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A42920 The holy arbor, containing a body of divinity, or, The sum and substance of Christian religion collected from many orthodox laborers in the Lords vineyard, for the benefit and delight of such as thirst after righteousness / ... by John Godolphin ... vvherein also are fully resolved the questions of whatsoever points of moment have been, or are, now controverted in divinity : together with a large and full alphabetical table of such matters as are therein contained ... Godolphin, John, 1617-1678. 1651 (1651) Wing G943; ESTC R9148 471,915 454

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of Christ and then they will come in and be glad they have Christ though on Christs conditions Thus as the children of Israel being stung with fiery Serpents and that unto death were healed by looking unto the brazen Serpent erected by Moses so when we are stung by the old Serpent Sin and Death we must ever remember by Faith to look upon Christ Now we are said to Take Christ when we so take him as to bring him into our hearts to dwell there when we are knit to him and he to us But some men cleave to Christ not because they have any good ground but because they want Temptations to a contrary way therefore it is Gods usual maner when men seem to Take Christ and to believe in him to put them to the tryal to see what they will do whether their Faith will work or no For when to such as take Christ for love of the good things by him and not for love of his person other commodities are presented that are present and sensible and in their apprehension greater then those by Christ then they let Christ go again and their Faith proves uneffectual like those that marry not for Love but for Wealth the maner of these men is to seek mercy and not grace yet may we look upon our own advantages by Christ but not on that alone Thus when a man is drawn from God it is either by some offer of some great benefit or some great evil which he is put in fear of in both which Faith is that Vnum Necessarium to keep thee from sinning for it is Faiths office to guide our lives so as that we be not overcome by Adversity nor drawn aside from God in Prosperity Now that Faith that saves must be effectual Faith it is the effectualness of Faith onely that God requires that is if there be any effectualness in man that comes not from Faith God requires it not but if we labor to grow in Faith we shall be enabled to do the duties of New Obedience but if we have not the ground all that we do is but in vain Therefore when we finde any coldness weakness or languishing in the Graces we have encrease Faith and all other Graces will grow This effectual Faith is wrought or our Faith is made effectual by the Spirit of God it is not in our own power of our selves we are not able to believe if God himself put not his hand to the work no man is able to believe because naturally man hath a hard heart So for an holy life when we have believed and accepted the Righteousness that is offered us in Christ when that is done it is Gods part to frame and fit us for an holy life for after that a man is Justified by Faith Christ Sanctifieth him and it is he that carries him afterward thorough his whole life in a holy conversation And as Christ is thus made unto us Justification and Sanctification so is he made unto us Redemption also for he delivers us from the least evils as well as from Death Eternal and Hell it self yea there is no evil that the Saints are freed from but it is purchased by the Blood of Christ which is over and above some general works of Gods Providence that all men taste of Now though there be sufficiency in Christ to save all yet none have benefit by it but those that receive it as they ought that is as a Lord as well as a Savior We must therefore come to God as with a full heart so with an empty hand for Faith doth its work best alone for all that Faith hath to do is onely to Take from Christ that Righteousness which we want our selves And without this Faith God regards not the best Moral Vertues the Moral man what he doth he doth it of himself and through himself and for himself but he that doth what he doth by Faith doth it of Christ and through Christ and for Christ for we must receive all from Christ and do all for Christ and all by Faith Faith worketh in us a love to God and presenteth to him a perfect Righteousness and this Faith is the sum of the Preaching of Christ and his Apostles Now God requires no more but a Willingness in Earnest to come and take Christ he will make thee able afterward to do the rest for God never gives his Son to any but he gives them the Holy Ghost the Spirit of his Son also And we must know That Faith admits degrees and that every Christian ought to grow from degree to degree Rom. 1.17 for though the weakest Faith may be a true and so a Saving Faith yet if this small measure of Faith be not edged on with a longing fervency after fulness of perswasion and seconded with an assiduous serious endeavor after more perfection it is no sound and saving Faith but onely a counterfeit shew or deceiving shadow The least Assent to the least Belief of the Promises so it be sufficient to over-ballance the Scale of Doubting which is called the least degree of Faith brings us to Christ and make us willing to Take him and is Faith though it come not to the full degree though it hath some doubting some fears And afterward we shall be more fully and better perswaded which addes to the degrees For Faith though it be mingled with some doubtings and fears may be effectual though not perfect for there is a Doubting mingled with the best Faith so it be but such a Doubting as does not overcome it may stand with true and sound Faith If a man hath so taken Christ that still he is growing still his Faith is prevailing still overcoming these doubts and fears from day to day he is better and better resolved if it be thus still on the growing hand it is a saving and effectual Faith yea it is not Faith except it hath some Doubting except there be some fears some troubles within that resist this Faith and strive against it for there is no man that hath perfect Faith especially at the first or afterward so as to set his heart fully at peace So that it is said of Doubting in this case as we say of Thistles They are ill Weeds but it is a sign the ground is fat and good where they grow So Doubting as it is a thing that resists Faith is bad but it is a sign the heart is good where it is so that where there is no Questioning there is all Flesh And a man may have a saving Faith though he want the comfortable Assurance thereof in his own knowledge which is the reflect act of Faith For as some men have a perswasion of the forgiveness of their sins yet not savingly believe so a true Believer may have but a weak perswasion of the forgiveness of his sins but that Faith which is joyned with Love is infallibly true but disjoyned thence is false and the smallest Faith yea the weakest may
