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A09970 The golden scepter held forth to the humble VVith the Churches dignitie by her marriage. And the Churches dutie in her carriage. In three treatises. The former delivered in sundry sermons in Cambridge, for the weekely fasts, 1625. The two latter in Lincolnes Inne. By the late learned and reverend divine, Iohn Preston, Dr. in Divinity, chaplaine in ordinary to His Maiesty, Mr. of Emanuel Colledge in Cambridge, and somtime preacher at Lincolnes Inne. Preston, John, 1587-1628.; Glover, George, b. ca. 1618, engraver.; Goodwin, Thomas, 1600-1680.; Ball, Thomas, 1589 or 90-1659. 1638 (1638) STC 20227; ESTC S112474 187,142 312

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your speech bee gracious alwayes Col. 4. not only by fits So for family duties looke if there be no way of wickednesse there Ephes. 6. 4. Children and servants ought to bee brought up in the nurture of the LORD This you ought to do to your servants for when they are delivered to you you are become as parents to them Deut. 6. 7. There is a strict command to rehearse the way of God upon all occasions Those families wherein nothing is done for the bringing them up in the wayes of the Lord have a way of wickednesse in them and search it out I have insisted the longer upon particulars because it is the spreading of the net that catcheth the fish Therefore Saint Paul condescends to particulars whereas hee might have contented himselfe with generalls Rom. 1. 29. as being fild with all unrighteousnesse But hee adds a catalogue of many particulars fornication wickednesse covetousnesse maliciousnes full of envie murther debate c. So 1 Cor. 6. 9. the Apostle says Know you not that the unrighteous shall not inherit the kingdome of God that might have beene enough in the generall yet he brings in a catalogue of many particulars Bee not deceived no fornicator nor drunkard c. shall inherit the kingdome of God as if hee should have said should I stay my selfe in these generall tearmes you would be ready to shift it off therefore I speake it of every particular course of sinning When a man is to shoote at a multitude of birds he puts not in one bullet only but haile shot so when wee are to speake to many people we are to make application of many particulars Nathan applyed his message in particular in David and if Ministers should omit it yet the people should themselves bring generals to particulars in applying the word to themselves at home and in applying these particulars let them consider the doctrine delivered that if there be any of these or any other way of wickednesse in a man hee cannot bee saved And though many will bee ready to say wee know this already it is no newes to us yet I feare that if the hearts of men were ransacked and searched it would bee found they believed it not but that they thinke they may lie in some little sinne and yet bee saved by the mercies of God in Christ for if they thought not so they would not bee so bold to lie in sin as they are therfore doth the Apostle upon this occasion still put in this Caveat be not deceived as in Ephes. 5. 6. Let no man deceive you with vain words because of these things ●ommeth the wrath of God upon the children of disobedience as if he had said every man is apt to think that notwithstanding such courses of disobedience hee may bee saved therefore take heed saies he such advertisements as these the Apostle doth often use As 1 Cor. 6. 9. it is as if one should say to a traveller asking him of the way that at such and such a place there is a by-turning if you take not heed if you marke it not you may be deceived and goe out of your way Many have lost their wayes there So bee not deceived saith the Apostle it is twenty to one you will in this particular Wee are ready to thinke God a God all of mercie and to see the greatnesse of Gods justice requires spirituall eyes therefore though you know this yet consider it there are many things which we know and do not know them we see and do not see them that is we do not consider them as wee should and the Divell is apt for to delude us saying such a small sinne may stand with salvation and therefore it is no wonder if many erre I may say of that man that is fully perswaded of this that to lie in any small sin whatsoever will condemne him a thousand to one if that man will be turned Yet take this in to explicate it that notwithstanding a little swerving a mans estate may bee good but it is continuing in it makes it a way For if you judge a man by a step or two you will judge amisse of him therefore I say it must bee a way of wickednesse the ground is because a way of wickednesse proceeds from the roote from the frame of the heart which a man will returne to againe be it good or bad for howsoever a godly man may be transported for a time yet he returnes againe to his former course On the contrary a wicked man may bee hedged in for a piece of his way by education so as hee cannot goe out So Ioash was hedged in by Iehoiada and went strait on for many yeares but consider what way you take when you come to the lanes end when you are your owne men at your owne choice And therefore because wee are upon a point of salvation and damnation wee had need distinguish exactly And that which puts us to distinguish in this point is that a regenerate man may have many relapses into wayes forsaken and wicked men may have stands in their evill wayes and sometimes turne out of them and performe many duties and goe farre in obedience to the Law The question is how shall we doe to distinguish this it will serve to unmaske the one and comfort the other Observe three rules to find the differences 1 In regard of the search made for sinne an upright hearted man if therebe any ambiguous case in his whole life he is willing to be informed to the full to referre himselfe to the word and good men for the finding out what is right when himselfe doubts hee would bee glad to bee resolved and would love him that would doe it Lord try mee saith David if therebe any way of wickednesse in me which was a signe of the uprightnesse of his heart When the heart is not sound then a man is not willing to come to try all as Iohn 3. 