacrifice and the practice of our Sauiour Hos 6. 6. who neglected the outward rest of the Sabbath that hee might doe the workes of the Sabbath in curing and healing the lame and diseased The contrary whereof God condemneth in the Iewes and reiecteth Esa 1. 11 12 17. 66. 1 2 3. their ceremoniall seruice as odious and abominable because they tooke occasion thereby to neglect the Morall And thus they offend who spend their chiefe zeale about ceremonies and circumstances of Gods seruice and imploy their best strength and indeuour either in defending or opposing them being in the meane time more cold and slacke in the mayne parts of Gods seruice and the principall duties of a godly life Thus we must preferre the seruice of God it selfe before the meanes of it and the duties of piety and charity before the helpes which further vs in them as the doing of the Word before hearing the practice of godlinesse before the teaching or learning of it when both cannot well stand together prayer and the workes of piety and righteousnesse before fasting and outward abstinence In which regard the Lord reiecteth Esa 58. 3 4 5 6. the fasts of the Iewes because they preferred them before the workes of Iustice and charity neglecting these vnder colour of doing the other And thus likewise they faile who place their Religion chiefly in hearing the Word in the meane time neglecting the practice of what they heare and learne in the duties of their callings and in the workes of Iustice and mercy towards their neighbours heerein like vnto rich misers which spend all their time and strength in gathering riches and when they haue got them into their
helpe of their notes and examining their children and seruants and putting them to giue an account of what they haue heard and learned Lastly we must make what we haue heard our owne by applying it to our owne vse and bringing it to practice in our liues and conuersations whereby we shall Luk. 11. 28. Ioh. 13 17. Iam. 1. 25. intitle our selues to that blessednesse which is promised to all those who both heare the Word and keepe it And so much of the first meanes of inabling vs to the duties of a godly life the ministery of the Word and the things that are required vnto it The which I haue the more briefly Christian warfare 1. part lib. 2. cap. 26. passed ouer because I haue touched diuers of the poynts before and more fully handled some of them in another Treatise CAP. VII Of the second publike meanes of a godly life which is the administration of the Sacraments §. Sect. 1 That the Sacraments further vs much in a godly life as they are seales of the Couenant THe second meanes of inriching vs with all sauing graces and strengthening vs vnto all the duties of a godly life is the right vse of the Sacraments Baptisme and the Lords Supper both which doe much conduce hereunto and each of them seuerally For the Sacraments are seales annexed to the Couenant of grace purposely instituted of God to strengthen and confirme our faith in this assurance that Christ and all his benefits doe belong vnto vs that in him and for his righteousnesse death and full satisfaction vnto Gods Iustice he hath pardoned and forgiuen vnto vs all our sinnes that in him he is well pleased with vs and hath giuen vnto vs iust title and interest to all his promises both of grace in this life and glory and happinesse in the life to come that hee will giue vnto vs his holy Spirit and thereby write his Law in our hearts that we shall not depart from him mortifie our corruptions and quicken vs vnto new obedience Of all which benefits the Sacraments are not onely significant signes but also infallible seales annexed purposely by God vnto his Couenant to assure vs that he will performe all his promises and to giue vnto vs like a bond and conueyance legally signed and sealed iust title and interest vnto all those blessings euen before we sensibly haue them in possession and fruition Yea not onely so but they also serue like instruments and conduit pipes to conuey to the worthy receiuer Christ and all his benefits Now what can more forcibly perswade or more powerfully inable vs to the duties of a godly life then the representing assuring and exhibiting of all these inestimable benefits in the right vse of the Sacraments What can more inflame our hearts with most feruent loue towards God then the consideration yea sense and feeling of this admirable loue of God towards vs in giuing vnto vs when wee were sinners strangers and enemies vnto him and his grace Christ Iesus and with him all these vnspeakable benefits and what more then loue can effectually mooue vs to an holy desire in all things to glorifie and please him and to walke worthy his loue in all holinesse of life and conuersation What can more lighten the burthen of our labour and make vs to thinke all too little which we can doe and suffer for him Againe the Couenant of grace sealed vnto in the right vse of the Sacraments doth singularly incourage vs to lay aside all doubts and difficulties seeing God thereby assureth vs that he will yea hath giuen vnto vs his holy Spirit to direct and assist vs in all our good indeuours in the mortifying of all our sinfull corruptions seeme they neuer so strong and vnresistable and strengthening vs to the performance of all good duties seeme they neuer so difficult and vnpleasing vnto flesh blood And what can more effectually moue vs to go on in the worke of sanctification then to haue such an assistant to ioyne with vs vnto whom nothing is difficult being infinitely able to performe and perfect whatsoeuer he vndertaketh What can more powerfully perswade vs to doe God faithfull seruice then to haue the pardon of our sinnes put into our owne hands signed and sealed so dearly purchased and so freely giuen then to haue the present pledges and pawnes of Gods loue and fauour the earnest of his Spirit the first fruits of his graces and the conueyances of our heauenly Inheritance sealed and deliuered into our own keeping For who would be so sluggish as not to doe faithfull and diligent seruice to such a glorious and gracious Master for such liberall and bountifull wages Finally seeing in the right vse of the Sacraments wee doe really and truly though spiritually and by faith receiue Christ that he may dwell in vs and we in him and not onely communicate with him in his diuine graces imputed by God and applyed by faith but also by vertue of his Spirit assisting this ordinance haue all sanctifying and sauing graces confirmed and increased in vs whereby wee are strengthened vnto all the duties of a godly life hence also it appeareth how much they conduce and further vs in them seeing we haue Christ himselfe a co-worker with vs who by his holy Spirit sustaineth the greatest part of the waight of that his easie yoke and light burthen which he layeth vpon vs in which respect we may take courage vnto vs and say with the Apostle that we are able to doe all things through the power of Christ which strengtheneth Phil. 4. 13. vs and seeing also they cherish and increase his gifts and graces in vs whereby we are moued and inabled to worke together with him in all holy duties of Gods seruice and of a godly and Christian life §. Sect. 2 That the Sacraments further vs in godlinesse as they are testifications of our seruice to God Secondly the Sacraments are helpes vnto vs for this purpose as they are solemne testifications of our seruice and obedience vnto God seeing they are his liueries and cognizances whereby his seruants are knowne from others and the sacramentall oath which he causeth all his souldiers to take when he entertaineth them into his spirituall warfare and the pres-money which he putteth into their hands whereby hee obligeth and firmely bindeth them to continue constant in this warfare and to fight couragiously vnder his colours Now this may mooue vs to doe faithfull seruice vnto our great Lord and Master partly because hee hath so innobled vs by giuing vs entertainment into his Family and graced vs by letting vs weare his liuery and cognizance seeing it is a farre greater aduancement and dignity to be one of his meanest seruants euen a doore-keeper in his House then to be the greatest Monarch in the earth partly Psal 84. 10. because he incourageth vs to faithfull and diligent seruice by such bountifull wages and inestimable rewards and partly because wee shall otherwise
sence of our imperfections if wee did not also obserue men subiect to the like infirmities walking before vs in the wayes of godlinesse and inuiting vs to follow them who though they goe not so swiftly as they should yet haue much outstripped vs in the Christian race Furthermore this society and communion with the faithfull is a notable meanes to make vs familiar with God and to inioy the fellowship of his holy Spirit which is the chiefe bond that vniteth vs together in this holy communion For where two or three are gathered together in Matth. 18. 20. Christs name and Gods feare to performe Christian exercises and to further one another in the waies of saluation there he also is in the midst of them taking notice of their actions and making himselfe better knowne vnto them his face and fauour his bounty and goodnesse whereby they are incouraged with more chearefulnesse to doe him seruice §. Sect. 8 That good company preserueth vs from falling into many sins and inciteth vs to many duties Finally it is a notable helpe vnto a godly life because it is a powerfull Magna pars peccatorum tollitur si peccaturis testis assistat Seneca Epist 11. Malum quippe quod nemo videt nemo arguit c. Bernard Epist 115. meanes to restraine and pull vs backe when as we are ready to fall into any sinne In which regard that wise heathen man perswadeth his friend to suppose some graue man to bee present when he was alone because men would not easily offend if there were alwaies some by to bee witnesses of their faults And one of the Ancients vseth it as a reason to disswade from a solitary life because thereby wee become more prone to sinne seeing that euill which none seeth none rebuketh and where there is none to reprehend both the tempter assaulteth more securely and the offence is committed more licentiously If thou doest any good things in good company no man prohibiteth But if thou wilt doe euill thou art not suffered for presently thou art by many obserued reproued and amended whereas contrariwise if they behold any good they all admire it honour and imitate it In which respect also good company doth no more forcibly restraine vs from euill then incite and prouoke vs vnto that which is good For as iron sharpeneth iron so a man sharpeneth the countenance of his Pro. 27. 17. friend that is one friend by the presence of another is whetted on and prouoked to doe such good duties as deserue his approbation In which respect the Apostle exhorteth Christians to obserue one another that they may whet and sharpen each other to loue and good workes For if euen Heb. 10. 24. hypocrites and men of ingenuous natures though they care not for good exercises are ready to ioyne with their friends in them to get their allowance and loue Then how much more will it quicken those that are truely religious vnto euery good worke and Christian dutie which they like and loue when with the approbation of their friends they haue the allowance of God and their owne consciences And if Saul himselfe prophecied by keeping company with the Prophets being as it were rap't and rauished for the time with a diuine furie how 1. Sam. 19. 20 21. much more shall those that are truely religious bee much inflamed with zeale and deuotion in all holy exercises when being in good company they are rap't vp and rauished with the diuine breath of the holy Spirit which bloweth amongst them §. Sect. 9 That by good company wee are fitted to performe Christian duties one towards another Lastly good company is a singular helpe vnto a godly life as it fitteth and enableth vs to vse all Christian duties one towards another whereby we doe mutually further one another in all holy and religious actions tending to edification to the inriching of vs with all sauing graces and the strengthening of vs vnto all good workes The first whereof is mutuall obseruation and watching ouer one another that we may take all occasions of doing good both by restrayning those from sinne that are ready to fall into it and by inciting and prouoking one another vnto all vertuous actions Vnto which the Apostle exhorteth Let vs saith he consider one another to prouoke vnto loue and to good workes For Heb. 10. 24. the Law of charity requiring that wee should loue our neighbours as our selues bindeth vs to seeke their good as well as our owne and to this end to watch ouer them that we may take all good opportunities whereby we may further them in the waies of godlinesse And therefore let vs not thinke that wee haue discharged our duty when as wee haue vsed the meanes of our conuersion and saluation and that we haue nothing to do with other men seeing our Sauior requireth that when we Luke 22. 32. are conuerted we strengthen our brethren And the Apostle giueth vs in charge that we should not onely looke on our owne things but that euery man should also looke on the things of others And not to take care of our brethren Phil. 2. 4. as well as our selues is plainely to discouer that we are of Cains spirit Gen. 4. who refused to be his brothers keeper and no true members of Christs body whose property is not to respect their owne good alone but as it is conioyned with the good of the whole bodie and of all the rest of their fellow members The second Christian dutie is instruction whereby with all readinesse we informe the ignorant in all the waies of godlinesse inlighten them in the knowledge of God and his truth and open their eyes that they may turne from darkenesse to light and from the Acts 2● 18. power of Satan vnto God that they may receiue forgiuenesse of sinnes and inheritance amongst them which are sanctified by faith in Christ. Whereby also wee reclaime the erroneous which wander out of the way of truth which is a speciall dutie required by the Apostle Brethren if any of you Iames 5. 20. doe erre from the truth and one conuert him let him know that he which conuerteth the sinner from the errour of his way shall saue a soule from death and shall hide a multitude of sinnes Which duties if we performe wee shall be richly rewarded in Gods Kingdome where they that turne many to Dan. 12. 3. righteousnesse shall shine in the light of glory like the Starres in the firmament as they shined here in the light of truth The third dutie is admonition whereby wee put our brethren in minde of their dutie when they seeme to forget and neglect it by falling into sinne and lying Rom. 15. 14. 1. Thes 5. 14. in it without repentance or omitting the duties of Gods seruice either those which are generall and belong to all Christians or those which specially belong to them in their seuerall places and callings of which I haue spoken
