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A97360 The works of the judicious and learned divine Dr. Thomas Taylor, part 1. sometimes preacher of Aldermanbury, London. Published by himself in his life time, in several smaller volumes, now collected together into three volumes in fol. two of which are here bound together. The first volume containing, I. An exposition on the 32. Psalm ... The second volume containing, I. An exposition of the parable of the sower and seed, on Luk. 8. ... The third volume is in the press, and will containe in it, I. The progress of sts, to full holinesse ... Taylor, Thomas, 1576-1632. 1659 (1659) Wing T560A 683,147 498

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which draw on such fearful falls and mischiefs and preserveth him that neither hope of promotion nor gain nor ease nor favour of man who is but a worm shall make him forget the Lord that spread the Heavens this fear which is Loves keeper holdeth the heart in the Love of God himself of his Worship of his Word of his Children and whatsoever carrieth his Image all which without it either lye or quickly grow as refuse wares out of request 4 To drive away security awake sloathfulness provoke to watchfulness stir up to prayer keep in a fitness to profit by the word to tremble at it when God threatneth to rejoice in the promises as those to whom they belong to help us to better our selves by our afflictions as the speech of the converted Theef to his fellow implieth that if hee had had the fear of God he would being in the same condemnation have otherwise carried himself towards Christ than hee did And in a word to fence the heart which is as the market-place of a City against temptation in which special use it is called a Well-spring of life to escape the snares of death By all this that hath been spoken every man that would seem religious ought to labour above all things for this worthy Grace which God specially bestoweth upon his Children with whom hee maketh his new Covenant Jerem. 32. I will put my fear in their hearts never to depart from mee saith the Lord. Which hath all promises belonging unto it for a mans Self for his Children for this life present for a better for supplies of every good for with-holding and removing of every evil so as whosoever feareth the Lord wanteth not a good and rich treasury such as all the Indian Mines cannot afford yea such as both possesseth himself and entaileth unto his posterity the rich blessing of the Almighty Blessed saith the Psalm is the man that feareth the Lord Psal 128.2 3. himself shall bee mighty on earth his Children shall bee blessed after him his Wife shall bee as a fruitful Vine Riches and Treasure shall bee in his house Psalm 112.3 hee shall want nothing that is good and let his troubles bee never so great the Lord will deliver him out of them all Here is a Jewel worth hiding and laying up in the safest closet of the soul even in the midst of the heart for there God layeth it and calleth for the Heart to make room for it Deut. 5.29 Oh that there were such an heart in them to fear mee Isa 8.13 Sanctify the Lord in your hearts and let him be your dread Another bond whereby man is knit unto God is the working of righteousnesse an immediate fruit of the fear of God Where must bee considered 1 What this righteousness is and then 2 What is the working of it For the former To work righteousnesse what it is This righteousness is a grace of God whereby the beleever is inclined unto honest actions according to the prescript of Gods Law When I say a grace of God I understand that righteousness whereof a man in the state of grace is by grace made partaker and exclude all that Original Righteousness which was set in the nature of man by his Creation whereby hee was wholly conformable to the Image and Righteousness of God further saying that the beleever is hereby inclined to honest actions three things are implyed 1 That this righteousnesse is not that imputed righteousnesse of Christ which is a most exact conformity of the humane nature of Christ with all his actions and sufferings performed of him in our stead with the whole Law of God whereby wee are wholly covered as with a Garment in the sight of God but rather a fruit of that namely that infused and inherent righteousness wrought in the heart of every beleever by the finger of the Spirit whereby the Image of God is daily renewed and repaired in him and so himself inclined to works of righteousness to which hee is now Created Eph. 4.24 2 That the subject of this righteousness is the Beleever for all the works of unbeleevers whose mind and conscience are defiled Tit. 1.15 inward or outward cannot be other than sin and unrighteousness 3 That the next efficient cause of it is lively faith being the instrument of the Holy Ghost by which hee begetteth this righteousness wheresoever it is now Faith produceth this righteousness in us not as it is a● excellent gift of God nor as an excellent quality in us but onely as it is a●●and or instrument apprehending and laying hold upon Christ who justifying us by his own righteousness imputed and by his Spirit regenerating and sanctifying our natures is the very proper cause of this infused and inherent righteousness The last words in the description according to the prescript of Gods Law shew that then a work is righteous Juste agere est agere ex praescripto juris when it is framed according to the right rule of the Law of God it being the only perfect rule of all righteousness Mens Laws are rules also but imperfect and no further yet so far bind as they are agreeable unto Gods II. The second point is the working of righteousness wherein 1 The Order 2 The Manner The Order is in the words first To fear God and then to work righteousnesse all the duties of love must bee founded in Faith and in the fear of God for whatsoever is not of Faith is sin and the fear of God is the very seed and life of all true obedience which the wise man implyeth when hee calleth it the head and beginning of wisdome Prov. 1.7 that look as all sense floweth from the head so all heavenly sense and motion from the fear of the Lord. Which sheweth that many men begin at the wrong end in the matter of their obedience some think they do God high service if they come to Church say some prayers hear a Sermon things not to bee dis-allowed but know not how far they are from pleasing God herein because they bring not hearts renewed with Faith and Repentance nor souls possessed with Hope Love and the true knowledge of God without which the Lord accounteth their sacrifices but maimed and professeth his hatred against them others place all their Holiness and Obedience in the works and duties of the second Table If they bee liberal to the poor just in their dealing sober and civil in their conversation though they live in gross ignorance of God and his Word utterly careless of the waies and worship of God yet conceive themselves in as good case as any other man which is all one as to account that man a living man who hath no head the fear of God being to true religion even as the head to the body of a man besides that they thrust the second Table into the place of the first inverting the order of God yea they pull and break asunder the two Tables which the Lord
That God is to bee loved above all and that for himself being the chief good This is the scope of the whole first Table the first and the great Commandement Mark 12.33 To love God with all the heart all the understanding all the soul and all the strength is more than all burnt offerings and sacrifices as the Scribe conf●ssed whereupon the Text infers hee answered 〈…〉 cordate discreetly wisely and that in Christs Judgement This is wisdome to give God the first place first thoughts first service chief praise and precedency for of him and through him Rom. 11.36 and from him are all things 2 An●ther chief point of spiritual wisdome in the things of God is 2 Purchase Christ above all gain to purchase Christ and Remission of sins above all things in the World The sound Christian is that wise Merchant that sells all to buy the Pearl that is Christ and his Righteousness that wise builder that lays Christ a sure foundation in his heart Hee is of the number of those Wise Virgins that will bee sure what ever they lack to furnish themselves of Oyl in their Lamps to meet their Bridegroom Wisdome will procure the best commodities and chief gain which is Christ both in life and death Phil. 1. ●1 Paul was a wise Merchant who esteemed all things as dross and dung in comparison of Christ So were the Disciples saying Master wee have left all and followed thee John 6.63 So were the Martyrs whom the world accounted simple fools in following Christ with the loss of life and all Happy is that soul and filled with sound and saving Wisdome that comes to Christ with this resolution Master thou hast the words of eternal life and whither shall I go 3. Let us prefer in our election and choise things of higher nature 3 Chuse best things first before things of inferiour for wisdome keeps a method by which it ever subordinateth lower things to higher This rule our Saviour prescribeth Matth. 6.33 First seek the Kingdome of God and his righteousness and then the things of this life First provide for heaven and then for earth By which rule of wisdome 1 All profits and pleasures must give place to piety for all is but pidling gain to godliness 2 By this rule of wisdome the special calling and trade of life must give place to the general calling which is the trade of Christianity 3 By this rule a Christian must chuse to bee rich in God and good works rather than in the world which because the Rich man in the Gospel neglected hee is called fool for his labour Luke 12.10 4 By this rule we must with David Psalm 4. more affect one glimpse of Gods favour and countenance than all Corn Wine and Oyl that is the most necessary and delightful profits in the World 5 By this rule wee must make more account of pardon of sins looked up in our breasts than of the whole treasury of a Kingdome in our chests 6 By this rule wee must esteem a grain of grace above a million of gold And 7 a poor godly man above a wicked Prince Eccles 4.13 Better is a wise Child than an old foolish King which will not be admonished 4 Fear God and keep his Commandements for this is the whole duty of man 4 Fear God keep his Commandements Eccles 12.13 This is to apply our hearts to Wisdome to set our hearts to keep Gods commandements and do them This is our Wisdome Deut. 4.5 Who is a wise man among you indued with knowledge Let him by good conversation shew his works in meekness of wisdome Jam. 5.13 A Wise man will attend the mouth of the King and will fear the danger of the Law So a wise Christian will walk in the Law of the Lord Psalm 119.1 and will bee sure to keep him to this rule and warrant contained in the word of God Gal. 6.16 And as a Wise man is careful to keep his Assurances and Evidences for the certainty of his Lands and earthly Livelihoods and is loath to forfeit any of them by failing in any of the conditions So it is the Wisdome of a godly man to keep the word safely in his heart which assureth him of his estate in heaven and which hee is loath to forfeit by failing in the conditions and clauses of it CHAP. VIII Containing Rules of Wisdome concerning the Inner man and first of the Mind Thoughts and Will BEing to entreat of the Rules of Wisdome concerning man and the things of man good order requireth that wee b●gin with such as concern first Ones self And secondly others They which concern a mans self respect either the inner man of the outward The inner man in five particulars 1 In his Mind 2 Thoughts 3 Will. 4 Conscience And 5 Affections Rules for the Minde 1 To inlighten it For the Minde these rules of wisdome are necessary to bee remembred 1 To furnish it with necessary profitable and humble knowledge The wise mans eyes are in his head Eccles 2.14 This is a wisdome to sobriety Rom. 12.13 where also the Apostle condemneth curiosity and conceitedness which wastes our time and brings infinite idle questions wherein men presume above that which is meet The Prophet David professed hee medled not with things too high for him Psalm 131.1 1 Cor. 2.2 And the Apostle Paul desired after his conversion to know nothing but Jesus Christ and him crucified As for humbleness in knowledge Solomon saith The way of a Fool is right in his own eyes Prov. 1● 15 and A wise man in his own conceit is more hopeless than a Fool Prov. 26.12 16. Our rule therefore must bee to grow up in wisdome and as wee grow in knowledge so to grow in humility for the more sound knowledge a man attains the more shall hee see in himself to humble him 2 To deck 2 To deck and adorn the minde with humility holiness modesty shamefastness c. 1 Pet. 3.4 5. and Col. 3.12 As the Elect of God put o● tender mercy kindness humbleness and meekness but above all things put on love verse 14. Rules for the Thoughts The second sort of Rules concerns a mans Thoughts The general is in Prov. 4.23 Keep thy heart with all diligence for it is slippery and deceitful more than necessary to watch and suspect it and to set time apart to check and reclaim it But for the better keeping of thy thoughts in order think on these particulars 1 Give God the first thoughts 1 Give God thy fi●st thoughts that hee may hold the chief part in thy heart and this will sweetly rell●sh th● heart and by estranging it from worldly impediments fit it and keep it in preparedness for all good occasions Psa 108.1 2 3. David prepares his heart and will awake early to praise the Lord The way to walk safely and comfortably all the day is first to reform that which is
as any chaff and as easily destroyed as any stubble that it is not consumed But 1 This fire is not kindled against the bush cut of the sparks of Gods wrath Heb. 12.29 Heb. 12.10 and indignation which is indeed a consuming fire but of his Fatherly affection and love not for the hurt of the bush but for the profit of it not to destroy the persons but the sin for the persons sake Wee have indeed kindled and blown up our selves a violent and devouring fire Heb. 10.27 which God might send into our bones Lam. 1.13 Psal 83.14 Lam. 3.22 to burn us up as fire burneth the forrest and as the flames set the mountains on fire But the mercy of God is as water to quench this fire for else would it burn to the bottome of Hell and instead of a Furnace of fury which melteth away his enemies Ezek. 22.22 he setteth up in Zion Isa 27.9 a furnace of favour only to melt the metal consume away the dross and refine his chosen ones to become vessels of honour 2 Because the fuel of the consuming fire of Gods wrath are slaves not sons those wicked brambles Ezek. 15.7 which if they escape one fire saith the Prophet they fall into another which shall consume them but not this bush which is only made brighter and better by the flame but not blacker not worser The chaff and stubble must feed the fire of wrath never to come forth more but the pure metal is cast into the furnace to come forth so much the purer as it hath been the longer tryed Exod. 3.2 3 Because the Angel of God is in the bush This Angel was Jesus Christ the Lord of the holy Angels and the great Angel of the Covenant For Moses saith expresly of this vision ver 4. The Lord appeared unto Moses and God called unto him out of the middest of the bush and S. Luke recording the same vision Act. 7.31 2. greeing with Exod. 3.6 after that hee had called him an Angel bringeth him in saying I am the Lord of Abraham c. This same presence of the Son of God was noted the cause why the three children in that furious furnace of Nebuchadnezzar Dan. 3.25 being cast in bound walked loose in the midst of the flames why not they but their bands were burnt and why not an hair of their cloaths vers 27. and much lesse of their heads were touched no nor smelt of the fire Isa 43.2 Behold the bush burned but not consumed because the King saw four men walking loose having cast in but three bound and they have no hurt for the form of the fourth is like the Son of God Because God is in the midst of it saith David of the Church it shall not bee moved No● potentia urendi sublata ab ig●e sed operatio tantum ut Dan. 3 for God shall help it very early How partly 1 by restraining the natural force of the fire 2 partly by obfirming and strengthening the bush against it 3 partly by watching it that it spread not too far for himself as it were sits by the fire to tend it 4 partly by slaking and cooling it when it groweth too hot lest the heat smite the bush as the worm did Jonas his gourd By these means Jonab 4.7 the bush in the flame becometh like the Gem Amiantus Amiantus g●●●a ig●● non absumitur sed lucidi●● ac ●urior redditur Dub. Chytr●●s Isa 53.3 which is not consumed by fire but becomes brighter and purer than before This most holy and comfortable truth is fully assured unto us in the person of our Lord and Head as well as in the body who in the daies of his flesh was 1 A bush most able to peirce and wound his enemies in himself most desplicable and base in all outward appearances and in this bush God dwelt not in any visible sign of his presence but as never in any before essentially and bodily 2 A bush in the fire partly of Gods wrath Col. 2.9 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Isa 53.10 Matth. 26.38 Mat. 27.46 Lam. 1.14 True first in the head and then in the members in inward passion and suffering in his soul the sorrows of the second death which made him cry My God my God why hast thou forsaken me into which flame had the bush of the Church been cast it had been utterly consumed Partly of mans wrath in outward passion and misery such as whereof hee complained that no sorrow was ever matchable to his And partly of Satans wrath in most fiery and furious temptation the which hellish fire was renewed and blown up against him in most violent sort three several times as in the Treatise following we shall by Gods grace discover 3 A bush in the fire not consumed but came forth of the hotest Furnace that ever was kindled more bright and glorious than the Sun in his strength For easy it was with him to convince his temporal adversaries by the mighty raising of himself from the dead through his own Divine power Rom. 1.4 when hee had overcome the wrath of God his Father and not difficult for him that had in his life overcome Satans Temptations and in the wilderness spoiled him of his power and weapons in part Col. 2.15 upon the cross by his death openly and perfectly to destroy his Forces and as on a glorious Chariot to triumph over him This bush burnt but not consumed As he is the end of all the Scriptures so also of the exposition of them in whom and for whose glory I have published this Exposition at the importunate request of some Friends Notwithstanding many discouragements that was on the one hand and sundry godly lights in our own tongue opening the same Scripture on the other Mr. Udal Mr. Perkins Mr. Dike 2 Sam. 23.13 The truth is magnified in the mouth of many witnesses and a poor man may give in as true an evidence as a rich If I may hold Benajahs place in the Church of God and stand for God among the thirties and the many of his Worthies it shall well content me although I attain not unto the first three What ever this labour is I have presumed to dedicate it unto you noble Sir as a testimony of my true and unfeigned affection and duty 1 Because God hath made you a worthy instrument in this place which as well by your authority and care as through your godly affection and countenance of good men and causes hath a long time enjoyed much comfort assistance and refreshing 2 Your sound love to the truth hath invited this truth to run under your patronage 3 As he which hath been once friendly bid welcome will boldly come again so your good entertainment of this doctrin in the delivery of it assures it you will now bid it as welcome to your eye as it was to your ears at the first offer of it