person at all times though the form of words be still the same for as there are divers operations of the same Spirit in divers persons yet not opposite each to other so there may be divers motions of the same Spirit at divers times in one and the same person yet not contrary each to other for who can say he hath the same measure of the Spirit at all times alike Now then if any one can compose a set Form of the Spirit which no Creature dare usurp or confine the Spirit to a set form of words which Angels want Rhetorick to do then possibly may he make a set Form of Prayer Call it then not a set Form of Prayer but a set Form for Prayer To think the Spirit can be stinted by words set in this or that Form is a popular Mistake because the Spirit hath an extent beyond both the Restraint of the strictest words and the sublimest signification of any words and because the Spirit of Faith which is the Causa sine qua non of Prayer is not limitable by words indeed the gift of Elocution the gift of Utterance the subject-matter to be prayed for and the like may be stinted by words but the grace of Faith the grace of Love the grace of Zealous Fervency such special operations of the Spirit in Prayer cannot be stinted by words nor can set words limit them because when they are wound up to the heighth they have still an implicite voyce in the heart beyond whatever can be uttered by the tongue And this is known in Scripture by the pouring out of the heart before God 1 Sam. 1.13 Psal 62.8 Insomuch that when a soul in Faith prays as we say ex tempore even then the words of the tongue though unlimited yet comes oft times far short of the language of the heart which is the Spirits proper Dialect and which could not be if words might restrain the Spirit Indeed if the Spirit were onely in the words or wholly confin'd to the words then must it be stinted by the words Thus a set Form for Prayer is a stinting of the subject-matter to be prayed for and that by the stinting of the words but is not a stinting of the Spirit which is too Spiritual to be limited by words If I can pray in the liberty of the Spirit without any words at all no question but I may pray in the liberty of the Spirit with any words aptly composed for Prayer so long as the Spirit is not circumscriptible by words for though the words of a Petition confine me to pray Thy Kingdom come as the subject matter to be prayed for in that Petition yet my Spirit is left at liberty to pray that Petition in Faith Zeal and Fervency proportionable to the measure of the Spirit vouchsafed me and not to the method and the number of the words prescribed me For the operation of the Spirit in Prayer refers to that Love which the Author of the Spirit bears to the party praying and not to any form of words composed for Prayer Besides a Prayer prayed ex tempore without any premeditated or preceding composure of words into a certain Form is not onely to the joynt-Supplicant Auditors but also to the party himself praying viva voce a set Form for Prayer for he cannot pray at all viva voce without a Form set either premeditatively set or set ex tempore the latter whereof is as well a set Form in all audible Prayers as the other and that not onely to the co-Supplicants but also to the party himself audibly praying because words must necessarily fall within those bounds the Composer frames them and no other whereby at last they become a Form set whether premeditatively framed or framed ex tempore and that as well to him that frameth and prayeth them audibly as to them who joyn therein with him so that if the Spirit be stinted by the one it is stinted by the other also and consequently we could not audibly pray at all without stinting the Spirit were that common Assertion true That the Spirit is stinted by a set form of words Indeed if there could be a set Form of the Spirit and consequently a set Prayer indeed then it might be granted that thus the Spirit might be stinted And thus we grant That there may be a set form of words for Prayer but no such thing as a set Prayer for that is onely of the Spirits composure which is no way subject to words And so this may stand for a Conclusion That no words whatsoever be they never so defectively or comprehensively composed into any Form for Prayer can be properly said to lay a restraint on the Spirit which with no words or any words hath still its liberty in the fervent Prayer of Faith Yet to prevent Misunderstandings we may not think but a set Form of words for Prayer doth stint and limit the Petitions though not the Spirit wherein and wherewith they are petitioned Nor is this so said in vindication of set Forms for Prayer as to lessen at all the excellency of Extemporal Prayer for the Spirit hath its liberty in both And as I hold set Forms of petitions for Prayer may be of most excellent use to such as have Faith and a measure of the Spirit yet want the gift of Elocution so I likewise hold That they are but of subordinate use to them whose infirmities are helped and supplied by the Spirit without them and that all Prayers whatever ought to carry in them touching the matter and maner of them a Resemblance parallel to that Form for Prayer which Christ set and taught his Disciples and in them us From which therefore let no man for fashions sake think himself exempted because it is a set Form for is not the extemporal Prayer of another man in my audience a set Form to me yea and to himself also being extemporally though not premeditately set Or are we exempted from it because some Idolize it Is the sin of Commission in one a warrant for the sin of Omission in another Or are we indeed exempted from it under a pretence of the Spirits being stinted by it Is not all that is supplicable or can be prayed for therein comprehended if the Rejecters thereof understood it Or doth the excellency of that Prayer too much eclipse the lustre of our own both being prayed in Faith Are we so Prayerproud Doth it not rather supply the defects of our own Or is the bare verbalizing of that Prayer in the faithless and ignorant a ground sufficient for the godly to deny it their Zeal their Faith their Hearts Are we exempted from it under a supposition that it is too Good for sinners Is not this rather an Idolizing of the words Have we no relation to it because Christ taught it onely to his Disciples Absist Must not the Faithful pray it because the Wicked babble it Shall I reject Scripture because the Devil hath used
THE HOLY ARBOR CONTAINING A Body of Divinity Or the Sum and Substance OF Christian Religion Collected from many Orthodox Laborers in the LORDS VINEYARD For the Benefit and Delight of such as Thirst after RIGHTEOUSNESS First Methodically and Plainly Treated of Then Annalized and Applied at large By John Godolphin J.C.D. VVherein also are fully Resolved the Questions of whatsoever Points of Moment have been or are now Controverted in DIVINITY Together with a large and full Alphabetical Table of such Matters as are therein contained or occasionally handled Either by way of Exposition Controversie or Reconciliation LONDON Printed by John Field for Edmund Paxton neer Doctors Commons And William Royhould at the Sign of the Vnicorn in S. Pauls Church-yard neer the West-end 1651. The Curtain drawn OR The Front-Door of this HOLY ARBOR Unlock'd and laid wide open A Laughing Horizon a smiling Skie The rightside-Prospect of the Lefthand-eye First lights thee Reader to discover more Then Janus could had he four eyes before Though Lynceus wore a pair of eyes behinde Without this Spectacle he 'd be but blinde Here Wisdom's Monarch in his Marble chair By his acuteness can divide a hair Of the profoundest Notions and contain The world within the nutshel of his Brain Whose tow'ring Eagle-eye can never want The strength or cunning of the Elephant On this hand stands a Gospel-Prophet such As doth not care for Circumcising