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A01979 The vvhole-armor of God: or A Christians spiritual furniture, to keepe him safe from all the assaults of Satan First preached, and now the second time published and enlarged for the good of all such as well vse it:whereunto is also added a treatise of the sinne against the Holy Ghost. By VVilliam Gouge B.D. and preacher of Gods Word in Blacke Fryers London. ...; Panoplia tou Theou Gouge, William, 1578-1653. 1619 (1619) STC 12123; ESTC S103304 450,873 662

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is a mother-mother-grace which breedeth and bringeth forth other graces as the heart being quickned sendeth forth life into all the other parts That it is the first is euident for Christ is that fountaine in whom all fulnesse dwelleth Col. 1. 19. of whose fulnesse al● receiue Ioh. 1. 16. without whom we can doe nothing Ioh. 15. 5. Now it is Faith whereby wee touch Christ By Faith Christ dwelleth in our hearts Ephes 3. 17. The spirituall life which we liue we liue by Faith in the Sonne of God Gal. 2. 20. therefore till by Faith we be ingraffed into Christ no true sauing grace can be in a man Without Faith it is impossible to please God Heb. 11. 1. That also it is a mother grace is cleare for from Faith springeth repentance loue new obedience c. Repentance is a change of the heart as the notation of the Greeke word implyeth Now what is it that changeth the heart of a sinner Is it not the apprehension of Gods infinite loue and rich mercy a perswasion that a mans sinnes are pardoned The apprehension of Gods wrath and feare of hell fire may worke some sorrow for sinne committed yea also it may restraine a man from committing many sinnes at least for a time but that which altereth the naturall disposition of the heart which changeth and reformeth it is Faith in the remission of sinne By Faith God purifieth the hearts of men True Christian loue also is a reflection of Gods loue to man till a man feele Gods loue to warme his heart and to set it on fire he can loue neither God nor man He that loueth his brother aright must loue him in and for the Lord and so must loue God before but it is not possible for any to loue God except he beleeue that God loueth him Can a peece of yron giue heat and burne except it be first heated by the fire But our hearts are naturally more destitute of loue to God then any yron of heat they must therefore be set on fire by Gods loue and a sweet apprehension thereof before they can loue God We loue God because he loued vs first It is Faith which worketh by loue Thus I might further shew how all other sanctifying graces spring from Faith But what followeth from thence surely this that if any sanctifying and sauing grace be needfull then is Faith especially which is the Mother of all without it no grace at all no life at all for the iust shall liue by his Faith Hab. 2. 4. From faith commeth the spirituall life of a Christian in this world Gal. 2. 20. and eternall life in the world to come Ioh. 3. 16 c. Yea no benefit from Christ without Faith though Christ receiued the spirit without measure and it pleased the Father that in him should all fulnesse dwel yet to such as haue no faith he is as a deepe well out of which no water of life can be had But when a man hath faith what is the profit and benefit thereof Much euery way By faith Christ dwelleth in our hearts and so we are vnited to him By Faith wee liue by Faith we are reconciled iustified sanctified saued It were infinite to reckon vp all the benefits of Faith In regard of profit and benefit to ourselues it far surpasseth all other graces By other graces as loue mercy kindnesse wisedome and the like we may be profitable to others but Faith is it which draweth and bringeth in to our selues bodies and soules all the profit It is also a grace of admirable comfort this is it which bringeth peace of conscience That peace of God which passeth all vnderstanding this vpholdeth in all troubles and that many times aboue and against sence and reason All comfort without Faith is in vaine when all other comforts faile then may faith vphold vs. Thus faith vpheld Iob Dauid Iehosaphat When other graces and the testimony of our conscience faile Faith may support vs for the conscience hath respect to the man himselfe to his disposition and carriage which is subiect to many temptations and many alterations but Faith hath respect to GOD and his promises to Christ and his sacrifice which are props or rather rockes that neuer faile In this respect is Faith fitly compared to a shield for as a souldier who hath a good shield and is able well to vse it will not vtterly be discouraged but stand out in the battell though his head-peece bee crackt his brest-plate battered his girdle loose c So when verity righteousnesse patience and other like graces seeme to faile he that hath sound faith will not vtterly be quailed and confounded Faith being so excellent a grace as that whereby God is most honoured so necessary profitable and comfortable a grace as hath beene shewed what point of Christian Religion is rather to be made knowne is more to be pressed oftner to be inculcated about what can a Minister of Gods word better spend his time study and paines For Faith is the most proper and principall obiect of the Gospell which is therefore called The Word of Faith The preaching of Faith yea Faith it selfe §. 