before at large The fourth dutie is reprehension whereby we rebuke those that wittingly fall into sinne and wilfully continue in it without amendment The which the Apostle requireth where he chargeth vs to haue no fellowship with the vnfruitfull Epe 15. 11. workes of darkenesse but to reproue them rather implying that if wee see sinne in our brother and doe not rebuke him for it hauing a calling thereunto wee haue communion and fellowship with him and are accessary to his sinnes The right course of performing which dutie our Sauiour plainely setteth downe If thy brother shall trespasse against Matth. 18. 15. thee goe and tell his fault betweene thee and him alone and if he shall heare thee thou hast gained thy brother c. Which dutie if wee neglect we hate our brother in truth whatsoeuer shew we make to the contrary and doe nothing hereby but discouer our selfe-love which maketh vs loth to trouble our selues in so vnpleasant a businesse and suffer others rather to perish in their sinnes then wee will venter the alienation of their hearts from vs by giuing them any distaste And this reason the Lord vseth to presse this duty Thou shalt not hate thy brother in thine heart Leu. 19. 17. but thou shalt in any wise rebuke thy neighbour and not suffer sinne vpon him The fifth dutie is exhortation whereby wee incite and prouoke others vnto all duties of godlinesse pricking forward those which are dull and sluggish dehorting and disswading from vice and sinne those that are in danger to fall into it and incouraging those who runne well in the Christian race that they may continue faithfull and hold out vnto the end And vnto this the Apostle perswadeth vs Exhort one another dayly while it is called to day lest any of you be hardned through the deceitfulnesse Heb. 3. 13. of sinne The sixth dutie is consolation whereby wee strengthen the weake hands and feeble knees and refresh with seasonable Heb. 12. 12. comforts those which are ready to faint vnder the waight of their afflictions And this the Apostle requireth of all Christians Comfort 1. Thes 5. 11 14. saith he your selues together and edify one another euen as you doe and againe Comfort the feeble-minded support the weake be patient towards all men Reioyce with them that reioyce and weepe with them that weepe be of the same Rom. 12. 15. minde one towards another for it is an ease to those that are in misery to haue companions of their griefe and the heauiest waight is made more tolerable when as it is borne by many shoulders The seuenth duty is counsell whereby we aduize those who doe not know of themselues what to doe in the best course which is an excellent office to bee performed by those whom God hath indued with wisedome and sound iudgement towards them who are weake and defectiue in these gifts Yea in truth it is very profitable when it is giuen by those which are of equall parts yea oftentimes by those who are much inferiour vnto vs as we see in Abigails counsell to Dauid because lookers on being free from all preiudice and passion can see more cleerly then those who are interessed in the busines though at other times more quick-sighted pride selfe-loue and vnruly affections corrupting and blinding their iudgement and mis-leading them out of the right way The last duty tending to further one another in godlinesse is good example by which shining before them in the light of an holy conuersation we doe not onely shew them the wayes of righteousnesse but also as it were by the hand leade them in it And vnto this our Sauiour exhorteth Let your light so shine before men that seeing Mat. 5. 16. your good workes they may glorifie your Father which is in heauen And the Apostle Peter Haue your conuersation honest among the Gentiles that 1. Pet. 2. 12. and 3. 1. whereas they speake against you as euill doers they may by your good workes which they shall behold glorifie God in the day of visitation And so much concerning the ordinary helpes and meanes whereby wee may be inabled and furthered in all the duties of a godly life CAP. XXXIII Of extraordinary meanes of a godly life and first of feasting and solemne thankesgiuing §. Sect. 1 Of solemne thankesgiuing what it is and when to be performed HAuing intreated of the ordinary meanes of a godly life it now followeth that we say something of the extraordinary which are such as are to be vsed vpon extraordinary occasions when God offereth them vnto vs. And these are specially two the first is holy feasting wherein we returne vnto God thankes and praise for his speciall blessings and benefits the other an holy fast wherein we doe after an extraordinary manner humble our selues before him in the sight and sense of our sinnes or some afflictions which they haue deseruedly brought vpon vs. Concerning the former I shall not need to say much seeing I haue already spoken of it and am here onely to shew what extraordinary thankes and praise we are to returne vnto God when as we are stirred vp thereunto by some extraordinary and speciall benefit The which is the same thanksgiuing spoken of before performed in a solemne special maner for some great extraordinary fauour of God shining cleerly in some more then vsuall benefit receiued as it were from his owne hand when in respect of secondary causes we could not so much as hope for it and in regard of our sinnes and vnworthinesse we had good cause to expect the contrary As when God hath magnified his wisedome power and goodnesse vnto vs in some wonderful deliuerance from some dreadful and desperate danger threatening imminent destruction or out of some grieuous calamity into which we are already plunged when as we could not reasonably expect helpe and safety from our owne meanes or the assistance of any creature but from God alone to whom nothing is impossible or in bestowing vpon vs some positiue benefit of great vse and worth when vpon the former considerations we could conceiue small hope that euer we should haue inioyed it Of the former we haue diuers examples in the Scriptures As in that solemne thanksgiuing rendred vnto God by the people of Israel for their freedome out of the Egyptian bondage and for drowning their enemies in the red Sea for which Moses Miriam with the rest of the people Exod. 15. men and women reioyce before God and sing vnto him songs of deliuerance The which they yeerly renewed in a most solemne manner in the celebration of the Feast of the Passeouer wherein they litterally magnified Gods mercy for that temporary deliuerance and typically for their spirituall Redemption from sinne Satan and all other enemies of their saluation by the true Paschall Lambe the Messias who was to bee slaine and offered to God his Father as a propitiatory sacrifice and all-sufficient price of Redemption
for their sinnes and all others who should beleeue in him And such a solemne thankesgiuing was made by Deborah Iudg. 5. and the people for their victory ouer Sisera and their freedome from the tyranny of Iabin King of Canaan who had long oppressed them By Dauid when as God had deliuered him out of the hands of all his enemies and especially out of the hand of Saul and by Hester Mordecay and the Iewes Hest 9. of the Captiuity from that feareful conspiracy of Haman who had plotted the destruction of the whole Nation And such a feast of thanksgiuing we worthily celebrate vpon the fifth of Nouember for that maruellous and almost miraculous deliuerance of our King and State from that horrible and vnmatchable Powder-treason by giuing wisdom to our gracious Soueraigne to interpret their darke riddle as he did somtime to Daniel for the expounding of Nebuchadnezzars dreame when the wisedome of the wisest in the Land could not vnfold it Of the other we haue an example in Abraham who made a solemne feast that he might render vnto God Gen. 21. praise and thankesgiuing for giuing vnto him contrary to all hope a son in his old age of whom should come that promised seed in which both himselfe and all the Nations of the earth should be blessed §. Sect. 2 When this solemne thanksgiuing is most seasonable how it differeth from that which is ordinary and the kinds of it Which examples we ought to imitate consecrating vnto God some day for solemne thankesgiuing whensoeuer wee receiue from him any great and extraordinary benefits either priuatiue consisting in deliuerance from some imminent or present euill or positiue when as he vouchsafeth vnto vs some great and vnexpected blessing But aboue all other times we must performe this duty when wee celebrate the Sacrament of the Lords Supper in remembrance of that inestimable benefit the great worke of our Redemption wrought by the death and Passion of Iesus Christ whereby we are deliuered out of the hands of all our spirituall enemies The which is called the Eucharist or a Sacrament of thankesgiuing because therein wee doe in a solemne manner render vnto God thankes and praise for Christ and all his benefits the pardon of our sins and that great Charter of our peace sealed first by his blood and now by this Sacrament instituted to put vs in remembrance of it and as it were afresh to renew his Couenant and to put our Pardon into our owne hands Now this extraordinary thankesgiuing to bee vsed vpon such speciall occasions differeth from that which is ordinary not in the matter which is one and the same but in the manner and measure which according to the occasion ought to be extraordinary in quantity and degree For our hearts must be more then vsually inflamed with the apprehension of Gods loue and goodnesse and inward ioy in the speciall fruition of his singular blessings which must affect them with extraordinary zeale to glorifie and praise him and to expresse our thankfulnesse by renewing our couenant with God binding our selues by firme resolution that in sense of his present fauours wee will be more deuout and zealous in all duties of his seruice for the time to come then euer we haue been in time past And by continuing our thankesgiuing in a solemne manner for a longer time then ordinary setting it apart as a Sabbath of rest from all our worldly labours that it may be wholly spent in Gods praises and in testifying our loue and inward ioy and reioycing in him by outward feasting and more liberall vse of meates and drinkes and all other comforts of this life and in shewing our loue and bounty in obedience to God by entertaining at our table and by sending gifts and rewards vnto our poore neighbours that they also may reioyce with vs. And this solemne feasting and thankesgiuing is according to the occasion of it publike or priuate Publike for some publike benefit which concerneth the welfare of the Church or Common-wealth which is to bee appoynted onely by the publike authority of Christian Magistrates and is to be celebrated in a most solemne and publike manner all sorts and conditions of men assembling together in the Church to magnifie and praise Gods holy name and to craue the continuance of his loue and fauour The which prayers and prayses are profitably conioyned with the preaching of the Word for the stirring vp of the whole Assembly to extraordinary thankfulnesse when as thereby the greatnesse of the blessings receiued and the inestimable mercie of God is set forth vnto them Priuate for some speciall benefits bestowed either on a particular person or a whole family which is to bee solemnized by singing of Psalmes prayer and thankesgiuing reading of some portions of holy Scriptures fit for the present occasion holy conferences whereby wee are to magnifie Gods mercies and to recount and tell what great things hee hath done for vs and also expressing our inward ioy by a more free and liberall vse of Gods creatures whereof wee must also cause our poore neighbours to haue some taste The which kind of feasting and solemne thankesgiuing is a notable helpe vnto true godlinesse as it worketh our hearts to a more liuely sense feeling of Gods loue stirreth vs vp to more zealous performance of all religious duties vnto him who hath been so gracious and good vnto vs and as it giueth vs occasion to renew our couenant with God and to confirme our resolution that wee will be more diligent and zealous in doing all things which may please and glorifie him CAP. XXXIIII Of the second extraordinary meanes which is solemne fasting §. Sect. 1 What a true fast is and how it differeth from all other fasts THe other extraordinary meanes of a godly life is an holy fast of which it is my purpose to speake briefly though the vse and benefit of this duty is so great that it well deserueth a more full discourse because it is already so excellently and exactly handled in diuers Treatises purposely written of this argument and especially in one which is called The holy exercise of a true fast and in another intituled The Christian exercise of fasting written many yeeres since by the right Reuerend Father and my most deare brother that nothing materiall can be added vnto it And therefore I will content my selfe to set downe after mine owne manner some of those poynts briefly which are most essentiall and necessary vnto this exercise for how should I in a Chapter expresse all fully which would require a whole Treatise referring the Christian Reader vnto those learned Treatises if he desire more thorow satisfaction and particular direction in any of them And first that wee may begin with the description of this duty A fast as we here vnderstand it is a voluntary religious and solemne action vndertaken vpon some extraordinary occasion wherein we seriously humble our selues before God in the sight and sense of
vnto vncleannesse but vnto holinesse that the grace of 1. Thes 4. 7. Tit. 2. 11 12. God which bringeth saluation appearing or shining vnto vs in the ministery of the Gospell teacheth vs to deny vngodlinesse and worldly lusts and to liue soberly righteously and godly in this present world which lesson if we learne not we had been better to haue sate still in darknesse seeing our knowledge will but aggrauate our sinne and increase our condemnation according to that of the Apostle To him that knoweth to doe good and doth it not to him it is sinne and that of our Sauiour The seruant that knoweth his Ioh. 9. 31. Jam. 4. 17. Luk. 12. 47. Masters will and doth it not shall be beaten with many stripes Finally our Sauiour telleth vs that if we be grafted in him we must bring forth fruit seeing euery branch that beareth not fruit he taketh away and casteth forth as a branch that is dead and withered and men gather them and cast them into the Ioh. 15. 2 6. fire and they are burned And therefore if wee would haue any assurance that we are effectually called that Christ is ours and we his and that being vnited vnto him as liuely members of his body we haue right vnto him and all his benefits let vs as the Apostle exhorteth walke worthy the vocation Ephes 4. 1. 2. Pet. 1. 10. wherewith we are called and as the Apostle Peter perswadeth Let vs make our Calling and Election sure by adding one vertue vnto another and bringing forth the fruits of them all in a godly and Christian life §. Sect. 2 The second reason taken from our Iustification and the fruits which follow it Finally the benefit of our Iustification with all the fruits that doe follow it are so many strong motiues to incite vs vnto the duties of a godly life for God in our Iustification of his free grace imputing vnto vs the death and obedience of Iesus Christ hath forgiuen vs all our sinnes and pronounced vs iust and righteous in his righteousnesse By which inestimable benefit he hath bound vs to serue and glorifie him in all holy duties who hath done so great things for vs. For seeing there is no euill like the euill of sinne no tyranny and bondage alike miserable therefore when God of his free grace hath freed vs from it wee must with all care flee sinne and take heed that wee doe not againe come into this thraldome And seeing he hath forgiuen vs so great a debt let this make vs Luk. 7. 47. loue him much and expresse our loue by seruing and pleasing him in the duties of holinesse and righteousnesse The which vse the Apostle maketh of this benefit namely that being dead vnto sinne that is freed from Rom. 6. 10 12 18. the power and tyranny of it and aliue vnto God we should not let sinne any longer raigne in our mortall bodies that we should obey it in the lusts thereof but that we should yeeld our selues vnto God as those that are aliue from the dead and our members as instruments of righteousnesse vnto God and that being made free from sinne we should become the seruants of righteousnesse Which if we doe not we can haue no assurance that wee are redeemed by Christ and iustified seeing the same vertue and power of Christs death and Resurrection which taketh away the guilt and punishment of our sinnes in Ephes 5. 25 26. 1. Pet. 2. 24. our Iustification is as effectuall to sanctifie vs in the killing and crucifying of our corruptions and our spirituall quickening to holinesse and newnesse of life in our sanctification and as well did there issue out of his pierced side the water of ablution to cleanse vs from the pollution of sinne as the blood of Redemption to free vs from the guilt and punishment The fruits also which follow our Iustification doe effectually perswade vs to serue God in all the duties of a godly life For seeing wee are reconciled vnto God by the death of Christ our care must bee to walke in such a course as may preserue vs in his loue for Christ hath as the Apostle speaketh reconciled vs in the body of his flesh through death to present Col. 1. 21 22. vs holy vnblameable and vnreprooueable in his sight We haue receiued the Spirit of Adoption crying in our hearts Abba Father that it may be also Rom. 8. 15. in vs the Spirit of Sanctification and inable vs to please God in al things as it beseemeth his children And in whomsoeuer this Spirit is them it regenerateth raising them from the death of sinne to the life of righteousnesse Ephes 3. 12. So our free accesse to the Throne of grace should make vs take heed of sinne which will be as a wall of separation betweene God and vs and to liue in such holinesse of life as may still preserue our confidence in making our suits knowne vnto God The loue of God shed abroad in Rom. 5. 5. our hearts by the holy Ghost will inflame them with loue towards him and make vs carefull to approue it by liuing according to his will The peace of God following our Iustification by faith and passing all vnderstanding Rom. 5. 1. must make vs diligent in shunning those things which might disturbe it and imbracing and practising such vertues and holy duties as will preserue it Our spirituall ioy and reioycing in God will make vs auoyd all knowne sinnes which would interrupt our ioy and turne it into Rom. 5. 3. sorrow and to please the Lord in all things that his face and fauour may make vs still glad Our hope of heauenly happinesse will also much incourage vs in the worke of our sanctification for as many as haue this 1. Ioh. 3. 2 3. hope that they shall be like Christ in glory purge themselues as he also is pure as the Apostle teacheth vs. In a word there is no benefit accompanying grace and saluation which may not serue as an effectuall reason to moue vs to the practice of all holy duties both out of thankefulnesse towards God for such inestimable gifts and for the better assuring our selues that we haue receiued them seeing God hauing giuen them all vnto vs for this end we haue no reason to perswade our selues that wee haue any interest in them vnlesse they further vs to it and stirre vs vp in some measure to glorifie God in all the duties of an holy life And therefore if wee haue any loue towards God wrought in vs by so many rich mercies or any true loue towards our selues which is chiefely shewed in seeking the assurance of such inestimable benefits let vs aboue all things labour and indeuour to serue and pleased God by bringing forth the fruits of holinesse and righteousnesse in the whole course of our liues and conuersations CAP. XXXIX Other motiues arising from those duties which we owe vnto God and our neighbours §.