much Thy Praedial Fruits The world I hear him say But one Nights lodging by not in the way To heaven is The other side holds out A studious Artist musing he no doubt Is sounding What the depth of Humane things And findes them all but well-tun'd Fiddle-strings These hold forth Knowledge to the life then be Perswaded to become One of the Three Let fall thine eye one glance and thou shalt see The Church her Motto or Epitomy The staming Bush not burnt the Church indeed Is heart-whole though her Members ever bleed Truth 's Emblem in her HOLY ARBOR stands The Light of Sun and Scripture in her hands Tramp'ling on all the Harnesse of War ' Yond Archimedes reach a Virgin-star She lives lives chaste and from pollution free Maugre Romes Murder and Adultery The world her Pedestral in flames because It will no Loyalist be unto her Laws Idolater Iew Turk Insidel turn Any thing rather then a Martyr burn Hence flames the World indeed whose Fate that read Shall finde her in her ashes buried ' Cause from her Non-age to her riper youth Thence to her dotage she despis'd the Truth When Shilo's Scepter now breaks forth the Skies High time the Saints all pray Let God arise Thence downward cast thy fight exactly there Observe and then tell me if ever were More true Devotion in a Womans breast Then to the life is there by her express'd See how she prostrates all her self o' th ground As if she meant the Earth should down resound To sad Souls below what a Savior they Lost by their worship to a god of clay Her breast kisses the dust her heart the Skies Faith is compounded most of wings and eyes A Lowring Horizon a dismal Skie The leftside-Prospect of the Righthand-eye Hell-black night all over enough to fright An Eagle blinde or blinde men to their sight Ravens Batts Owls Shrich-owls what not that can Paint the Darkness of an unknowing man A Man-monster whose hollow head may pass For like but not so wise as Balaams Ass Claws that can wound corrode and scratch the best Yet hath not wit to feather his own nest That when his Claws are blunt rather then fail He can make use of the Scorpions tayl Scarce a Creature who when his tongue is loose Doth staulk and hiss and gaggle like a Goose That knows no more then Tom then he no more Whose brain leaks all out at his nose before Swear by his vast estate who onely can That sure he was intended for a Man He 's now become so to both Sexes knit An Epidemical Hermophrodite Old Superstitions blear-eyed Mother Schism's Error 's Heresie's Foster-brother A Demi-Signpost guilt or an empty Cask A Woodcocks brain that 's troubled with the Lask A man would think him something that were made For money to draw Custom to the Trade Of Ginns and Roadnets Scan this and great chance If all together spel not Ignorance Convey thine eye a little lower see The ghastly Draught of Hell's Epitomy Disgorging Error Heaven doth engage A branded sword lest it infect this Page Her twilights both are vayl'd she cannot see She 's so besmeard with foul Hypocrisie A pair of Spectacles in this hand goes For eyes which better would become her nose In that a Mole though Blinde can undermine Deep-laid Foundation then look well to thine She 's snar'd she that so much Liberty taught T'others is now her self in Engines caught May the snare prove strong may 't ne e be broken Till her mouth be stopt or her eyes be open Lastly Observe a Superstitious Ape Cas'd in a Fryars Frock without a Cape Which when his Zeal grows cold serves as a Charm To re-inflame 't and keep his Worship warm If this new Father were but at the Court Of Rome doubtless 't would make most exe'lent sport Are there not many such why not an Ape Like him as well as he i' th others shape Reader this Holy Arbor's door th' hast seen Wide op'n Be serious now and enter in The Holy Arbour Contayning the whole Body of Divinity or A Cluster of Spirituall Grapes gathered from the Vines of certaine Moderne Orthodox Laborers in the Lords Viniard Pressd For the Spirituall delight and benefit of all such as thirst after Righteousness By Jo Godolphin I. C.D Exumat Deus Ema nuoll Ad te Domine Ad te mi Jesu ● dissipentur inimici Printed by John Feild for Edmund Paxton neere Doctors Commons and William TO THE TRULY HONORABLE THE POOR in SPIRIT Right Humble THe mighty Nazarites Riddle Out of the Eater came Meat and out of the Strong came Sweetness Judg. 14.14 was the second Course served in at his Marriage-Feast which by way of Allusion may not unaptly be applied to you Came not the Spirit of God upon you at the Conquest of that devouring Lyon in the fierce Assaults of his ingenious Temptations At your return from which Spiritual Combat began you not to feed on the Peace of Good Consciences when the Word of the Lord became as Honey in your mouthes Is not this a Riddle to the Vncircumcised of the World In Congratulation of which no common Victory is this Address no less properly then humbly prostrated to you onely as the most faithful Guardians of this Holy Arbor whose unfenced Ambulage when spiced at your approach by the fragrancy of your Innocency craves the Subterfuge of your Prayers As for those extravagant Weeds which grow so far beside the Alley of your Conversation they are left to the Euroclydons of the Air But for the Errata's onely of the
and upbraideth not 6. To be a God true of his Promises therefore we crave the accomplishing of them 4. The necessity of prayer for it is the means which God hath appointed to obtain every good thing Mat. 7.7 Jam. 4.7 5. The utility or profit we receive by this duty of Prayer which is exceeding much and very beneficial to us many ways as 1. To obtain every good thing Christ hath passed his most certain and general Promise for it Joh. 16.23 2. To prevent Judgements threatned Jer. 26.19 and remove them being inflicted Jam. 5.18 3. To preserve nourish and strengthen in us all Spiritual graces Col. 1.9 c. 4. To obtain pardon and remission of sins Acts 8.22 5. To subdue in us the power of sin Psal 19.13 experience can well witness this to those that use prayer 6. To sanctifie all Gods creatures to our use and whatever we do 1 Tim. 4.5 usurpers are they that use them otherwise 6. The efficacy thereof for it prevaileth over all Creatures reasonable or unreasonable and of reasonable both visible as Man and invisible as Angels whether evil or good yea it prevaileth with God himself Examples of all which may be these Daniel by prayer stopped the mouthes of the Lyons Dan. 6.22 Davids prayer turned Achitophels counsel into foolishness 2 Sam. 15.31 Thereby the Devil even when he is surest possessed is cast out Mat. 17.21 At Elisha's prayer a mountain was full of horses and chariots of fire round about him 2 Kings 6.17 By prayer Jacob had power over the Angel which was called The Angel of the Covenant Christ Jesus true God Hos 12.4 who therefore was called Israel because he prevailed with God Gen. 32.28 7. The great honor thereof whereby the Saints have a free access to the glorious Throne of Grace The Romish Church doth neither know nor teach nor practice the duty of prayer aright and that for these Reasons 1. They pray not in knowledge but in a strange tongue and allow of Ignorance as the Mother of Devotion 2. They commend doubting and speak against Assurance and so pray not in faith nor obedience 3. They pray not in humility for mercy for their sins for they think to merit by their prayers 4. They direct not their prayers to God onely in the name of Christ but to God and his Saints making the Virgin Mary their Mediatress In the close of all take this seasonable direction with thee touching praying for or against our Enemies We may lawfully pray against the evil cause that an evil man maintaineth but not against the person of that evil man Now if any extraordinary man hath truly and indeed the Spirit of discerning to judge whether Gods and his enemies be incurable and hath a pure zeal to Gods honor therein he may lawfully pray against such their very persons as David did in the 109 Psalm Prayer the Souls Incense sent by faith to God Attracts his Blessings and diverts his Rod It does acquaint us with the Lord and makes A trembling Terror cease th' Infernal Snakes It makes the weak victorious yea the Sun Stand still Go back It stays a Plague begun When th' Earth had in a Burning-Feaver layen Full three years space it caus'd a gracious Rain It wings the Soul for that Celestial good Which eye ear heart ne're saw heard understood §. 