Gods book for the increase of knowledge and conscience Psal 1. ● Deut. 6 and add hereto meditation and prayer for these three saith Luther make a Divine all time thus spent is well redeemed As for lascivious and idle books shun them as rocks 2 Rejoyce in the good you know by another praise God for it pray for the increase of it But if you know any evil by any mourn for it and if you can by brotherly admonition amend it ●ob 31.1 ●sal ●59 ●7 3 Retrain your ears eyes mouth and hands from hearing seeing speaking or performing any wicked and vain thing knowing that death often entereth in at the windows S ●am 1.2 1 Stick to God as well in adversity as prosperity the one being as necessary as the other If you want necessaries humble your self for them if you have them bee humble with them and use them well lest you forfeit them ●at 5.23 ●sal 35.14 2 Seek Reconciliation with your Neighbour freely forgiving those that have offended you and earnestly desiring to be forgiven of all that have been offended by you ●at 23.25 ● 7.9 10 3 Study to approve both your heart to God and your Life to Gods Children in your particular calling and especially to such ●hes 5 ● 6. ● as to whom God hath joyned you as if a servant in obeying if a Master in ruling if an husband in loving if a wife in reverence for a good conscience a good name and good manners must go together T ●b 3.12 ● 1.11 ● 15 ● m. 1. ● 12. 1 Take heed of performing holy duties for fashions sake or without feeling and profit for this is hypocrisy or prophaneness 2 Thankfully requite at least with 1 Acknowledgement 2 Hearty affection 3 Prayer the good you get by any man for there is no member in the body but standeth in need of others mens gifts Cor. 11. ● 26 3 Think it the greatest work in the world to dye well which to do you must inure your self to dye before hand 1 by dying to your sins 2 Leaving the world in affection before it actually leave you 2 In your last leaving of it do it willingly yea Joyfully whensoever wheresoever or howsoever God shall call you V 1 Vow to God and keep it Eccl. 5.34 Psal 16.14 especially strive in performing the solemn vow of your baptism and the covenant which you renew in the Lords Supper 2 Vatiance and discord with men will not stand with your peace with God If you love God 1 Joh. 4 20 you will love men also for Gods image or else for his Commandements sake 3 Use the World as not using it and your prosperity and liberty to be bettered by them That is not gained 1 Cor. 7.31 Mat. 16.26 which is gotten with the loss of your soul and then is the soul exchanged with an handful of the world when it is not gotten and held 1 In Christ restoring it 2 With Christ the chief gain 3 For Christ the Lord of it W 2 Wait upon the Lord and he will direct your way becom his servant Psal 37.7 for this is the way to attain your truest liberty 2 Weep with them that weep Rom. 12.15 Jer. 13.17 Psal 69.9 and fellow-feel the afflictions of the brethren that are in the world Christ in Heaven accounteth the sufferings of his Saints his own and wee his members upon earth must do the same Religion and mercy are well matched by God and must not by man be divorced Ezek. 9.4 as for the miseries and sins of the age wherein you live mourn also for them and pray to God for remedy 3 Wish not a long life so much as a good life he hath lived long who hath lived well A short life in grace setteth into the everlasting life of glory The Analysis of Christs Temptations In Christs Temptations consider 1 The preparation parts three 1 Christs entring the lists here 1 Time Then 1 When he had been baptized 2 When he undertook his high office 3 When the Spirit had descended upon him The Sonne of God The Teacher of the Church 4 When hee had received testimony from heaven that hee was 2 Person Jesus 3 Guide of his way was lead of the Spirit Here 1 The Guide The Spirit 2 The manner was lead 4 Place into the wilderness 5 End To bee tempted of the Devil Here 1 Author The Devil 2 End it self To be tempted 2 His expectance of the enemy Here three things 1 How he was furnished Hee was filled with the Holy Ghost Luk. 4.1 2 His Company He was with the wilde beasts Mar. 1.13 3 His imployment 1 He was tempted within that time Luk. 4.2 with lighter on-sets 2 He fasted in his fast 1 time forty days forty nights 2 effect he was afterwards hungry 3 Entrance of the adversary where 1 The time Then when Christ had fasted and was hungry 2 The name of the adversary The Tempter 3 The manner of his entrance he came in an assumed shape externally 2 The Combate it self in three fierce on-sets First consist of an 1 Assault in it 1 The ground If thou be the Son of God 2 The inference Command these stones to bee made bread Here 1 Facility Command 2 Readiness of object these stones 3 Utility to be made bread 2 Repulse in it 1 The manner it was 1 reasonable 2 meek 3 modest 2 The affection negative But conjunction discretive 3 The matter a testimony of Scripture It is written 4 Parts of the testimony 1 Negative Man liveth not by bread only 2 Affirmative but by every word which proceedeth c. Second consists of 1 Preparation here 1 The time then 2 The place set down 1 In general the holy City Luke expresseth it to be Jerusalem 2 In special a pinacle of the Temple 3 The manner how Christ was conveyed thither in 2 things 1 Hee took him up 2 He set him on the Pinacle 2 Temptation in it 1 Assault in it 1 The ground If thou be the Son of God 2 The matter cast thy self down Here 1 The action Cast down 2 The agent thy self 3 The place whence from hence saith Luke where means of safety were 3 The argument to perswade him a testimony of Scripture in which 1 General consideration It is written 2 Special matter 1 As abused by Satan 2 In his right use here 1 Angels ministery keep thee 2 Who seals their commission Hee shall give his Angels charge 3 The limitation in all thy waies 4 The manner they shall bear thee in their hands c. 2 Repulse in it 1 Resistance Jesus said unto him 2 Reason 1 Scripture alledged for it is written to the contrary 2 in the allegation 1 who must not tempt thou 2 who must not be tempted The Lord. Thy God 3 action of tempting Third in it 1 Assault in it 1 preparation in it 1 choice of a fit place Here 1 what place
quiet enough till God set him apart to deliver his Brethren and after that hee was never at quiet The like may bee said of David an eminent type of Christ while hee kept his fathers sheep hee was at rest but if hee will set upon Goliah and bee annointed King by Samuel let him look to himself Saul will hunt him like a Partridge and so narrowly espy his haunts that himself will say hee must surely one day fall by the hand of Saul Zech. 3.1 when Jehoshuah the High Priest another type of Christ commeth to stand before the Lord in his service the Devil commeth and standeth at his right hand to resist him The Apostle Paul so long as hee was of the strict sect of the Pharisees hee was highly esteemed and lived quiet enough but when hee became an elect vessel to carry the Gospel among the Gentiles then hee was tryed and buffeted now hee knows that bonds and imprisonment abide him every where 2 Cor. 7.5 6.5 1 Satans hostility against God and his glory and the means of it Reasons forceth him to hinder whatsoever may further Gods Kingdome and hinder his own While the Prisoner is in fetters under bars and bolts the Jailor sleeps quietly and while the strong man keeps the hold all is in peace but disturb him a little and you shall hear of him Hence it is that the more weighty any calling is and the more conscionably a man sets himself to discharge it which wee see in Christ himself the more vigilantly doth Satan watch to hinder it Reach once at Satans head and hee will surely reach as high as hee may at thine 2 This is not without the good providence of God who hereby will prove his servants to whom hee will commit some special work whether they will shrink or no hee will have them also to have good proof and trial of his strength and faithfulnesse in supporting them that they may the better commit themselves unto him in time to come who hath upheld them formerly and go on undaunted in constant walking with him through the experience of his goodness 3 God seeth though Satans malice blindeth him that his children without such strong trials should not bee so fitted for his service It is a training of them to great employments and makes them not onely more expert in themselves but also far more able to help others in any kinde God would not exempt his natural and only Son from temptations that hee might know how to help others that are tempted Heb. 2.18 nor the Apostles for the same end 2 Cor. 1.4 6. Use 1 All sorts of men the more they set themselves to glorify God in their places the more they should expect trialls A Christian can no sooner give his name unto Christ nor the Spirit descend upon him but Satan with all his malice will assault him Christ was no sooner baptised but hee must go forth to bee exercised with Satan and his Members also who not onely by outward profession but inward sincerity also make a league with God to renounce Satan sin and this evil world shall not want all the molestation that Satan can create them Rev. 12. the red Dragon watcheth for the Child to bee born to devour it and such is his malice Whom Sat●● cannot 〈◊〉 in the end● which is sal●●tion bee w● trouble the● in the way● that whom hee cannot hinder of Salvation hee will hinder of their peace and joy as much as hee can if hee cannot chase vertue out of the world hee can disgrace it and if he cannot quite hinder all good proceedings hee will by molestation delay them as long as hee may Hee is subtile if hee cannot do the greatest evil that hee would hee will do the lesser that hee may as by Sanballat hee did hinder the re-edifying of the Temple The condition of the child of God is military in this life Hee hath Satan and all his Army of wicked ones mortal foes against him Many deceive themselves who mean to profess Religion so long onely as they may injoy peace and credit and the applause of the world so long as they may see Christ with a golden crown and scepter and follow him into Jerusalem with Hosanna But they have not cast their accounts right nor weighed the difficulties of sound profession of Christ and therefore like the foundation of the foolish builder when winds and floods rise they fall down right with shame they forsake Christ and religion and all they look back and run back to the filthinesse of the world they embrace a course which standeth with their own ease but never shall they have the honor of honouring God or of effecting any thing which shall bring God true praise and themselves true peace It will bee the wisdome therefore of every Christian undertaking any commendable action so to look and begin with God that ever hee have another eye upon Satan and his malice both to expect it and resolve not to bee beaten off for it Shall the Israelites being set out of Egypt run back again because Pharaoh pursues them no but hye them more hastily away Shall I give ●●er my profession because the greatest part of men hate and reproach it no I must see Satans old malice renewed who casts a flood of poysoned water against Christ himself who should not avoid the same measure of obloquie and reproach if hee lived again upon earth Was it thus with the green tree it is no marvail then if it bee so with a dry Shall I neglect my duty to which God and good conscience ties mee A wise Christian may stop the mouth of Satan but never his malice because I would not displease men and bee thought no medler then farewel Gods glory if I go about to stop the Devils mouth which if I could yet I shall never stop his malice Use 2 The more publike a mans calling is the more doth Satan aim at him to cast him down who doth conscionably intend it as for example 1 The Magistrate Satans chief aim is against Chief●●in● in Church and Common-wealth Satan stirs up David to number the people 1 Chron. 21.1 2 The Minister being the Lords standerd-bearer the Devil seeks to winno● him especially and begges leave to bee a lying spirit in the mouths of four hundred false Prophets at once And both these because God hath specially instituted these callings for the beating down of Satans Kingdome and lifting up the Scepter of Christ and again if Satan can foil the Leaders the bands are soon overcome smite the Shepheard and the sheep will bee scattered cast down Cedars and they will crush many shrubs with their fall Hence must both these bee more careful of themselves than ordinary men as being in greater danger as men set upon steep and slippery hills beset with enemies to cast them down And the less that men see these oppositions the less service do they to God or his
distinguish between being tempted and being led into temptation in our Saviours sense the former is a work of Gods mercy to try exercise or chastise any of his Children the latter is a work of Justice in which God leaves a man to himself so as the temptation is prevailing against him Now wee pray onely against the latter which is to bee left and so overcome in temptation neither doth God so lead us into temptation but to make us in the end more than Conquerors so as still wee may bid Temptations welcome and with cheerfulness submit our selves unto them Vse 3 In every tryal see that the Spirit lead thee for this is a sure ground of comfort and hath assured hope in it of a good end Christ was not led into temptation by private motion neither did hee thrust himself unto it no more must wee rashly run into or pull dangers upon us or through presumption object ourselves unto temptations if wee do Wee must not thrust our selves into tryals but expect the leading of the spirit wee must needs fall and cannot expect safety because wee tempt the Lord and provoke him to with-draw his Fatherly protection from us whereas there is no danger in following the leading and guidance of the Spirit Many a man is of so strong a faith that nothing can harm him hee is for all courses and all companies But how can a man bee safe where Satans throne is Peter thought himself strong enough to go into the High-Priests Hall but hee found in the end it was no fit company for him Others through vain presidence of Gods protection run in times of contagion into infected houses which upon just calling a man may but for one to run out of his calling in the way of an ordinary visitation hee shall finde that Gods Angels have commission to protect him no longer than hee is in his way Psalm 91.11 and that being out of it this arrow of the Lord shall sooner hit him than another that is not half so confident Others are bold-hardy to set upon the Devil in his own holds they dare enter into and lodge in houses given up by God to the Devils possession which is if it bee out of ones lawful Calling to cast a mans self into most probable danger for whereas wee ought to use all good and lawful means for the preventing of imminent danger this is to seek danger and hurt and commonly they that seek it justly find it The issue of such presumption wee may see in the sons of Sceva Act. 19.16 who took upon them to do as the Apostles did namely to name Christ over those that were possessed but the Devil seeing their want of calling thereunto ran upon them and overcame them so as they fled out of the house naked and wounded Others through temerity and rashness bring on themselves much woe who follow the motions of their own spirits in their courses and never or seldome consider whether they have Gods Spirit before them or no they look not for warrant out of Gods Word in the things they do or speak they begge not Gods direction and assistance they spy not in what ambush Satan lyeth what advantages hee easily taketh and so for want of Christian watchfulnesse lay themselves open to many evils and dangers wherein they can meet with no great comfort because they cannot say with a good conscience Lord thou hast led mee into this estate but rather I have cast my self into this danger If therefore thou wouldest finde comfort in troubles keep thee in thy way that thou mayest never bee without the leading of the Spirit Three notable effects from assurance of the spirits guidance in trials and then this will bee the issue 1 Being led by the Spirit thou wilt follow willingly thou wilt lay aside all reasonings excuses and delaies as Christ did hee murmures not delaies not doth not first return to Nazareth bids not his Parents and friends farewel consults not with flesh and blood but was driven out with a strong motion ot the Spirit This is the same free Spirit which dwelleth in the hearts of Christians hee leads them too and they obey and follow Abraham follows him from his own Countrey and Moses into Egypt 2 If thou see the Spirit leading thee thou shalt not faint under the Cross no not when thou lookest upon the greatest danger that can be threatned because the other eye is upon the Spirit which helpeth thy infirmities and according to the measure of affliction ministreth a sound measure of comfort 1 Pet. 4.14 therefore the Saints rejoyce in affliction because the Spirit of glory and of God resteth upon them A valiant Captain leading the way incourageth the most timorous souldier to follow with courage and resolution So this Spirit which leadeth is a spirit of strength and of power not in himself alone but supplying with new strength those that give up themselves to bee led by him 3 If thou see the Spirit leading thee into tryal it will keep thee from seeking to winde thy self out by any unlawful or unwarrantable means thou wilt follow him to bee led out by him as well as thou wast led in by him thou wilt wait his leisure for the removal of thy Tryal in whose good pleasure it lyeth most seasonably to deliver thee This is often the reason why God giveth his children to bee led by the Spirit to try whether they will abide with him in temptation or no. And those who will shift themselves out of trouble by lying swearing and the like or avoid crosses and losses by wicked means as poverty by breaking the Sabbath sickness by sorcery and witchcraft what spirit soever led them in certainly the evil spirit hath led them out the remedy is worse than their disease and their escape is made only by breaking the prison Vse 4. As Christ was led by the Spirit in all his course of life so should Christians for as many as are the Sons of God are led by the Spirit of God Rom. 8.14 So the Apostles in their Ministry went hither and thither stayed or departed preached and prophecyed by the Spirit They were forbidden by the Holy Ghost to preach the Word in Asia and Bithynia Act. 16.6 7. 21.4 certain Disciples told Paul by the Spirit that hee should not go up to Jerusalem And it is the duty of all true Beleevers to resign themselves in subjection to Gods Spirit Quest How shall I know when I am led by the Holy Ghost Answ By these rules 1 Gods Spirit works in and by the Word therefore if thou enquirest in every thing what is the good and acceptable wil of God Three rules to know a mans self led in every thing by the Holy Ghost Rom. 12.2 thou art led by the Spirit 2 Discern his guidance by the mortification of the deeds of the flesh for the life of the Spirit is opposed to the life of the flesh Rom. 8.13 Therefore