9. Of the high account which wee ought to make of Faith AS Ministers are most to preach this Doctrine so are people to learne it aboue all to be very well instructed in it that they may know what true faith is yea to examine themselues whether they haue in them this grace or no if not to enquire how it may be gotten how discerned and proued if they haue it to labour well to preserue increase and vse it for Faith is a capitall grace We must therefore in this respect learne wisdome of the Serpent who hath an especiall care of his head if hee be assaulted and cannot flie hee will couer his head with the rest of his body and suffer it to be strucken and wounded rather then his head Wee ought to bee the more carefull of this Head Vertue because Satan who well knoweth the worth of it seeketh most to assault it Is it not good wisdome to looke to that most of all which hee most of all si●teth Of these points I shall more distinctly speake afterwards This I thought good to premise by way of preparation vnto the discourse following taking occasion from the Apostles Preface aboue all §. 10. Of the Papists c●uill against Faith IF any popishly minded shall thinke or say that so much preaching and learning of Faith is an hinderance to good workes and maketh men carelesse of all piety and charity I answer that if any be so minded they are blinded by the god of this world that the light of the glorious Gospell should not shine vnto them The truth is that no other doctrine can make men more conscionable in performing all duty to God and man then the doctrine of
is an expectation of such good things to come as God hath promised and Faith beleeued 1 In expectation especially consisteth the very nature of Hope If we hope c. We waite Dauid ioyneth hoping and waiting together as implying one and the same thing Waite vpon the Lord and hope in him 2 Good things are the proper obiect of Hope herein it differeth from Feare We feare things euill and hurtfull I looked that is hoped for good saith Iob The thing namely that euill thing which I feared is come vpon me Iob 3. 25 30. 26. 3 These good things are to come not past nor present which either are or haue beene seene Hope which is seene is no hope for how can a man hope for that which he seeth 4 They are also such as God hath promised For the ground of our Hope is the promise of God who is faithfull and true we may well waite for that which he hath promised whatsoeuer it be In this respect this true Hope is termed The Hope of the Gospel that is an Hope which waiteth for those things which in the Gospel are promised This was the ground of Simeons Hope These promises are of all needfull things in this world both Spirituall and Temporall of assistance vnder all crosses and of deliuerance from them and at length of eternall glory and happinesse in heauen which because it is furthest off and includeth in it an accomplishment of all other promises is the most proper obiect of Hope In which respect the Scripture doth thus entitle it Hope of Saluation Hope of eternall life Hope of glory c. 5 The things we hope for are also such as Faith beleeued For there is such a relation betwixt Faith and Hope as is betwixt a mother and a daughter Faith is the mother that bringeth forth Hope and Hope is a blessed daughter which nourisheth Faith Faith is the ground of things hoped for Till a thing be beleeued a man will neuer hope for it By Faith we waite that is Faith causeth vs to waite Againe except a man hope and waite for that which he beleeueth his Faith will soone decay §. 4. Of assurance and patience of Hope THus in generall we see what Hope is There are two especiall properties which the Scripture doth oft annexe to Hope 1 Assurance 2 Patience For Assurance expresly saith the Apostle Shew diligence to the full Assurance of Hope In regard of this property it is said Hope maketh not ashamed that is disappointeth not him that hopeth of the thing which he waiteth for so as he need not be ashamed of his Hope Fitly therefore is it termed An Anchor of the soule both sure and stedfast According to the quality and quantity of Faith is the quality and quantity of Hope What a man beleeueth that he hopeth for as he beleeueth so he hopeth for it but true Faith doth assuredly beleeue the truth of Gods promises therefore true Hope doth certainely expect them for there are the same props to vphold our Hope as are for our Faith to wit the goodnesse power truth and other like attributes of God Hope ariseth not from mans promises nor is nourished by mans merits Our aduersaries make vncertainty a property of Hope and ground it vpon coniectures and probabilities wherby they take away one main difference betwixt the hope of sound Christians and carnall Libertines and cleane ouerthrow the nature of sauing Hope for though by reason of the flesh the best may sometimes wauer in their Hope as well as in their Faith yet is not this wauering of the nature of Hope but the more Hope encreaseth the more is doubting dispelled For Patience that also is expresly attributed to Hope If we hope for that we see not we doe with patience waite for it How needfull it is that our Hope bee accompanied with patience we shall see hereafter §. 