Apostle perswadeth Christians in diuers callings to performe their duties in them that they might not cause the Word of God to be blasphemed 1. Tim. 6. 1. Tit. 2. 5. seeing it is the common custome of worldly and wicked men to to lay the faults of Professours vpon their profession and to impute their scandalous sinnes to their much going to Church and hearing of the Word as though their profession and hearing were the cause of their wicked and vnlawfull courses whereas in truth they would if they abused them not bee as strong cables to draw them from all impiety and vnrighteous dealing And contrariwise he would haue them to liue in an holy conuersation that they might adorne the doctrine Tit. 2. 10. of God our Sauiour in all things For men are apt to speake of the Religion and truth which wee professe either in the better or worser part according to the fruits which we bring forth of it in our liues thinking our Religion to bee pure and good if we approue our selues to bee so by our holy and Christian practice and conuersation but contrariwise if like those of whom the Apostle speaketh wee haue onely a forme of Godlinesse and in our liues deny the power there of or professe 2. Tim. 3. 5. that we know God but in our workes disclaime him being abominable and Tit. 1. 16. disobedient and vnto euery good worke reprobate wee shall open their mouthes not onely against vs but also against all Professours of Gods true Religion yea euen against the Religion and Doctrine of truth it selfe which we professe For if euer Dauid himselfe fall into foule sinnes it will not onely tend to his owne dishonour but also giue occasion to the enemies of the Lord to blaspheme as though he were 2. Sam. 12. 14. a patrone or approuer of such crimes §. Sect. 5 The 1. reason that we may auoid giuing of offence And so much of those reasons which respect God The second sort respect our neighbours from whom also wee may draw diuers arguments 1. Cor. 10. 32. to perswade vs to an holy conuersation And first because we shall being vnblameable auoid giuing vnto them any iust offence eitherby laying stumbling blockes in their way whereby they should be hindred from the professing of the true Religion when as they are able to take exceptions to the liues of Professours or if they bee religious bee grieued in their righteous soules when they see our liues full of blots and blemishes or make the weake fall by our ill 2. Pet. 2. 7 8. example The which we must carefully auoid because our Sauiour Matth. 18. 7. pronounceth a fearefull woe against those by whom such offences come and contrariwise labour with the Apostle to exercise our selues Acts 24. 16. dayly in this that wee may haue alwaies a conscience void of offence towards God and towards men Secondly we may be moued to the practice The second reason of al holy duties of a godly life that we may gaine those that are without to Christ to imbrace that true Religion which we professe For if we haue our conuersation honest among the Gentiles they seeing our good 1. Pet. 2. 12. workes will glorifie God in the day of their visitation And this argument the Apostle Peter vseth to perswade wiues vnto their dutie that they which 1. Pet. 3. 1. obeied not the Word might without the Word be won with their Christiā conuersation The which so much preuailed with the Apostle Paul that he vtterly denied himselfe and his owne will and became all things to all men that he might gaine some to Christ and was content to please all 1. Cor. 9. 19 22. Chap. 10. 33. men in all things not seeking his owne profit but the profit of many that they might bee saued And how much more then should we with all willingnesse walke in such a course of holinesse and righteousnesse which in gayning others will profit our selues and not onely saue them by gayning them to Christ through our good example but assure our selues also of our saluation Finally wee may be perswaded vnto all The third reason holy and Christian duties because they so much tend to the good and profit of our brethren who are in the same holy communion with vs. First because by the light of our godly liues we shall moue them together with vs to glorifie our heauenly Father who is the Author Matth 5. 16. and Fountaine of all good things which they see in vs. Secondly because we shall edifie them by our good example and moue them to imitate those good things they shall see in vs and by our communion and fellowship with them like kindled coales on the same heape wee shall inflame their zeale and by an holy emulation make them striue to match vs in their Christian duties as the Apostle sheweth in the example of the Corinthians whose zeale in Christian beneficence 2. Cor. 9. 2. had as hee saith prouoked many And thus hee perswadeth Timothy to bee an example vnto beleeuers in word in conuersation in charity 1. Tim. 4. 12. in spirit in saith in puritie And exhorteth vs all to consider one Heb. 10. 24. another to prouoke vnto loue and to good workes To which purpose nothing can bee more effectuall then good examples when as we see those duties constantly performed by our brethren with much comfort and delight which wee feared as tedious troublesome and almost impossible and in this regard durst not vndertake them Finally wee shall doe good to our brethren euen in the duties themselues both of piety by teaching admonishing exhorting comforting and counselling them that neede our helpe and also of mercy by feeding the hungry clothing the naked visiting the sicke and such like workes of Christian charity whereby wee minister vnto their necessities CAP. XL. Of such reasons moouing vs to the duties of a godly life as respect our selues §. Sect. 1 The first reason taken from that dignity vnto which God hath called vs. IN respect of our selues there are also many effectuall arguments and reasons which may mooue and perswade vs vnto all duties of a godly life As first that high and heauenly dignity vnto which God of his free grace and goodnesse hath called vs out of a most miserable and wretched condition which should effectually mooue vs to walke worthy this high and excellent Eph. 4. 1. calling as the Apostle exhorteth vs. For wee were in darkenesse and in the shaddow of death but the Lord hath called vs into a marueilous light reuealing cleerely vnto vs the knowledge of himselfe and his will the great mystery of saluation by Iesus Christ and the meanes whereby we may be made partakers of the fruits and benefits of it in which respect it becommeth vs to walke as children of light circumspectly not as fooles Eph. 5. 8 15 16. 1. Th. 5. 5 6 7 8 Col.
leading of a godly life they also escape many temporary Heb. 6. 6 7 8. iudgements and sharpe afflictions whereby God like a gracious and wise Father doth correct his children when they neglect their dutie and sinne against him which differ nothing from the punishments that are in this life inflicted vpon the wicked in their matter and oftentimes very little in the quantity and sharpnesse of the stripes but onely in the causes from which they proceed which is the loue of a gracious Father towards the one and the anger of a iust and seuere Iudge towards the other also their diuers ends the chastizements of the Faithfull being intended for their good and amendment that they may not being iudged be condemned with the world but 1. Cor. 11. 32. the punishments of the wicked for the satisfying of Gods Iustice by inflicting on them deserued punishments But howsoeuer the sinnes of the Faithfull cannot moue the Lord to reiect them or cause his loue to depart from them seeing it is one branch of the couenant made in Christ that he will loue them with an euerlasting loue and pardon all their sinnes yet they doe moue him to correct them with the rod of men and Ier. 31. 3 31 33 34. 2. Sam. 7. 14. Psal 89. 31 32. Heb. 12. 6. Apoc. 3. 19. the stripes of the children of men for he chastizeth euery sonne whom he loueth and receiueth that being pulled out of their sinnes by strong hand which they would not flee and forsake out of meere loue they may by their vnfained repentance and amendment escape eternall condemnation as wee see in the example of Dauid the Corinthians and many others The which his iust yet gracious seuerity there is no possible 1. Cor. 11. 31 32 33. meanes to escape no not though Noah Daniel and Iob should intercede for vs or any other who are most highly in his fauour vnlesse Ezek. 14. 13. we preuent these sharpe corrections by leading a godly life and fleeing from sinne which is the cause of them or stay Gods hand by turning from our sinnes by vnfained repentance Which course if wee take wee shall be freed not onely from eternall punishments but also from temporary afflictions which our sinnes doe bring vpon vs vnlesse it be such as the Lord inflicteth for the triall of his graces in vs that being approued they may be crowned with an answerable measure of ioy and heauenly happinesse According to that of Salomon A prudent man foreseeth the euill and hideth himselfe but the simple passe on and are punished Or if by our sins we haue brought them vpon Pro. 22. 3. vs yet repenting of them and returning into the waies of righteousnesse we shall when we crie vnto God obtaine helpe and deliuerance according to that of the Psalmist The righteous crie and the Lord heareth Psal 34. 17. and deliuereth them out of all their troubles Seeing then no chastening for the present seemeth ioyous but grieuous what a strong motiue should Heb. 12. 11. this be to perswade vs to forsake all our sinnes and to serue the Lord in the duties of a godly life seeing wee haue hereby this singular benefit of being freed from temporary afflictions which are so sharpe and bitter vnto vs A third benefit which will redound vnto vs by leading of a godly life is that being vnblameable giuing vnto none any iust cause of offence we shall hereby stop the mouthes of wicked men so as they shall not be able to reproch vs nor blemish our good name by their calumnies slanders with any shadow or colour of truth And this was a strong reason to moue the Apostle to walke in a godly vnblameable life that by exercising himself herein he might haue alwaies a conscience voyd of offence towards God towards men And this Act. 23. 1. 24. 16. Tit. 2. 7 8. argument he vseth to perswade Titus to shew himselfe in all things a patterne of good workes that he who was of the contrary part might be ashamed hauing no euill thing to say of him Thus the Apostle Peter exhorteth vs to sanctifie the Lord in our hearts and to haue a good conscience in all things 1. Pet. 3. 15 16. that whereas wicked men speake euill of vs as of euill doers they may be ashamed that falsely accuse our good conuersation in Christ And perswadeth the Faithfull to abstaine from fleshly lusts and to haue their conuersation honest 1. Pet. 2. 11 12. among the Gentiles that whereas they spake euill of them as of euill doers they might by their good workes which they should behold glorifie God in the day of visitation And thus he moueth subiects to shew all obedience to Magistrates because it is the will of God that by wel-doing Vers 15. they should put to silence the ignorance of foolish men Or if wee cannot thus farre preuaile with them by our holy conuersation in respect of their maliciousnesse but that they will seeke to disgrace vs by their vniust slanders and reproches yet may wee in the confidence and peaceable cleerenesse of a good conscience stand out against them as a brazen wall beating backe their false calumnies vpon their owne heads and like immoueable rockes returne their fome and froth vpon themselues when as all that heare them shall condemne their malice and fals-hood Yea they shall by their slanders but giue occasion vnto all men to speake of our innocencie in which respect as Iob speaketh though they should write a booke against vs Iob 31. 35 36. wee might take it vpon our shoulders and binde it as a crowne vnto vs and that not onely a Crowne of Fame in this life but of Glorie also in the life to come according to that of our Sauiour Blessed are Matth. 5. 11 12. yee when men shall reuile you and persecute you and shall say all manner of euill against you falsely for my sake Reioyce and bee exceeding glad for great is your reward in Heauen And that of the Apostle Peter If yee be reproched for the Name of Christ happie are yee for the 1. Pet. 4. 14. Spirit of Glorie and of God resteth vpon you Now what a strong reason this should bee to mooue vs to walke vnblameably in the duties of a Godly life it may hereby appeare if wee consider how precious and excellent a good name is seeing as the Wiseman speaketh A Good name is rather to be chosen then great Riches Pro. 22. 1. and louing fauour rather then Siluer and Gold And is to be preferred before the most precious oyntment seeing it smelleth most sweetly both to our selues and others which are neere and farre off Eccl. 7. 1. §. Sect. 4 That a godly life doth much strengthen vs against Satans tentations A fourth benefit of a godly life is that it much strengtheneth vs against the assaults of Satan and so armeth vs against all his
the mind are not onely preserued but also much improoued by continuall exercise so vertuous actions and workes of piety and righteousnesse being the exercises of our faith doe tend much to the strengthening of it whereas contrariwise by the neglect of these duties it is much weakened and by the contrary vices and acts of sinne exceedingly shaken and grieuously wounded In which regard the Apostle ioyneth the holding of faith and a 1. Tim. 1. 19. 1. Cor. 15. 58. good conscience because the one will not stay without the other being such louing twins as cannot be diuided but liue and die together More especially the duties of a godly life doe confirme our faith in the assurance of our election not as causes for the election of God is free of grace and Rom. 11. 6. Eph. 1. 4. not of workes but as the effects and fruits of it and as the end vnto which wee are elected for wee are not chosen because wee were holy but to the end that wee might bee holy as the Apostle sheweth Thus the Apostle Peter exhorting vs to make our calling and election sure 2. Pet. 1. 10. prescribeth this as the onely meanes the ioyning of one vertue and Christian duty with another telling vs that if wee doe these things wee shall neuer fall The Psalmist likewise setting downe the markes and signes whereby wee may know whether God hath chosen vs to dwell in his holy mountaine maketh this the first chiefe to walke vprightly and work righteousnesse Psal 15. 2. 24. 4. and to haue cleane hands and a pure heart Secondly hereby our faith is perswaded of Gods grace and loue in Christ For by keeping of Gods Commandements we are assured that we loue God according to that of the Apostle Iohn Whoso keepeth his Word in him verily is the loue of God perfected 1. Ioh. 3. 6. 1. Ioh. 4. 19. and consequently that he loueth vs seeing we loue him because he loued vs first our loue being but a sparke of that diuine and infinite flame Thirdly of our effectuall calling this being the meanes which the Apostle prescribeth to make it sure For heereby we know that the grace of God 2. Pet. 1. 10. Tit. 2. 11 12. bringing saluation hath shined vnto vs when as we are taught thereby to deny vngodlinesse and worldly lusts and to liue soberly righteously and godly in this present world that wee haue in a sauing manner heard Gods Word when hauing receiued it into honest hearts wee haue brought foorth fruits Luk. 8. 15. with patience That wee are ingrafted into Christ the true Vine when Ioh. 15. wee bring foorth the ripe Grapes of holinesse and righteousnesse That wee are trees of righteousnesse of Gods owne planting when like the tree planted by the riuers of waters wee bring foorth fruit in due season That wee are good men when out of the good treasure of our heart Psal 1. 2. Mat. 7. 17 18 20 we bring foorth that which is good That wee are of God and the Sheepe of Christ when we heare Gods Word and follow him And that wee are truely Luk. 6. 45. a kinne to Christ when wee doe the will of his Father which is in heauen Ioh. 8. 47. Mat. 12. 50. Fourthly by a godly life and the workes of piety and righteousnesse our faith is assured of it selfe that it is liuely and vnfained for as our good workes doe shew it vnto others so also they approoue it vnto our selues as being the fruits of this tree and the very breath of this body without which it is but a dead stocke and rotten carkasse For as the Apostle Iames Iam. 2. 17 26. telleth vs Faith if it haue no workes is dead being alone And as the body without the spirit is dead so faith without workes is dead also Fifthly our faith is heereby assured of our iustification and of all the fruits and benefits that doe accompany it As that we are freed from our sinnes both in respect of their guilt and punishment by the death and resurrection of Iesus Christ when as by the vertue and power of them we feele our selues deliuered from the corruption of them so as they doe not rule and raigne in vs as in former times and quickned in the inner man vnto holinesse and newnesse of life That we are reconciled vnto God when as we feele an earnest desire and constant indeuour wrought in vs of pleasing him in all things That we are his children by adoption and grace when we liue as it becommeth his children and resemble our heauenly Father in holinesse and righteousnesse That we are sanctified by his Spirit when as wee bring forth the fruits of our sanctification in a godly and Christian life That we haue vnfainedly repented of our sinnes when as wee bring forth fruits worthy amendment and doe daily exercise our selues in good workes Finally that we are Citizens of heauen and heires of euerlasting happinesse when as we haue our conuersation there setting our hearts and affections on things aboue and not on things beneath and when hauing Phil. 3. 20. Col. 3. 2. Joh. 3. 2 3. this hope that we shall be made like vnto Christ we haue purged our selues as he also is pure §. Sect. 4 That a godly life strengthneth and increaseth our hope and confidence in God The second spirituall benefit of a godly life is that it strengtheneth and increaseth our hope and confidence in God grounded vpon this assurance Psal 34. 15. that hee will preserue all those that feare and serue him from all euill all perils and dangers and the malice and might of all their enemies and that he will prouide for them all things necessary seeing he who is so bountifull euen to his enemies will not let his owne children want any thing that is good who haue a desire to serue and please him So that they which feare the Lord haue great cause to trust in the Lord as the Psalmist Psal 115. 11. exhorteth because he is their helpe and shield And this made the three Children so confident that they cared not for the rage of the Tyrant nor for the fiery Furnace though seuenfold hotter then ordinary because they had serued God with a good conscience and thereby were assured that the God whom they serued was both able and willing to deliuer them Dan. 3. 17. This made Daniel to serue God constantly whom hee had formerly serued notwithstanding the cruell edict of the King because he well knew that the God whom he serued was able to deliuer him from the Lions as Dan. 6. 16. Darius also acknowledged From which confidence there arise diuers other singular benefits as inward ioy and comfort in all estates seeing in this confidence we haue cast all our care vpon God patience in all troubles seeing we trust assuredly in God for helpe and deliuerance in that time which shall be most seasonable both for his glory