sin and help themselves thereunto by these rules 1 Consider thy charge Levit. 19.16 Thou shalt not walk about with tales among thy people and consider that whispering and back-biting are the sins of men of a reprobate sense Rom. 1.29 2 Receive no false accusation receivers of stollen goods are accessary to the theft if there were no receivers there would bee no theeves if no hearers no informers Drive away the slaunderer with an angry countenance as the North-wind driveth away rain Prov. 25.23 have no pleasure in this sin of another man Rom. 1.32 3 Do thine own business look to the duties of thine own calling busie-bodies and pratlers are joyned together 1 Tim. 5.13 4 Take heed of envie malice never spoke well it is always suspicious ever traducing Embrace the love of thy neighbours person 5 Deal with another mans good name as thou wouldst have him deal with thine if it came in his way Consider thou mayest restore his goods but never his name once broken ever a scar A felon is more tollerable in a Common-wealth than a slanderer 6 In receiving reports excuse the person so far as thou canst Vide Pe●ald tom ● p. 561 de detractore● construe the speech or fact in the most favourable sense do as thou wouldest bee done to and if thou canst not advise the reporter to look to himself and tell him that in many things wee sin all 7 Curse not the deaf saith the Scripture now a man that is absent is a deaf man Object But I speak the truth Answ But not truly 1 Without ground thou art uncalled and unsworn thou doest it not by way of charitable admonition to the party himself or others 2 Not in a good manner without love pity sorrow nay thou rejoycest rather in thy tale 3 Not to any other end but to fill mens mouths with prattle and bring thy brother into contempt And why speakest thou no good of him as well as evil but art like a swine in a garden that leaves all the sweet flowers to dig or wallow in a dung-hill Five motives to lay aside calumniation and slandering Motives to lay aside and abhor calumniation and slandering 1 Charity is not suspitious but in doubtful cases thinks the best 1 Love thinketh not evil 1 Cor. 13.5 2 It covers a multitude of sinnes Prov. 10.12 and 3 It gives to every man his due in his goods and good name And therefore the tale-breeder tale-bearer and tale-beleever who do none of these but hammer tales and slaunders upon the anvil of envy and set them upon the wings of fame and report are uncharitable and unchristian persons the Devils fewellers and gun-powder for where no wood is there the fire goeth out so where there is no tale-bearer the strife ceaseth Prov. 26.20 2 Wee have a common Proverb A man museth as hee useth as himself useth to do so hee imagineth of another and therefore to judge lewdly of another upon bare suspition is commonly a note of a lewd person those that are so ready to tax men of Hypocrisy commonly are hypocrites themselves 3 It is a question among the school-men whether a man that hath impaired anothers good name bee bound to restore as hee that hath pilfered his goods and it is concluded by all the Doctors that hee is bound in Conscience because a good Name is better than all Riches saith Salomon And because it hath more enemies than our goods even this law of restitution and satisfaction should bee of force to keep them off us and if the law bind him that steals our goods to restore five-fold certainly hee that stealeth our name is bound to restore fifty-fold because it is so far above a mans substance and the blot is never wiped away If Serpents sting us or mad dogs or venemous beasts bite us there is some remedy but against the tongue of the slanderer there can none be found 4 It is one of the sins against the ninth Commandement to hear our Neighbour falsly accused and not to clear him if wee bee able Jonathan when hee saw Saul stirred up by tale-bearers against David spake boldly in his defence and said Why shall hee dye what evil hath he done And Nicodemus Ioh. 7.51 when hee saw the Scribes and Pharisees so set against Christ that they would have condemned him being absent and unheard stood up and said Doth our Law condemn any before it hear him and know what he hath done A good rule for us how to carry our selves towards all Christians 5 Wee must hold us to our rule to judge no man before the time 1 Cor. 4.5 and if no man then 1 Not our superiours people must not bolt out opprobrious words against their Pastors and Teachers sin is aggravated by the person against whom it is committed to tevile an ordinary man is odious but much more to revile the father of our souls or bodies Pastors or Parents 2 Not godly men and professors of the Gospel as to charge them with hypocrisy and traduce with violence that which would receive a charitable construction Heb. 6.9 3 Not such as in whom Gods graces shine more eminently than in others through pride or envy this is a high sinne and cost Christ his life yea to disgrace and obscure Gods gifts which ought to bee acknowledged with thankfulness is in the skirts of that unpardonable sin and had need bee stayed betimes for it is to hate goodnesse and if it did hate it because it is goodnesse it were farre more dangerous 3 Note Seeing Satan is such an Arch-accuser If there be so many accusers no marvail if godly men want no manner of accusation and that his special hatred is against goodness is it any marvail that the Children of God pass through many slanderous accusations If speech bee of the faithful Preachers of the Word neither Prophets nor Apostles shall avoid most dangerous slanders Amos shall bee accused by Amazia to preach against the King and that the whole land is not able to bear his words chap. 7. ver 9. Paul and Silas preaching nothing but Christ are brought before the Governours exclaimed upon as men troubling the City preaching Ordinances not lawful to bee received and teaching men to worship God contrary to the Law Act. 16.20 18.13 Let speech bee of professors of the Gospel how do men in their mindes accuse and judge that to bee done in vain-glory which is done in simplicity and for Gods glory and that to bee done in hypocrisy or for commodity or other sinister ends which God sees is done in sincerity Yea as if men did see their hearts and inside how do they speak it that such are not the men they make shew of or if grace evidently appear in the eminent notes of it they can so lessen so diminish and clip the beauty and glory of it as still they shall bee disgraced Our blessed Lord himself was accused and condemned for a malefactor yea and
this Miracle and the Gospel it self 4 That hereby he might bid battel offer opportunity and provoke his adversary to the combate for this was the end both of his fasting and going into the Wilderness and of his hunger Wherein also this fast of Christ may not be imitated for we are not to offer any opportunities or advantages to Satan who is ready enough to seek and take enough as we may not tempt God so we may not tempt the tempter but pray that we may not be lead into temptation by him and watch lest we fall into temptation Mark 14.38 yea we must cut off and prevent his advantages and shun all occasions wherein hee might assault us as knowing our own weakness The third thing in Christs fast is the continuance of time III. Christ fasted no longer nor shorter time than forty days for five reasons Moses in mon●e ante legem Elias in itinere sub lege Christus in deserto sub gratia forty days and forty nights Quest Why did he fast so long why no more nor no less Ans For these reasons 1 To bee answerable to the types As Moses fasted forty days at the institution of the Law and Elias at the restitution of it so would Christ here at the manifestation of the Gospel 2 He exceeded not his number lest he should seem too inhuman and cruel against himself for he did no more than Moses and Elias had done men subject to infirmity In our time he is no man that cannot strain one trick above others but Christ being in the shape of a Servant takes not upon him above his fellow-servants 3 He would not fast less because he would not seem less than the Prophets nor unlike them 4 He would not fast more because he would not have his Deity now acknowledged by the Devil 5 He would not give occasion to Hereticks to doubt of the truth of his body and human nature If he had fasted longer than Moses and Elias he might have been thought no true man but only in shew incarnate Quest Why is it added that he fasted forty nights Ans For these reasons Forty nights added for two reasons 1 To shew that it was not such a fast as the Jews used to keep who fasted many days together but ate at nights as Daniel fasted for three weeks of days chap. 3. vers 10. Nor like the Turkish fasts who so soon as they see a starre eat any thing on their fasting days but that which is strangled or Hogges flesh Nor yet like the Papists fast who though they say they fast forty days both to imitate Christ and to give God the tithe of the year yet can feed well and fare deliciously every night 2 To shew that Christ had a care to spend his nights well as well as his days not spending them out in sleep but in watching and prayer as well as in fasting for by the same power his body was preserved without sleep as it was without meat Farre unlike the Papists who in their fasting-days spend the night in gluttony luxury and all uncleaneness Doct. Fasting a most necessary duty This example of Christ teacheth us of what great necessity this exercise of fasting is both for the entrance and comfortable continuance of the duties of our calling both general and special This Nehemiah knew well when hearing of the calamity of Jerusalem and his brethren the Jews hee fasted certain daies and prayed before the God of heaven chap. 1. v. 4. And Ezra proclaimed a fast to seek the right way homeward and safe from their enemies chap. 8. v. 21. see also Act. 13.3 Reasons 1 Fasting in an holy and religious manner helpeth forward graces that are necessary for our calling as 1 the grace of conversion and therefore is made an adjunct of it Joel 2.12 Turn you with all your heart with fasting and weeping 2 The grace of prayer for as Prayer sanctifieth fasting so fasting strengtheneth prayer Otherwise to place Gods worship in fasting is to make the belly the God 3 It helps forward the knowledge of the mysteries of God and godlinesse Dan. 9.3 conferred with 20.21 as Daniel was praying and fasting Gabriel was sent to instruct him and revealed to him the mystery of the seventy weeks 4 It addes strength and courage in the Christian combate between the flesh and the spirit it is as a third that comes in to take the spirits part and so helpeth to the victory by subduing the flesh 2 The necessity and profit of this exercise appeareth in respect of our selves for 1 If wee want publike or private benefits fasting joyned with prayer is the means wherein God will have them sought and obtained The Benjamites after two sore overthrows by this means got the victory Jud. 20.28 Annah by the same obtained her Samuel and David fasted for his childes life 2 If wee bee in danger of publike or personal judgements by the same means they are to bee diverted religious fasting is a chief part of the defensive armour of the Church as wee may see in the examples of Hester saving her people from Hamans devise and of the Ninivites turning away the destruction threatned by Jonah by fasting and humbling themselves 3 If wee bee to attempt publike or private duties hereby wee must fit our selves and obtain success and blessing So did Nehemiah and Ezra as wee saw before and when Paul and Barnabas were separated to the work of the ministery they fasted and prayed Act. 13.3 Yea Christ himself spent a whole night in fasting and prayer before he chose his Disciples Luk. 6.12 13. 3 Daily experience shews the necessity of religious fasting for 1 How many men observe in themselves that for want of this duty they grow dull in their profession and heavy in holy practices yea empty of grace so as they may think the Spirit is departed from them yet when they have renewed this exercise they finde themselves more ripe and ready more quick and able to good duties as if they had new soules given them 2 Do wee not see that the more conscionably a man carrieth himself the more busily Satan doth bestir himself against him and had hee not need so much the more fence himself with coat-armour and flye to God for strength and protection If a good Magistrate or Minister bee to bee brought into any place how doth Satan storm and bend his forces against him because hee thinks that then his Kingdome must down Therefore if a man mean to be serviceable to God in any place it is meet hee should first sanctify it by fasting and prayer as Christ did Vse 1. This serves to rebuke the great want of this so needful a duty What Magistrate or Minister against whom Satan most shooteth entreth thus into his calling as Christ by fasting and prayer but by gifts favour or otherwise get livings and offices but to God they go not and this is the cause that so little good is done
either in one calling or the other as much blessing as they seek they have So what other reason can bee given that many lingring evils and want of Gods blessing is in so many families but because men omit the chief means of procuring the one and repelling the other Men think they have nothing to do with this duty but when publike authority enjoyns it and that it is onely the fault of Magistracy it is so out of use as though every Master of a family were not a Magistrate and Bishop in his own house or as if that were not a means for private blessings which is so mighty for publike Oh deceive not thy self that which thou canst not do publikely thou maiest do in thine own house and therefore if thou wantest any grace or blessing blame thine own idleness that seekest it not in Gods means Vse 2. This should move us to perform so needful a duty as this is Motives to fasting 6. and thereunto to consider of these reasons 1 Consider the Promises that are made and have been made good to fasting and fervent prayer Remember that one example of good King Jehoshaphat against whom came the Moabites Ammonites and they of Mount Seir whereupon hee proclaimed a fast throughout all Judah and prayed earnestly 2 Chron. 20.2 17. and before they had ended their Prayer the Spirit of the Lord came upon Jahaziel a Levite who by the Spirit of Prophecy foretold the victory saying Yee shall not need to fight in this battel O Judah and Jerusalem Fear yee not but to morrow go out against them and the Lord will bee with you and so it came to pass for the enemies slew one another and the Jews gathered the spoil and returned and praised God in the valley of Beracha that is of blessing so called ever after 2 The ordinary prayers of Gods children have prevailed much and much more can their fasting and prayer bring greater blessings When Peter was in prison sleeping between two souldiers the night before he should bee brought out to death being bound with two chaines and the Keeper before the door watching the Prison at the ordinary Prayer of the Church an Angel smote Peter saying Arise quickly and his chains fell off and hee was delivered Act. 12.5 much more can Extraordinary Prayer joyned with fasting prevail 3 Many things are not obtained but by that prayer which is joyned to fasting Matth. 17.14 this kind of Devils is not cast out but by prayer and fasting that is by a most fervent kind of Prayer to which fasting is joyned as a whetstone to sharpen it and set an edge on it Some things as those that are pretious cost a greater price and some sutes must bee obtained of men not without long and instant supplication so here many things are long sought by ordinary prayer which being extraordinary favours might by extraordinary prayer have been sooner had 4 God hath rewarded the wicked who have used this Ordinance in Hypocrisy and much more will hee those his servants that use it in truth 1 King 21.21 Ahab fasting for the destruction threatned by Elijah humbled himself and this fast of his not joyned with true repentance but onely kept in the outward ceremony in abstaining from meat in sackcloth and giving some testimony of outward sorrow was not unrewarded but obtained a reprieve of the execution of the sentence till his Sons dayes How much more respect shall wee obtain of God if wee joyn to the outward fast the inward graces of humility repentance faith and fervency 5 Were this exercise in request sometimes in families it would prevent many judgements and many sins the procurers thereof in governours children and servants as adultery fornication drunkenness swearing riot and prophaneness these might bee kept out as well as cast out by this means and unspeakable were the good that might hereby be procured as release from many evils life health c. 6 We have the example of the Jews who besides all other moveable fasts upon special occasion must have one set fast in a year Levit. 16.29 1 Because many great sins of all sorts might be committed in a year for which they needed to be humbled 2 Once a year God might shew some tokens of displeasure publick or private that they might know that once a year they had cause to be humbled Obj. That was a Ceremony Ans The day was not the thing the equity of which binds us as well as them because the ends and causes bind us And in the Gospel wee have the example of John and his Disciples who fasted often and Christs Disciples must fast when the Bridegroom is gone and causes of mourning come Beside these we have sundry other motives to religious fasting as 1 Shall Christ fast for us and not we for our selves 2 Shall the Pharisees fast twice a week in hypocrisie and wee not once in our lives in sincerity 3 Can we cheerfully betake us for our bodily health to fasting diet or abstinence so long as the Physician will prescribe and will we doe nothing for our souls health 4 Can worldly men for a good market fast from morning to evening and can Christians be so careless as to dedicate no time to the exercise of fasting and prayer to increase their gain of godliness 5 Is not this a seasonable exhortation hath not God sounded the Trumpet to fasting Matth. 9.16 when the Bridegroom is taken away it is time to fast But now 1 Sins abound as Drunkenness Pride and high wickedness and there is no more fear of Gods wrath in the Church and Land 2 The Word and Ministery is more despised than ever and less loved Preachers and Professors of the Gospel are scorned as in the days of Noah the heavenly Mannah is contemned and the contempt of it threatneth a final departure ot the Bridegroom 3 Papists increase in numbers in boldness in pride in power and are so farre from being converted by the light as they are daily more perverted and perverse notwithstanding the glorious Gospel of God and the wholsome Laws of the Land Adde unto these the swarms of Atheists Machevilians carnal and cold Protestants among us 4 Who hath not smarted in the common judgements of the Land lingring by many years in plagues unseasonable weather fires waters and the like all of them fore-runners of greater misery Who can forget the warning of Gun-powder and the present unfeelingness of it And were not these publike evils how may every one of us bewail Christs hiding of himself from our souls His gracious beams shine not on us with such comfort as they might his Word is not so fruitful in the best as it should dulness and conformity with the times creep in upon the best the Sun and Moon great Lights in the Ministry are darkned and the Starres lose their light among professors Is it not time to awake our selves if ever and to betake our selves to sack-cloth and ashes to fasting