20. 21. whence this difference is taken Every man that doth truth that is up●ight hearted comes to the light but he that doth evill hates the light The one desires his deeds might bee brought to the light but the other hates it because hee would not have his deeds knowne It is spoken of the Pharisees who tooke it in scorne to have their uprightnesse questioned by our Saviour And this is sincerity 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as the Apostle cals it when a man is willing to have al his actions brought to the Sunne-beames as that word implyes that if there bee any flaw in them they may bee discovered and amended he desires not that they may be kept in darke shops like bad ware but brought to his view and discovery therefore the upright de lights most in the company of those that are freest from his sinne they appeare most beautifull in his eyes and hee loves a ministery that speakes to that particular every
heart is hard still It may be so indeed and your heart not softned but yet this I say First for thy comfort that if thou continue doing this the Lord accepteth it but if thou dost it not thy bloud shall bee upon thine own head we require that thou shouldst only labour to doe it and the Lord will accept it though thou art not able to soften thine heart And secondly know for thy comfort also that God will joyne with thee if thou labour thus with thy heart and send the spirit of humiliation on thee as the Disciples though they rowed all night yet CHRIST came at the last so though thou toilest many dayes and makest no proficiency as thou thinkest yet know that God at length will come and help thee and that because he hath commanded thee to doe this he will not suffer you to be doing that alwayes in vaine which he commandeth and therefore hee will come but that you may have the more ground for this remember that you have many promises made of Gods helpe as in Luk 11. 13. If yee then being evill know how to give good gifts unto your chil dren c. You shall never alone of your selves bee able to soften your hearts without the Holy Ghost but continue knocking and the Lord will give you the Holy Ghost though you bee but strangers So that every man may come to God and say Lord thou hast made such a promise thou canst not goe from thy word and therefore deny me not and bee earnest with God and hee cannot deny thee The woman of Canaan was not a Iew yet shee having this ground that hee was the Messias she would not bee put off therefore doe thou so and thou shalt in the end finde that thy heart is softned and the longer thou waitest the greater measure thou shalt have of the spirit and when thou hast him hee shall humble thy heart as in Zach. 12. 10. I will poure upon the house of David and upon the inhabitants of Ierusalem the spirit of grace and supplications and they shall looke upon him whom they have pierced and they shall mourne for him as one mourneth for an onely sonne The people of Israel were here exhorted to mourne and to separate themselves and to doe it every family apart The businesse was the same that you are to doe every fast-day Now sayes GOD if you seeke me aright you must have the spirit and sayes GOD I will doe my part I will poure on you the spirit of bowells for so the word may be translated The meaning of it is this that when the Spirit of God is thus upon you you will bee tenderly affected to the Lord even as a mother toward her child then saith hee they shall looke upon him whom they have pierced and they shall mourne for him as one mourneth for his only sonne and be in bitternesse for him that is you shall then remember your rebellions and the remembrance of them shal be bitter to your soules as bitter things are to your tast so it was with Iosiah the reason why his heart melted and he wept when he heard the booke of the Law read was because he had the spirit of bowells which every one of us should have So Iob Now I have seene thee I abhorre my selfe Iob 42. he was not thus before he was a holy man but this was a new worke for says he I have heard of thee by the hearing of the eare but now my eye sees thee He was enlightened anew as it were the spirit shined into his heart with a new light I have beene in a myst all this while in comparison but now mine eye hath seene thee and I have an experimentall feeling of thee now I abhor my selfe It is a hard thing to abhorre a mans selfe thus which then a man doth when Gods Spirit with a new light enableth a man to see Gods love and kindnesse and his owne unkindnesse in their colours If the Lords Name be called upon us we should learne hence to keepe his Name faire to keepe it pure and unspotted As it was said of Saint Paul he