5. Of the agreement betwixt Faith and Hope HOpe agreeth with Faith in many things for example in these In the Author and worker of them both which is Gods holy Spirit as Faith is a fruit of the Spirit so we abound in Hope thorow the power of the holy Ghost In the common matter for both are sauing and sanctifying graces as We are saued by Faith so also by Hope and as By Faith the heart is purified so he that hath Hope purgeth himselfe In the Ground of them both of them are grounded on Gods promises as we haue heard In the fore-named properties Assurance and Patience The same Apostle that made mention of Assurance of Hope mentioneth also Assurance of Faith and as he that hopeth waiteth with patience so he which beleeueth maketh not haste In continuance which is onely til they haue brought vs to the possession of the inheritance promised in which respect Loue which continueth euen in Heauen is preferred both to Faith and Hope In many excellent effects as are a cleare and quiet conscience an vtter denyall of a mans selfe a casting of himselfe wholly on Gods grace a patient bearing of all crosses perseuerance vnto the end c. §. 6. Of the difference betwixt Faith and Hope THey differ in these things especially 1 In their order Faith is first for it bringeth forth Hope Faith is the ground of things hoped for 2 In the kind of Obiect Faith is also of things past and present hope onely of things to come Obiect Faith is also of things to come for we beleeue eternall life Answ Faith giueth a subsistence and present being to such things as are to come by it we beleeue those good things which are promised to be ours though the possession of them be to come 3 In their nature Faith beleeueth the very truth of Gods promises and sealeth that God is true Hope waiteth till God manifest and accomplish his truth Thus we see that Hope is a different and distinct grace frō Faith yea so as it may be of vse when faith faileth and it serueth to cherish and vphold Faith needfull it is therfore that vnto Faith it be added §. 7. Of the resemblance betwixt Hope and an Helmet FItly is Hope resembled to an Helmet which according to the notation of the Greeke word couereth the head all ouer so as vnder it may be comprised the Beuer and whatsoeuer couereth the face The vse of this Helmet is to keep and fence the head safe from Arrowes Darts Bullets Swords and other weapons whereby it might otherwise be sorely wounded and the man be killed downe-right He that hath his head and face well and safely couered will be bold and couragious without feare lifting vp his head and looking his enemy in the face and so boldly goe on forward not fearing Arrowes Darts or any such things that shall be shot
the same thing onely this latter is somewhat more emphaticall and as proper as any of the rest This is somewhat like to that Hebrew phrase which Solomon vseth Keep thine heart aboue all keepings implying thereby that the heart of all other parts is most narrowly to be watched ouer most carefully and diligently to be looked vnto so is Faith aboue all to be regarded Quest Is Faith simply more excellent and necessary then other sauing graces Answer All sauing graces are in their kind very excellent and necessary as hath before bene shewed of verity righteousnesse and patience neither can a Christian wel spare and be without any of them for they are as seuerall linkes of one chaine whereby a Christian is held out of hell if but one linke breake the chaine is broken and downe falleth he that was held thereby yet some linkes in a chaine may be put to greatest stresse and so be of greatest vse Faith serues to beare the greatest brunts and in that respect may be counted most excellent and most necessary euen as the shield of all other parts of armour is the most needfull as we shall after heare §. 6. Of pressing the doctrine of Faith THe Apostle vseth this phrase aboue all in the beginning of his exhortation to set an edge vpon it and to make it the sharper that so it may pierce the deeper into vs as if a captaine should giue diuers directions to his souldiers to instruct them to arme and fence themselues and among those seuerall directions set some speciall item on one of them and say Aboue all remember this would not this item make him the more to regard it As where the Apostle saith Doe good to all especially to them who are of the houshold of Faith doth it not make a Christian so much the more to be moued with compassion when hee seeth any of the faithfull stand in need of his helpe Hence then I obserue that Among and aboue other po●nts and principles of Christian Religion and mysteries of godlinesse the doctrine of Faith is especially to be opened and vrged by Gods Ministers and to bee learned and obserued by Gods people What point thorowout the whole Scripture is more vrged all the rites and types of the Law set forth the doctrine of faith Moses and the Prophets preached it so did the fore-runner of Christ Christ himselfe and his Apostles For some especiall instances of this point reade and obserue Christs conference with Nicodemus and Pauls Epistles to Rom. and Gal. No other doctrine more setteth forth the glory of God and more maketh to the good of his Church children §. 7. Of the honour which Faith doth vnto God GOd is then honoured when he is acknowledged to be as he is namely most holy wise true powerfull mercifull iust c. But the beleeuer and the beleeuer onely so acknowledgeth him 1 For God holinesse how approacheth the beleeuer before God surely in an vtter ab●egation of himselfe and in the mediation of Christ Iesus for well he knoweth that himselfe is all ouer defiled with sinne and that Iesus Christ the Iust is an aduocate with the Father who by his blood purgeth vs from our sinnes and with his righteousnesse couereth vs. This manner of appearing before God sheweth that the beleeuer acknowledgeth God to be so perfectly holy as he cannot endure the sight of any vncleane thing 2 For Gods wisedome who are they that subiect themselues to God in all estates of prosperity and aduersity Beleeuers onely Why then their faith perswadeth them