unlesse hee were madd neither is it charity nor humanity to take money for a duty the nature of which is to bee free Charity seeks not her own and much less other mens but of these sorts of wicked men the speech is true Their mercies are cruel As charitable as that Usurer is so conscionable is hee that follows His conscience will not suffer him to take above the law not above ten in the hundred and that he hopes he may according to the wholesome laws of the Land Answ Where were his conscience if the Law of King Edward the sixth were revived whereby it was utterly forbidden according to the Canon of Gods Word and the ancient Canons of the Church but for the Statute now in force enacted Eliz. 13. c. 8. 1 I say it alloweth no usury but punisheth the excess of it 2 The title of the Act is An Act against Usury How then is it for it 3 It calleth usury a detestable sin how then can it secure thy conscience 4 All usury above ten in the hundred is punishable by the forfeit of the usury 5 What if the Laws of men should permit what Gods Law condemns is it not plain that this conscionable man flyeth Gods law to shelter his sin under mans as though the Laws of man were the rule of conscience and not Gods laws or as if the law of an inferiour can dispense with the law of the superiour or as if Moses permitting one evil in the Jews namely the putting away of their wives for preventing a greater did allow thereof or warrnnted the sin to the conscience of the hard-hearted Husband Wee conclude then that the Usurer lives not by any word of God but against it And to these adde the bands of this sin the Brokers to Usurers that live or raise gains by letting out other mens mony I will say no more to them but if hee bee shut out of heaven that lends his money to usury be shall hardly get in that is his Agent And humane Laws condemn theeves and accessaries It is a Statute of Henry the 7. Anno. 3. that all such Brokers for usury shall pay for every default twenty pounds and suffer half a years imprisonment and bee brought to the open shame of the Pillory It is just with God that Saul and his armour-bearer should fall together and dye on their own swords IV. Such live not by any word of God as encroach upon the Sabbaths of God by labouring either in themselves or in their servants as 1 by buying or selling wares Neh. 13.18 2 By works of the six daies whether in harvest or caring time Exod. 16.29 34.21 Neh. 13.15 3 by travelling for gain or pleasure For the Sabbath was made for our spiritual profit it is a day to give and collect almes and not gain Manna it self must not bee gathered on the Sabbath much lesse must more ignoble sustenance if it bee sought it shall not bee sound Object 1 May I not do a little to set forward my work for the beginning of the week Answ No Manna might not bee sought though early in the morning and though it was but a little way off and required little labour Object 2 May I not take a fair day when it comes the weather being uncertain and catching Ans Thou mayest as well say May I not take a purse when it comes wilt thou bee a theef and rob God of his due Should not ill weather and Gods judgements rather force thee to Repentance and obedience than to sin Object 3 It lies me upon a bond my estate and many poor men depend upon mee Answ First pay thy bond to God saith and obedience never brought losse with it and better were it to loose a little commodity than Gods favour and a good Conscience nothing is so heavy as Gods curse for this sin V. Common Gamesters and such as make a gain of play live not by any word of God it is a common theft and they come directly under the eight Commandement and that Precept of the Apostle Eph. 4.28 Let him that stole steal no more but rather labour with his hands And as they live out of a calling so their course is an unjust taking into their possession that which no law of God or man doth warrant them by any manner of lawful contract See August Epist 54. and the Civil law and Fathers condemn that gain which is gotten by play In the same rank of theeves are they that live by keeping dice-houses or gaming houses and such places of lewd resort Use 4. Let us take some rules whereby wee may comfortably pass our lives according to Gods Word and avoid all these sins against it There are three 1 Concerning our calling 2 our states 3 Our maintenance of life The first Rule concerning our Calling is this The carriage of our calling according to Gods Word is a special part of that word of God by which man must live Quest How may I carry my calling according to Gods word Answ By these means 1 Wee must make choice of such callings for our selves and ours as bee profitable for the Church or Common-wealth there bee many vain and new-fangled inventions which rather maintain sin than bring any good to the Church or Common-wealth But God therefore bestoweth variety of gifts to furnish men to the variety of callings all for the common and every ones private good 2 Seeing not the having of a Calling but the right use of it glorifieth God wee must use our callings with the practice of sundry vertues 1 In faith and obedience to God Faith makes our persons obedience makes our actions approved of God yea every duty of our calling ought to bee an obedience of faith looking at the commandement and promise the Commandement keeps us within the compass of our callings the promise secureth us of good success A good action not warranted by a calling is sin 2 In diligence not wilfully neglecting but serving and redeeming the means of Gods providence Every man must abide in his calling and keep him in his way for so long hee is sure to bee provided for thus bee avoides idleness and destruction and maintains the order and rank wherein God hath set him 3 In cheerfulness not carking or excessively careful but doing the labour and leaving all the success to God Some are heart-lesse in their calling because it brings in so little profit and return and labour as the Oxe who must go out his journey but without cheerfulnesse or heart which God looks for in all our duties Such should consider 1 That Callings were not onely ordained to get money but help us cheerfully through our way and contain us in a course wherein to please God 2 That the goodnesse and worth of a calling is not to bee measured by that profit it brings in to us but by the publike benefit and as it is rightly used God may bee served as well in the basest as in
as 1 To serve God is to reign and to be a King over the world fleshly lusts c. and to suit with Saints and Angels 2 God hereby becomes our protector maintainer and revenge● a David often prayeth Lord save thy servant teach thy servant revenge the cause of thy servant c. 3 Servants of unrighteousness meet with the wages of unrighteousness 4 All our comfort in crosses and afflictions stands in our service of God and a good Conscience or else we have none 5 To fear and keep his Commandements is the whole duty of a man and that which makes him f●lly happy Notes of a good servant of God 1 Labour to know the will of the Lord which hee hath revealed in his Word as David prayed Psal 119.125 For in the Scripture hee hath laid but our work for us and let us expect our calling to every business there let us be ready to hear not lightly absent nor present for custom but conscience 2 Let us serve him in affection and be glad to doe any thing to please him and grieve when we fail either in doing that wee should not or in not doing that we ought or not in that manner that may please the Lord. 3 Be ever imployed in his work How know I a mans servant but by his labouring in his Masters business Yee are his servant to whom yee obey Rom. 6.16 and Joh. 15. Yee are my Disciples if yee doe whatsoever I command you If I see a man spend his time in the service of sin of lusts of games pleasure the world c. I know whose servant he is certainly he is not in the service of God hee is not in Gods work 4 Intend thy Lords profit and glory A good servant knows his time and strength is his Masters and hee must bee profitable to him and seek his credit It will be with every servant of Christ as with Onesimus Phileus 11. being converted howsoever before grace he were so unprofitable and pilfering as he was unfit for any honest mans house and much more the house of God yet now he profits the Lord and credits him and takes not his meat and drink and wages for nothing 5 A good servant sets forward his Masters work in others hee will provoke his fellow-servants and not smite and hinder them as the evil servant did he will defend his Lord he will venture his life for him he will stand also for his fellow-servants while they are in their Masters business he will be a law to himself if there were no Law no Discipline he will not idle out his time his eye is upon the eye of his Master his mind upon his account his endeavour to please him in all things Vers 11. Then the Devil left him and behold the Angels came and ministred unto him HAving by the assistance of God now finished the two former general parts of this whole History which stood in the 1 Preparation and 2 The combate it self we proceed to the third and last which is the issue and event of all which affordeth us the sweet fruit and comfort of all our Saviours former sufferings from Satan and of our labours and endeavours in opening the same In this issue two parts are to bee considered 1 Christs victory 2 His triumph His victory and conquest in that the Devil left him His triumph in that the Angels came and ministred unto him In both which shine out notably the marks of his Divine power which even in all his lowest abasements did discover it self to such eyes as could see it and gave shew of a person far above all that his outward presence seemed to promise as for example His conception was by the Holy Ghost His birth as mean and base as might be but graced with a Star and the testimony of Angels and his Circumcision with Simeons His Baptism performed by John in Jordan but graced by his Fathers testimony and the Spirits descent in a visible shape of a Dove His civil obedience causeth him to pay tribute but hee sends for it to a Fish His person was called Beelzebub but Beelzebub confesseth him to be the Son of God At his Passion what greater infamy than to be hanged between two Theeves What greater glory than to convert and save one of them At his apprehension they that took him fell backward to the ground Joh. 18.6 In death he trod upon Deaths neck and being shut up in the Grave he opened it So here he is carried and recarried in the hands of the Devil but as one weary of his burden hee is forced to leave him on the plain field and to give up the bucklers because a stronger than hee is come This is the great mystery of God manifest in the flesh 1 Timothy 3.16 In the victory of Christ consider three things 1 The time when the Devil left him Then 2 The manner hee departed from him 3 How long hee left him and that is in Luke for a season Then This particle may have reference to three things 1 When the temptations were ended saith Luke namely all those which his Father had appointed him to indure at this time in the Wilderness For as the Son of God knew how much to suffer so Satan would not give over till hee had spent all his powder and had exercised all his malice in these most hellish Temptations wherein hee used all his skill strength and malice if he might possibly in this seed of the woman overthrow all the Sons of men and in the Head kill all the members Whence wee may Doct. Observe The obedience of the Son of God who stood out resolutely and departed not the field at all nor expected any rest till all the Temptations for this time were ended Christ could have confounded Satan in the beginning of the temptations and so have freed himself from further molestation but he continues and abides all the trial to the end And why Reason 1 His love to his Father made him submit himself to the lowest abasement even to the death of the Cross and refuse no difficult service for which his Father sent him into the World of which this was a principal The speech of David was most proper to this Son of David Behold here am I let the Lord do with mee even as hee will In his greatest agony hee said Not my will but thy will be done For he that loveth God his Commandements are not grievous to him 2 His love to his Church made him stand out the uttermost peril in this dangerous combate Eph. 5.25 Christ loved his Church 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and exposed himself for it and made himself liable to all wrongs and dangers for it as a loving Husband steps between his Wife and danger 3 Hee persisted in the Combate to teach us to hold out after his example in temptation and to expect freedome from temptation when wee have indured all but not before It is absurd to expect the
rather than over-ruled by power it laies by all dialogue dispute murmuring and desire of dispensation 3 In the measure of doing it will indeavour in all the Commandements and all duties no man so wicked but hee can do many things as Herod but hee cannot yield to all 4 In continuance and conclusion of that hee doth it holdeth on in doing things purely for a good end for Gods glory and not by fits and starts but perseveres to the end and the crown of the work In all which a wicked man comes short for whatsoever is forced or feigned must bee heavily entered on and more heavily ended besides whatsoever is from such an one is joyned with reigning sin which hales and tugs him backward and toils him out before hee bee half way in any good work 3 How often doth the Lord reject the sacrifice of the wicked their oblations their fasts their prayers their temporary yea miraculous Faith their almes and charity yea their confessing and Preaching of Christ as in the last judgement all which had they been fruits of sound grace they had been acceptable But God looks not so much to the matter of the work as the person working the manner of working and the end of the action Vse 1. Well as Satan goes away when hee can stay no longer and so his obedience is forced so doth sin from most men when they can keep it no longer and so that which seemeth obedience in them it is no better than the Devils obedience in this place Vse 1. Many refrain many sins for fear of Hell and the curse of God they dare not hold their sin any longer whereas they are as much in love with it as before as Moses his Parents kept him so long as they durst before they exposed him to the waters so dearly love men the children of their own corruption What thank is it for a Robber or Felon to leave robbing and stealing for fear of hanging If there were no Law nor Magistrate hee would to his own calling again because hee is no changeling So what thank is it for a man to avoid sin because of damnation here is no fear of God but fear of evil no love of God but self-love And yet this is the restraint of most men whom Conscience no whit bridleth Why do men abstain from open wronging of men by Robbing Stealing Murthering they will say for Conscience But then the same Conscience would keep them from all secret deceit lying and cousenage and then the same conscience would keep them from all other sins also as swearing drinking dicing carding gaming pride wantonness and the rest A good conscience in one thing is a good conscience in all 2 The like is the obedience of many sinners that are still in league with their sins Many filthy unclean whoremongers and harlots have left their sin but it is because it hath lest them they have broken their strength and either age or diseases in their bodies hinder them oh now they will pretend Conscience But they can as filthily speak and as merrily remember their mad pranks as ever they acted them they want onely a body no minde will or affection to commit over the same things again Many Prodigals have left their sin because their wealth hath left them and poverty feeds upon them Many quarrellers and swaggerers have left off such furious courses why perhaps they have gotten some maim or mischief or perhaps they fear whether they can do so again safely or no and this is all the conscience that hath calmed and quieted them