was a chosen vessell to carry Gods Name and therefore it behooves them to take heed how it bee polluted by them or they give occasion that it be blasphemed for the evill committed by you reflects vpon the Name of the Lord. A small thing is a great matter in you one fly corrupts a box of oyntment but many flies in a barrell of Pitch or Tarre are counted nothing so many sinnes in a wicked man redound not so much to the dishonour of Gods Name as one in the Saints When a Saint doth a thing that is uncomely hee polluteth the Name of the Lord not that it can be polluted in it self but it seemes so to other men Before men are regenerate their sinnes are as blots upon a table before a Picture be drawne upon it which are not regarded of any but after it is drawne the least blot is seene of every one So it is when men are but strangers to God the sinnes which they commit reflect not to the disgrace of God but when Gods Image is renewed in a man then these sinnes are more taken notice of and cause the Name of God to be blasphemed of his enemies This should teach us not to be ashamed of God and the profession of his Name for shall the Lord not be ashamed of us as he shewes he is not when he is willing to put his Name upon us and shall we be ashamed of him it is an unreasonable and an unequall thing for a child to be ashamed of his father for a wife to bee ashamed of her husband and so for us to be ashamed of the Lord whose Name we beare This is the rather to bee spoken of because it is a fault very common amongst us that we doe not take notice of But the most will say we are not ashamed of religion but wee account it rather a glory to bee accounted Christians Give mee leave to examine you by these two Questions First are you not ashamed of the strictest ways of religion There is a common course of Religion that you need not be ashamed of because all are for it and commend it but yet there are some speciall acts of Religion that men cast shame upon such was that act of David when he daunced before the Arke which seemed absurd in Michals eyes for a King to doe yet he said I will be yes more vile some of the wayes of God give a more peculiar distaste to wicked men and there is a shame cast upon the power of Religion by reason that the multitude goeth another way Now what is singular that shame is cast upon as in any thing let the multitude have never so ill favoured a fashion it is no shame whereas if a few others weare a garment farre more
payment God requires all this humiliation and these purposes and an act of turning beside All is lost labour unlesse there bee a divorce made from your sinnes Well therefore might Daniel say to Nebuchadnezzar Breake off thy sinnes by righteousnes and thine iniquity by shewing mercy to the poore Daniel 4. 27. Daniel doth not exhort Nebuchadnezzar to prayer onely c. though this is likewise to be done but to breake off his sinnes by righteousnesse that is whereas he was an oppressor now he must give almes and take off their burthens that is take the contrary course This is the counsell GOD gives to Ioshua Ioshua 7. 8. when he was humbling himselfe and praying Get thee up take away the accursed thing from among you c. that is this is not the way to fast though this is to be done too that which I most looke after is taking away the evill that hath provoked mee Though this bee a truth acknowledged yet looke into mens hearts there is a false conceit lurking there that hearing the word receiving the Sacrament c. is enough to save them Men would thinke their estates absolutely bad if they should performe none of these duties and wholly neglect them but if they come to Church give some almes c. then they think that all is well But know that except you actually turne from all evill wayes all these performances are in vaine And to convince you of this consider that the end of the word conference and Sacraments is to turne you from your evill wayes therefore God accepts them no further then they have this effect Thou shalt keepe my ordinances and statutes that thou mayest walke in my wayes to feare me saith the LORD that is the end of al ordinances and statutes so that though there bee never so much done yet except your lusts be mortified and victory got over those sins which are most connaturall to you al is lost Againe consider that those duties in which you trust as we are al apt so to do as reading good Bookes confessing thy sinnes if they be rightly performed they will worke a true change and if they doe not it is asigne they are but carcases not accepted without this fruit what are they but bodily exercises though happily performed with some intention of minde because they profit nothing 1 Tim. 4 8. for the Apostle calls that Bodily exercise which profiteth little therefore Rom. 2 ult there is a distinction put betwixt a Iew in spirit and in the letter and so betweene a right and a false performance of the duties of the Law the one in the letter the other in the spirit the one respects the outward part of the duty only the other the inward and if they be not inward in the spirit and so thereby effectuall to work a general change both in their hearts and lives their praise may be of men that is you your selves and others may thinke you good Christians but their praise is not of GOD saith the Apostle wee are all Gods husbandry the Ministers d●essers of it the ordinances are the manuring of it Now what is the end of all husbandry is it not fruit is it enough for the trees to say wee have submitted our selves to all manuring watering c. but wee are still as barren or our fruit as bad as before Mal. 3. 