2. The Lords Prayer VVE must imitate and follow the matter and form of the Lords Prayer in all our prayers but are not so tyed to the very words of this Prayer but that we may freely use them or other words at our pleasure for our Savior himself oft-times prayed in other words and so did the Apostles neither is there such vertue as that by the bare repetition of them we can binde God to grant our requests or that we should never pray in other words But as the Ten Commandments contain all things to be done of us the Creed all things to be believed by us so the Lords Prayer doth comprehend all things to be asked by us of Almighty God Some think it is to be used onely as a Direction by which we may learn how and what to pray and that the words themselves are not to be used others think it the onely Prayer to be used at all times and upon all occasions The former opinion grounds it self on Mat. 6.9 the latter on Luke 11.2 The truth is the use of this Prayer is not onely to direct for matter or for words but for both but in praying the very words take heed lest the tongue run without the heart as it must needs do in those that ceremoniously rehearse them making haste to have done before they ever truly began Wherefore to pray these words rightly he that prayeth must in some convenient measure understand them and have his minde taken up with them in the uttering the heart still conveying it self into the meaning of every petition and if thus this Prayer be said it is well used alone or added to other prayer Now we must know That other prayers though differing from this in order yet if consonant thereto in matter may also be used by us for otherwise Paul in his Epistles would not have used such variety of order and maner in thanksgivings requests and deprecations for his Spiritual children for himself and for the whole Church So that though this order be generally to be followed yet neither is it always necessary nor yet is it a swerving from this Direction though some of these petitions onely be asked in some of our prayers and others be omitted But the error is when we go beyond the Rules here given us doting too much upon worldly things or having proud unfaithful or malicious hearts we make our prayers the labor of polluted lips In the Lords prayer are contained 1. A preface and therein a compellation Our Father wherein seven things are to be considered 1. Who is to be called upon that is God whom we are to call by the Name of Father wherein we must observe That Father here is not the Name of one Person onely but of the whole Essence 2. That God will hear such as call upon him because he is their Father 3. That he is able to grant and answer their requests for he is in heaven 4. Who ought and also are able to pray aright and they are the Sons of God 5. That Faith is here required for by Faith we become the Sons of God 6. Through whom we must pray that is in the Name of the onely begotten Son of God 7. The difference betwixt the prayers of Christians and of Turks or Jews for ours are made by faith in Christ 2. Six requests viz. 1. Hallowed be c. which is then done when the true knowledge and glory of God is celebrated by men 2. Thy Kingdom c. that is let thy Church be extended multiplied preserved enlarged and guided by thy Spirit 3. Thy will be c. which is then done when
adversity because it cometh unto us by the will of God 5. That God would turn the hearts of all men from sin and bring them every where to the obedience of his will 6. That Events such as are not contrary to Gods will that is that such things may come to pass which so please him 7. That God would bless and prosper our actions and counsels that no other Events may follow them but such as himself knoweth may most serve for his glory and our salvation 8. That God would hasten that time and state unto us wherein we shall perfectly do the will of God that is our state of glory Rules of obeying Gods will 1. Obey Gods will absolutely and for himself obey man onely in God and for God 2. Obey God in the maner as well as in the matter which he commandeth 3. In doing the works of piety let them give place if unfaigned necessity require and calleth to a work of Charity 4. Let the works of thy private Calling give place to works of the publike calling and general as if thou be laboring on the six days the Lord calling to his House by his worship there thou must attend it Lev. 23. 5. The works of a general common calling must give place to the works of a special undoubted calling being contrary if a man at any time hath such That all our obedience to Gods will may be the better accepted of him it must have these three properties 1. Chearfulness and readiness God loveth the chearful giver 2. Sincerity which is heartily and from the Spirit approving our selves to God and not affecting the applause and praise of men 3. Universality which is in all and every particular thing thus Job is approved obediently professing his subjection to God though he should aggravate his misery and kill him The way how to become chearful doers of the will of God or the duties required by this petition to be practised by us that Gods will may be done 1. We must prove what is the good and acceptable will of God Rom. 12.2 that is we must by often tryal of our actions by the Word of God become expert in Gods will and esteem highly of it be it never so contrary to carnal Reason Thus Abraham did Gen. 22.3 2. We must lay aside our own wills and be possessed with a base conceit thereof not leaning thereon 3. We must labor for a true perswasion of Gods mercy in the pardon of our sins and for the salvation of our souls whereby we may shew our selves thankful to God for so great a mercy 4. We must consider that we are the Temples of the Holy Ghost which is a wonderful dignity to sinful men and in regard hereof we must stir up our selves so to live that we make not sad the Spirit of God which dwelleth in us 5. We must consider the blessings of God bestowed on us both in soul and body one by one and this will move us to love God which love we shall shew in doing his will 1 Joh. 5.3 6. Let us consider the threatnings of God against sin and his Judgements upon them that live in sin and these will help to restrain our corruptions that they break not forth into action 7. We must be strict in the matter of sin making conscience of every evil way yea even of the first motions unto sin that never come to consent for this Petition