that God is wisest and best knoweth what estate is fittest for them and so euen against their owne sence and naturall reason faith maketh them wholly resigne themselues to Gods wise prouidence and in that respect to be thankefull in all things 3 For Gods truth he that beleeueth hath sealed that God is true for what maketh men beleeue but that they iudge him who hath promised that which they beleeue to be faithfull and true Faith then is an acknowledgement and a confirmation of Gods truth which is an high honour giuen to God for God maketh great reckoning and account of his truth 4 For Gods power many of the promises which God maketh to his children are of things which seeme impossible yet faith giueth assent thereunto and thereby testifieth that God is Almighty that nothing is impossible to him Thus Abram by his faith did magnifie Gods power and so did Iehosaphat also 5 For Gods mercy that is the especiall and most proper obiect of Faith If the poore sinner were not perswaded that God were rich yea euen infinitely rich in mercy he could neuer beleeue the pardon of his sinnes faith then is it which aboue all commendeth Gods mercy 6 For Gods Iustice what maketh beleeuers so strongly trust vnto and wholly rely vpon the sacrifice of Christ Because on the one side they beleeue God to be so perfectly iust that without expiation and satisfaction for sin there can be no hope of mercy and on the other side the sacrifice of Christ being of such infinite value as to make full satisfaction to Gods Iustice they beleeue that God will not exact that of them for which Christ hath satisfied but will manifest fauour to them because Christ hath purchased fauour for them These are points of Iustice to require satisfaction to remit that for which satisfaction is made to bestow that which is merited and purchased But Faith acknowledgeth all these and so commendeth Gods Iustice for it hath respect to Gods Iustice as well as to his mercy Obiect Sinners repentant and beleeuing sinners vse to appeale from the barre of Gods Iustice to his mercy-seate what respect then hath Faith to Gods Iustice Answer In regard of themselues and their owne manifold pollutions and imperfections euen in their best workes they dare not stand to the tryall of Gods Iustice but cry for mercy and pardon but yet in confidence of the All-sufficient sacrifice of Christ Iesus they may appeale to Gods Iustice for God is not vniust to require a debt that is paid In these and other like respects it is said of Abrah●● That he was strengthened in the Faith and gaue glory to God So doth euery beleeuer in some measure the stronger faith is the more glory is giuen to God But on the contrary no sinne is more dishonourable to God then infidelity for that which is said of one particular He that beleeueth not maketh God a lyar may be applyed to the rest he maketh God vnwise impotent mercilesse vniust c. §. 8. Of the good which Faith bringeth vnto man IN regard of mans good Faith of all other graces is the most necessary profitable and comfortable It is the first of all sauing graces wrought in the soule of a Christian as the heart is the first member framed in the body Yea it
of those things yea it is one of the most principall of them Vpon this ground the Apostle exhorteth vs to proue our selues whether we are in the Faith c. In vaine were this exhortation if Faith could not be discerned and proued §. 38. Of the difference betwixt those who seeme to haue Faith and those who indeed haue it 1 Obiect THe heart of man is deceitfull aboue all things who can know it how then can the truth of any grace be discerned Answ In naturall and wicked men there is a double heart wherby it cometh to be deceitful but the faithfull haue a single simple honest vpright perfect heart 2 Obiect Many presume of what they haue not yea very hypocrites goe so farre as they can hardly if at all be discerned Many of them doe more resemble the faithfull then counterfeit coine doth current money for herein the Diuell helpeth mans wit Iudas was not discerned by the Disciples till Christ discouered him Answer If that which is counterfeit coine be thorowly tried if it be brought to the touch-stone if clipped thorow if melted it will be discerned so hypocriticall Faith But suppose some be so I know not what to say cunning or simple that they deceiue others and themselues yet thereupon it followeth not that he which indeed hath faith should be deceiued because he which hath it not is A man which dreameth that he eateth and drinketh may for the time strongly be conceited that he doth so and yet be deceiued Can not he therefore which is awake and in deed eateth and drinketh know that he doth so Hee that wanteth a thing groundeth his conceit vpon meere shewes and shadowes but he that hath that which he is perswaded he hath groundeth his perswasion on sure sound reall euidences Obiect 3. Many which indeede haue faith make a great doubt and question of it yea they thinke and say They haue no faith at all How then can Faith bee knowne Answer That is thorow mens owne weakenesse or thorow the violence of some temptation When they are strengthned and the temptation remoued that doubting will be dispelled But it followeth not because at some times some persons are so exceeding weake and so violently assaulted that therefore they should neuer know that they haue faith or that other which are not so weake nor so assaulted should not bee able to know their owne faith In naturall matters there may be some who thorow long sicknesse or some wound blow or bruise on their head know not what they doe Can not therefore healthy sound men know After Dauid had giuen many euidences of his assurance of faith thorow some temptations hee doubted §. 