2. The end of CHRISTS comming is made to be as a refiner to scoure out staines which place being compared with that of the first of Esay where GOD sayes He abhorred their new moones and sacrifices because their silver was become drosse both afford this that the end of Christs comming being to purge out this drosse therefore if this be not done all performances new Moones Sacrifices c. are in vaine Conclude therefore that except there be an universall change both of the object from evill to all good and of the subject in all the faculties except this be wrought in you you shal surely die for it the LORD will not forgive you or heare in heaven when you cry though you shed never so many false teares If this bee the condition upon which mercy is suspended this also followes that good purposes and intentions will not serve the turne not but that these must bee precedent to every mans turning and when they are true they doe bring forth this effect of turning from all evill wayes whatsoever But as there is a purpose which is true and the ground of sincerity so there are false ones also the true alwayes continues and brings forth constant endeavours and fruits but the other leaves us where it findes us and quickly dies and withers There is so much in a carnall man as may breed good purposes and desires and resolutions viz. naturall conscience and desires of preservation and salvation which two put together worke serious purposes but this being all but flesh still is not able to worke so through a change as we see in moorish ground and in a rotten fenny soyle that it brings forth broad long grasse which soone withers and decayes neither is it sweet nor usefull So is it with conscience enlightned to see a mans duty and selfe-love they produce good purposes and in shew great and serious but yet such as the people there expressed Deut. 5. 29. who purposed to keepe the Law but Oh saith God that there were an heart to feare mee as if he had said the soyle the ground is not good for these purposes to grow in therefore they will surely wither there wants a heart changed to afford roote to them and to nourish them The next point is gathered from the order of the words turning from our evill wayes being put last of all these foure conditions because all the other doe but make way for this All the other prayer and humiliation are but preparatives to this As the end of all dressing and pruning of trees is the fruit and the end of plowing and sowing is the bringing forth of corne so the end of all other duties is turning from our evill wayes and the end is alwayes hardest omnis difficultas in ipsa summitate in the utmost pitch and top of the hill this being the utmost of all the other is therefore the hardest Therefore the Prophets urge this upon all occasions if you turne cease to do evill rend your hearts then will I leave a blessing behind me In that this is the pin upon which all hangs and is suspended observe thence That it is a very difficult thing to turne from a mans evill wayes That this is the difficultest duty of all else wee see plaine in the Israelites The Iewes religion was very costly they being to kill so many Sacrifices to keepe so many Feasts yet they were content to doe all this but not to turne they would not bee brought to it when yet to any thing else Whence appeares this
to bring the soule backe againe you must therefore take a great deale of paines with your hearts That which is said of Ministers fullones animarum fullers of mens soules that is every man now to be himselfe to wash out the staines of his heart and to make his soule whiter as it is Dan. 11. and that will move GOD either not to bring afflictions or to remove them and therefore clense your hearts from all pollution of flesh and spirit and know that to get staines of a deepe dye out will cost a great deale of paines you must scoure till your soules ake againe and though it cause the skinne to come off and if you do the worke your selves thus and plow your owne hearts GOD shall not need to doe it by afflictions therefore doe it and give not over till you have done it and have brought your hearts to be throughly humbled for them for that is a great meanes to doe it What else is the meaning of that in Iames 4. Cleanse your hearts yee sinners c. but how should we doe it would some say afflict your selves and mourne and let your laughter be turned into mourning bee content to sit alone get out of company and not to take your former liberties and mourne and humble your selves and doe it constantly for it is not bowing downe the head for a day which God regards but let sorrow abide in your hearts It is continuance that God regards doe it and doe it to purpose for the want of this is the reason of the coldnesse and remisnesse in our profession namely that we are not throughly and constantly humbled it is the ground of every grace and the growth of it What seed is sowne in a heart broken in pieces thrives and prospers but all instructions falling upon an heart not broken will bring forth no fruit If you were humbled wee should find wonderfull fruit of our Ministery Doe this therefore but one day and you will be the fitter for it the next Sorrow should be as a spring that runs a long constantly from day to day The sorrowes of many are but