for obedience respects not onely our words and deeds but also our secret thoughts for even they must be brought to obedience unto God 2 Cor. 10.5 8. We must seek to cut off all things that hinder us from doing Gods will we must use Spiritual means and pray for the Spirit to mortifie and crucifie the lusts of the flesh Rom. 8.13 which makes us rebels against God in transgressing his will Now the ground of this work is the death of our Saviour Christ applyed by true Faith to our corrupt hearts 9. We must not live inordinately but in that sort which God hath enjoyned Christians in his word every one godly in the general calling of a Christian and faithfully and conscionably in his particular calling whether of Church State or Family 10. We must endeavor to subject our selves patiently to the will of God in all afflictions whatsoever for it is the will of God that through manifold afflictions we should enter into his Kingdom This Petition teacheth us to bewail 1. Our natural disposition whereby we are prone to rebel against the will of God 2. Our natural hypocrisie even that which remaineth in us after grace received 3. Though we have never so much grace yet to lament and bewail our want of obedience in all good duties because the best of us all fail in the maner of doing them 4. Our impatience that when God layeth any crosses upon us we cannot as we ought endure them patiently and thankfully 5. Our slack and imperfect obedience yea privy pride proud presumption deadness of Spirit secret hypocrisie and other weaknesses incident to us even in our best services 6. The sins of others whereby they disobey the will of God and so rebel against him whereby he is dishonored and therefore must we be passionately grieved for the sins of others and labor to reclaim them In the supplication of this petition we pray 1. For grace to deny our own wills and ways 2. For understanding of the will of God which without it we cannot perform 3. For faith whereby to believe that the will of God revealed unto us is the will of God 4. For power to obey the holy whole will of God which is both active in doing and passive in suffering In the deprecation of this Petition we pray against 1. Rebellion or an obstinate offending against the known will of God 2. Prophaneness which is an undervaluing estimation of holy duties 3. Hypocrisie which is a drawing near to God with the lips but estranging the heart from him 4. Natural Corruption which draweth away to disobedience enticing to evil 5. Wea riness in well-doing a refusing to go forward and a turning back again 6. Impatience murmuring at crosses and discontent at Gods Providence The thanksgiving of this Petition is 1. For disobedience and sin in any measure mortified 2. For the knowledge of Gods will for faith and desires in truth to obey the will of God in all things all the days of our life In this Petition we are taught to frame our lives to an holy imitation of the blessed Angels which will not stand with their humor who account zeal in Religion affected preciseness But such as call God Father in sincerity must set before them the obedience of the holy Angels as a patern for their imitation to a like resemblance although not to a like equality of perfection Now in them we may observe these things for us to follow 1. They desired before Christs Incarnation to look into the mystery of our Redemption wrought by Christ 1
resteth secure for Salvation 2. A Spiritual Joy of heart in regard of the benefit of Faith 1 Pet. 1.8 2. A clear Conscience that is a faithful endeavor to approve our selves unto God by doing what is acceptable and avoiding what is offensive to his most excellent Majesty The ground of this clear Conscience is Love for a sense of Gods Love worketh love to God and it is always accompanied with a pure heart 1 Tim. 1.5 2 Cor. 1.12 These two things are especially Requisite as Helps to Faith 1. A faithful Remembrance of Gods Promises 2. A right Application of them For the right application of Gods Promises three things are to be observed viz. 1. The matter contained in them 1. General concerning supply of all good things and deliverance from all evil Gen. 3.15 22.18 Rom. 8.28 1 Cor. 3.22 2. Particular fit for our particular estates and needs and they concern 1. This life therin 1. Temporal things as 1. To Supply things needful 2. To Remove things hurtful 2. Spiritual things Jer. 31.33 c. Luke 11.13 2. The life to come for which heavenly and glorious things are promised Luke 23.43 1 Cor. 15.22 Phil. 3.21 Mat. 25.34 2. The kinde or quality of them viz. 1. Absolute which God hath simply and absolutely determined to accomplish even as they are propounded so all saving and sanctifying Graces being absolutely necessary to Salvation are promised to all Gods children 1 Cor. 1.5 and eternal life Joh. 10.28 2. Conditional which are no farther promised then God in his wisdom seeth to be most for his own glory and his childrens good and are no otherwise to be prayed for by us Thus conditionally are promised 1. All Temporal Blessings which Lazarus an holy man wanted Luke 16.20 2. Freedom from all Crosses and troubles what Saint hath not had his part in some of them 3. Freedom from all Temptations as our Head was tempted so have his members been from time to time 4. Less principal Graces which are called Restraining Graces These the Spirit distributeth severally 1 Cor. 12.8 Not all to every one some to one some to another 5. The measure of sanctifying Graces for though every Saint hath every saving Grace in him yet have they not all a like measure some have a greater and some a less 3. The maner of propounding them 1. Expresly declared and they are either Generally propounded to all Or Particularly applyed to some particular persons 2. By consequence imployed in the Examples Prayers of Saints 1. By those Blessings which they have enjoyed 2. By those which they have prayed for in Faith and obtained Our laboring to strengthen Faith is of much use to us especially these three ways 1. In getting Assurance of Pardon after some sin is committed 2. In Conflicts with strong Lusts 3. In want of Spiritual Graces The use of Faith in Prosperity viz. 1. It maketh us acknowledge That it is the Lord who hath so disposed our estate 2. It maketh us rest upon God for the time to come that all shall go well with us for Faith hath eyes whereby it doth after a maner see that to be true which yet it seeth not accomplished Faith hath also a double use in Adversity viz. 1. It upholdeth us in the present distress when else we know not what to do 2. It maketh us patiently wait for deliverance Hos 6.1 2. for God having promised to give a good issue Faith resteth upon it even as it were now and already accomplished The Vices repugnant unto Faith and forbidden in this first Commandment viz. 1. Unbelief which assenteth not to such Doctrine as is heard and known concerning God 2. Doubtfulness which neither stedfastly assenteth to it nor altogether gainsays it 3. Distrust which applyeth not unto it self the knowledge which it hath of God and his Promises and doth through fear of Gods forsaking us surcease the doing of that it should do 4. A Dissembling or Hypocritical Faith 5. Temporary Faith or a Revolting from Faith 6. A Tempting of God stubbornly and proudly provoking him to anger 7. Carnal Security without thinking of God his Will or our own miserable estate under sin Faith doth the Sun in 's Zenith far out-shine Inflames with Love and makes us all divine Cancels our Debts makes all our Reck'nings ev'n Takes wing at Christ and flies us up to Heav'n Lifts us above the World and does advance Hope ' yond Hope and rests us in Assurance Which first sucks life from Faith returns back then The sap much stronger to the Root agen He that hath Faith hath Heav'n onely does stay To take a Death and Cross or two in 's way §. 