our selues in vaine by labouring after impossibilities Finally that though wee haue neuer so much grace and be as forward as any in the duties of godlinesse yet we may fall from this state and become as wicked as any other and therefore seeing when we haue done our best in seruing God and haue with much paines stored our selues with all spirituall graces wee may lose all our labour and become notwithstanding all our care and diligence vtter brankrupts in all goodnesse it were our best course to giue ouer this doubtfull paines in the seruice of God and to satisfie our owne lusts with the present fruition of worldly delights Of all which tentations which Satan as impediments casteth in our way to discourage vs in the course of godlinesse I haue largely spoken in the first part of my Christian Warfare and therefore heere thus briefly passe them ouer referring the Christian Reader to that Booke for his more full satisfaction in these points §. Sect. 5 Satans tentations whereby he seeketh to hinder vs from entring into the wayes of godlinesse or from proceeding in them In respect of the godly life it selfe Satan raiseth against vs many lets and impediments either to hinder vs from entring into the course of Christianity or to make vs performe the duties required in it superficially and vnprofitably In respect of the former he vseth many deuices to stop our entrance into the wayes of godlinesse And first he laboureth to keepe our eyes blinded with ignorance that wee may not see the wayes of godlinesse wherein we should walke or if they be discouered by the light of the Gospel shining vnto vs hee will indeuour to keepe vs from seeing the profit and necessity of walking in them The former whereof we may auoyd by remembring and considering that sauing knowledge is one of the chiefe grounds of a godly life without which it is no more possible that we should performe the duties of Christianity then to walke in difficult wayes hauing no eyes to guide vs nor light to direct vs in them And therefore we must not content our selues with our good meaning and ignorant deuotion which can bring foorth no better fruits then blind superstition and will-worship which are odious vnto God but vse all good meanes whereby our minds may be inlightened with the sauing knowledge of Gods truth and carefully inquire after the good and old Ier. 6. 16. wayes as the Prophet speaketh that wee may walke therein and finde rest to our soules And for the auoyding of the other wee must know and remember that nothing in the world is so profitable and necessary as to walk in the wayes of godlinesse after that by the light of truth they are discouered vnto vs seeing this alone though all worldly things bee wanting will make vs happy and blessed in this life and the life to come Luk. 10. 42. whereas if we haue all other things and want this wee shall be wretched and miserable Secondly Satan laboureth to hinder vs from entring into the wayes of Christianity by alluring vs to continue in our sinful courses with the baites of worldly vanities and by causing vs to content our selues with the present possession of these earthly trifles hee maketh vs to neglect our heauenly hopes which are infinitely more excellent and permanent For the escaping of which snare wee must labour to contemne these inticing baites by considering that these worldly things are in respect of spirituall grace and heauenly glory vaine and vnprofitable vncertaine mutable and momentany as elsewhere I haue plainely shewed Christ Warf 2. part Thirdly he hindreth vs frō all duties of godlinesse by the deceitfulnesse of sin which he secretly windeth into our hearts by degrees till by many acts of wickednesse he hath brought vs vnto a custome which is like another nature and hath in it the commanding force of an vnresistable Law Which hindrance if we would auoyd we must watch ouer our selues that our hearts be not hardned through the deceitfulnesse of sinne to which purpose Heb. 3. 13. we must shunne the first occasions withstand the first motions of it and plucke vp these cursed plants before they be thorowly rooted or if wee haue already loaded our consciences with these dead workes our second care must bee to breake off our sinnes by vnfained repentance offering heerein to our corrupt nature an holy violence and as the Apostle speaketh We must lay aside euery waight and the sinne that doth so easily beset Heb. 12. 1. vs clinging as it were about our neckes to hold vs backe that wee may so runne with patience vnto the Race which is set before vs making voyd by degrees the strong custome of sinne by the acts of piety and righteousnesse vntill wee haue confirmed in vs the contrary custome of godlinesse and new obedience Finally Satan laboureth to hinder vs from entring into the course of Christianity by perswading vs to make delayes and when he cannot any longer make vs beleeue that it is needlesse or of small waight but that seeing the profit and necessity of it wee doe resolue to leaue our former sinfull liues and to betake our selues vnto Gods seruice he will perswade vs to deferre it for a time as a thing vnpleasing to our corrupt nature and vnprofitable to our worldly ends vntill we may finde some fitter opportunity and haue better settled our earthly businesse The which impediment I shal haue fitter occasion to remoue in the following Discourse Onely let vs here remember that if we will be aduised by our Sauiours wise counsell We must first seeke the Kingdome of God and his righteousnesse Math. 6. 33. which being a matter of greatest waight and in comparison onely necessary we must not put it off till after-times which are vncertaine but secure our selues of it whilest the day of saluation lasteth And these are the common impediments which Satan casteth into our way that he may stop vs from entring into the wayes of godlinesse with which if he cannot so farre preuaile as to make vs neglect all holy duties altogether hee will in the next place indeuour to make them vnprofitable for our saluation To which purpose amongst many other lets he chiefly and most vsually vseth these two The first is to keepe vs from feeling in them any power of godlinesse for the bettering of our spirituall estate by causing vs to performe these duties in a cold and formall manner more for custome then conscience sake The other is to make vs fickle and vnconstant in them performing them by fits and flashes when we haue least to doe and haue some spare time from our worldly imployments The former whereof wee may auoyd by setting our selues about the duties of Christianity as our mayne businesse with all resolute diligence and zealous deuotion knowing that it is impossible to trauaile in this way so full of difficulties and dangers without serious indeuour or to performe duties of so high a nature
the world hath been from the beginning the Gen. 3. 15. portion of all Gods Saints and seruants whom it hath pursued with deadly malice because they haue been beloued of God Yea aboue all others did it most hate and maligne our Lord and Sauiour Iesus Christ and therefore we must not thinke much if it pursueth vs with the like malice For as he hath told vs The seruant is not greater then his Lord If they haue Joh. 15. 19 20. persecuted me they will also persecute you Fourthly the worlds hatred needeth not to discourage vs in the wayes of godlinesse seeing it is vnto vs a comfortable euidence that we are not of the world for then it would loue his owne but that we are the true Disciples of Iesus Christ whom he hath chosen out of the world Yea contrariwise if the world should loue vs we had iust cause to suspect our selues seeing loue ariseth out of likenes neither could we be so much in the worlds fauour vnlesse we too much fauoured it Fifthly the worlds hatred cannot discourage vs if wee consider that it is abundantly recompenced with the loue of God and of his Saints and blessed Angels For the worlds malice can but bring some temporary trouble ioyned with much inward and spirituall comfort but in the fauour of the Lord is life and blessednesse And therefore Psal 30. 5. as no wise man who is highly in the fauour of his Prince his chiefe Nobles and the best of the people will greatly care for the hatred of base gally-slaues and the abiects of the Land especially when the fauour of both will not stand together so if we be truly wise for our owne good we will not if we be assured of Gods loue and all his faithfull seruants regard much the hatred of the world which can loue none but those whom God hateth Finally this hatred of the world for righteousnesse sake will not dismay vs if we alwayes remember that it shall be rewarded with euerlasting happinesse according to that of our Sauiour Blessed are Luk. 6. 22 23. yee when men shall hate you and when they shall separate you from their company and shall reproch you and cast out your name as euill for the Sonne of mans sake reioyce yee in that day and leape for ioy for behold your reward is great in heauen for in the like manner did their fathers to the Prophets §. Sect. 3 That the former poynt ought to be held with diuers cautions But yet some cautions must be heere obserued as first that howsoeuer we are not to loue the world nor to maintaine neere and inward familiarity Rom. 12. 18. with Gods enemies yet in respect of our priuate carriage we must behaue our selues innocently and iustly towards them and as the Apostle speaketh as much as in vs lyeth haue peace with all men Secondly we must so hate their sinnes their worldlinesse and prophanesse as that in the meane time we loue their persons performing vnto them all ciuill and religious duties whereby we may gaine them to Christ and bee meanes as much as in vs lyeth of their conuersion and saluation Thirdly that vnder colour of hating the world we doe not carry our selues cynically and harshly peeuishly and contentiously with those which remaine still professed worldlings but goe forward in the practice of all holy duties with all meeknesse of conuersation opposing them in nothing but when they oppose vs in piety and righteousnesse For the world is ready to hate vs too much already for our profession and practice of Gods true Religion though by our peruerse behauiour and rigid stiffenesse euen about things indifferent we doe not giue it any cause to hate our persons And therefore let vs auoyd their errour who when they haue taken vpon them the profession of Christian Religion thinke themselues bound to professe open enmity against all those who are contrary minded and that they best approue their Christianity when as the fire of dissension by their tart behauiour is kindled betweene them because Christ came to Math. 10. 34. Luk. 12. 49. bring a sword and fire vpon the earth and to set at variance euen those which are of a mans family For in many other places wee are earnestly exhorted to vse all meeknesse and loue that we may win them by our conuersation who are without vnlesse it be in the cause of God and the defence of his truth And therefore that place of our Sauiour is not to bee vnderstood so much of the doings of the faithfull whereby standing vpon tearmes of hostility they should prouoke the enemies of the Gospell against them but rather of their sufferings and persecutions which for Christs sake and the Gospell they should indure at the hands of the wicked though they behaued themselues as meekly and mildly as innocently and louingly as the cause of God and defence of his truth would suffer them Or if at all of their doings and oppositions against prophane worldlings yet not in such things wherein they might lawfully agree but in matters weighty and important as concerning Gods glory and their owne saluation and not in spleene and spite or priuate reuenge but when they haue lawfull authority to suppresse their fury curbe in their malice or by an open war according to the Law of God and Nations proclaymed against them Finally we must take heed that we doe not esteeme all them as worldlings who goe not as farre as wee in the profession of Religion and the practize of holy duties for there are Christians of all sizes and ages and as well babes as growne men in Gods family But those onely are to be ranked in this number of worldly opposites who are professed enemies of Christian Religion or onely haue the name of Christians but are in truth grosse idolaters or wickedly prophane who in their liues deny the power of that truth which they outwardly professe maligning and hating all those who loue and feare God euen for their godlinesse sake and displaying their banners of impiety against all grace and goodnesse Neither doe I thinke that formall Christians who liue ciuilly amongst vs professing Christianity and ioyning with vs in the publique exercises of Religion are to be reckoned amongst these worldlings who oppose vs and whom we oppose though wee cannot obserue in them any signes of sound conuersion or of the sincerity and power of godlinesse seeing our Sauiour himselfe is sayd to haue loued the yong man who yet had not so farre proceeded in the course Marke 10. 21. of Christianity but prophane persons lewd liuers notorious blasphemers professed scorners and malicious opposers against the Professors and practisers of Gods true Religion §. Sect. 4 Of the false iudgement of the world shewed in their bitter censures of the godly And thus we may incourage our selues in the duties of a godly life against the hatred of the world and wicked men Let vs in the next place consider
of the fruits of this hatred from which diuers impediments doe arise that hinder many in the wayes of godlinesse And these are either internall in the minde and iudgement or externall in the words and actions of the former sort there are two notable hinderances and discouragements The first is the false iudgement and erroneous opinion of wicked worldlings shewed in their hard and harsh bitter and vncharitable censures of the godly whereby they condemne their persons and all the good graces of God in them with all the vertuous actions which are done by them as euill and faultie Their feruencie of deuotion in religious exercises they iudge to be grosse hypocrisie their wisdome and Christian prudence they repute wilinesse and subtilty their simplicity folly their zeale 2. King 9. 11. madnesse their patience Stoicall apathy and stupidity their frugalitie niggardly auarice their bounty lauish wastfulnesse their Christian forbearance and long-suffring pusillanimity and base cowardize their seuerity cruelty their resolute and absolute obedience to Gods Law they condemne as no better then rebellion against Princes and Magistrates their contempt of the world and earthly vanities is reputed by them cynicall and melancholike sottishnesse and folly In a word if wee set our selues seriously to please God nothing that wee can doe will please the world but all is taken at the worst and euen our best vertues will be branded and blemished by their vniust and vncharitable censures as blameworthy and vicious But that this may not discourage vs in our Christian courses let vs consider that this hath beene euer the portion of all Gods children to be condemned by his enemies Thus the Prophets were censured to be opposites to Princes and States the Apostles to be seditious Matth. 11. 18. persons and brochers of nouelties Iohn the Baptists abstinence Matth. 26. 8. and austerity was counted deuillish Maries loue and bounty reputed needlesse and lauish wastefulnesse Yea our Sauiour Christ himselfe escaped not these false and vniust censures but had his best actions blemished with the malicious censures of wicked men His miracles done by the vertue of his diuine nature were deemed to be done by the power of Beel-zebub the prince of the deuils For his benigne sociablenesse he was iudged a boone-companion and a friend to Publicanes and sinners and all his gracious words wrested and misconstrued vnto the worst sense which wit and malice could giue vnto them And therfore if we will walke in their steps we must looke for the like measure which both our fellow seruants and our great Lord and Master haue found before vs. Againe let vs remember that we stand or fall to our owne Master and as it will doe vs little good to be approued of the world when he condemneth vs so as little hurt to be condemned of the world when God and our consciences doe approue and iustifie vs. Finally let vs know to our comfort that the day will come when all these vniust censures and sentences pronounced by the mouthes of malicious men shall be wholy reuersed and all the sorrow and griefe caused by them swallowed vp with rauishing ioy when we shall heare that last sentence of approbation pronounced by our Lord and Sauiour Well done good and faithfull seruant c. applauded Matth. 25. 23. by the acclamation of all the Saints and Angels §. Sect. 5 Of worldly contempt vnto which the godly are liable The other impediment whereby the world laboureth to discourage all that in the sincerity of their hearts feare and serue God is to Mal. 3. 17. haue them aboue all other men in greatest contempt and basest esteeme For whom God prizeth as his choysest Iewels the world vilifieth as abiects and the refuse of all things whom the Lord honoureth with the glorious titles and priuiledges of his owne children and heires apparant to his heauenly Kingdome the world despiseth as men vnworthy to liue in any humane society And no sooner are they admitted into that holy and happy communion with God and fellowship of his Saints but presently worldly and wicked men shunne them as vnworthy their company For as the vniust man is an abomination Pro. 29. 27. to the iust so he that is vpright in his way is abomination to the wicked And this was that stumbling blocke which being cast into the way hindred many of the Rulers from following Christ and from imbracing and professing that truth of which their consciences were conuinced because they feared lest hereby they should impeach their reputation and expose themselues to the contempt of their consorts louing the praise of men more then the praise of God This kept the parents Ioh. 12. 43. Joh. 9. 23. of the blinde man from confessing Christ and iustifying his miracle because the Iewes had decreed that if any man did confesse that Iesus was Christ he should be put out of their Synagogue and banished from their societies and publique assemblies Which impediment if we would remoue wee must learne to esteeme basely of the worlds estimate and neither to thinke better of our selues when it honoureth vs nor worse when it vilifieth and despiseth vs. To which purpose let vs consider that when wee are for righteousnesse sake most contemned in the eyes of the world wee are most magnified in the eyes of God and contrariwise when we haue most the applause of men in our euill courses we are esteemed of God most vile and abiect according to that of our Sauiour That which is highly esteemed amongst Luk. 16. 15. men is abominable in the sight of God Let vs remember that we cannot immoderately affect the applause of men and maintaine faith and a good conscience For as our Sauiour demandeth How can yee beleeue Ioh. 5. 44. which receiue honour one of another and seel not the honour that commeth from God onely That we can neuer hold out constantly in our course of Christianity vnlesse we can with the Apostle esteeme it a very small 1. Cor. 4. 3. thing to be iudged of mans iudgement and can be content with him by honour and dishonour euill report and good report to goe forward in the duties 2. Cor. 6. 8. of a godly life which if wee performe with neuer so much diligence zeale yet if therein we doe not ayme chiefely to please God more then men we shall not be the seruants of Christ but of the world Gal. 1. 10. seeing we will be willing to lay aside our profession and holy practice when the world censureth and condemneth them Let vs know that it will little auaile vs at the day of death or iudgement to haue had the approbation and applause of men when as God and our owne consciences shal condemne vs nor be any cause of griefe at that day when we call to minde that for the pleasing and honouring God in all Christian duties we haue displeased the world and brought our selues into contempt with men when as the