but what obedience is this Is that an obedience to God for a Dicer or Gamester to forbear play or rather as it is his theeving when he wants mony to stake 3 In Gods service what makes men come to Church to hear and Pray Every man saith Conscience Yea but good Conscience works powerfully upon the Will what then means the unwillingnesse of men and heavinesse who are so far from apprehending their week-occasions as if they ask their own hearts they must tell them that on the Sabbaths of God were it not for fear of law and shame of men both which are often forgotten they would not come at all Here is obedience much like the Devils because they are of the Devils teaching The like of many servants and Childrens obedience whose comming to Church to hear their duty is meerly forced by the compulsion of Masters and Parents and hath as little comfort in it as the Devils obedience 4 The like is to bee said of late Repentance at the time of death when the sinner hath held his sin so long as hee can then hee would bee rid of it Indeed his sin leaves him but not the curse of it but hee is so far from leaving it as were hee to live over his daies again hee would put as much life into his sin as ever before Late repentance is seldome true ever suspicious Why do many rich men never do good while they live but live as unprofitable and hurtful as swine till they come to the knife but then when death is binding them they will give somewhat to good uses to the Poor for a Sermon c. Why what moves them Conscience they say But it is an accusing Conscience crying out against their oppression usury wrong cruelty and deceit and now this wicked Conscience would stop its own mouth by offering to God some trifle of that hee hath robbed For were it a good conscience why doth hee not leave some part of his wealth for God before it wholly leave him Were it a free-will-offering why comes it so late why doth hee not good while hee hath time Gal. 6.10 Surely God likes a living Christian for any man will bee a Christian dying Neither is it thank-worthy to give that which a man cannot keep And commonly such gifts do more good to others than the giver himself Which is not spoken to hinder men from doing good at their deaths but to provoke them to do good before that time And yet better late than never Let us examine all our obedience by this ground and bee sure that it differ from the obedience of Devils and wicked men And that by these rules 1 God loves truth in the inward parts and refuseth all that obedience which follows not sanctification of the Spirit duties without must flow from graces within Examine now thy inward change wee are his new creatures created to good works joyn that in thy actions which the Devil divorced the inner man with the outward the subjection of the soul with the obedience of the body 2 Examine thy love in thy obedience that because the love of God constrains thee thou doest what hee commands and whether thou preferrest the Commandement of God which is ever-joyned with his glory above all the World and thy obedience above thy profit credit case pleasure mens favour or dis-favour whether thou canst obey God against all these This was
may be said to bee anointed two ways Christus totus vel Christus mysticus either properly in his own person as considered in himself or figuratively by the use of Scripture as he is the head of his Church which joyned unto him maketh up whole Christ as the Fathers call him or mystical Christ Thus Paul calleth Christ united with the Church by the name of Christ 1 Cor. 12.12 we must therefore help on the perfection of this latter seeing he is already perfect in the former Every Christian must be a King To this purpose every man must become a King for so he is if hee partake of Christs anointing in being ever in the field in combate against sin in taking up arms against Satans hellish power in getting daily dominion over his own rebellious flesh and wicked lusts For if thou beest a Christian thou hast ten thousand rebels to encounter and as many strong temptations and lusts which thou must stand out to victory and here faith must be thy victory which grace is attained by this anointing But oh the misery of infinite numbers every where meer Bond-men and captive Caytiffs to Satans suggestions and held down under the power and tyranny of their own lusts in whom there is no resistance no fight never a stroak they strike against their own sins the strong man is gone away with all very cowards against the Devil nay couragious Champions for him and yet will be called Christians no no there is never a drop of Christian bloud in such this anointing as yet never came near them here is no spirit no power but such as ruleth in the world And a Priest Rom. 6 13 Again thou that wilt be a Christian must be a Priest to offer up thy self soul and body an acceptable sacrifice of sweet smell unto the Lord to offer up thy prayers and praises the calves of thy lips these are the odours of the Saints Revel 5.8 to offer up thy sins to bee sacrificed and slain by the knife and sword of the Spirit in the Ministery of the word to offer the sacrifices of almes and mercy with which sacrifices God is well pleased to offer the sacrifice of a broken and contrite heart which the Lord despiseth not and lastly to offer if need require thy life and deerest bloud for Christ and his profession But how many titular Christians be there who indeed are no better than Belzebubs Priests who offer their souls their bodies their sences themselves wholly to the service of the Devil in sin and unrighteousnesse for prayer and praise they curse swear and blaspheme most remorselesly fierce and hard-hearted in themselves and unto others and so farre from this anoynting as many of the Heathens who never heard of Christ would be ashamed of them and wonder what kind of God that Christ should bee by whom they will bee called And a Prophet Lastly thou must be a Prophet thou must have the knowledge of God in thy self thou must hold it out and impart it unto others within thy family and without for to this thou art anoynted as also to hold out Christ in a constant profession which tyeth every man to know and acknowledge the truth of God that he may be able to propagate it to others but especially Ministers Magistrates Parents and Masters whose special calling besides the general fastneth this duty upon them These are the chief things to which others might be added wherein every Christian ought to testifie himself anoynted by Christs anoynting that he communicateth as well in his graces as in his name and that he hath received some good measure of that oyl of grace which was poured out upon him without measure for as in the head the God-head dwelleth bodily so in every member 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 though not the God-head it self yet a Divine nature is apparent 2 Pet. 1.4 Now this godly nature is nothing else but those excellent renewed qualities and precious gifts which the Holy Ghost bestoweth upon the regenerate by means of this anoynting and is opposed to natural lust and corruption in the same verse Who went about doing good Now we come to Christs execution of his Office according to his former calling and furnishing For no sooner receiveth he gifts and calling from his Father but he manifesteth and putteth forth the same in most painful preaching and most powerful working of Miracles which hee did not for a brunt or by starts and fits but he went aboue doing good By which words is noted his diligence in absolving and finishing his course within his vocation and calling not seeking herein himself nor the praise or applause of men nor the Kingdoms of this world but denying himself and glory spent his whole life in doing good unto others suffering himself to bee subdued under a most shameful and cursed death that hee might bring others to life who were as yet his enemies and lying in the shadow of death Wherein he propounded himself a worthy pattern and example of imitation unto all such as have received gifts Note and calling unto any office in Church or Common-wealth who are not to hide in a Napkin those talents but bring them forth and traffick with them and that not for their private as seeking themselves but for the common good and not for a start or brunt but thus to finish their course holding out in well-doing unto the end Thus if we shall doe we shall be conformable unto Jesus Christ acceptable to God our Father profitable to our brethren here on earth and shall treasure to our selves an excellent weight of glory in heaven But how many bee there who having received many talents and charge to traffick with them bury their gifts and forget their charge against whom the fearful sentence is not only passed but half executed already his talent is taken from the sloathful servant there now remaineth nothing but the binding of him and casting him into hell And would this were not too true not in many Ministers only but even in numbers of private Christians who have had both gifts and calling to teach and pray in their families but have wilfully lost them for want of the careful use of them Now more specially this going about of Christ doing good standeth in two things The former in curing the deadly diseases of mens souls by most holy and saving doctrin revealing his Fathers whole will and teaching the things of the Kingdom not coldly as the Scribes but in most powerful manner so as his very enemies were forced to say Never man spake as this man doth The latter in curing the bodies of men also by most powerful Miracles one kind whereof which was most eminent namely the healing of Demoniaks is put for all the rest in the words following by both which means he shewed himself a merciful Saviour and the chief Physician both of soul and body and in one word the very healing God Of both which
but seeing he who is thy head is in Heaven thou that art a member of him must be there also And as Christ while hee continued upon earth after his resurrection lived a kind of supernatural and heavenly life so if thou be risen with him thou livest not the life of nature but hast begun the life of grace and an heavenly conversation Quest But how shall I know whether I live by this heavenly life or no Heavenly life disce●n●d by two notes Ans There be two special notes to discern this truth by the former is the dissimilitude and opposition which it hath with the life of sinful natural men upon earth the latter is the similitude and agreement it hath with the life of Saints and glorified men in heaven Concerning the former ● In the matters of this life the Natural man will follow and pursue things which tend to a sensual and natural life he will beat his brains for gold and silver meat and cloth goods and lands for himself and his as for Heaven he will have nothing to doe there till he be dead and for the way thither hee cateth not to know it till he be dying at the soonest But the Spiritual man hee coveteth after Spiritual things the power of Christs Spirit where it is present will lift up his heart be it never so heavie to seek the Kingdom and the righteousnesse or it and hee seeketh after the wisdome of God as for gold and treasures he accounteth of the graces of faith love hope humility and the fear of the Lord above all pearls and precious things he provideth for himself and his the food that perisheth not and thinketh h●mself warmly and comely arrayed when he hath put on the Lord Jesus Christ as knowing that only the garment of his righteousnesse can fence him from all the injury of wind and weather The Natural man doth not more seriously listen after great purchases of Lands and Fields as he doth cast with himself to purchase the pearl hid in the field for which he will sell himself as we say into his shirt nay and further how own self liberty life and if he had any thing dearer than that The Spiritual man as for the things of this life if he have them not hee wanteth not his portion If he have them his care is that they have not him or become his portion If riches increase he setteth not his heart upon them If they decrease his heart faileth not with them In abundance he carrieth himself warily and weanedly In want cheerfully and contentedly The things hee hath he useth as not using them the things hee hath not hee knoweth he hath no good use of them or else he should have them And thus as the Natural man bestirreth himself and all his motion tendeth to the bettering of his outward estate at home so contrarily doth an heavenly-minded man accounting himself from home while he is here in the body bend his chief care to settle his estate at home in heaven and all his trading and converse in this strange Country tendeth to the enriching of him in his own Country Further if we look to the Natural mans course in the matter of his religion we shall see as great difference between them For it is clear 2 In the matters of religion that whereas matters of religion are a burthen to the one they are the joy of the other The one as heavie to pray to hear to read and meditate on the Word and of his own estate as a Bear to the stake if Law of shame or some such by-respect moved him not if were all one to him to bee on his Horse-back as in the Church the other would account his life tedious were it not for these meetings of God and his people in the assemblies and those sweet refreshments they bring back from thence The one if he pray sometimes in publick hee maketh little conscience of private prayer in his family and so of other private duties to which God and a good conscience would bind him as straight as to the former The other walketh wisely and religiously in the midst of his house and preserveth the worship of God at home and maketh his house a little Church and house of God The one maketh little or no conscience of such sins as either in comparison of other or in his own corrupt conceit are smaller sins such as are inferior oathes idlenesse gaming sins of omission idle words of hurtful unclean or wandring thoughts words he thinketh to be but wind if he mean no hurt and if he mean hurt but doe none thoughts are free As for the sins of the time he will not be so undiscreet as to swim against the stream hee is here violently carried without resistance into a gulf of known evils and all is well he doth but as others doe and it were worse for him if hee did not The other maketh conscience of all sin lesser sins and secret sins hee can hate all even those which he cannot avoyd hee hateth the evil that himself doth and willingly will not displease God though all men bee therefore offended with him To conclude this point the one seeketh to appprove himself unto man the other to approve his heart to God because he knoweth he made it and knoweth what is in it And this shall serve for a tast of the opposite disposition between Natural and Spiritual life Agreement which it hath with the life of the Saints in Heaven in two things II. The second note to discern this heavenly life by is the similitude or agreement which it hath with the life of the Saints in heaven For the life of the Saints in Heaven must be a counterpane of the beleevers upon earth to which they must be daily framed in sundry regards 1 In respect of the things they are called from 2 In respect of the things they are called unto 1 The Saints in Heaven are called from three things 1 The world it self 2 The corruptions that are in the world through lust 3 The company of the wicked of the world Even so must beleevers in the world in their degree and measure carry themselves as those that are chosen out of the world and such as are bought from the earth Rev. 14.3 medling no more wich earthly things than needs must enjoying them so as they joy no more in them than in things which are not their own but borrowed only for a time using them so as they abuse them not because they are to be countable for them abiding in them earthly businesse and callings What the Saints are called from in three things so as they be never earthly minded in one word so desiring pursuing having holding and parting from the profits of this life as those to whom God hath shewed better things than any below yea and esteeming of their present life it self so indifferently as that they can account the day of their