3. Of Humility HUmiliation is the fruit of Faith and the first effect whereby Faith which lies hid in the heart doth appear And in the very instant when a sinner begins truly in heart and conscience to humble himself before God he is then entred into the state of Salvation Now if a man finde himself hard-hearted and of a dead Spirit so as he cannot humble himself as he ought or as he would such persons if they humble themselves must be content with that Grace which they have received for if thou be truly and unfainedly grieved for this That thou canst not be grieved thy Humiliation will be accepted And though it may be thou art more humbled and hast a greater grief for an earthly loss then for thy committed sins yet mayest thou even then be truly humbled and grieved for thy sins too because the one is a bodily natural and sensible loss and the other a supernatural insensible and spiritual Now sensible things do more affect and urge the minde then the other The heart of man cannot be lifted up in Assurance of Gods favor to the apprehension of heavenly things unless it be first abased by true Humiliation brought to nothing in it self To this must be added Faith for in the practice of a Christian life the duties of Humiliation and Faith cannot be severed Till the heart be throughly by Humiliation prepared by being broken with the sight of sins and Gods wrath Christ and the Gospel is preached to it in vain and though some drink in the Truth of the Gospel with their Education yet such usually hold not out without also sound Humiliation Thus by the Spirit of Elias is meant a sharp Ministery to shew men their sins that they may be throughly humbled and prepared else they will never take Christ so as to keep close to him for without sound Humiliation sin is not accounted the greatest evil nor Christ the greatest good We cannot love Christ till upon the consideration of our sins we are humbled for them and are become poor in Spirit and then the Lord regards us highly and will raise us up but the want of sorrow for sin is a greater Argument of the want of love to Christ then the sin it self Now Humiliation is not required as a Qualification antecedent and precedent to
Prosperity 2. It must be sincere and sound not feigned or hypocritical Rom. 12.9 3. It must be fervent increasing inwardly and shewing it self in the fruits thereof outwardly 1 Pet. 4.8 4. It must be constant holding out unto the end Heb. 13.1 5. It must not be for any private by-respects 6. We must love those that are our enemies and hate us Mat. 5.46 47. The signs of true Christian Brotherly love 1. If we love God unfeignedly with our hearts and labor to keep his Commandments 1 Joh. 5.2 2. If we love without servile and slavish fear for there is no such fear in love 1 Joh. 4.18 3. If we can forgive wrongs forget to revenge them and pray for them that did them 1 Cor. 13. 4. If it be not onely in time of Prosperity but when he stands in most need of our love if it be more manifest to our Brother in his adversity then in his prosperity Prov. 17.17 5. If it be not for outward respects but because they are the Sons of God 6. If it be not outward in shew onely but inward in the heart Motives perswasive or Reasons to inforce our love to our Brethren 1. Except we love our Brethren we do not love God and if not God he not us 1 Joh. 4.20 2. Except we have this love we know not God for God is love 1 Joh. 4.8 3. If we love not our Brethren we abide in death 1 Joh. 3.14 are none of Gods children 1 Joh. 3.10 but the Devils 4. He that loveth not his Brother is a manslayer neither shall he be saved 1 Joh. 3.15 5. Because God so commandeth us to love one another yea on pain of eternal death Heb. 2.2 The Vices repugnant unto the love of God viz. 1. The casting away of Gods love or the contempt and hatred of God which is through the alienation of our Nature from God and Gods Justice and by reason of an inclination thereof to sin therefore to flie and shun God accusing and punishing Sin 2. Inordinate love of our selves and of other creatures which is to prefer our Lusts or Pleasures or Life or Glory or any other thing before God and his Will and Glory and to be willing rather to neglect and offend him then to part from those things which we love 3. A feigned love of God an hypocritical counterfeit or self-respecting love whereby also we may here offend Now we cannot here ever offend in the excess because we never love God so much as we should Hail O thou lovely Grace whose rare feature When Faith and Hope vanish from the Creature Shall ever Lustre forth in Heaven be As now of Sweetness full of Majesty By thee the Graces all enamell'd are 'Mongst whom thou shin'st the Heart Attractive Star By thee the Saints are ever so inflam'd To be but warm th' are holily asham'd Sweet Flame perfume my Soul and in thy fire Ravish'd let me from whence thou cam'st aspire §. 7. Of the Fear of God THe last Vertue required in this First Commandment is the Fear of God which being formerly touch'd and though taken in a strict consideration was yet found to be a great part of the Worship of God and an infallible Sign of the true Religion We shall therefore in this place speak a word more of it onely in reference thereto Now whereas it is said to be a great part of the Worship of God it is understood chiefly and principally of the Inward Worship which alone is properly simply and of it self the Worship of God the Outward is not simply the Worship of God but onely so far forth as it is quickned by the Inward and grounded on it God is a Spirit his Worship is Spiritual This is the Worship of the Minde the Heart the Conscience the Will and Affections for Man by all these joyntly and severally performeth Worship and Service to his Creator and this is the Spiritual Worship of the Inward Man the Foundation of all true Worship of God whereas the Outward Worship is onely that whereby the Inward is testified outwardly by the speech and actions The Worship of God according to his Word consisteth in things which God either giveth us as his Titles and Works or requireth of us as Hearing his Word Prayer Sacraments Vows and Swearing in all which thou shalt fear the Lord thy God because he is the Lord Levit. 14.19 To which may be added Outward Adoration Confession not ordinary or Ecclesiastical Confession but such as is made before the Adversary and Fasting in all which the Fear of God which is taken for the whole Worship of God or for the general Obedience according to all Gods Commandments Prov. 1.7 This Fear which ariseth from a knowledge of Gods Justice and of his Power to punish sins from a consideration of of that Right and Dominion which he hath over all Creatures This Fear which is an acknowledging of sin and the wrath of God keeps the whole Man in a Religious Respect a holy Dreadfulness and in an awful Reverence of the great and mighty Majesty of Heaven and Earth commands him to walk as in the Presence of God that even his whole Conversation seems one undiscontinued holy and Religious Adoration The whole Worship of God may stand in these five particulars viz. 1. To Fear and Love him above all 2. To Believe in all his Promises without doubting 3. To Call upon him in all our necessities 4. To be Thankful unto him for all his Benefits which shews it self in these 2 things viz. 1. An Acknowledgement of the heart That our Souls and whatsoever we have is Gods and proceedeth from his Blessing alone 2. In a Consecration of our Bodies Souls Lives Callings and Labors to the honor and service of God 5. To be Obedient to all his Commandments The Worship of God consisteth in things that are 1. Perpetual which are 1. Confidence in God Prov. 3.5 22.19 2 Chron. 