not possible to be condemned if wee conscionably vse the meanes of attayning to saluation or to be saued if wee neglect these meanes and walke in the wayes of wickednesse which leade to destruction For whom he Rom. 8. 30. hath predestinated to saluation those also he calleth iustifieth and sanctifieth Those whom he hath chosen he hath also ordained that Eph. 1. 4. they should be holy and without blame before him in loue and hath elected 1. Pet. 1. 2. them through sanctification of the Spirit vnto obedience and sprinkling with the blood of Christ Those whom he hath ordained vnto glory he hath predestinated them to be conformed to the Image of his Sonne and hath created Rom. 8. 29. Eph. 2. 8. them in him to good workes And therefore if wee be effectually called iustified and sanctified we may thereby be assured that we are elected to saluation but if none of these can be found in vs wee still continue in the state of reprobation seeing the meanes and end doe inseparably goe together Finally when as the Scriptures teach vs that Faith alone iustifieth as being the onely instrument that applieth vnto vs Christ our righteousnesse loose Libertines doe hence conclude that that Faith which is alone iustifieth and therefore so they beleeue in Christ they haue liberty to liue as they list and need not to take any paines to serue please God in the duties of a godly life Wheras the Apostle plainly telleth vs that we shal be iudged according to our works 2. Cor. 5. 10. whether they haue bin good or euill And our Sauiour hath taught vs that he will pronounce the last sentence according to the workes of mercy either Matth. 25. 34 35 36. performed or neglected by vs as being the signes and vndoubted euidences of our Faith whereby it is approued as sound and sincere or condemned as counterfet hypocriticall And the Apostle Iames expresly affirmeth that Faith without works is dead like a carkase without Iam. 2. 17 26. breath or life And therefore though good workes are not required as causes to the act of iustification yet they are necessary as effects to the Matth. 25. 34. Rom. 6. 23. party iustified though they doe not merit euerlasting happines seeing it is a gracious inheritance Gods free gift yet they are the way that leadeth vnto it in which we must necessarily walke if we wil be saued for without holinesse we shall neuer see the Lord as the Apostle telleth vs. Heb. 12. 14. §. Sect. 6 That infidelity is a great impediment to a godly life Againe the corruption of our intellectuall faculties doth exceedingly hinder vs from seruing God in the duties of a godly life not onely as it blindeth them with ignorance and misleadeth them with errour but also as it poysoneth them with cursed infidelity which is the roote of all other sinnes and the chiefe impediment of all Christian duties the ground of all which is a liuely faith For as the Apostle speaketh No man can come vnto God vntill he first know that God Heb. 11. 6. is nor performe any faithfull seruice vnto him vntill he be perswaded that he is a rich rewarder of them who diligently seeke and serue him Againe Without faith it is impossible to please God because whatsoeuer is not Rom. 14. 23. done of Faith is sinne Without Faith wee cannot be ingrafted into Christ seeing it is the bond of this vnion nor bring forth in him any fruits of new obedience for without Christ we can doe nothing Vnlesse Ioh. 15. 2 5. by Faith we be assured of Gods loue towards vs we cannot loue him for as the Apostle Iohn saith We loue him because he loueth vs first and 1. Ioh. 4. 19. without loue there is no obedience seeing it is the summe of the whole Law And therefore if we would leade a godly life wee must with all care and indeuour remooue this impediment then the which none is more pernicious for how should wee flee from that sinne which we naturally loue or practise those duties vnto which our natures are auerse if wee neither beleeue Gods threatnings restrayning vs from sinne nor his promises alluring vs to obedience And to this end wee must carefully vse all those meanes of which I haue before spoken both of begetting Faith in vs if it be wanting and of confirming and increasing of it if it be begun CAP. X. Of those manifold impediments of a godly life which arise from our sinnefull and corrupt hearts and affections §. Sect. 1 The first impediment is an heart hardned through the deceitfulnesse of sinne ANd thus haue I shewed how we may remooue those impediments of a godly life which arise from the corruption of the intellectuall faculties Those which respect the heart and affections are many and dangerous The first is when our hearts are hardened through the deceitfulnesse of sinne and so habituated and accustomed to euill courses that it is death to vs if we indeuour to forsake them and to serue God in the duties of a godly life Of this wee haue many warnings in the Scriptures as being a most dangerous rocke vpon which many haue suffred shipwracke To day if you will heare his voyce harden not your hearts Psal 95. 7 8. And Take heed brethren lest there be in any of you an euill heart of vnbeliefe in departing from the liuing God But exhort one another dayly while it is Heb. 3. 12 13. called to day lest any of you be hardened through the deceitfulnesse of sinne Which impediment if we would remooue let vs withstand sinne in the first motions of it and if at any time we be ouertaken let vs carefully take heed that wee doe not lie in sinne but rise againe speedily by vnfained repentance Let vs beware that wee doe not often fall into the same sinnes after wee haue repented of them seeing by many acts wee come at last to an habit and custome Or if this custome hath already preuailed and is now come to haue in it the strength of a Law and to be as it were a second nature let vs not suffer it any longer to continue inuiolable but bend all our power and strength to disanull and breake it Neither let our corrupt nature pleade prescription for sinne or the neglect of holy duties as though because we haue long done that which God forbiddeth or not done that which he hath commanded therefore we must be borne with if we doe so still seeing this is no excuse at all but rather the greatest aggrauation of our sinnefulnesse and negligence For though they might be somewhat excused if they were done but once or twice they are altogether intolerable when they grow common and customable And therefore our long liuing in sinne and in the neglect of Christian duties should be so far from excusing our continuing in these courses that it ought to be a strong motiue to
double our diligence in redeeming this lost time as the Apostle exhorteth And this reason the Eph. ● 16. 1. Pet. 4. 2 3. Apostle Peter also vseth to perswade vs that we should no longer liue the rest of our time in the flesh according to the lusts of men but according to the will of God because the time past of our liues may suffice vs to haue wrought the will of the Gentiles when we walked in lasciutousnesse lusts excesse of wine reuellings banquetings and abominable idolatries Now the meanes whereby wee may be enabled to breake off this custome in sinning and to performe the contrary duties of a godly life is to labour to haue our hearts possessed and fraughted with Gods feare partly in respect of his Iudgements denounced against sin partly in respect of his mercies and manifold blessings promised to all that serue and please him For nothing doth more powerfully ouer-master this tyrannicall custome then the true feare of God euen as the want thereof is the chiefe cause of falling into and continuing in sinne And secondly our best course is to set our selues with a firme resolution to breake off and discontinue our custome in sinning and to performe the contrary duties of a godly life seeing many acts of wel-doing will at last bring vs to an habit and custome and make them easie and familiar which at the first entrance seemed difficult and almost impossible The like impediment vnto all Christian duties ariseth from security and hardnesse of heart which taking away all sense and feeling both of Gods mercies and Iudgements and putting away the euill day farre from vs doth make vs also therewith to put off the day of repentance to neglect all holy and religious duties and to goe on securely in our former euill courses Of the remouing of which impediment I will not here speake because I haue handled it at large in my Treatise of carnall security and hardnesse of heart §. Sect. 2 Of the second impediment respecting the heart which is 〈…〉 the world The second impediment of a godly life respecting the heart is worldly concupiscence and immoderate and excessiue loue of the world and earthly things and chiefely of honours riches and pleasures and that carking care which ariseth from it for the getting or keeping of them Concerning the former As the loue of God and the loue of the world will not harbour together in the same heart because 1. Joh. 2. 15. Jam. 4. 4. the amity and friendship of the one is enmity against the other as the Apostles Iohn and Iames teach vs so neither can we performe faithfull seruice to them both being Masters which stand in flat opposition one to Math. 6. 24. the other as our Sauiour hath told vs. In which regard Demas is said to 2. Tim. 4. 10. haue forsaken the Apostle Paul and with him his Master Christ and his truth assoone as he begun to loue this present world For when men haue once fixed their hearts vpon earthly vanities all their cogitations are so taken vp with them that they haue no leisure to thinke vpon any Christian duties and so wholly are they besotted with the loue of this painted strumpet that they thinke all time lost which is not spent in winning and gaining her So that when Christ inuiteth them vnto his Marriage Supper to feast them with spirituall delicacies that Gods graces may bee so Luk. 14. 16 17. strengthened in them as that they may bee inabled to serue him in all Christian duties they presently pretend excuses and will not come For Joh. 12. 42 43. the remouing of which impediment wee must vse all good meanes to weane our hearts from the loue of the world that wee may contemne it as vaine and worthlesse in comparison of spirituall grace and heauenly glory To which purpose we must consider that the worlds prosperity which we dote so much vpon will being thus abused become a notable tentation to draw vs into all manner of sinne to our perdition and destruction according to that of the wise Salomon The prosperity of fooles Prou. 1. 32. Mark 8. 36. shall destroy them And What will it profit vs to gaine the whole world and lose our owne soules as our Sauiour speaketh Let vs consider that these worldly things are momentany and mutable hardly gotten and soone lost vncertaine in the pursuit whether after all our labour we shall obtaine them or no and no more certaine in the possession seeing they may euery day be taken from vs or we from them Let vs consider that they are vaine and satisfie not but the more we drinke the more we thirst the more we abound the more we want and that they bring not any sound contentment to their owners but labour in getting care in keeping and feare in losing them That they doe not at all profit vs for the assuring of those things which are chiefly to be desired nor at those times when wee shall stand in most need of helpe and comfort namely at the houre of death and day of Iudgement Yea if we immoderately dote on them they will become exceeding hurtfull and pernicious being those thornes which will choke in vs the seed of Gods Word from which all sauing graces Math. 13. 22. doe spring those snares of the diuell which intangle vs to our perdition those heauie burthens which hinder vs in our iourney towards our heauenly 1. Tim. 6. 9 10. home and Cammell-like bunches which will keepe vs from entring into that straight and narrow gate §. Sect. 3 The third impediment arising from worldly cares The cares also of this world are a great impediment to a godly life For first they hinder vs from performing religious duties as we see in the Math. 22. 5. Luk. 14. 18. and 9 59 61. Luk. 10. 40. example of those who being inuited to the Marriage Supper of the Kings Son refused to come and of those who being called to be Christs Disciples were so taken vp with the care of their worldly businesse that they could finde no present leisure to follow Christ Yea of Martha her selfe who though she were a good woman yet was so cumbred with care in prouiding for Christs entertainment that she could finde no time to heare his heauenly Sermons and enuied her sister for performing this high and holy duty Or if we set our selues to performe any seruice vnto God these cares interpose themselues and distract vs with worldly and wandring thoughts so as we cannot performe it with any fruit and benefit as we see in the Parable of the Sower where he that receiued seed among thornes is as our Sauiour expoundeth it he that heareth the Word and the Math. 13. 22. cares of this world and the deceitfulnesse of riches choke the Word and hee becommeth Luk. 8. 14. vnfruitfull In which regard our Sauiour giueth vnto vs a speciall caueat whereby we may be fitted for his comming
consider first that this is a shamefull and horrible abuse of Gods mercy and goodnesse which hee will neuer let goe vnpunished to take occasion thereby the more to offend and diplease him by wilfull continuing in sinne and neglecting the duties of his seruice To prouoke God to wrath because he is patient and long-suffering and to sinne against him because hee is good and gracious and ready to forgiue And finally to neglect all duties of his seruice because he is such a bountifull Master that he giueth of his free grace and mercy rich wages and rewards without all merit and desert For these should rather be arguments to inflame our loue towards him and to make vs so much the more zealous of his glory and fearefull to offend so gracious a God according to that of the Psalmist There is mercy or forgiuenesse with thee that thou mayest bee feared Or if through Psal 130. 4. frailty and infirmity we haue contrary to our purpose and resolution been ouertaken of any sinne this patience and loue of God should be a strong motiue to make vs to rise out of it by vnfained repentance according to that of the Apostle Despisest thou the riches of his goodnesse and forbearance and long-suffering not knowing that the goodnesse of God leadeth thee to repentance Secondly let vs consider that as the Lord is infinite in mercy and compassion so hee is no lesse infinite in iustice and truth that as he is mercifull Exod. 34. 6 7. and gracious long-suffering and abundant in goodnesse and truth keeping mercy for thousands forgiuing iniquity to ansgression and sinne so also hee is iust in all his wayes and holy in all his workes and will by no meanes cleare the Psal 145. 17. guilty visiting the iniquity of the fathers vpon the children vnto the third and fourth generation that as he is a mercifull Sauiour so also a iust God and Esa 45. 21. Psal 11. 7. a righteous Lord who loueth righteousnesse and will not let sinne goe vnpunished but will iudge euery man according to his works and that he is a terrible 2. Cor. 5. 10. Iudge especially to those who abuse his mercy and long-suffering And therefore let vs not disioyne these things which cannot be seuered nor imagine such a mercy in God as will not stand with his Iustice which were to mayme the Diuine nature and to pull as it were one of his hands from him which outragious violence offered vnto his holy Maiesty hee will neuer suffer to goe vnpunished Let vs with Dauid so acknowledge that hee is good as that wee doe not deny that Psal 25. 8. Psal ●01 1. hee is also vpright and in our songs so sing of his mercy as that wee doe not disioyne his Iudgement from it Let vs remember that in God and in all his workes mercy and truth doe meete together righteousnesse Psal 8● 10. and peace doe kisse each other Let vs not say His mercy is great he will Ecclus 5. 6 7. be pacified for the multitude of my sinnes for mercy and wrath come from him and his indignation resteth vpon sinners Neither let vs presuming on Gods mercy and patience make any tarrying to turne vnto the Lord nor put it off from day to day for suddenly shall the wrath of the Lord come foorth and in thy security thou shalt be destroyed and perish in the day of vengeance Thus the Apostle telleth vs that if we despise the riches of Gods goodnesse and forbearance Rom. 2. 