39. Whether Faith and doubting may stand together Quest CAn then true Faith stand with doubting Answ Yea it can for what the Apostle saith of knowledge may we apply to other Christian graces euen to the mother of them all Faith we beleeue in part The man that said Lord I beleeue yet doubted for he added helpe my vnbeleefe This doubting is not of the nature of Faith but rather contrary vnto it arising from the flesh which remaineth in vs so long as wee remaine in the World therefore the more strength Faith getteth the more is doubting driuen away Yet as the Spirit in truth may be where the flesh is so in truth may Faith be where doubting is but as we must striue to subdue the flesh so also must we striue to dispell doubting §. 40. Of trying Faith both by the causes and by the effects NOw come we to the maine point How Faith may be proued and knowne For the true triall of Faith we must consider both the causes and also the effects of Faith how it was wrought and how it worketh and compare these together Most doe send men onely to the effects of Faith by them to make triall of the truth of them but there is an hypocriticall Faith which bringeth forth many fruits so like true Faith and true Faith is oft so couered with the cloudes of temptations that if respect be had onely to the effects counterfeit Faith may be taken for true Faith and true Faith may be counted no Faith The birth therefore and the growth of Faith must be considered iointly together and one compared with another that they may both of them giue mutuall euidence one to another and so both of them giue a ioint and sure euidence to a mans soule and conscience that he is not deceiued §. 41. Of that illumination which causeth Faith VVE are first to begin with the birth of Faith of the meanes and order of working Faith I haue spoken before for the proofe of Faith in this respect we must apply the seuerall points before deliuered to our owne Faith examine whether it were accordingly wrought namely whether it were grounded on a true illumination of the minde in regard of mans misery and the remedy appointed by God and of a right disposition of the heart both in regard of true griefe for sinne and true desire after Christ For Illumination it is not sufficient that we haue a generall knowledge of the fore-named misery and remedy that such and such are all men by nature that this is the remedy afforded vnto them but we must haue an experimentall knowledge of our owne wofull estate as Saint Paul had when he set forth his own person as a patterne of a miserable man and in particular reckoned vp his owne particular greeuous sinnes this is it which will driue a man to Christ if at least we also vnderstand that the remedy is such an one as may bring redemption vnto our selues It is more cleare then needs be proued that what Faith soeuer ignorant men men that liue in neglect and contempt of Gods Word make shew of hath not so much as a shew of sound Faith but is palpably counterfeit therefore this first point may not be left out in the triall of Faith §. 42 That Griefe goeth before Faith FOr the disposition of the heart vnlesse first it haue beene touched with a sence of mans wretchednesse and grieued thereat it is to be feared that the pretence of Faith which is made is but a meere pretence for God healeth none but such as are first wounded The whole neede not a Physitian but they that are sicke Christ was annointed to preach the Gospell to the poore to heale the brok●● hearted c. Obiect Many haue beleeued that neuer grieued for their misery as Lydia Rahab the theefe on the crosse and others of whom no griefe is recorded Answer Who can tell that these grieued not It followeth not that they had no griefe because none is recorded All particular actions and circumstances of actions are not recorded it is enough that the griefe of some as of the Iewes of the Iaylor of the woman that washed
himselfe cannot find out Hence it followeth that 1 For sinnes past which by his owne or other mens or the Lords meanes are found out and discouered he is truly humbled and giueth no rest to his soule till he haue some assurance of pardon as Dauid 2 For the time present because he findeth the flesh still remaining in him he maintaineth a strife fight against sinne as Paul 3 For future times he is watchfull that he be not ouertaken as in former times as Dauid To this integrity of heart a faithfull man may attaine It is that which wee daily pray for in the third Petition it is all that God exacteth where it is found it is a good euidence of Faith And it is the rather to be noted because it is both an encouragement for a Christian to endeauour to doe what he can knowing that his honest will shall be accepted and also a comfort against his manifold infirmities and imperfections keeping a man from despaire §. 