20.20 Psal 37.3 5. 2. Love of God Deut. 6.5 Joh. 22.5 25.11 Mat. 22.37 3. Reverence of God Mat. 4.10 Heb. 12.28 Deut. 6.33 10.20 2. Belonging to this life as 1. Hope in God Psal 37.7 62.5 6 7. Isa 38.18 1 Pet. 1.21 2. Fear of God Deut. 4.10 6.2 13. 10.12 20. 14.13 Rev. 14.7 The Heads of Inward Worship are two 1. Adoration whereby a man upon a vile and base estimation of himself subjects himself his Soul to the Glory and Majesty of God 2. A cleaving to God which is by Faith Love Hope and Inward Invocation Adoration is twofold 1. Religious in which Religion and godliness is exercised wherein are these two The Intention of the Minde The outward prostrating of the Body 2. Civil which fellow-Creatures give one to the other and this pertaineth onely to the Second Table Two principal grounds of Adoration in the heart 1. Abnegation or denyal of our selves when we esteem our selves to be meer nothing 2. Exaltation of Gods Majesty above all the things in
worse sense 24. To defend an evil Cause and impugn the contrary 25. To write or spread abroad infamous Libels 26. To raze Deeds or any Testimonial Evidences 27. To counterfeit another mans hand or to forge any thing 28. To suppress the Truth whether by fraud violence favor or by any other means 29. By delivering our judgement of any person or thing in words of a double sense 30. To refuse to give Testimony when we can and ought being lawfully thereto required by the Magistrate 31. To deny to give an account of our Faith when Error stands in competition with Truth 32. To lye though it be for never so good an end Zech. 13.3 The Vertues required in this Commandment viz. 1. A Rejoycing for the Credit and good Estimation of our Neighbor Gal. 5.22 2. Willingly to acknowledge that goodness we see in any man whatsoever and onely to speak of the same Tit. 3.2 Moreover we must withal desire receive and believe Reports of our Neighbors good Acts 16.1 2 3. Notwithstanding this must be so performed by us that in no wise we approve or allow of the vices and faults of men 2 Chron. 25.2 27.2 3. Fairness of Minde being a vertue taking well things well or doubtfully spoken or done and interpreting them in the better part as far as there are any reasonable causes to induce thereto and doth not easily conceive suspitions neither sticketh upon suspitions though they be such as are just and have reasonable causes nor determineth ought by them unless the Honor of God be interested therein yea to interpret a doubtful evil to the better part 1 Cor. 13.5 7. Gen. 37.31 32 33. 4. Not to believe an evil Report running abroad amongst the Common People by the whispering of Talebearers as it were by Conduit-pipes Psal 15.3 Jer. 40.14 16. Prov. 25.23 5. Taciturnity or Silentness which withholdeth in silence things secret and unnecessary to be spoken where when and as far as is needful and avoiding overmuch babling and talkativeness to keep secret the offence of our Neighbor except it must of necessity be revealed Prov. 10.12 Mat 1.19 18.16 Contrary hereto is prating and foolish pratling also Peevishness and Morosity 6. To get a good Name and Estimation among men and to keep the same when we have gotten it Phil. 4.8 Now a good Name is gotten thus viz. 1. If we seek the Kingdom of God before all things repenting us of our sins and with an earnest desire embrace and follow after Righteousness Prov. 10.7 Mark 14.9 2. We must have a care both to judge and speak well of others Mat. 7.2 Eccl. 7.13 3. We must abstain from all kinde of wickedness for one onely vice or sin doth obscure and darken a mans good Name Eccl. 10.1 4. We must in all things earnestly seek for the Glory of God onely and not our own Mat. 6.5 6. 7. Truth which is a firm Election in the Will whereby we constantly embrace true Sentences and Opinions speak that which is true keep Covenants and Promises and avoid all deceitful dissembling both in speech and outward gesture and all to the Glory of God and the Safety of our Neighbor Repugnant to this vertue are all Lyes as well Lyes of courtesie called Officious Lyes as others also vanity or levity and the like 8. Simplicity which is open Truth without wrinkles or circumlocutions a vertue which doth properly and plainly speak and do such things as are true right and honest with a single heart To this is repugnant Doubleness in Maners and Conversation 9. Constancy being a vertue not departing from the known Truth neither altering purpose without good and necessary causes but constantly speaking and doing such things as are True Just and Necessary Contrary whereto is Lightness and Pertinacy 10. Affability or Readiness of speaking which is a vertue gladly and with signification of good will hearing answering speaking where need is upon a necessary cause Rash Censure of men being a high breach of this Commandment may be committed these many ways viz. 1. When things are well done to carp and cavil at them without cause that is just 2. When actions and speeches indifferent are taken in the worse sense 3. When upon light occasion and uncertain Reports we suspect and surmise evil of our Neighbor 4. When we see any want in our Neighbors speech or behavior to make it worse then it was or indeed it is 5. When we spread abroad and publish the wants of men to defame them which might better be concealed and in Conscience and Charity ought so to be 6. When we speak nothing but the Truth of another yet withal do insinuate thereby some evil of the party in the hearts of the hearers This is a pestilent practice and too much used 7. When in hearing the Word Preached and sins reproved in the Congregation some misapply the same with spight against the Ministers person or his Ministery Reasons against Rash Judgement viz. 1. The practice of it cannot stand with Christian Charity for Charity bindes us to walk in Love and Love suspecteth not evil but thinks the best always 2. When thou seest a man erre consider thy self art or may be guilty of the like or worse 3. Consider That God the Father hath committed all Judgement unto his Son who now judgeth by his Ministers 4. Consider That thou art unable to judge aright of other mens actions being ignorant of many circumstances thereof for thou knowest not haply with what minde or to what end the action was done nor the cause why he did it nor the state of his person nor the maner of his temptation thereto 5. He that gives rash Judgement of another is worse then a Thief that steals away a mans goods for he robs him of his good Name which Solomon saith is to be chosen above great riches Prov. 22.1 Three things Required in judging of others aright viz. 1. We must have recourse to the cause of our Judgement for if the Cause be insufficient then our Judgement is Rash and unlawful 2. We must have Authority and Warrant by lawful calling to give Judgement or else some thing which is answerable thereto though the Judgement be private for private men in private Judgement though they want this Authority by a lawful calling yet if they have that which is answerable thereto that is the Affection of Christian Love then they may judge 3. We must alway have a good end of our Judgement that is the Reformation and amendment not the defarning of our Brother Since Truth is the chief and principal thing required in this Commandment consider in the last place that there is a fourfold Truth viz. 1. Of Judgement when a mans Judgement agreeth with Gods Word which is the Touchstone of Truth So as the Principles of that Religion which he professeth and his opinion concerning the same are ground thereon and may be warranted thereby This is the ground of all the rest to which must