4 5 6 which should leade vs to repentance we shall after our hardnesse and impenitent heart treasure vp vnto our selues wrath against the day of wrath and reuelation of the righteous iudgement of God who will render vnto euery man according to his deeds And the Lord threatneth that if any man hearing the words of his curse against sinners doe blesse himselfe in his heart saying I shall haue peace though I walke in the imagination of my heart to adde drunkennesse to thirst that he will not spare him but that his anger and iealousie shall smoake against that man and all the curses that are written in the booke of the Law shall Deut. 29. 19 20. lie vpon him and the Lord shall blot out his name from vnder heauen Let vs remember what the Apostle teacheth vs namely that no outragious sinners continuing in their wickednesse without repentance shall inherit the Kingdome of Christ and of God and therefore exhorteth that wee suffer no Eph. 5. 5 6. man to deceiue vs with vaine words seeing because of these things commeth the wrath of God vpon the children of disobedience Finally let vs consider that though Gods mercies be in themselues infinite and aboue all his workes and all his gracious promises which are in Christ yea and Amen yet they are limited by his infallible truth and appropriated vnto repentant sinners and therefore cannot extend to the presumptuous who take occasion from his mercies to continue impenitently in their sinnes but he will glorifie his iustice in punishing them as hee glorifieth his mercy in pardoning the sinnes of all those who turne vnto him by vnfained repentance And therefore let vs acknowledge with the Psalmist that the Lord is good Psal 73. ● and gracious yet not to all but onely to Israel euen to such as are of a cleane heart and that as the eyes of the Lord are vpon the righteous and his eares open to heare their cry so the face of the Lord is against them that do euill to cut off the Psal 34. 15 16. remembrance of them from of the earth Let vs not presume vpon Gods mercy whilst we continue impenitently in our sins but let vs stand in awe of Gods Iustice and Iudgements and sin not and offer first the sacrifice of righteousnesse Psal 4. 4 5. and then put our trust in the Lord. Those likewise who presuming vpon the all-sufficiencie of Christs death merits and satisfaction doe take occasion thereby to continue in their sinnes without repentance and to neglect the duties of a godly life may easily remooue this dangerous impediment out of their way if they will but seriously consider that this is a most fearefull abuse of his inestimable loue who hath done so much for vs when as we vse his helpe to vphold vs in our sinnes and his death and merits as a pillow whereon we may sleepe more securely in our wickednesse Whereas he came not to ratifie and confirme but to dissolue and abolish 1. Ioh. 3. 8. the workes of the deuill And gaue himselfe for vs not onely to free vs from all sinne in respect of the guilt and punishment but also to purge Tit. 2. 14. vs from all iniquity and that being his peculiar people we should bee zealous of good workes He hath redeemed vs out of the hands of all our spirituall enemies Luk. 1. 74 75. that wee may serue him in holinesse and righteousnesse
away both these causes and effects of it And first wee must rowze vp our spirits and stirre vp Gods graces in 2. Tim. 1. 6. vs as the Apostle exhorteth that wee may not bee weary of well-doing by 2. Thes 3. 13. considering the waight and worth the profit and necessity of Christian and religious duties in comparison whereof all worldly things ought to be neglected as vaine and of no value Let vs remember that all the promises of grace life and saluation shall be assured vnto vs if we faint not whereas we shall haue no part or interest in them though we haue made neuer so good beginnings or proceedings if we doe not still goe forward and hold out vnto the end For if we indure Matth. 24. 13. to the end we shall be saued if we fight vnto the death we shall receiue the Crowne Apoc. 2. 10. of Life But if wee lay our hand vpon the Plough and looke backe we shall Luk. 9. 62. not be though worthy of the Kingdome of heauen Finally let vs dayly renue the meanes of Spirituall life and strength that so they also may be renued and repayred as hearing reading meditation prayer watchfulnesse holy conferences and the rest without which the soule will grow faint and languish like the body which is depriued of corporall food but especially when we feele our faintnesse and languishing wearinesse let vs vnite all the powers of our soules in prayer vnto Almighty God desiring him by the inward operation of his holy Spirit to quicken our deadnesse and strengthen our weakenesse that we may not waxe wearie of well doing but continue constant vnto the end Now concerning the effects of this slothfull wearinesse which are also great impediments to a godly life as hindring vs from entring into it or proceeding in it inconstancie and vnsettlednesse in performing Christian duties and want of feruencie in our loue and zeale in doing of them I shall not neede to adde any thing here for the remoouing of them seeing I haue spoken before of perseuerance and constancie in the dayly performance of all Christian duties and of that feruour of loue and zeale which ought to be vsed in doing of them And therefore thus much shall suffice to haue spoken of those impediments which arise from the flesh and corruption of our nature and also of the helpes and meanes whereby wee may remoue them CAP. XIII Obiections against a godly life made by the flesh answered and first such as pretend impossibility and difficulty §. Sect. 1 That a godly life is possible vnto vs. BVt the flesh doth not onely hinder vs in the duties of a godly life by those reall impediments which it casteth in our way of which I haue before spoken but also by suggesting into our mindes many strong obiections which tend to this maine end that wee may be discouraged from entring into the course of Christianity And first the flesh is ready to obiect that in this state of frailty and corruption it is vtterly impossible to lead a godly life in that manner as it hath beene before described For who can bring that which is cleane out of that which Iob 14. 4. is vncleane Who can leade such a life as is pleasing and acceptable vnto God whose pure eyes can indure nothing which is impure and imperfect seeing the Prophet telleth vs that our best righteousnesse is as Esay 64. 6. a polluted cloth and the Apostle who so farre exceeded vs that now liue in piety and righteousnesse notwithstanding complayneth that he could not doe the good he would but contrariwise did the euill he would Rom. 7. 15. not And therefore it is in vaine to wearie our selues about impossibilities and so to lose both the pleasures of this life and that which is to come And thus the flesh perswadeth vs to play the bankerupts and to resolue that because we cannot pay all our whole debt that therefore wee will pay nothing at all To which I answere with our Sauiour Christ that those things which are impossible to vs are both possible and easie vnto God who hath promised to assist vs if we desire and indeuour to serue and please him Secondly I answere that though nothing will please God but that which is pure and perfect all our best actions are full of corruption imperfection yet this need not to discourage vs from doing the best we can seeing Christ who hath perfitly fulfilled the Law for vs couereth our imperfections with his most perfect righteousnes washeth away our corruptions in his most precious blood so that we may doe the best we can then what is wanting on our part shal be supplied on his For what the Law could not doe in Rom. 8. 3. that it was weake through the flesh God sending his owne Son in the likenes of sinfull flesh and for sin condemned sinne in the flesh that the righteousnes of the Law might be fulfilled in vs who walke not after the flesh but after the Spirit as the Apostle speaketh Thirdly though that perfect obedience which the Law requireth be impossible vnto vs in respect of our frailty corruption yet that Euangelical obedience required in the couenant of grace namely that beleeuing in Christ we desire resolue indeuor to please God in al things is not so Though we haue no ability to performe seruice vnto God in that exact perfection which the Law requireth yet if we doe that which we are able in sincerity truth with vpright hearts good cōsciences we shal through Christ be accepted of God For he reiecteth not the least indeuours of his faithfull seruants who desire Nehem. 1. 11. to feare his name He will not breake the bruised reed nor quench the smoking Matth. 12. 20. flax till he bring forth iudgement vnto victory He spareth vs as a father spareth Mal. 3. 17. his sonne that serueth him and if we haue a willing mind we shal be accepted according 2. Cor. 8. 12. to that we haue and not according to that we haue not He pittieth our frailties and infirmities like as a father pittieth his children that feare him Psal 103. 13 14. out of this pitty pardoneth them For he knoweth our frame remembreth that we are but dust And though he hath most pure eyes which can indure no pollution yet he beholdeth not iniquity in Iacob neither doth he see Num. 23. 21. peruersnes in Israel Nor is he any accepter of persons but in euery nation he that Act. 10. 35. feareth him worketh righteousnes not according to the rigor of the law from which Christ hath freed vs but in the truth and vprightnes of his heart is accepted of him And thus was Dauid accepted as a man according to Gods own heart because he applied himselfe to obserue his precepts alwaies Psal 119. 112. to the end notwithstanding his grieuous sins and fearefull fals
vnsupportable waight of sin the wrath of God and curse of the Law from which he hath freed vs and not such an one as will toyle and turmoile vs but a burthen that bringeth ease and a labour which causeth rest It is not Christs purpose to surcharge and oppresse vs by imposing a burthen aboue our strength for he that hath taught vs that a good man is mercifull vnto his beast Pro. 12. 10. will not be hard-hearted and cruell to his yoke fellowes yea to his owne body and bowels but onely he desireth that we would beare him company promising that if our weight be ouer-burthensome he will ease vs if it be irksome and tedious he will make it sweet pleasant and if there be any defects wants in vs he will supply them by vertue of that communion which we haue with him If we be dead Rom. 6. 4. and cannot mooue in the actions of piety and righteousnesse by touching his dead body he will giue vs spirituall life and motion For as the Father rayseth vp the dead and quickneth them euen so the Sonne Joh. 5. 21 25. quickneth whom he will He is the Resurrection and the Life he that beleeueth Ioh. 11. 25. in him though he were dead yet shall he liue So if being raysed we want spirituall illumination that we may walke in those wayes which God hath prescribed our Sauiour will supply it according to that of the Apostle Awake thou that sleepest and stand vp from the dead and Christ shall giue thee light If we be weake feeble he will strengthen vs with might Eph. 5. 14. by his Spirit in the inner man If we feele the exercises of a godly life so Eph. 3. 16. difficult vnpleasant to our corrupt nature that we haue little hope of proceeding in them that which is defectiue through naturall corruption he wil supply by grace aboue all that we can expect for he is able to doe exceeding abundantly aboue al that we aske or thinke according to the power Vers 20. that worketh in vs. If we be faint he will support vs if weary he will refresh vs if we fall he wil lift vs vp If we be discomforted and discouraged with afflictions tribulations which we meet with in the way he will strengthen vs with faith patience that we may be able to beare them so as we may say with the Apostle We are troubled on euery side 2. Cor. 4. 8 9. yet not distressed we are perplexed but not in despaire persecuted but not forsaken cast downe but not destroyed §. Sect. 4 That the duties of a godly life are made easie by the assistance of the holy Spirit Finally the holy Spirit so assisteth vs with his grace that the duties of a godly life which are to the flesh difficult and vnpleasant become Rom. 8. 11. sweet and easie For when we feele our selues most dull dead and vtterly vnable to moue in the wayes of godlinesse this Spirit of life and power will quicken and reuiue vs according to that of the Apostle If the Spirit of him that raysed vp Iesus from the dead dwell in you he that raysed vp Christ from the dead shall also quicken your mortall bodies by his Spirit that dwelleth in you If our flesh rebell and labour to hinder vs in all good duties the Spirit of God will mortifie and subdue it If carnall corruption be so strong in vs that it withdraweth our hearts and affections from God and his seruice This Spirit of God as a sharpe razour will circumcise our hearts and purging vs from our naturall Deut. 30. 6. corruption will inflame them with Gods loue and with feruent desires to please him in all things If we be so straightned in our zeale and deuotion that we can neither read heare nor pray yet our comfort is that the Spirit of God is not straightned but can like fire thaw our Mic. 2. 7. frozen hearts open our eares and hearts that we shal be able with Lydia to attend vnto those things which concerne our saluation and helping Luk. 16. 14. our infirmities will make intercession for vs with gronings which cannot be Rom. 8. 26. vttered If we be destitute of all sauing graces in our owne sense and feeling and doe thirst after them like the drie lands Gods Spirit will quench our thirst and be in vs as a fountaine of liuing water springing vp Ioh. 4. 14. into euerlasting life Finally if wee be stiffe and vnactiue vnto euery good worke so as we cannot performe any dutie of Gods seruice or if we doe yet with much difficulty and with murmuring and complayning of the flesh this oyle and holy vnction of the Spirit will supple and soften our hearts and stiffe ioynts making vs to goe with ease and agility in the wayes of godlinesse like the wheeles of a cart which being drie goe hardly and with a creaking noyse but when they are oyled runne with much ease and swiftnesse And therefore when wee finde our selues indisposed to Gods seruice prayer or any other duty and see some difficulty in them to our sinfull flesh let vs not hereby be discouraged but feeling our owne weakenesse let vs craue the helpe and assistance of this holy Spirit that we may be strengthened Eph. 3. 16. thereby in the inner man with all might according to his glorious power and so Col. 1. 10 11. walke worthy of the Lord vnto all pleasing being fruitfull in euery good worke Let vs goe boldly vnto the Throne of grace crauing the Spirit to support vs seeing we haue Gods promise that he will giue it to those that aske him Let vs begge the Spirit of Grace and supplication seeing the Luk. 11. 13. Zach. 12. 10. Lord hath promised to bestow it vpon all the faithful and finding our selues so drie and emptie of all goodnesse that we thirst after Gods grace which inricheth vs with it let vs by faith goe vnto Christ inuiting vs to come vnto him and to drinke plentifully of these waters Ioh. 7. 37 38. of the Spirit that we may be nourished thereby vnto euerlasting life §. Sect. 5 That the sauing graces of the Spirit wrought in vs make the godly life easie and familiar And as the Spirit it selfe so the gifts and graces which it bringeth with it and worketh in vs are notable helpes enabling vs to ouercome all difficulties which we find in the way As first a true liuely Faith which not onely ouercommeth the world and all the enemies of our saluation and vniting vs vnto Christ doth cause vs to bring forth fruits in him but also perswadeth assureth vs that notwithstanding all lets and difficulties we shall attaine vnto that sanctification and holinesse of life which we labour after The which as a singular encouragement hearteneth vs to take paines to vse all diligence in all Christian duties when as we are sure that we shall