1 Seeing a man cannot safely and comfortably pass through any part of the day without the light strength and comfort of the Scriptures it pleased the Lord to set up this publike ministery in his Church that even beleevers themselves by hearing the Scriptures daily explained obscure places opened by those which are clearer and figurative speeches cleared by the proper might attain not onely to a clearer understanding of the Scriptures but also to have them printed in their minds and memories so as they might bee able to draw them into continual use 2 Even the best have nature in them and their daily failings and without daily repair grow weak in faith weary of well-doing and unfruitful in the work of the Lord. And therefore though they should not need to come to increase their knowledge yet have they need to hear their faults controlled to bee provoked unto duty to bee confirmed in their obedience to bee strengthened in their faith reformed in their lives comforted in their troubles and spurred to bring every thing to use and practice and therefore the best may be still Disciples and Learners in the School of Christ 3 The agreement and fellowship of the members of the Church is excellently hereby maintained and preserved not onely by communication of gift● and graces while some teach and some learn but also while it is a mean to hold them all of a mind whereas without this publike Ministery if every one were left to hi● private sense and reading it could not but br●●d corrupt and private opinion● to the dissolving of minds and affections And this special benefit of thi● publike ordinance the Apostle aimed at Eph. 4.13 Till wee all meet together in the unity of the Faith and knowledge of the Son of God unto a perfect man implying that the scope of the Ministry is to bring and preserve all the members of the Church in this unity of faith and knowledge wh ch in this world it cannot do but so soon as it hath done this it self shall ce●se nam●ly in the life to come Hee must needs bee wilfully blind that espieth n●t very gr at necessity of the word preached for the strengthening of th●se joy●●s and bands whereby beleevers are knit both unto the head as also unto the me● 〈◊〉 From the oppo●ition of the Devil and wic●ed on●● Thirdly The necessity of this Ordinance appeareth in that the Devil and wicked 〈◊〉 W●●●● have ever resisted it above all other as being the greatest enemy unto his Kingdome which maketh him fall down like lightening in the heart of men Hence is it that hee stirreth up Jannes and Jambres and all the ●able of Egypts Inchanters against Moses and setteth all his power against him to prove him a counterfeit Hence is it that hee will not want a Pashur to sinne Jeremy nor an Amaziah to do as much to Amos. Hence raised hee up many Armies against Paul Elimas and Alexander Hymeneus and Philetus D●otrephes and Demas and from his mouth hee casts out floods of r●pro●chful and virulent slanders against him that hee is a pestilent and 〈◊〉 ou● fellow that hee speaketh against the Law and against the Temple away with such a fellow it is not fit that hee should live A d hath the Devil grown any whit more calm or can hee digest Pauls preach●● better since Pauls time no sure hee is no changling except because his time is shorter his malice bee stronger and more raging I wish Gods faithful Ministers every where found it otherwise But to omit other proofs 〈◊〉 serve generally the voice of the multitude Where there is no Preacher but some poor creature to serve as they say or starve them rather it is wonderful how well people think themselves with him he shall be commended and defended for a very honest peaceable man or for a very good fellow that will bear his Neighbors company they could not have a better and for all hee cannot preach a worse they f ar will come when hee is gone But whose voice is this and is not the hand of the Devil in all this Well on the contrary where there is by Gods mercy a painful and faithful Minister that Preacheth constantly and conscionably how goeth the cry and common voice of people upon him wee have one that Preacheth indeed often and perhaps is a good Scholar but hee is very unpeaceable a reprover of every man a spy-fault hee hath made such contention in our Parish since hee came that wee wish hee had never come amongst us we were quiet enough and held peace and neighbourhood before he came And thus he is cou●ted as Jeremy a man that striveth with the whole earth The same prove● by experience Fourthly The necessity appeareth by common experience if we compare the people who have had the Ministry planted amongst them with those who have it not In the one what shall a man sooner meet with than woful ignorance Popish opinions superstitious practices heathenish conversation they live as men without God in the world or as if the old Sodomites were alive again But in the other by Gods mercy some seal of the Ministry you shall meet withall some men of knowledge of conscience and out of conscience performing duties in publike and in private in the house of God and in their own houses you shall hear godly and gracious speech in their mouths see good example in their lives holy desires and endeavours to grow in grace and in the knowledge of Jesus Christ And whence is this difference but from the presence or absence of this ordinance and Gods blessing attending or departing from it Vse 1. Ministers must urge themselves to diligence by this necessity The Ministers of Christ must urge upon themselves this self same Commandement to provoke themselves to diligence in p●eaching for it layeth necessity upon them and woe unto that Minister that pre●●heth not the Gospel A lamentable thing is it to see how little either this commandement● or the denunciation of this fearful woe prevaileth with many but some are given up with Demas to imbrace this present world some give up themselves to idleness and voluptuousness of life some to ambition and further preferments some to policy and state matters and very few onely to faithful and painful Preaching Thus this commandement of Christ is generally forgotten the sheep and Lambs of Christ unfed and forsaken the Kingdome of Christ unbuilded and unrepaired and the Kingdome and power of sin generally standeth in the state of it unshaken in the hearts of men 2 Wee see hence what little need wee have of a dumb or blind Ministery unless there hee need of breaking so express a Commandement of Jesus Christ who sealeth no mans Commission but to Preach to his people No need of a du●b o● blind Ministe●y What need is there of wells without water of mouths that speak not of candlesticks without light of stars without shine of salt without
savour Christ needed not to have ascended to send men without gifts hee sendeth no Messenger without a message no Steward without his provision no Captain without weapons no Watchmen without eyes this were a folly which the wisdome and weakness of man cannot brook but hee sendeth an interpreter the Learned tongue the prompt Scribe in the Law of the Lord such as are mighty in the Scriptures and are stored with things new and old Let us not implead the wisdome of the Son of God and say where shall wee have such store of Preachers for our several Parishes If wee want them the fault is our own and not Gods who hath given means men and maintenance enough if all these were wisely and thankfully disposed to his glory and the service of the Church 3 This Doctrin must bee applyed also to the more ignorant sort of men who never as yet came to see the absolute necessity of this Ordinance of Preaching as witn●ss 1 Their formal comming hereunto as forced by Law ●ow men see this necessity of preaching or constrained by custome and thence departing again without any fruit of Faith or increase either of knowledge of obedience or of comfort 2 The inbred corruption yea and malice of their hearts against it which bewrayeth it self in a number of frivolous Objections which they shame not to bolt out among their mates As that this preaching of the Gospel is but foolishness they see other have lived honestly and well without it before them and so have themselves done for many years and yet they live as well as those that are the forwardest to run after Sermons Alas poor souls how hath Satan over-reached them in a matter of such moment as is their whole estate and freehold of Heaven who if ever they come to see their lost estate and what a woful condition they stand in for the present they will tell us another tale with shame in their faces for that they have said they will profess the Ministry of Reconciliation to bee as necessary as their attonement and friendship with God which is better and sweeter than life it self Others conceive and complain as the Israelites Many pl●●● against it that there is too much Preaching and too much of this Mannah and some of better place but no better hearts avouch that it is so common that it grows into contempt Now would I ask of these was it the abundance of Mannah the Angels food that was the fault or their wicked loathing of it even so is it the commonness of the word that maketh the wicked contemn it for the hungry soul of the godly would never dispise it if it were ten times more common or rather because they see not the worth nor taste the sweetness of it des●●s● wee the Sun because it riseth daily and shineth all the day long upo● 〈◊〉 or the air which wee breath in every moment or doth the ordinary and common use of the bread upon our Tables bring bread out of request with us No wee see the necessity that without the Sun and without our daily bread and without the air wee cannot live And did wee see also as clearly that where vision faileth people perish wee should change with our minds our note and highly bless God for the commonness of it as we do in the other and sure I am that either the Apostle Paul did not fear this inconvenience or else hee oversaw it when he enjoyned the Ministers to Preach instantly both in season and out of season Others say the world was better when there was lesse Preaching and thence conclude that it is far worse now because there is more which though it bee a rude fallacy scarce worthy answer as putting that to bee a cause of mens wickedness which is not yet something must bee said unto it and fools must bee answered in their folly lest they bee wise in their own conceit Let these men bethink themselves and then tell us whether the Holy Gospel being the power and arm of God to save every beleever the glad tydings of salvation and word of life can make the World worse than it is For if that bee the use of it our blessed Saviour was far overseen to leave his glory of Heaven to take our flesh and in it to submit himself to the obedience of the whole Law and to the suffering of the whole curse of it for our disobedience if by all this hee leave the World or make the World worse than he found it How shall it bee true that is written of him that the Son of Man came not to destroy but to seek and save that which was lost if the Preaching of him make the World worse than it was wee will easily grant that the Gospel being a great sight it daily discovereth that corruption and darkness which before lay hid as the Sun rising manifesteth all those things which were wrapped up in the darkness of the night But to say that sin is the more because it is more seen by the light of the Gospel is a fancy or if sin it self in these daies of the Gospel by the multiplication of people bee multiplyed shall wee say the Gospel is the cause or rather the malice of men who pervert it to their own destruction taking occasion by it to turn the grace of God into wantonness Let not ●s therefore bee as the old Idolaters in Jeremies time who told him plainly that they would not hear the Word that hee spake in the name of the Lord for while they served the Queen of Heaven they had plenty of victuals and were well and felt none evil but since they left to burn incense unto her it was never well with them they had scarceness of all things and were consumed by the Sword and by Famine Jer. 44.17 18. and therefore they were resolved to do as their Fathers did But let us with thankfulness cast our eies upon the Grace of God that hath appeared and learn as it teacheth to deny ungodliness and worldly lusts and to live soberly righteously and godly in this present world Many other allegations of simple people against this ordinance I might alleadge but they are well met withall by some others and my self have elsewhere answered many of them Beauties of Bethel and therefore referring the Reader thither I content my self with these few for the present and conclude this point with this exhortation to these poor seduced people that considering the straight charge and Commandement that lyeth upon us to Preach in season and out of season they would bee willing to pick out their duty therein implyed which is to bee diligent yea swift to hear to attend as earnest suters at the gates of Wisdome for their own good to lay up instruction as they would treasure gold and to call after the wisdome of God revealed in this ordinance without which never was any made wise to salvation And let them further know that
their conscience can dispense with covetousness unbridled anger wantonness filthy speeches c. But if Gods word bee the same so must the conscience and hee that serves God as Paul did in Pure Conscience 2 Tim. 1.3 will do so at all times in all places and things and will avoid sin in his Closet as much as in most publike meetings yea small sins as well as great 5 Keep diligently the goodness and purity of conscience by two things 5 It is great wisdome to keep things well as to purchase th●●● therefore wee must if wee would walk wisely bee as careful to keep good consciences as to obtain them and thereunto observe two things 1 Daily take away matter of accusation which is sin by repentance 2 Rather displease all men than thine own conscience thy friends thy family thy rulers nay thy own self before thy conscience So did Daniel and his fellowes So did Cyprian as Augustine relates it when the Emperor in the way to his execution said Now I give thee space to consider whether thou wilt obey mee in casting a grain into the fire or bee thus miserably slain Nay saith hee In retam sancta deliberatio non habet locum there needs no deliberation in this case The like wee read in the History of France in the year 1572. presently after that tragical and perfidious slaughter massacre of so many thousands of Gods Saints by treacherous Papists Charls the ninth King of France called the Prince of Condo and proposed to him this choice Either to go to Mass or to die presently or to suffer perpetual imprisonment His noble answer was that by Gods help hee would never chuse the first and for either of the two latter her left to the Kings pleasure and Gods providence Thus a good conscience makes a good choice for it self chusing any thing rather than to offend God CHAP. X. Rules of Wisdome concerning the Affections THe fifth sort of rules for the inner man concerneth the Affections Rules concerning the affections 1 Give God the chief affections and hath these particulars 1 Delight thy self in the Lord and make him thy chief joy Psalm 37.4 For the object of our joy must not bee carnal but the Lord himself apprehending him as Gen. 17.1 El shaddi All-mighty to save All-sufficient to supply and a large portion our Sun our Shield Grace and Glory Psalm 84. Solomon having tried his heart with all other delights came at last to a recantation and so do all Gods children and say Lord lift thou up the light of thy countenance upon us Psalm 4. 2 Labour to affect all other things in God and for God nothing like him 2 Affect all other things in God and for God much less above him or against him Psalm 34.8 Taste and see how good God is that is in all things labour to finde the sweetness of God in all his creatures and all his actions A wise man will not insist in the gift but look to the giver whose love hee prizeth more than the token of it If any affection make us unfit to pray or any way thrust us from God it is carnal 3 Let us labour to get our affections more to Heaven than earth 3 Fix them more upon Heavenly things than earthly Matth. 6.24 Col. 3.2 Set your affections on things which are above and not on things which are on earth where wee see plainly that these two cannot both have the affections set on them no more than two Masters served at once as also that it is not enough to affect heavenly things but also with chief affection and care in the first place Hence is that ordinary rule Verse 33. That spiritual things must bee affected and asked simply being simply good but temporal with limitation as being but conditionally good 4 Fear the evil of sin more than the evil of punishment 4 Fear evil of sin more than of suffering because the evil of sin is more evil Sin is simply evil and so is nothing else no not the punishment of it A wise man should rather chuse Hell than Gods offence for there is nothing but sin which God hateth and wee ought to hate nothing so much sin directly resisteth Gods glory but punishment makes for it in the manifestation of his justice 5 Bee affectionate one in the case and condition of another 5 Commiserate the afflicted estate of our brethren In case of spiritual misery sin weakness humane frailty Bee tender hearted one to another even as God for Christs sake forgave you Eph. 4.32 So Col. 3.12 Now Beloved as the Elect of God put on tender mercy kindness c one to another And in the temporal miseries of our brethren put on bowels of compassion bee not without natural affection forget not Josephs affliction Amos 6.6 but lend give cloath feed protect from violence and turn not thine eyes from thine own flesh The phrase Bowels of mercy shews that all our mercy must bee from within even from the tender compassions of the estate of our brother And the same in Isa 58.10 That wee pour out our souls to the needy that is our souls must first bee merciful and then our mercies will bee plentiful which is noted in the word Pouring CHAP. XI Rules of Wisdome for the outward man and first concerning his Calling NOw wee come to such rules of Wisdome as whereby the outward man is to bee ordered that wee may walk both toward our selves and others not as unwise but as wise and that by the Wisdome which is from above And these rules concern 1 His Calling 2 His Estate 3 His words 4 His actions Rules for the special calling 1 Live in a lawfull Calling Directions to walk wisely in his course and calling are these 1 Seeing the Calling is a part of Christian obedience and duty to God a Christian may neither live out a Calling nor in any Calling not warranted by Gods word For if God set us in our Callings hee promiseth both to bee with us in them and to give us good success and to help us against the tediousness of them Jos 1.8 Therefore sanctifie thy Calling and every part thereof 1 Tim. 4.5 1 Shew all good faithfulness in it by the Word and Prayer 2 In the whole exercise of our Calling wee must shew all good faithfulness 1 To God Hab. 1.16 Deut. 8.18 2 To our selves 1 To God by depending on him who hath made our Calling a chief means of our maintenance and not sacrificing to our own Nets For it is the Lord that gives power to get substance 2 To our selves by walking diligently and abiding in our Calling that wee may eat our own bread and provide for our selves and ours and give to him that needeth Eph. 4.28 For by idle and inordinate living through the neglect of the Vocation by Gods just judgement men fall into the depth of sin Drunkenness Gaming Whoredome Theeving and nothing