58. Of the Continuance of a good Conscience FOr the Continuance a cleare Conscience which proceedeth from a sound Faith neuer decaieth nor yet standeth at a stay but rather groweth and increaseth as Christ said to the Church at Thyatira I know thy loue seruice faith patience and workes that they are more at the last then at the first The Apostle saith of himselfe That hee endeauoured to that which was before and followed hard toward the marke and thereupon exhorteth others to be so minded This must needs be a good euidence of Faith because Faith is that which receiueth and conueigheth in and from Christ such supply of grace as maketh the beleeuer grow vp thereby Hee that beleeueth in me saith Christ out of his belly shall flow riuers of water of life By their continuance are many which had onely a temporary and hypocriticall Faith discouered who otherwise before they fell away would hardly if at all haue beene discerned That conscience which is thus grounded on Loue accompanied with sincerity and extendeth it selfe to all things which are pleasing to God alwayes is that good and cleere conscience which is so much commended in the holy Scripture he that is assured thereof as the Apostle was Heb. 13. 18. hath a sensible euidence of true Faith Thus wee haue heard how Faith may bee gotten and proued §. 59 Of the issue of ouer-much boldnesse THe third point is how it may be preserued which point is the rather to be deliuered to preuent two extreames whereinto many are ready to fail The one is ouer-secure boldnesse the other ouer-childish fearefulnesse For when men haue gotten and proued their Faith some thorow the pride of flesh are proane to be insolent and too much to boast of it other thorow their weakenesse which also ariseth of the flesh to feare the decay and losse of it The ground of the former extreame is that Faith is an immortall seede which shall neuer cleane vtterly decay and cleane fall away This they know and are able to proue by testimony of Scripture and euidence of reason But though this ground be very sound and orthodoxall yet the collection which is made from thence is vnsound and impious for it crosseth Gods wisdome who hath ordained and reuealed meanes for the preseruing and cherishing of that which hee hath appointed to continue to the end wherefore wee are exhorted to worke out our saluation though it be in Heauen reserued for vs withfeare and trembling But to preuent that illusion let it be noted that a man if hee make not the better proofe of his Faith may be deceiued and take counterfeit for current a temporary Faith for iustifying Faith which if he doe then his ground faileth for a temporary Faith may cleane drie away as the Corne sowen in stony ground witnesse Simon Magus Demas and many that beleeued in Christ It is likely that they which are ouer-bold neuer thorowly tried the truth of their Faith for one note of true Faith is an holy iealousie lest Faith should decay §. 60. Of losing Faith 2 THogh true Faith cannot totally finally fall away yet it may to their feeling be so farre gone as it will make them with heauy harts to repent their proud boldnesse and carelesse security For 1 It may be so couered ouer and smothered as it cannot be discerned they can for the time haue no assurance of it 2 All the ioy and comfort of it wherewith they were formerly vpheld may be cleane taken away and they euen faint for want of it 3 No fruits thereof may appeare but they be as trees in winter little conscience of any duty dull in hearing Gods word cold in prayer nothing remaining but a formall profession if that 4 Their consciences may proue a very racke a greeuous torture and torment vnto them 5 It is not like to be recouered with a wet finger with a light sigh and a groane but they may call cry and roare againe and againe before they be heard 6 When they recouer it it may be they shall neuer attaine to that measure which once they had if to that measure of the thing it selfe yet not of the ioy and comfort of it they may carry the griefe of this their folly to their graues §. 61. Of the grounds of Scripture against secure boldnesse FOr preuenting these fearefull effects they who are tempted to this extreame must be very watchfull ouer themselues and seriously meditate of those premonitions which tend to this purpose as Let him that thinketh he standeth take heed lest he fall Thou standest by Faith be not high minded but feare Take heed that no man fall away from the grace of God Take heed lest at any time there be in any of you an euill heart of vnbeleefe in departing from the liuing God Let vs feare lest at any time by forsaking the promise any of you should seeme to be depriued Watch and prau that ye enter not into temptation If any withdraw himselfe my soule shall haue no pleasure in him Not without iust cause are these and such like premonitions much vrged and pressed by the Holy Ghost for well hee knoweth how prone we are to fall away from grace Lead iron stone or any other earthy heauy thing is not more prone to fall downeward if it be not continually drawne and held vp by some meanes or other nor water more subiect to waxe cold if fire be not kept vnder it then we are to decay in grace if wee bee not watchfull ouer our selues and carefull to vse all good meanes for nourishing and increasing thereof Besides we are subiect to many temptations which are as water to fire they will soone quench the Spirit if we be not the more watchfull and carefull to stirre it vp Yea if once we waxe secure selfe-conceited and ouer-bold wee prouoke God to giue vs ouer to