continuall labour that they haue no leysure for the duties of a godly life §. Sect. 1 That Gods Commandements bind vnto obedience both poore and rich THe seuenth obiection is made by those who are afflicted with pouerty and cannot without much labour and great paines procure necessaries for the sustayning of their owne liues and those that depend vpon them O say they we are so miserably poore that vnlesse we spend our whole time in the workes of our callings we cannot get such a small competency as is sufficient to hold life and soule together nor food and clothing for our selues wiues children and families which we must prouide for vnlesse we would be worse then Infidels being bound so to doe both by the Law of God and nature And therefore hauing no spare time to spend in Religious duties we hope that God will haue vs excused and not impute the fault vnto vs but to our pouerty which necessarily constraineth vs to neglect the duties of his seruice which if wee had time and leisure like other men wee would willingly performe To which I answer first that the Law and commandements of God are giuen indefinitely and generally vnto all men the poore as well as the rich and tie all sorts of men equally and indifferently vnto obedience without any exemption or toleration granted to any state and condition Otherwise if such excuses might passe for current pay none would want pretences to slip their necks out of the yoke of obedience seeing prosperity and plenty as well as aduersity and penurie doe not want their seuerall imployments and distractions enow to hinder vs from the duties of Gods seruice if at least we will yeeld and giue way vnto them Secondly I answer that the state of pouertie being sanctified vnto vs is much more fit for the duties of Gods seruice then that which floweth with plentie and abundance as being lesse subiect to many potent vices and corruptions which hinder vs in them as pride and selfe-loue wrath and insolencie sloth and idlenesse intemperance insobriety and many others §. Sect. 2 That pouerty hindreth not Gods graces in vs but rather furthereth them Thirdly pouerty doth not hinder any of Gods graces in vs Yea through Gods blessing doth much further and increase them as meekenesse humility patience temperance sobriety watchfulnesse in prayer Yea it doth not make vs lesse fit for any either in respect of the graces themselues or the practice and exercise of them for sauing graces are not bought for money nor lost for want of coyne to purchase them but are the gifts of God which he giueth freely without respect of persons to poore and rich if they hunger and thirst after them according to that gracious call Ho euery one that thirsteth come yee to the waters and he that hath no money come yee buy and Esay 51. 1. eate yea come buy wine and milke without money and without price So our Sauiour Christ If any man thirst let him come vnto mee and drinke Joh. 7. 37 38 39. he that beleeueth on mee as the Scripture hath said out of his belly shall flow riuers of liuing water that is the sauing graces of his sanctifying Spirit as he expoundeth it in the words following Neither doth pouertie hinder the Spirituall exercise of any grace in our outward practice no not Christian bounty and beneficence which God measureth not by the greatnesse of the gift but the obedience and liberality of the giuer For if a man hath a willing minde hee is accepted 2. Cor. 8. 12. according to that which hee hath and not according to that which hee hath not as in this particular case the Apostle speaketh The which our Sauiour euidently sheweth in the example of the poore yet liberall widdow whose two mites being all her wealth was esteemed the greatest gift that was cast into the Treasurie Much lesse doth pouertie hinder vs in the duties of Gods seruice which seeing they are to bee performed not with outward pompe but in Spirit and Truth neede not the helpe of money and riches to further Ioh. 4. 24. vs in them And this the examples of all Gods Saints who haue liued in former ages doe euidently shew vnto whom pouertie was no impediment to hinder them from performing vnto God any dutie of his seruice For the poore Fishermen were no lesse diligent in all religious duties then the wealthy Patriarches poore Lazarus then rich Abraham Amos an heard-man then Esayas of the Kings stocke Paul a poore Tent-maker then Dauid a rich King yea our Sauiour Christ himselfe as hee exceeded all others in pouerty liuing vpon almes and not hauing a place of his owne Luk. 9. 58. where to lay his head so hee exceeded all men that euer liued in piety and in the practice of all Religious duties belonging to a godly life §. Sect. 3 That the more poore we are the more earnest we should be in Gods seruice Fourthly I answer that the more poore wee are in our outward estate the more intentiue and diligent should wee be in the seruice of 1. Tim. 6. 6. God and all religious exercises that being defectiue in earthly blessings wee may be made rich in all spirituall and sauing graces and that wanting with Peter and Iohn siluer and gold wee may with them exceede in Godlinesse which is the chiefest Gaine and bringeth with it the greatest contentment Finally that hauing no other patrimony in lands and houses wherein we might delight our selues wee doe make Gods testimonies to be our heritage for euer and the verie reioycing Psal 119. 111. of our hearts Fifthly seeing the whole earth and all therein is is the Lords and at his disposing to whom he pleaseth and it is his blessing alone which maketh rich therefore the more poore wee Psal 24. 1. are the more painefull and diligent should we be in all duties of his seruice that he may so blesse our labours and prosper our handy-worke as that it may be an effectuall meanes seruing his prouidence for procuring some sufficiency of these temporall benefits Thus Dauid acknowledged that it was the Lord whom he serued Psal 23. 5. that had furnished his table That it is he who giueth vnto all their Psal 145. 15 16. meate in due season and by opening his hand doth satisfie the desire of euery liuing thing That except the Lord build the house they labour Psal 127. 1 2. in vaine that build it except the Lord keepe the Citie the watchman waketh but in vaine And that it is in vaine for vs to rise vp early to sit vp late and to eate the bread of sorrowes vnlesse the Lord doe blesse our labours as the experience of many in all times plainely sheweth whose carking care and restlesse labours will not affoord them such necessaries as are cast vpon others with little paynes It is the Lord as 1. Sam. 2. 7 8. Hanna professeth who maketh poore and maketh rich
his holy Spirit are not onely nourished and strengthened with their ordinary food as hearing the Word prayer holy conferences and good company but through Gods Spirit assisting them are able to turne euen Iron ages into good nourishment and the poyson of euill examples into cordials and preseruatiues to strengthen them the more against common corruptions and raigning sinnes And therefore to excuse our neglect of Christian duties belonging to a godly life because we liue in euill places and times what is it but to proclaime that we are like vnto them and are not yet regenerate by Gods Spirit nor changed in our natures but still remaine in the state of corruption and consequently lyable to death and condemnation CAP. XX. Diuers other obiections made by the flesh against a godly life propounded and answered §. Sect. 1 That it is not enough to liue harmlesly vnlesse we performe religious duties ANother obiection which the flesh maketh against the strict performances of Christian duties is that it is vnnecessary seeing if we be harmlesse and not guilty of hainous sinnes as idolatry blasphemy murther adultery drunkennesse theft and such like but liue honestly amongst our neighbours doing no man any hurt and in good fame and name in the world the Lord will accept of vs and beare with our infirmities though wee be not so precise as many others in performing the duties of a godly life as they haue been before described To which I answere that the Lord will neuer accept of vs as his seruants and children if wee doe not at least desire resolue and indeuour to yeeld vnto him intire obedience to his whole Law as well by doing the duties which he hath commanded as in leauing vndone the vices which he hath forbidden and that this obedience chiefly consisteth rather in performance of that which is good then in abstinence from that which is euil that if to be harmelesse and innocent were all that is required to Christianity then were wee best Christians when we sit idly still rather then when wee are in action yea though we should sleepe out our whole liues because then wee are furthest off from doing any hurt But let vs consider that God requireth seruice at our hands and he is counted but a sorry seruant who receiuing meate drinke and wages doth content himselfe if he doe his Master no harme though he neuer indeuour to doe him any good That the axe is set to Math. 3. 10. the root of the tree to cut it downe that it may be cast into the fire if it bringeth not forth good fruit though it should beare none that is euill and the barren tree must be hewne downe and cast out of the Lords Vineyard Luk. 13. 7. because it doth but cumber the ground That we must be not onely trees of innocency but trees of righteousnesse if we be of Gods planting which Esa 61. 3. Luk. 8. 44. are distinguished from euill trees destinated to the fire not by bearing nothing but by bringing forth good fruit Let vs remember that the Fig-tree was cursed by our Sauiour not because it had vpon it figs like those in one of Ieremies baskets which were so very naughty that they could Ier. 24. 2. Math. 21. 19. not be eaten they were so bad but because it had none at all when Christ purposely came to finde some vpon it That the vnprofitable seruant is by Math. 25. 30. his Lord reputed an euill seruant and adiudged to punishment for not increasing his Masters Talent though he had not mis-spent it in riotous liuing And that the sentence of condemnation shall passe against those Mat. 25. 41 42. who neglect to doe the workes of mercy to Christs poore members though they neuer oppressed or wronged them Finally let vs know that they deceiue themselues who dreame of a meane betweene not doing good and doing euill for if we be not on Gods side wee are against him if Luk. 11. 23. we gather not with Christ we scatter abroad neither can wee sooner cease to Esa 1. 16. doe euill but presently we begin to doe that which is good §. Sect. 2 That it is not sufficient to serue God in some things and at some times Againe it is ready to obiect that if it be not sufficient to abstaine from euill and from grosse and hainous sinnes but that wee must also performe the contrary duties yet at least it is not necessary that we should be tyed so strictly vnto all duties of holinesse and righteousnesse which God requireth or if to all yet not at all times but that it is enough if wee performe some good duties either towards God or our neighbours though wee neglect others and that wee bee at some times zealous and deuout though at other times we take our liberty and ease our selues of this hard taske by taking our pleasures seeing as long as wee liue in this world wee cannot be Saints but must liue like other men as being alike fraile and full of infirmities To which I answere that euen in this life we must be of the communion of Saints if euer we meane to communicate with them in glory and happinesse and howsoeuer corruption of nature and humane frailties hang vpon vs yet we must not willingly nourish them and cheerfully obey the flesh in the lusts thereof for if we liue after the flesh we shall Rom. 8. 13. dye but we must labour through the Spirit to mortifie the deeds of this body of sinne that we may liue as the Apostle teacheth vs. And although we cannot by reason of the law of the members and the sinne that hangeth vpon vs yeeld vnto the Law that perfect and strict obedience which it requireth for in many things we sinne all yet if euer we would haue any Iam. 3. 2. sound comfort in the gracious promises of the Gospell wee must yeeld vnto God the obedience of sonnes which consisteth in an earnest desire full resolution and diligent indeuour to please our heauenly Father by framing our liues according vnto his will in all things and at all times We must put off as much as in vs lieth the whole old man with all his corrupt Eph. 4. 22 23 24 and deceitfull lusts and being renewed in the spirit of our mindes we must put on the New man which after God is created both in righteousnesse and true holinesse Wee must haue with Dauid respect vnto all Gods Commandements Psal 119. 6 20. and leade our liues both in godlinesse and in honestie For though wee be 1. Tim. 2. 2. neuer so deuoute and zealous in religious duties yet if we doe not ioyne with them the duties of charity and righteousnesse God will reiect vs as being no better then hypocrites according to that of the Prophet I hate Amos 5. 21 22 24. I despise your feast dayes and I will not smell in your solemne assemblies Though yee offer me burnt offerings and
be directed by them and tread in their footsteps so long as they goe before them in the wayes of truth and godlinesse and finally that they should march after their spirituall Captaines and Leaders and ioyne with them in fighting against the enemies of their saluation For it were as good for them to want these burning and shining Lights if they sit idly still and doe nothing to haue no such examples if they neuer imitate them to bee without guides if they will not follow them and these Captaines and Leaders if they let them sustaine alone the brunt of the battell and not like faithfull Souldiers ioyne common forces against common enemies Thirdly I answere that if the speciall imployments of our particular callings might make vs dispence with the generall duties of Christianity and Gods seruice the Ministers calling if we faithfully walke in it and diligently performe our duties hath as much businesse and imployment and not many fewer or lesse distractions from priuate religious duties then those which are of other professions As besides his priuate studies Reading and Meditation vnto 1. Tim. 4. 15 16. which hee must seriously attend that hee may prepare and fit himselfe for the publike seruice of the Church and the gouernment of his owne family hee must also watch ouer his flocke visit the sicke strengthen the weake comfort the afflicted priuately admonish those that erre and goe out of the way exhort those that are sluggish and rebuke those who wilfully offend and continue in their sinnes All which if they be performed with that conscionable care which they ought will leaue them as little time as other men for their priuate deuotions although vnder this pretence they must not bee neglected Finally though more bee required of Gods Ministers in respect of degree seeing where the Lord bestoweth a greater measure of his gifts and graces there hee requireth that they should in a greater measure bring foorth the fruits of holy obedience yet the same duties are to bee performed of all Christians according to the proportion of their grace receiued and both alike are tyed to yeeld vnto God their common Master religious seruice although those who exceed in knowledge and other gifts are bound to doe them in more perfection And howsoeuer a greater measure of knowledge is required of the Minister then the people because his lips must preserue Mal. 2. 7. it as in a common Treasury that they may haue recourse vnto him for the supplying of their wants yet as all men must liue by their owne Habac. 2. 5. faith so also they must walke by their owne sight and haue such a measure of knowledge and illumination of the Spirit as may be sufficient to direct them in all Christian and religious duties For their soules being alike precious vnto them as theirs are who are called to the Ministery and the way and meanes the same which bring both to eternall life and happinesse it behoueth them both alike to labour after this common saluation in the performance of the same Religious duties which are also required of both as common vnto them §. Sect. 5 Their obiection answered who pretend the want of meanes But here againe they are ready to obiect that if they had such means of knowledge and other sauing graces as others enioy and such helpes and furtherances in the duties of a godly life as many abound with then with some reason they were to be blamed if they did neglect them But alas they are vnder some ignorant or idle minister which cannot or wil not instruct them or such vnconscionable guides as shine not in the light of a good example but rather lay stumbling stones of offence before them by their enormious and scandalous liues and neglecting all good duties themselues doe dis-hearten and discountenance them who are carefull to performe them rather then any wayes encourage them either by their words or actions In which regard they thinke that they may be excused if they be not so zealous and forward in performing the Religious duties of Gods seruice and of a godly life To which I haue in part before answered namely that if this be our case first we must vse all good meanes to moue them to their dutie especially that we powre forth our hearty prayers vnto God for our Pastours and Ministers intreating him that he will inlighten their mindes and sanctifie their hearts and affections and so make them as able as willing to performe those high and holy duties vnto which they are called And secondly if the courses which they still hold affoord vs no better hopes then accounting the glorifying of God in the eternall saluation of our soules that one thing necessary which is farre to be preferred before all earthly commodities wee must labour to place our selues vnder such Pastors and Teachers as will carefully and conscionably breake vnto vs the bread of life and shine before vs not onely in the light of doctrine but also of an holy life conuersation In the meane time these outward wants must not make vs neglect the Religious duties of a godly life or if they doe they cannot be sufficient to excuse our negligence which doth not so much proceed from the want of externall meanes or those discouragements which are without vs as from the secret corruptions that lie lurking within vs. Which if they were thorowly mortified and our hearts inflamed with feruent zeale and true deuotion we would not be moued by these publique defects and discouragements to neglect the priuate duties of Gods seruice yea rather wee would vse them with more diligence as being through want of the other pressed vpon vs with a greater necessity For he that hath no friends or parents to looke vnto him or such as greatly care not whether he feed vpon wholesome food or famish for want of bread findeth that he is the more bound hereby to prouide for himselfe Whereas contrariwise these corruptions which make vs neglect the duties of Gods seruice still remayning in vs and quenching in our hearts all zeale and deuotion would make vs alike cold and negligent in our priuate exercises of Religion although the publike meanes which we enioyed were neuer so excellent Of the former we haue an example in Dauid who when he liued in the barren wildernesse had his soule so watred with the dew of Gods grace that it neuer brought forth more better fruits of holines and so inflamed with the fire of Gods Spirit that he was neuer more deuout in religious exercises nor more zealous in the priuate duties of Gods seruice though being banished and exiled from the Tabernacle and the publike place of Gods worship he was withall depriued of the ordinary means of his saluation And the like we see in the example of the persecuted Martyrs who neuer were more feruent in their priuate deuotions then when they durst not shew themselues in open assemblies but hid their heads frō