comes amiss to an idle person Besides discredit bad report and poverty come as an armed man upon such a one Prov. 6.11 3 To others 3 To others whether wee bee Masters or servants as knowing that in our Calling wee are to practise most Christian duties as love to our brethren patience truth fidelity uprightness as being ever under Gods eye 3 Be not busie in other mens Callings 3 Another point of Wisdome in our Callings is not to meddle with other mens business but follow our own close 1 Thes 4.11 Study to be quiet and to do your own business And every where the Apostle reproves busie bodies who going beyond their own bounds thrust their sickle into every mans harvest and being out of their own places and business intermeddle with that which no way concerns them And these are disturbers of peace and civil tranquillity kindling and blowing up contentions for lack of other work The same rule is for women also that they bee not gadders but house-keepers Tit. 2.5 4 In earthly business carry an Heavenly minde Phil. 3.20 4 In all earthly business study to carry an heavenly minde A Christian while hee converseth in earth must have his conversation in Heaven And know that in all the ways of this present life hee ought never to step out of the way to eternal life Neither shall a man bee a loser by this course seeing wee have an express promise that if wee seek Gods Kingdome first and principally these outward things should so far as they are needful for us without such carking care bee cast upon us 5 Intend most the most necessary duties of them 5 As all duties of the Calling must bee profitable in themselves and for the publike good so the most profitable must bee most intended and specially performed A Minister must read the Word but must apply himself more to Preaching as being more necessary A Magistrate must execute Justice upon transgressors of mens Laws but especially against open transgressors of Gods Law Masters of families must provide for the bodies and health of their family but especially for the good and salvation of their souls CHAP. XII Rules of Wisdome concerning a mans estate and first for adversity THe rules of Wisdome concerning a Christian mans estate are these One general Rule for all estates is to think the present estate best for thee First General Secondly Special The general rule for all estates is this Bee prepared for any estate contented in every estate and assure thy self the present estate whatsoever it is is best for thee though not ever in thy sense yet in Gods gracious and wise ordering of it This lesson the Apostle Paul had well learned Phil. 4.11 12. I can want and abound I can bee full and hungry I have learned in all estates to bee contented The special rules are either for prosperity or for adversity Rules for affliction Concerning adversity and afflictions these are the rules of Christian wisdome 1 Consider thou art not placed here in the world by God 1 God may as well be injoyed in Adversity as Prosperity to injoy the pleasures of the World but to injoy God which thou mayest do as well in affliction as in prosperity and to cleave to him in his service looking for nothing but afflictions as a Pilgrim going to thy Country the way whereunto lyeth through afflictions This ground not laid men count troubles a strange thing 1 Pet. 4.11 and start at the mention of them as the Apostles Joh. 11.8 when they heard Christ speaking of going into Jury where the Jews had lately sought to stone him And note it to bee a corruption of the heart to bee more grieved for thine own troubles than the troubles of the Church for private than publick evils 2 Lay up strength and comforts aforehand As first Humility 2 Lay up strength and comfort aforehand to over-master and tame the pride and rebellion of our hearts and to bring in contentedness to sweeten our troubles and our labour will be well spent for if wee can relish the hardest part of our life our whole life else will assuredly bee more sweet and joyful 2 Grow up in the knowledge of God which will make thee rise up in much comfort and will bring in comfort against that confused heaviness distrust and dangerous affections and passions which else in trouble might beat us down and off him 3 Get assurance of faith which will sweetly warm the heart in the sense of Gods love in Jesus Christ The fruit of which will bee first To inable us to trust our selves with God in any estate and bee assured the Lord is with us in fire and water in the midst of the Valley of the shadow of Death Secondly to depend on him for strength Psal 23.4 for howsoever Satan would make us beleeve our affliction is greater than it is or wee are for it yet wee shall assure our hearts that the Lord hath measured it out for our strength and not above Thridly 1 Cor. 10.13 to wait upon him for a good issue and seasonable deliverance who hath promised to turn it to the best This shall keep us from fainting distrust and despair Rom. 8.28 3 In all evils of punishment take occasion to set upon the evil of sin 3 In evils of punishment to set upon evil of sin and revenge upon that complain of it to God and men murmure and grudge at nothing else If affliction bee sharper than ordinary it is sure some sin or lust addes a sting unto it But this rule mortifies sin and unruly passions and will weaken the heart and make a man say with the Church Mic. 7.9 I will bear the wrath of the Lord because I have sinned 4 Make them no heavier than God maketh them by impatience 4 Make them no heavier th●n God hath made them frowardness and looseness of heart God sometimes layes on a little finger and the froward heart lays on the whole hand and loyns to make the burden heavier with faithless heaviness and distrust which is but an addition of new and worse troubles than the former How inconsiderately do many men load themselves with troubles too too light in themselves and on the shoulders of wise men who can make a vertue of necessity and step over a number of rubs which others stoop to remove and infinitely toil themselves How do many in smaller troubles as discourtesie of neighbours unruliness of children unfaithfulness of servants smaller losses and crosses in Family-matters give place to unquietness impatience and passion till their folly have by seeking to case their burden increased it from a dram to a talent And now how unmeet are they for the service of God How unprofitable in any Christian society How sowr and heavy in countenance disguised in speech Levius sit pationus Quicquid corrigere est nosas Horat. and impotent in their behaviour All which
Cor. 6.12 All things are lawful for mee but I will not bee brought under the power of any thing And 2 Cor. 7.30 Wee must rejoyce in the creature as not rejoycing use it as not using buy sell and have a wife is not having This is to affect indifferent things indifferently Contrary whereunto is that excessive desire and use of any creature which makes our servants our Masters and puts us out of possession of them that wee may bee possessed by them as when riches have our hearts and wee have not power to command them to any good use the Heathen disclaimed this slavery Divitiae mea sunt non ego divitiarum Sence My riches are mine said Seneca not I my riches Would God Christians would say so much to whom grace offers better things So when a man or woman have inslaved themselves to any creature and made it a Tyrant and Commander as insatiable Drunkards who can no more bee without strong drink or wine than the fish without water or themselves without ayr The Mule they say must have the bag hang by his mouth and these must have the bottle or pot at their elbow continually Others that so addict themselves to that bewitching weed Tobacco above all season set more thoughts upon it than they bestow upon God bestow more time on it by ten parts in one day than upon Gods service yea than upon any profitable Calling bestow more charge upon it than upon all pious and charitable uses through the year yea serve it as their God night and day and all to turn their bodies into Chimnies their blood into Sut their best and radical humour into smoak This is an intemperate and sinful use of a creature in it self good if physically used For wee condemn not drink when wee condemn drunkenness but the drunken use of it Neither can these dry Drunkards more justifie their sin than the moist nay far less seeing the one is ordained for common use so is not the other But without comparing them together it is a great sin to bee a slave either to a Pot or to a Pipe 5 In all indifferent actions wee must endeavour so wisely to pass them 5 For no indifferent forgo better things th●n they as 1 Time as wee d● not for them lose any thing better than they such as are 1 Time Men must not cast away much time in them Wee should eat out as little time with our meat as wee may much less play away our time Women must bee conscionable to spend as little time as may bee in arraying and trimming themselves for time is better than apparel Neither for wealth must wee exchange our time but that wee reserve special times for better ends For all the wealth on earth will not buy an hour of time 2 Our good name is better than any indifferent thing 2 Good name and ought to bee more precious than the sweetest ●yntment Wee must not eat and drink to bee counted Gluttons and Drunkards nor play in excess to bee counted Dicers and Gamesters which are infamous names and such persons were banished out of the Heathens Commonwealth nor so apparel our selves as to bee accounted proud garish and wanton nor build to bee accounted vain and prodigal but prefer our good names before the use of these 3 Our goods and portion of wealth which God hath given us 3 Estate are better than the excessive use of any of th●se and wee must not waste our goods more than is fit for our estate Men have no warrant to venture great sums of mony upon a few casts at Dice or Bowls or other sports Wee are not Lords of our goods but Stewards and must bee drawn to an account for them Religion will teach a man good husbandry and though it allow not onely a necessary and convenient expense but also for honest delight and pleasure in meat drink apparel recreation building c. yet it allows no prodigality except in the case of godly and charitable uses to the poor members of Christ Oh how rich should some mean men bee in good works if they had given that to the poor which they have lost in p●ay And who can say but one is far better far more comfortable than the other 4 Our vertues and graces are far better than any indifferent thing 4 Vertues and therefore wee must not lose these for the other Against which rule they sin who in meats and drinks lose moderation sobriety and temperanc● and they who in apparel lose their humility and lowliness and they who in recreation lose their patience meekness love and peace and they who in Marriage lose their chastity and holiness c. By all which Rules wee see h●w godliness takes not away the use of Gods creatures for it onely gives liberty in them but orders the use thereof that they may bee used in the just measure of their goodness and give place to better and restrains us no further than so as the Calling bee not exceeded nor the Rules of moderation violated CHAP. XXIV Special Rules for Meat and Drink NOW for the special Rules of things indifferent because I must not suffer this Discourse to grow so large as it would omitting all other things indifferent there bee three things as most common so more specially to bee treated of 1 Meat and drink 2 Recreation 3 Apparel For all which the word of God is plentiful in the Rules of Christian Wisdome and Direction I. Rules for Eating and Drinking Rule● f●r eating and d●inking 1 Necessity First For the lawfulness of it 1 It is necessary to nourish and strengthen us in our duties and repair strength decayed 2 It may also serve for delight for God hath given us leave liberally to use the creatures not onely bread to strengthen the heart but oyl to make his face glad 3 God hath afforded us leave to feast togeth●r and invite one another for the maintaining and cherishing of Christian love and mutual fellowship as wee see in Jobs children which was nor unlawful and the Primitive Churches had their Agapa's and Love-feasts of which the Scripture makes mention Act. 2.46 2 Propriety Secondly For the Propriety Wee must eat and drink our own the sweat of our own brows not other mens Many cut large peeces in other mens loaves I mean that which they know is not theirs but other mens if all debts were payed This is an high kinde of injustice 2 Thess 3.12 not to eat our own bread 3 Measure Thirdly For the Measure Wee must eat and drink according to the call of Nature or honest and moderate delight to make us and keep us in a fitn●ss to godly duties of hearing reading praying c. All that eating and drinking whereby men make themselves heavy sleepy unwieldy and unfit for good duties is sinful for this is not a refection or refreshing but a destruction or oppression of nature 4 Affection Fourthly For our
of our sports must not bee to purchase our neighbours money or to help our selves by his hindrance And I would know by what right of Gods word I can hold my Neighbours money which comes into my hand without labour love gift or just contract If it bee not mine by justice distributive or commutative it cannot bee mine by God But no law of God or man hath ranked Wagers in either Nay the Civil Law compels none to pay that which is lost or if hee have paid hee may recover it within fifty hours 2 Affi ma ive But the right ends of sports are these 1 Gods glory Nothing can bee lawful wherein some glory is not won to God in whatsoever wee do 1 Cor. 10.31 And therefore such sports as do not inable us to cheerfulness in the duties of Religion and Christianity fail in this end 2 All our earthly joyes must help forward our spiritual joy in God and the eternal joyes of his Kingdome If they come in comparison with them or will step up to hinder us therein they are to bee contemned Our chief joy must ever be placed in the Lord and our chief affections must bee reserved for that fulness of joy which is at Gods right hand First seek the Kingdome of God even in these and above these How doth hee so who spends more time in these than in that Yea more by a thousand degrees if wee would measure the time of his sports by the time of godly desires and Religious duties 3 The preservation of our own health and not to impair the health of our souls or bodies as many by their watching to play destroy their health and call numbers of diseases upon themselves and oftentimes untimely death In this use alone can all recreations become good and comfortable unto us although our corrupt nature is loath to bee so confined Object If onely these Recreations in this manner and these ends bee lawful you leave us none Answ Onely these in this manner and ends are lawful and yet wee disallow nothing which Gods word alloweth which ought to govern all his people Gods word alloweth for the exercise of the body the use of the Bow 2 Sam. 1.18 of Musick Neh. 7.67 of Hunting Hawking Birding and such sports without swearing disorder and needless tormenting of the silly creatures And for the exercise of wit hee alloweth honest Riddles Judg. 14. and such Games as the ground of which is wit or skill as Chess Draught● c. Besides an heart that is sanctified would inure it self to heavenly joyes and prefer them above carnal and little affect those which loose persons so much dote upon And to those who will be ready to object the use and custome of the world and the practice of so many fore-running ages I answer and conclude with the Apostles words Rom. 12.2 Fashion not your selves according to this world but prove what is the will of God Or if you will not walk by Gods Rules your sin shall destroy your own souls Look you to your duties I have endeavoured to do mine in discovering the same unto you CHAP. XXVI Rules of wisdome concerning our Apparel HAving thus finished the Rules of Wisdome concerning Meat Rules for Apparel and Drink and Recreations wee come to such Rules as concern Apparel and they are four 1 The matter of our Apparel must not bee stately and costly 1 For the matter which must bee measured partly by the ability our selves have partly the condition of life wee are in and partly by the example of such as are sober grave and wise in our rank Yea even in the matter of our Apparel our sobriety and modesty must appear yea our humility Prima v●stis data est propter usum non propter luxum When God made Adam garments hee made them of skins homely and base that hee might read therein his mortality and that by his sin hee was become like the beasts whose skins covered him 2 For the manner of our Apparel it must not be strange garish 2 The fashion affecting new fashions which argues levity and new-fangledness but such as becometh holiness Tit. 2.3 and according to the sober custome of our Country and rank Zeph. 1.8 I will visit Kings Children and those that wear strange Apparel that is such as in the form of fashion is wanton curious odde savouring of pride lightness and singularity A fearful threat under which our whole Land lyeth which is a receptacle of all the fashions of all Countries besides our own daily inventions of new fashions of monstrous Apparel that were men and womens bodies as monstrous as their Apparel they would bee cast out of the company and account of men And howsoever their bodies bee surely their mindes bee monstrous and filled with vanity And how just were it with God seeing such persons will not fashion their cloaths to their bodies to fashion them to their cloaths The Apostle wisheth us not to fashion our selves according to the world which Precept is so far out of date and use that almost the fashions of all the world and the vanity of all Countries England the worlds Ape may seem to bee arrived and landed in this Land of ours that a man may read in Capital Letters upon mens Garments the lightness and lewdness that is within 3 For the measure of it Beware of excess in Apparel 3 For measure which is a great sin and carrieth with it 1 Expence of Wealth which might bee better reserved to the use of the Church or Commonwealth or covering the poor and naked Saints 1 Excess in Apparel a great sin Reasons All excess is commonly maintained with covetousness injustice or unmercifulness 2 A note of a vain minde that glories in his Wardrobe as if a Theef should boast of his bolts or glory in his brand or mark of Felony for Apparel is the cover of our shame 3 Waste of time and idleness in the too accurate and curious culture of the body which should bee spent either in adorning the soul or following our ordinary Calling 4 Oftentimes debts and unjust detaining of mens dues from them Wee have known great Rents soon turned into great Ruffes and Lands into Laces Wee have heard of some brave Dames in such variety of fashions and colours as if they had stood with a Pedlars shop about them and of some brave Gallants that have carried some whole Mannors upon their backs But Mr. Latimer in his time a man of much observation noted one commodity in his Leather coat which hee wore at the Court when the Gallants mocked him hee told them His was paid for and so were not many of their Velvets and Sattins 4 Consider the ends and use of Apparel and that is 1 Spiritual 2 Civil Spiritual 4 The kindes of Apparel 1 Spiritual many wayes 1 When by putting cloaths on wee see our misery and in the nakedness of our bodies the nakedness of our