truth of heart be added and where truth of heart is there will be Truth of speech and action for sincerity in the heart will keep the Tongue from lying and the carriage of a man from dissimulation and deceit This Truth of Judgement is directly opposed to Error 2. Of Heart which is the singleness and sincerity thereof whereby a man seeketh to approve himself to God the Searcher of all hearts and to be accepted of him This is opposed to Hypocrisie whether open or secret 3. Of Speech which is an Agreement of the words of a mans mouth both with his minde and also with the matter which he uttereth Eph. 4.25 This is opposed to lying when a man speaketh against his Minde and Conscience and to Falshood when a man speaketh contrary to the thing it self 4. Of Action which is a plain faithful and honest dealing in all things whether we have to do with God or Man when men neither make shew of doing that which indeed they do not or of doing it otherwise then they do This was it Christ commended honest Nathaniel for Joh. 1.47 and is opposed to Dissimulation and Deceit Motives to stir up in us a desire of Truth viz. 1. The Excellency of it it maketh us like God himself for he is the Lord God of Truth Psal 31.5 his Son is Truth Joh. 14.6 17. his Holy Ghost the Spirit of Truth Jam. 1.18 his Word the Word of Truth Psal 19.9 and his Promises Commandments Judgements Ways and Works all Truth Psal 119. 2. The Necessity thereof for without it no Grace can be of any use therefore the Scripture commendeth Faith unfeigned 2 Tim. 1.5 Love without Dissimulation Rom. 12.9 and Wisdom without Hypocrisie Jam. 3.17 3. The Benefit of Truth for the least measure of Grace seasoned with it is acceptable to God and in that respect very profitable to us There is no greater Ornament or Beauty to Religion then Soundness and Evidence of Truth This is the very Glory and Crown thereof as for Antiquity Universality Unity Uniformity Succession Consent Multitude Pomp Revenues and the like being separated from Truth are but vain glosses or so many Pearls in a blinde eye to make it so much the more deformed This is it made the Martyrs so valiant David a man after Gods own heart Nathaniel so gracious in Christs eyes Job so couragious patient and constant and Paul so unconquerable Truth is a comeliness in every thing God is the God of Truth no Lye can stand Vnpunish'd by his All-Revenging hand Who calls God Witness to what is not true Stile him we may The Crucifying Jew And does what in him lies to make thereby The God of Truth the Author of a Lye We say the Lye deserves the Stab Are men So tender of their Credit much more then Jealous is God of his who will not take The Lye of Creatures for his Honors sake The Tenth Commandment Thou shalt not Covet thy Neighbors House thou shalt not Covet thy Neighbors Wife nor his Servant nor his Maid nor his Ox nor his Ass nor any thing that thy Neighbor hath TO Covet is to think inwardly and also to desire any thing whereby our Neighbor may be hindred albeit there ensue no assent of the Will to commit that evil And by Coveting here is to be understood That not onely evil actually committed is sin but harboring in the heart although it never cometh into act So that this Commandment is as it were added for the explaining of the former because the more ignorant people seeing no punishments inflicted for evil affections would not otherwise have thought them to be sins And it might be added to convince every man of Sin for we all bear in us Lust the tinder of Vice And this coveting what is anothers doth always argue a minde either lustful or not contented which is against all true Piety By the words House Wife Maid Ox c. the Commandment is illustrated as by an Argument drawn from the distribution of the Objects of Concupiscence Whence it is apparent That onely evil concupiscence is condemned in this place Gol. 3.5 for there is a good concupiscence or desire as of Meat and Drink and that of the Spirit Gal. 5.17 So then here are rehearsed the Objects of all Lusts for the most part whereby we are stirred up to the transgressing of any Commandment of the latter Table In the other Commandments not onely wicked deeds but also counsels and deliberate consent of the Will is forbidden but in this is required somewhat more namely that we be not tickled with any kinde of Lust although our Will consent not yea also though it be against it For here are forbidden all first motions of the Minde unto sin springing from Original Sin though no consent be yielded unto them and we are here commanded to keep our very hearts and mindes free from evil motions and thoughts against any of the Commandments of God and to be well contented with our own Thus the motions unto sin forbidden in this Commandment spring from Original Sin or the flesh in us other evil motions we are subject unto that are suggested by the Devil which are not our sins unless by consenting we make them so And the Duty here commanded is our thorough Sanctification not onely in deed but even in heart and thought also as in 1 Thess 5.23 the parts whereof are Mortification the putting off the Old Man which is corrupt through deceiveable lusts Eph. 4.24 and Vivification the putting on of the New Man which after God is created in Righteousness and true Holiness Joh. 3.5 otherwise called Regeneration or a New-birth The Sum of this Commandment forbiddeth all sins before consent and resolution all sins without us as Adams sin and all sins within us as the effect of the former The Scope and end of this Commandment is a Rightness and Inward Obedience of all our affections towards God and our Neighbor This Commandment is added to be a Declaration of the former and that Universal because this is spoken of the whole in general and is added to be as a Rule or Level according to which we must take and measure the inward Obedience of all the other Commandments Hereby not onely corrupt inclinations are sins but the thinking of evil is sin Unto this Commandment is Original sin or Concupiscence repugnant which is an inordinate appetite and a corrupt inclination and proneness in the Minde Will and Heart contrary to God and desiring those things that God forbiddeth in his Law which ensued upon the Fall of our first Parents Every Breach of this Commandment may be termed Covetousness Now covetous men the more they devour the more they covet like the Grave or the Barren Womb Prov. 30.14 15. like Dropsie men or Pharaohs lean Kine Thus Ahab that had a Kingdom at command covets a petty Vineyard which costs poor Naboth his Life and Living but withal covetous Ahab purchased more then he coveted the