chearfulnesse seeing wee walke in this way of godlinesse without feare and haue part of our heauenly wages in present pa● peace of conscience spirituall securitie and ioy in the holy Ghost which are the preludes and first beginnings of euerlasting happinesse For as the Apostle sayth The kingdome of God is not meat and drinke but righteousnesse Rom. 14. 17. and peace and ioy in the holy Ghost It freeth vs from the bondage of the Law which presseth from vs the obedience of slaues out of seruile Rom. 8. 15. feare of smart and punishment and rest●reth vs to the glorious libertie of the sonnes of God yeelding ingen●ous and voluntarie obedience out of meere loue to our heauenly Fa●her It taketh away all painfulnesse and displeasantnesse in yeeldin●●eruice vnto God by taking away Legall feare which as the Apo●●le sayth hath torment 1. Ioh. 4. 18. and maketh Christs yoke easie and his bur●hen light when we feele his promise accomplished of giuing vnto our soules this spirituall rest Matth. 11. 29. It preserueth vs from all iniquitie especially from speaking lies which is a base vice grounded on seruile feare either of losing some benefit or sustayning some euill or inconuenience by incurring mans displeasure in speaking trueth From which feare Christian securitie freeing vs doth also keepe vs from the vice of lying which is the effect of it According to that of the Prophet The remnant of Israel shall not doe iniquitie nor speake lies neither shall a deceitfull tongue be found in their ●●● 3. 13. mouth for they shall feed and lie downe and none shall make them afraid It maketh vs also with more constancie and patience to indure afflictions and all troubles when as wee are secure of the euent and are assured that they shall all of them aduance our spirituall good and heauenly glorie It worketh in vs Christian courage and resolution in resisting all the assaults of the enemies of our saluation when a securely resting vpon God his wisedome power and prouidence wee are assured for the present that they shall not bee able by all their might and malice to doe vs any hurt and that the issue of this spirituall warfare will be our victorie here and our triumph in glory in the life to come Finally it causeth vs to bee more frequent and feruent in prayer when as without seruile feare wee may approach into Gods Psal 145. 19. presence and with the libertie boldnesse and confidence of sonnes make our suits and supplications vnto him in the mediation of Iesus Christ with confidence that he will heare vs gratiously and bountifully condiscend vnto our desires According to that of the Apostle In whom we haue boldnesse or free libertie of speaking and accesse with Eph. 3. 12. confidence by the faith of him The which he vseth as an effectuall argument to make vs more frequent and diligent in performing of this duties Let vs therefore come boldly vnto the Throne of grace that we may Heb 4 16. obtaine mercie and find grace to helpe in time of need And thus much of the causes and effects of spirituall Securitie CHAP. III. Of the meanes of spirituall Securitie whereby it may bee obtayned or preserued and encreased § 1 Th●●●●st m 〈…〉 s highly to esteeme it and 〈…〉 e i● 〈…〉 and in him NOw it followeth in the last place that we set downe the meanes of obtayning and preseruing this grace of Christian securitie And first if we would attaine vnto this rich gift which maketh vs with ioy and comfort to enioy all other blessings because it secureth vs of their fruition quieteth our minds in the middest of all dangers comforteth vs against all afflictions as a rich treasury supplieth all our wants and is vnto vs an impregnable Fort to keepe off all our spirituall enemies and Armour of proofe to beate backe the darts of their tentations wee must in our iudgements esteem it according to the worth and value in our hearts and affections loue and desire it and so resolue with all care and good conscience to endeauour in the vse of all good meanes whereby we may attaine vnto it and preserue and cherish it when we haue gotten it As first if wee would haue the effect wrought in vs we must labour that the causes of it may bee effectuall in vs to this purpose And seeing God is the authour of this excellent gift and that rich fountaine of all grace and goodnesse from which Iam. 1. 17. Matth. 7. 7. Ioh. 16. 23. flow these sweet and still streames of Christian securitie let vs begge it at his hands by feruent prayer who is no niggard of his gifts but hath promised to giue them plentifully to all that aske them in the name of his Sonne Yea let vs not only seeke this securitie from him as the fountaine but ground it on him onely as the alone foundation of it For there is nothing in our selues or any creature whereupon it may safely and surely rest but onely vpon Gods infinite wisedome beholding vs and all things with all meanes and oportunities to preserue vs from all euill and to conferre vpon vs all good and his omnipotent power whereby hee is able to doe whatsoeuer in his wisedome hee knoweth to be best vpon his all-sufficiencie whereby hee sufficeth vs by himselfe alone without all other helpe his mercie and goodnesse whereby he is as willing and readie as able to helpe vs and his promises and trueth which assure vs of his fauour with all the fruits of it and that he will neuer faile those who by a liuely faith doe rest vpon them And if wee ground our securitie on this immooueable Rocke then though wee be neuer so weake in our owne strength neuer so much encountred with dangers and mightily assaulted with our many strong and malitious enemies yet may we retaine our securitie notwithstanding all these difficulties because hee alone is able to support vs by his owne strength to preserue vs from and in all perils and to giue vs victorie ouer all our enemies §. 2 The second meanes is to labour to be in the number of Christ Disciples and of his flocke Secondly if wee would haue this Legacie of spirituall securitie which Christ hath left vs we must labour to be in the number of his Disciples vnto whom alone it is bequeathed to bee sheepe of his flocke and fold ouer whom he watcheth and taketh care to protect them from all enemies and to preserue them from all dangers and then we may be secure seeing wee haue his promise that he will giue vnto vs eternall life that wee shall neuer perish and that no man shall Ioh. 10. 28. plucke vs out of his hand And if we haue the Lord for our shepheard then may we with Dauid rest securely vpon his prouidence assuring Psal 23. 1. 34. 10. our selues that if we liue at his finding we shall want nothing Then may we safely lie downe
vp our soules which were humbled in the sight and sense of our wants and impotency to supply them with firme confidence breaking thorow all doubts and difficulties assure our selues that God who is so able and true of his Word will graciously grant these things which he hath commanded vs to aske and that as he hath inlarged our hearts with hearty loue and feruent desires after the more full fruition of that good or freedome from that euill whereon we haue meditated so he will perfect his owne good worke replenish that roome which himselfe hath prepared and satisfie those holy desires vvhich by his good Spirit he hath wrought in vs. Which confidence may mooue vs to reioyce in the Lord and to glory after an holy manner in the assurance of our victory ouer our corruptions and of our fruition of those graces wherein as yet we are defectiue and imperfect §. Sect. 6 Of the egresse and conclusion of our Meditation The last point to be considered in this exercise of Meditation is our egresse and conclusion which must not be sudden and abrupt seeing this were neither comely nor profitable but deliberate and by degrees And as Oratours prescribe in the Art of Rhetoricke and elocution that wee should begin with a low voyce quiet affections and action and so rising by degrees till we come to our highest pitch of extension and earnestnesse both of inward and outward motion not to breake off abruptly in this height but remitting both voyce affection and action by degrees so must we doe in this case for hauing begun our Meditation in intellectuall discourse with quiet mindes and calme affections and raised them to that height of feruencie and deuotion whilest we haue laboured to attaine vnto a liuely sense and feeling of spirituall taste in the matter whereon wee haue meditated we must not make an abrupt conclusion but with some remission of our former feruour compose our minds and hearts to their former quietnesse and calmnesse And first we must cast backe the eye of our minds to reuiew our former exercise and to examine how wee haue performed it and what fruit and benefit our hearts and soules haue felt and tasted in it And if we find that it hath well succeeded we are to congratulate with our owne soules in the ioyfull fruition of so great a blessing and to giue the whole glory to God by whose helpe onely we haue so well prospered in this exercise rendring vnto him with cheerefull hearts all praise and thanksgiuing for the gracious assistance of his holy Spirit whereby he hath directed vs in our course inlightned our mindes confirmed our memories inflamed our hearts and affections with his loue and true deuotion giuing vnto them a liuely taste and feeling of spirituall comfort in the things whereon wee haue meditated The which our thanksgiuing we may inlarge from the subiect matter of our Meditation as if it be some point of doctrine for inlightning our minds in the knowledge of that truth and inflaming our hearts with the loue of it if it bee some grace and vertue for reuealing the beauty excellency profit and necessity of it to our vnderstandings for causing vs to imbrace and loue it with our hearts and affections and for working it in some measure in vs by his Spirit if it be a duty for teaching vs his wayes and inabling vs to walke in them or if it be a vice and sinne for discouering to our mindes the deformity haynousnesse and danger and working our hearts to a true loathing and detestation of it But if we haue found many wants and weaknesses in the performing of it as dulnesse and blindnesse of minde wandring thoughts and worldly distractions coldnesse of deuotion deadnesse of affection and by reason heereof little taste of sweetnesse and of the fruit of all our labour wee are to craue pardon at Gods hands and to bee humbled in the sight and sense of our owne weakenesse and corruption And then labouring to finde out the causes of this vntowardnesse let vs resolue to vse our best meanes to remooue them against the next time that wee may performe this exercise with more fruit and benefit Finally we may conclude this whole exercise by recommending our selues our soules and bodies into the hands of God which some Writers on this Argument doe call Oblation or offering whereby wee consecrate and deuote our selues wholly vnto God desiring no longer to liue vnto the world or our owne flesh but vnto him that we may doe him seruice and in all things please him denying our owne wills that they may bee submitted vnto his and crauing his protection against all enemies who would hinder vs in this our resolution and direction and assistance in the whole course of our liues that all our thoughts words and actions may bee suteable and answerable both to our generall profession of Christianity and to those conceits desires and resolutions which wee haue expressed in our last Meditations And so reposing our selues with holy and quiet security vpon the care and prouidence of our gracious Father wee may profitably conclude this exercise by singing to Gods praise some part or verse of Dauids Psalmes suteable to our present disposition or the subiect matter of our former Meditation CAP. XX. An example and patterne of Meditation the subiect matter whereof is true and vnfained repentance §. Sect. 1 The reason of this choice what repentance is and the causes thereof HAuing thus set downe the doctrine of Meditation it now followeth that I propound an example of it according to the former rules and directions Where first we are to make choyce of the subiect matter whereon wee purpose to meditate and then to discourse of it with our vnderstanding and to feele the vertue and efficacie of it in our hearts the which must be done in a Soliloquie between vs and our soules or rather of the soule to it selfe after this manner Now that thou hast O my soule sequestred thy selfe from all society that thou mayest haue some secret conference betweene thee and thy selfe in the alone presence of God and thine owne conscience make choyce of some fit subiect whereon thou mayest spend thy paines and time with most profit for thy spirituall good that laying a good foundation thou mayest erect thy building with more ease and fruit And what fitter matter vpon this present occasion canst thou chuse to thinke vpon then vpon that excellent grace and duty of repentance which is the first beginning of a godly life and after it is begun accompanieth it vnto the end as a chiefe agent in all this worke Vpon what better argument canst thou meditate then vpon this which the Prophets and Apostles haue so much beate vpon yea which our Sauiour Christ himselfe thought so necessary and profitable that he did not onely make it the subiect of his owne Sermons but being to ascend commended it at his last farewell to his Apostles as the chiefest theame
next vnto faith vpon Luk. 24. 37. which hee would haue them to preach in his Name A duty that belongs vnto all and is neuer vnseasonable alwayes necessary An Euangelicall grace and chiefe fruit of faith in which it liueth without which it is dead So that as faith is the life of our soules by applying Christ vnto vs in whom we liue so repentance in respect of our sense and feeling which can no otherwise iudge of the hidden roote but by the outward fruit is the life of this life As faith is the onely condition of the Couenant of grace which assureth vs of all good things temporall and eternall so repentance as a counter-bond assureth vnto vs this assurance by a sensible infallibility outward euidence perswadeth vs that we performe this condition of beleeuing in Christ and apprehending all the promises by faith vnfained Now that thou mayest O my soule proceed in some order what is this repentance but an Euangelicall and sauing grace of God wrought in thine heart by his holy Spirit applying by faith as by his instrument Christ and all his benefits which inflaming thine heart with feruent loue doth make thee looke vpon him whom thou hast pearced to bewaile thy sinnes as the chiefe causes of his death to hate and forsake them and to turne vnto God offering vnto thee grace and pardon by amendment of life and bringing foorth the fruits of new obedience So that it is a grace and free gift and no naturall endowment which commeth by inheritance or else procured by thine owne purchase It is the gift of God who giueth vnto thee all good things It is a gift of his free grace preuenting thee when thou didst neuer so much as thinke of it by putting into thy mind the profit and necessity of it and into thy heart some desire of receiuing it preparing and fitting thee for it by the preaching of the Law working humiliation contrition and legall sorrow and fitting thy mind and will that they might consent and obey the motions of the Spirit outward in the Word and inward in the heart and conscience working it first in thee by changing the mind and heart and turning them from sinne vnto holinesse and righteousnesse co-working with thee that thou mayest continue renew and increase in the practice of it and perfecting thy repentance in the parts and degrees of it which himselfe begun It is hee that calleth vs to repentance and inableth vs to repent He striketh our stony hearts and maketh them to relent by sound contrition before these rocks will yeeld any waters of true repentance It is he that powreth the Spirit Ezek. 11. 29. 36. 26. Zach. 12. 10. Act. 5. 31 11. 18. 2. Tim. 2. 25. of grace vpon the house of Iudah before they can lament for their wickednesse and that giueth repentance to the house of Israel and with it remission of sinnes Thou canst not turne vnto him O my soule before hee first turne vnto thee nor weepe bitterly with Peter till hee thaw thy frozen heart by reflecting vpon thee the beames of his gracious countenance Yea when he turneth thou canst not turne till hee turning his face turne also thine heart as it is running away with feare and neuer looking backe that thou mayest behold his gracious countenance promising nothing but good and his stretched out Arme to receiue thee vnto grace and fauour Surely saith the Church after I was turned I repented and after that Ier. 31. 19. Lam. 5. 21. I was instructed I smote vpon my thigh No man can sorrow for his sinnes nor resolue to forsake them but hee that hateth them nor any hate them but they who loue God nor any loue him whose hearts hee first inflameth not by sheading abroad his loue in them by the holy Ghost which hee giueth vnto Rom. 5. 5. 1. Joh. 4. 19. vs. Neither doth he worke alone but together with his Sonne and holy Spirit For it is the blood of this Lambe of God which worketh our adamantine hearts to this relenting softnesse and the water which issued out of his pierced side which being beheld with the eye of faith doth draw out of our eyes the brinish waters of repentant teares And therefore because he is the Author of our repentance both as hee procured it by the meritorious vertue of his death and worketh it by his blood-shed applyed by faith he inioyneth his Apostles to preach repentance in his Name Finally Luk. 24. 47. it is the oyle of the holy Spirit which suppleth and softneth our hard and stony hearts It is this diuine fire which warming our cold hearts with the flame of Gods loue and the hot blood that issued from our Sauiour causeth them to send vp into our heads these salt yet sweet waters of vnfained repentance which distill by our eyes and in trickling teares drop from our cheekes This winde of the Spirit must blow vpon vs yea must blow into vs before wee can returne vnto God one sigh to expresse our sorrow for our sinnes And therefore O my soule seeing God is the principall cause of thy repentance rob him of no part of his due but ascribe vnto him the whole glory of his owne worke Which though hee could effect by his sole immediate power yet hee is pleased to vse in it many subordinate causes meanes and instruments by which he worketh this grace in thee As ministeriall and helping causes namely the Ministers of the Word who in this worke are co-labourers with Christ sent by him to open mens eyes and to turne them from darkenesse to light and from Act. 26. 18. the power of Satan vnto God that they may receiue forgiuenesse of sinnes and inheritance among them that are sanctified by faith in Christ in which respect they are called spirituall fathers begetting them to God by the seed of the 1. Cor. 4. 15. Word So likewise instrumentall causes which are inward precedent and immediate as sauing knowledge shewing the way to repentance a liuely faith vnfained loue and true feare of God both in respect of his mercies and iudgements especially the last and generall Iudgement at Act. 17. 30. the end of the world or else outward which either lead and draw or else mooue and perswade vs to repentance Of the former sort are many instruments and meanes to bring vs to it As the Ministery of the Word and first the preaching of the Law which prepareth vs for it and of the Esa 55. 7. Gospel which worketh it in vs by assuring vs that if wee will turne to the Lord he will haue mercy vpon vs and forgiue vs our sinnes So also crosses Psal 119. 71. Luk. 13. 1 2 3. Rom. 2. 4. and afflictions either vpon our selues or others Gods blessings and benefits either promised or bestowed The moouing and perswading causes are innumerable as the loue of God towards vs his patience and long suffering his truth in his