lest yee bee hardened through the deceitfulness of sin Think what a fearful thing it is to fall from the grace of God yea or the degrees of it and would wee suffer a brother to run into this danger Secondly Chuse fit matter to confer of in company either by calling to minde things heard or by stirring up to profitable hearing diligent proceeding in-offensive walking watchful speaking and the like or if need bee of Admonition Exhortation or Reproof shew thy love therein full clouds will distill rain light will shine abroad and charitable knowledge is communicative Thirdly Bee sure to perform these private Christian duties in good and holy and unrebukeable manner As 1 Orderly those beginnings which are fittest in gifts and place as Elihu spake in his turn 2 Humbly none seeking to speak beyond his skill and reach 3 Wisely watching the fittest time and best occasion 4 Meekly and lovingly without reasonings and murmuring Phil. 2.15 none crossing others but through love one forbearing another advising in the spirit of meekness and with offering to submit themselves in other cases to receive words of Exhortation and Admonition 5 Conscionably so as in all such meetings and conference every one bee an helper to the truth 3 Joh. 8. to finde it out not to obscure or weaken it By these means wee shall have cause to rejoyce in our Christian fellowship as Jonathan and David 1 Sam. 23.14 Fourthly Observe the graces that are in others for a pattern to our selves 1 Thess 1 7. for our own provocation and imitation Yea spy and incourage the graces of God in the weakest and meanest Christian so framing our selves to that mark of a good man who honours all that fear the Lord Psal 15.4 Neither let the strongest scorn to receive help from the weakest Moses was content to bee advised by Jethro and David by Abigail and note Pauls humility Rom. 1.12 hee hoped to come and bee comforted by their faith as well as to help theirs Fifthly In the use of good company beware of giving any occasion of scandal or offence to any Matth. 18.7 8. leave no ill smell behinde thee avoid the note of pride conceit forwardness in speaking frowardness or stiffeness in thine own sense 1 Joh. 2.10 Hee that loveth his brother there is no occasion of stumbling or scandal in him Motives thus to carry our selves in good company Motives to provoke us wisely to carry our selves in good company 1 Consider how in our company wee are especially to watch seeing in no part of our life wee are sooner corrupted than in that seeing in no part of our life wee do so much discover our selves and seeing in no part thereof wee do either more good or more harm seeing wee do nothing without witness and should do nothing which wee would not have exemplary 2 As Satan layes snares every where so also in our company one with another not so much to bring the godly to such excess of riot as hee effecteth in wicked societies where is swearing gaming drinking rayling c. but to make them unfruitful and keep them from the good they might do and so far prevaileth as sometimes impertinent speech sometime debate and detracting speeches arise and the most tolerable speech is worldliness which stealeth away the heart and the time so as some who intended more good to themselves and others carry away hearts smiting them for not better imploying that opportunity 3 There is apparent loss when wee watch not to do or receive good in company with good men For godly men by reason of their Callings and distance of places seldome meet and when they do they lose the gain of that time in their special Calling and it they get it not up in the furtherance of the general calling of a Christian it is utterly lost And what but this makes the mindfulness one of another sweet in their absence when there was reaped so good fruit one of another in their presence 4 By this wise and fruitful carriage of company and meetings of good men Christians shall stop the mouthes of such as are ever complaining of and accusing Christian meetings to bee scarce to any other purpose but to detract defame slander censure to strengthen one another in faction and the like Or if such mouthes will not bee shut yet the conscience of Christians may rejoyce in the contrary innocency and not bee dejected by such false testimony 3 Rule In our speeches let us bee Proctors and Solicitors for the Saints speak wisely and willingly of the good wee know in our brethren 3 Apology and maintain the cause person and name of good men to our power The sincerity of love between David and Jonathan was manifest in that Jonathan defended Davids innocency to Saul his Father not onely to the loss of his Kingdome but the danger of his own life Ebedmelech the Blackmoor spake a good word for Jeremy and was saved from destruction when his Master Zedekiah was slain Nicodemus even in the beginning of grace spake for Christ when the whole Council was against him And how dangerous is it to devise and invent words against Gods children as Davids enemies to belye or reproach them to raise or receive slanders against them If such as stand not for grace shall fall then much more they that stand against it How needful is this Apology for them against the reproaches and scorns of this age How earnestly would children speak for their parents brethren or kindred Even so should it bee here It is nothing to speak for a man when others speak for him 4 Rule Concerning our actions towards good men 4 Rule Helpfulness wee should every way bestir our selves to procure their good and welfare Wee must to our hearts and affections joyn our hands and help to do them good yea bee ready to lay our hands under the feet of the Saints Gal. 6.10 Do good to all but especially to the houshold of faith Now in special 1 Wee must prevent from them all the evil wee can Means of it hinder them from sins and from falling hinder by all means reproach from their profession and danger from their persons 2 If thou findest a good man slipt into an infirmity labour to cover it make the best of i● as may bee Vaunt not thy self over him but consider thy self and by all good means cure it if it lye in thy power 3 If thou finde a good man stand in need of inward comfort and cast down help to raise him again Christ was sent to speak a word of comfort to the weary and every Christian hath received of his anointing When David was in deep distress his faithful friend Jonathan comforted him in the Lord his God 1 Sam. 23.16 4 I● thou knowest a good man helpless and without outward comforts thou must now shew bowels of mercy and compassion gladly receiving the poor Saints communicating willingly and freely to their nec●ssity 1 Pet. 3.8 Love one
another as brethren bee pitiful 1 Joh. 3.17 Hee that hath this worlds good and seeth his brothers need and shuts up his compassion from him how dwelleth the love of God in him To stir us up hereunto consider these Motives 1 Say with thy self Motives to the former duty What am not I a member of the same body with him Is not hee of the same family and houshold of Saints This is the Apostles argument Especially do good to the houshold of faith 2 What shall I gain if by word or deed I shall make sad the hearts of good and godly men Cain cast down he looks but God looks on it Cannot Ishmael laugh at Isaac but the Lord arraigns and condemns him of high per●ecution Surely then cannot I carry the like indignities scot-free 3 Do I read Meroz accursed because shee came not out to help the people of God though shee had no hand against them Judg. 5.23 Surely I must not onely have a hand against good men but I must set my hand to help them else is not my heart so right as it should Pilates wife wished her husband to have nothing to do against that just man But happy had Pilate been who was not violent against Christ to have been earnest and resolute for his deliverance the defect whereof was his overthrow And so it shall bee heavy enough in the day of judgement that wicked mens hands have not helped the godly seeing the sentence shall not run because they had hurt them but because they helped them not CHAP. XXX Rules how to walk wisely towards evil men First In general THE general Rule is in Col. 4.5 Rules of wise walking towards evil men Walk wisely towards them that are without that is the Gentiles who were not converted without the border of the Church for even in the Church some are of Gods domesticks some without as strangers that want faith as yet And godly men must walk so much the more warily not onely because they have Gods eye and godly mens eyes on them but even eyes of men y●t unconverted who must n●t bee cast back or confirmed in their errour or hardened against the truth but by all wi●e walking if it bee possible won to the love and liking of it Now towards all unbeleevers and unconverted men in general these particulars are worthy observation 1 Avo●d all just causes of s●andal 1 That every Christian avoid all known evils and offences by which evil men might bee occasioned to abide out of the Church The Law is Thou shalt put no stumbling block before the blinde For this is a fearful judgement of God on men unconverted they would willingly bee blinded and hardened in their natural estate Now our Rule is being our selves pulled out of danger to help others out also nay our light must reprove their darkness their covetousness by liberality their pride by humility their impatience by patience c. 2 All unconverted men hate the light and are prone to blaspheme the Gospel 2 Stop mouths of evil men and to reproach the holy profession of it Wise Christians therefore must cut off occasions from them and take heed of defiling their own nest 1 Tim. 5.14 Give no occasion to the adversary to speak evil And David prayeth that none might bee ashamed because of him Ezek. 36.20 the Lord complains that the Israelites among the Heathen polluted his Name and made them say These are the people of the Lord and are gone out of his land A lend childe saith Solomon dishonoureth the whole house Nay on the contrary the meanest Christian in his place by his wife and Christian walking must adorn the profession of Christ so the Apostle to Titus 2.10 Servants must bee no pickers but shew all good faithfulness to adorn the Gospel of the Lord Jesus An holy course of life will make the Gentiles say as they in Isa 61.9 They are the seed of the blessed of the Lord. 3 Seek to win them 3 All unconverted men esteem of doctrine by the life and the profession by the practise of Professors for they have no taste of the Doctrine in it self and therefore in the carriage of our profession wee must apply our selves if it bee possible to win them So the Apostle 1 Pet. 2.12 wisheth the Jews to have their conversation honest among the Gentiles that they might glorifie God in the day of their visitation And women are commanded so to watch their whole behaviour as their husbands might bee won by their godly conversation Private men must convert others by their private conversation Motives Motives so to do are these 1 Christians are on a Mount set on a Scaffold nothing they do escapeth sight and censure all is marked they stand or fall not alone but to many 2 They have a light with them which draws all eyes upon them and discovers all 3 The eyes of the wicked are not on others but on them to disgrace them and through them to smite Christ himself 4 The will of God is By well-doing to ●lance the ignorance of foolish m●n 1 Pet. 2.15 5 What a glory is it to slaughter envy it self to stop an open mourh and cloathe an adversary with his own shame that he that would accuse us must accuse the Sun of darkness when it shines 6 Hereby wee shall bee conformable to Christ whom when Satan came to sift hee found nothing in him Wicked men shall say as Saul said to David Thou are more righteous than I c. 1 Sam. 26.25 CHAP. XXXI Rules how to walk wisely towards evil men in special And first for Scorners NOw wee come to special Rules concerning special sorts of evil men of whom some are exceeding evil in themselves some are evil also to good men Of the former rank are scornful persons Of the latter hurtfull For Scorners observe these Rules 1 If wee know men to bee so far naught as they scorn goodness Rules how to carry our selves towards scorners 1 Avoid them good men and good things wee must avoid their company so much as wee may For what comfort can a godly man take in such company where all good and godly communication must either bee banished or derided There is no hope of doing good there is danger of taking harm 2 If wee bee by occasion beset 2 If cast into their company observe five Rules or cast into the company of prophane brutish and scornful persons then observe these Rules First Grieve thou wast not better directed Psal 120.5 Wo is mee that I remain in Meshec and dwell in the tents of Kedar Secondly Bee sure though thou seest no place or opportunity of good that thou hast no fellowship with them in any of the unfruitful works of darkness If they will bee no cleaner by thy company bee not thou defiled by theirs If they will not consent to thee in good consent not thou to them in any sin Thirdly Please them not by
yeelding to any sin but give apparent tokens of dislike Object Why May wee not by yeelding a little to them draw them to us Answ No but the way to win them is a pure conversation with fear 1 Pet. 3.12 much less may wee flatter them in any evil Mica●ah would not flatter with the King though four hundred false Prophets did Fourthly Acknowledge thy self a childe of Wisdome which is justified of all her children Suffer not Gods glory to bee trodden down by thy silence Wisely break off fooleries by savoury Riddles or Questions as Sampson and in a wise and peaceable manner change the matter holding it a settled ground of Religion not to relinquish piety to keep peace with wicked men Heb. 12.14 Follow peace and holiness No corruption of man must drive us from our station Fifthly So soon as wee may depart from them Prov. 14.7 Depart from the foolish man when thou perceivest not in him the lips of knowledge And b●ware of falling into the like company again Joseph wisely declined the company of his Mistress when shee daily spake unto him Gen. 39.10 and Dav●● would not return with Saul when hee perceived his wilfulness against him 1 Sam. 26.25 CHAP. XXXII Rules to carry our selves wisely towards evil men evi●●y affected to us IF men bee not onely evil in themselves but also to us then it is either in evil purposes or in evil practices against us If they purpose evil the● our Saviours Rule is Beware of men Matth. Rules how to carry our selves to our enemies 10.17 for they will deliver y●● up to the Councils By men our Saviour means those whom in the former w●rds hee calleth Wolves that desire to make a ●●ey and spoyl of the sheep of Christ and in his Caveat adviseth 1 Wisely to prevent the plots and trains of ungodly men discreetly to prevent our own trouble so near as wee can 1 Wisely prevent their plots How wisely did Jacob prevent the fury of his brother Esau And as they watch to traduce us so must wee watch to cut off occasions of entrapping Luke 6.7 The Scribes and Pharisees watched whether Christ would heal on the Sabbath day or no to finde accusation against him our Saviour for all this omitted not to do good but its doing it by his question unto them cut off so far as hee could the matter of their malice by clearing the lawfulness of it So must wee And yet prepare stoutly to bear whatsoever the Lord measureth out by them 2 Decline their fury 2 Our Saviour would have us wisely decline their fury not without cause provoking them It is no wisdome to provoke an evil man It is no good discretion to stir up a Lion to take a Bear by the tooth or a Dog by the ears For they desire nothing more than matter to stir up their corruption by So Hezekiah commanded his servants not to answer Rabshecah one word 3 Joyn with Serpentine wisdome innocency of Doves 3 Joyn with Serpentine wisdome innocency of Doves Matth. 10.16 Nothing more vexeth and vanquisheth an Adversary than innocency no better brest plate than righteousness But if a man had the innocency of Christ himself the Adversary will watch advantages and play upon a mans simplicity therefore joyn Serpentine wisdome as Paul did Act. 23.6 hee testified his innocency and that with all good conscience hee served God till that day But what tell you Ananias of Doves innocency hee commands to strike him on the mouth the more innocent the less indured hee fared the worse for that and therefore hee joyns in season Serpentine wisdome For perceiving his greatest enemies to bee Pharisees and Sadduces hee professeth himself a Pharisee and the son of a Pharisee and that hee was brought in danger for the hope of the Resurrection which the Sadduces denied and so casting a bone between them and letting them by the ears hee escaped between them 4 Out of their evil ●raw some good 4 Out of their malice wee should draw our own good so w●rily to carry our selves towards them as that wee may finde that of the Heathen true An enemy often hurteth less and profiteth more than many friends Wee must both in their absence and presence especially take heed wee do not disadvantage our selves It was some disadvantage to Paul when in the Council although hee was provoked and unjustly smitten hee called the High Priest Whited wall hee was glad to excuse it by his ignorance Wee may not bee too bold or too forward to speak in a good matter 5 Having received wrong f om them do three things 5 If evil men have done us harm and wrongfully molested and persecuted us our Rule is 1 In respe●t of them to pitty pardon and pray for them If wee do them good wee shall either overcome their evil with goodness or heap coals on their heads 2 In respect of our selves possess our souls with patience and shew meekness and moderation and say as David in Shimes his railing It may bee the Lord will do mee good for his cursing of mee this day 3 In respect of our duty still to shew an undaunted constancy and resolution for the truth and all good wayes 1 Pet. 3.14 15. If yee suffer for righteousness blessed are yee but fear not neither bee troubled but sanctifie the Lord in your hearts and bee ready alwayes to give an answer to every man that asketh a reason of your hope Thus far of the Rules of Christian Wisdome of which I may say with Moses Deut. 4.5 6. These are the Rules and Ordinances keep them and do them for this is your wisdome CHAP. XXXIII Containing motives for Circumspect walking BUt because this accurate and Circumspect walking is grown out of request and men generally are too well contented to walk at adventure and as men that shoot at tovers secure themselves in a loose and neglected course and go on carelesly as if there were no danger in wandring from God and declining from the good way Motives to the former Rules wee will use some Motives to provoke every Christian that tenders either Gods glory or his own salvation to undertake this Christian course 1 In regard of God 1 Whose Commandement is That all our wayes bee ordered aright Prov. 4.26 and that the Saints walk worthy of the Lord and please him in all things Col. 1.10 2 Whose Word must bee our Rule to which wee must continually frame our whole course and every part thereof For first The moral Law is a perpetual Rule binding at all times without any intermission 2 The Precepts of it are to make the Word our continual Counsellor to binde it to us not to let it depart but to meditate in it night and day And what is it less than Blasphemy to charge the Saints with folly singularity and a Saintish purity in that wherein they were most acceptable to God As David set the Lord before him continually and when hee