as land-flouds and take heed that the continuance of this duty from weeke to weeke make you not slacken your course herein suffer not your hands to faint When these duties are new you are apt to do much but when a while continued to bee perfunctory in them And let not any man complaine that he loseth a daies work for is there any work so necessary as the salvation of the soule Neither complaine that a daies study is lost for is there any excellency to the saving Image of God stampt on the heart Wee are hence to be exhorted to chuse the Lord for our God when you heare hee is so mercifull a God for no man ever served the Lord but he first made choyce of him to be his Master Every man when he comes to yeares of discretion and to be master of himselfe adviseth with himselfe what course he should take whether he should serve God or the world Now all the Saints of God have made this distinct choyce we will serve the Lord and goe to no other Moses when both stood before him the pleasures of Aegypt on the one hand and God and his people with their afflictions on the other hee chose the latter before the former Heb. 11. 25. So David sayth he did I have chosen the way of truth thy Iudgements have I laid before mee Psal. 119. 30. for to chuse is when a thing lyes before a man and hee considers and takes it So Ioshua I and my house will serve the Lord. Now I exhort you that seeing you are to make some choyce that seeing God is such a God so exceeding mercifull that you would make this choyce let him be your God for what moves a man to make choyce of one course of life rather then another the ground of it is some happinesse that he seekes when men consider what makes most for their happinesse that they will chuse Now if men were perswaded that to chuse God were the best way for happinesse they could not but chuse him and surely if God be so exceeding kind and mercifull a God their chiefest happinesse cannot but be found in him alone and surely there is no husband no friend so loving as he no father so kind as he so tender hearted he goes beyond all the sonnes of men for love and tendernesse and kindnesse for if there be any kindnesse in any man or woman the Lord hath put it in him That naturall 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and affection in Parents c. is not a drop to that Ocean not as a beame to the Sunne to what is in him And if the kindnesse in them be an excellency then surely it is in him And if the Lord hath commanded us to be amiable and full of bowells and goodnesse and easie to be entreated as being a part of that his image and that holy frame of heart which ought to be in us is it not then much more in himselfe but that I may not urge a bare exhortation without some reason Consider how mercifull the Lord hath beene to us and how gracious he is to them that make choyce of him for first hee giveth them the comfort of his presence and there is no comfort like that For joy and comfort is nothing else but the agreeablenesse of a thing to a mans minde applicatio convenientis convenienti Now there is nothing that better agreeth with mans minde then the presence and face of God for lusts and pleasures are the diseases of the soule and the pleasures that agree to them are the destruction of it Besides when thou art reconciled to him thou art out of all debt and danger he will set thy soule at rest that was rest lesse before And besides when thou hast the Lord to be thy God thou hast one to whom thou maiest goe and unbosome thy selfe to advise withall when thou canst not g●● to any in the world one thou maist fetch comfort from when thou seest no comfort any where else thou maist runne to him as to a refuge when thou art overwhelmed with oppositions slanders and ill reports and besides all this and the glory which we shall have in heaven consider what there is that thy heart can desire that hee will not doe for thee If thou hast any businesse to doe God will doe it better for thee then thou canst for thy selfe the Lord workes all our workes in us and for us Esay 26. 12. Art thou a Scholler and hast studies to bring to perfection a Tradesman and hast enterprises to bring to passe art in straights he will be entreated of thee to doe all for thee if thou go to him and hee will bring it better to passe then thou canst with all thy policie Againe Art thou fallen into poverty into sicknes into disgrace thou shalt finde
mee doe said hee then and hee was as good as his word Therefore take knowledge you that doe fall away what the defect hath beene and wherein for that will bee a meanes to set you right and recover you againe 3 Property of Humiliation is to have all the affections moderate all delights in worldly things faint and remisse and all his affections taken chiefly up about grace and sinne True affection in him wil eate up the false He esteemeth spirituall things at a high rate and all other things as little Aske such an one what of all things else he would desire and he will tell you Christ and the favour of God and the graces of the Spirit and to have his lusts mortified and his sinnes pardoned and that hee passeth not for the things of this life hee cares not in comparison whether he bee poore or rich bond or free notwithstanding if hee may have a better con dition hee will use it rather as a man that is condemned to die little regards hee his estate or the things of this life his apprehensions are taken up with greater things give him his