12. Of the neede of Hope in regard of our owne weakenesse 4 VVE haue need of Hope in regard of our own weakenesse for we are very prone by nature to thinke that God forgetteth vs and remembreth not his promises made to vs if at least it be a long time before he accomplish them or if he bring vs to any streights and seeme to hide his face from vs. Dauid was herewith sorely tempted it made him cry out and say How long wilt thou forget me O Lord for euer How long wilt thou hide thy face from me But what vpheld him himselfe sheweth that it was his hope For in the same Psalme he saith I trust in thy mercy It is the office of Hope in this respect to make vs hope aboue hope as Abraham and against sence as Iob. Thus we see that hope is so needfull as there is no liuing in this world without it herein is the prouerbe verified If it were not for hope the heart would breake §. 13. Of getting and preseruing Hope LEt vs therefore in the next place obserue how it may be first gotten secondly preserued thirdly wel vsed 1 It is gotten by the same meanes that faith is for it is the daughter of Faith The meanes which beget faith do immediatly hereupon beget hope 2 It is preserued by two meanes especially 1. By a due consideration and ful perswasion of Gods properties which make vs patiently abide for the accomplishment of his promises 2 By a faithful remēbrance of Gods former dealings Foure speciall properties of God are for this purpose to be obserued 1. His free grace 2. His infinite power 3. His infallible truth 4. His vnsearchable wisdome For being in our hearts perswaded by faith First That the same grace which mooued God to make any gracious promise will further mooue him to accomplish it And secondly That hee is able to doe it And thirdly So faithfull that not a word which he hath said shall fall to the ground Yea and fourthly That he is most wise in appointing the fittest times and seasons for all things so as may most make to his owne glory and his childrens good we are thus brought to waite and to continue waiting on God without prescribing any time to him till he hath actually performed what he faithfully promised §. 14. Of Experience nourishing Hope GODS former dealings both with others and also with our selues being faithfully remembred worke such an experience as cannot but bring forth Hope For this experience doth euidently demonstrate what God is willing and able to doe Hereby was Dauids Hope much cherished and strengthened This meanes doth St Iames vse to strengthen the hope of Christian Iewes bringing to their memories Gods dealing with Iob. For this end we must acquaint our selues with the Histories of former times especially such as are recorded in the holy Scriptures for Whatsoeuer things are written afore time namely in those Scriptures are written for our learning that wee thorow patience and comfort of the Scriptures might haue Hope It is also good to be acquainted with other Ecclesiasticall Histories but especially to obserue Gods dealings in our owne times The experience which most of all bringeth forth Hope is that which we haue of Gods dealing with our selues whereof we haue two notable examples one of Iacob Ge● 32. 10. The other of Dauid 1 Sam. 17. 37. For this end we are well to obserue and remember all those gracious fauours which God from time to time vouchsafeth to vs and not carelesly let them slip at the time present nor negligently forget them in the time past The Israelites in the wildernesse failed in both these They vnderstood not Gods wonders while God was doing them neither afterwards did they remember the multitude of Gods mercies This was the cause that they could not waite till the time appointed for their entring into Canaan was come but fainted and fell in the Wildernesse §. 15. Of meditating on the end of Hope TO these may be added as a further meanes to vphold and cherish Hope a serious and frequent meditation of the end of our Hope namely that rich and glorious inheritance which Christ hath purchased for his Saints and God hath promised vnto them Much might be saide to amplifie this point but I will referre it to the priuate meditation of the Reader and let it the rather be meditated of because we see the hopes of worldly men to be sustained with matters which are no way comparable herevnto Obserue what their hope is in earthly things which are very vncertaine The husbandman waiteth for the fruite of the earth and hath long patience for it vntill hee receiue the former and the latter raine As the Husband-man so the Souldier the Marriner the Merchant who not Their hopes make them vnter much and send themselues forth to great dangers yet oft they faile of their hopes Shall Christians of all others cast away their Hope the end whereof is more excellent then all things in Sea and Land which also they are sure to receiue if they faint not Cast not away your confidence which hath great recompence of reward §. 16. Of the resemblance betwixt Hope and an Anchor 3 THe vse of hope may fi●ly be set forth by that other metaphor whereunto Hope is resembled namely an Anchor Heb. 6. 19. 1 It must be cast vpon a sure ground If an anchor becast into a bottomlesse sea where is no ground or on quick sands which are no sure ground it is of no vse the shippe may be tossed vp and downe and suffer wracke for all that The onely sure ground of hope is Gods promise reuealed in his Word That this is a most firme ground cannot bee doubted of vnlesse the goodnesse power and faithfulnesse of God be called into question For as God himselfe is so is his Word faithfull and true sure and certaine nothing more firme and stable Till heauen and earth perish one iot or title of Gods word shall not scape till all things be fulfilled Dauid cast the anchor of his hope vpon this ground We are therefore to acquaint our selues with Gods manifold promises 2 It must be fast fixed on that sure ground If an anchor onely lie vpon the ground and be not fixed on it as good be without ground Then is hope fast fixed on Gods promise when his promise is stedfastly beleeued Faith maketh a way and entrance for hope Abraham first beleeued Gods promise and then waited for it First therfore labour for true and sound faith in Gods promises then will thy hope be sure and stedfast 3 It must oft be setled and fixed anew If an Anchor loose and slacken after it hath once been fastned a storme may cartie the shippe away where then is the benefit of the former fastening Our hope in regard of our owne weakenesse and the