pardon and take al else So here one truly humbled counts the favour of God so great as he esteemes all things else light in comparison When therefore men are violent in their affections towards worldly things and in their desires and delights in them and endeavours after them it is a signe they are not humbled 4 Property is to love God and Christ much Mary loved much because much was forgiven her that is not simply that much was forgiven her but because withal she had a sence of it apprehended it as much and her sin great by a worke of humiliation and so apprehended it a great matter to be pardoned And so a man having once apprehended death and hell and the wrath of GOD as belonging to him and God comes on a suddaine and tells him thou shalt live when his necke was on the blocke and hee expected nothing but death this causeth a man to love GOD much and to prize CHRIST and this made Saint Paul also to love CHRIST so much that the love of Christ constrained him because I was a persecuter and a blasphemer and he died for me forgave me a great debt Hee that is truly humbled will bee content with any condition as the Prodigall sonne I am content to be as an hired servant sayes hee and am unworthy to bee called a sonne any more hee was content to doe the worke of a servant to live in the condition of a servant to have the lowest place in all the familie And so Saint Paul look'd on himselfe as the least of all the Saints thought hee could never lay himselfe low enough Now this contentednesse is exercised about two things In a contentednesse in the want of these outward good things when a man is content with the meanest services and the least wages to want wealth and credit and gifts as Iacob being truly humbled I am lesse than the least of thy mercies whereas an other man that is not humbled when hee lookes upon himselfe and GODS mercies hee enjoyes he thinking highly of himself thinkes himselfe too big for them and that the disproportion is rather on his side whereas Iacob though he then had many mercies yet said take the least mercie and lay it in one scale and my selfe in an other and I am too light for it lesse than it and it too much for me It is exercised in bearing crosses One that is truly humbled still blesseth GOD as Iob and beares and accepts the punishment of his iniquity willingly and cherefully as we see it made a condition Lev. 26. 41. If their uncircumcised heart be humbled and they beare or accept the punishment of their iniquity if the Lord lay upon him a sharpe disease say the plague disreputation poverty yet hee beareth it willingly and chearefully for when a man thinkes in earnest that which is said Ezech. 36. that hee is worthy to be destroyed whatsoever befalls him from God which is lesse than destruction hee blesseth God for it and rejoyceth that he escapeth so The humble man therefore is in all conditions contented alwayes chearefull and blessing God if he hath good things they are more then he is worthy of if evill though never so sharpe yet they are lesse than destruction and then he deserves when as an unbroken heart is alwayes turbulent and thinkes in the secret murmurings of his heart that he is not well dealt with I should come now to the application of this Doctrine but before I must resolve a case and scruple which doth use to trouble the hearts of many The Case in question is whether to right and true humiliation it be necessary that such a solemne humiliation and such a measure of sorrow and violent Legall contrition goe before it There is a double kind of sorrow wrought in the hearts of men the one is a violent tumultuous sorrow which ariseth from the apprehension of hell and punishment the ground whereof is self-love and is commonly in those who are suddainely enlightened and so amazed therewith being taken on the suddaine as wee see in Saint Paul who was taken suddainely as hee was going to Damascus and it was discovered to him that hee was guilty of so great a sinne as he could never have imagined a voyce from heaven to strike his eares on the suddaine why persecutest thou me And this wee find by experience to have beene in many who never have true humiliation as wee see in Iudas God indeed sometimes useth it to bring men to humiliation as he did in Saint Paul But again we find in experience in some a cleaving to God and holinesse of life and a constant care to please him in all things without this violent vexing sorrow and many that have had their hearts deeply wounded amazed affrighted and have therupon taken up great purposes which have come to nothing the ground whereof having beene a violent passion as that the roote withered so the fruit withered also but a true apprehension and conviction of sin as in it selfe the greatest misery is more reall and drawes the heart nearer to Christ so that in this case we may say of these two sorts as Christ said of those who were bidden to goe into the vineyard They that said they would goe did not and others that said they would not goe yet went and therefore wee answer that it is not alwayes necessary to have such a violent sorrow or that a man should lie any long time in such an evident sence of wrath though alwayes there is a right apprehension of sin which doth humble a man which will appeare by these considerations 1 That is not alwayes the greatest sorrow that is thus violent though it seeme to bee so it is not alwayes the greatest sorrow which melteth into teares as that is