he may fall into so great a gulfe of sin and be so neere the pit of eternall damnation as hee will haue cause againe and againe to repent his folly as wee haue * before shewed Let vs therefore worke out our saluation with feare and trembling Vnto which saluation that we may be kept blamelesse The Grace of the Lord Iesus Christ and the loue of God and the Communion of the Holy Ghost be with vs all Amen FINIS AN Alphabeticall Index of the particular points contained in this Treatise A ADuersity a matter of thanksgiuing 406 The vse of faith in Aduersitie 268 AEdification to bee aymed at by Ministers 526 Affiance in God 558 All sorts of people must fight 51 All assaults must be held out 109 Christ offered to All. 228. 587 Ambassadors of God are Ministers 535 Apostles especiall Ambassadors 536 The dignity of Ambassadors 537 The duties of Ambassadors 539 Gods mercie in sending Ambassadors 544 Christs Ambassadors worst of all handled 547 Amen the vse of it 431 Amen to be vttered aloud 434 Apostasie 604 Apostates 605 Ardencie in prayer 353 Signes of extraordinary Ardencie 441 Armour of God why so called 19 Armour of God compleate 22 Be bould in the Armour of God 23 No safety without the Armor of God 33 They safe who well vse the Armour of God 35 Most part of it defensiue 118 Assurance of faith 261 Assurance a propertie of hope 297 B BAbling in prayer 499 Beleefe see Faith None sinne in Beleeuing 232 It is a sinne not to Beleeue 233 Blasphemie 576 What it is 577 How hainous a sinne it is 579 Blasphemies of Papists 580 Blasphemie to bee punished by Magistrates 581 Occasion of Blasphemie not to bee giuen 582 Blasphemie may bee pardoned by God 583 Blasphemie accompanieth the sinne against the Holy Ghost 598 Blessings of God reckoned vp as temporall c. 403 Why many Saints want outward Blessings 412 Boldnes needful for Ministers 523. 557 Wherein Ministers must shew boldnes 524 Ouer-secure Boldnesse 258 Brother a title of humility and gentlenesse 4. c. All Christians as Brethren 4 C CAllings which are peculiar to be most respected 114. 534 Canonicall houres 476 Charge euery mans Charge to be discharged 114. 534 Chiliasts arguments for redemption out of hell answered 618 Christs comming to iudgement whether in the day or night-time vncertaine 490 A superstitious waking for Christs comming ibid. Compunction see Griefe Confidence in Gods mighty power 15 Confidence in ones selfe vaine 11 Confidence in creatures vaine 11 Conscience what is the righteousnesse thereof 145 A cleare Conscience what it is 252 How it commeth from faith 253 The ground of it loue ibid. It is accōpanied with a pure hart 255 It extendeth it selfe to all duties 256 It endureth to the end 257 A quiet Conscience what it is 247 No wicked mans Cōscience is quiet 248 Constancie 110 Corrections of God in wisdome and loue 187 189 They are not simply tokens of wrath 139 Some despise them some faint vnder them 183. c. How kept frō those extreams 184. 185 Courage spirituall needfull 6. 114 Cursing Saints an horrible thing 392 D DAmnation eternall 618 They certainely Damned whose sinnes are not pardoned 621 Danger must make watchfull 45 Darknesse spirituall 76 Dead not to be prayed for 377 Dead not to be prayed vnto 507 Defence not in ones selfe 99 Most part of Christians armour Defensiue 118 Desire of Christ 223. 243 Notes of true Desire 244 Desire of performing ones functiō 558 Deprecation against euill 370 Despaire whence it ariseth 47 Temptations to Despaire are fiery darts 282 Yeeld not to Despaire 234. 284 DIVELL The Diuell our enemie 37 What Diuels were by creation and what they lost by their fall 37. 38 What maketh Diuels terrible 38. 81. 87. 89 The Diuels subtiltie wyles and shifts 39. c. The Diuell principall in all temptations 56 The Diuels haue a dominion 61 Diuels power 64. 65 They cannot doe what they wil. 66. 72 Nor doe any thing against nature 66 Nor worke miracles 66 Nor force mans will 68 Nor search mans heart 68. 69 Nor foretell things to come 69 Diuels extraordinary power wherein it consisteth 70 How far it is diminisht by their fall 71 Diuels rule onely in this world 75 Their vassals are ignorant and euill men 76 How men may come out of Diuels power 78 Diuels are spirits 79 Diuels are not qualities 80 Diuels extreamely euill 83. 84 Diuels many in number 86 Diuels haue an head 87 Their number makes them terrible 87 Comfort against the power and number of Diuels 87. 88 Diuels aduantage in place 89 Diuels fight to spoile men of heauenly things 92 Diuels malice 93 Diuels darts and fiery darts 281. c. Times wherin Diuels shal be loose 105 Diuels haue an hand in afflicting Saints 177 Diuels can euery way annoy vs. 280 Giue not place to the Diuell 63. 103 Resist and driue the Diuell away 313 Drousie praying 493 E EIaculations of heart 479 Elect cannot sinne against the Holy Ghost Endeauour of man must goe with Gods assistance 29 Euils what to be prayed against 370 Kindes of Euill 371. c. Euils from which Saints are freed are more then iustly they can feare 413 How Euils may prooue matter of thanksgiuing ibid. Examination to be vsed at a Fast 460 Experience vpholdeth hope 306 F FAinting in affliction 182 Saints subiect to Fainting 184 How kept from Fainting 185 Family-prayer 437 FAITH What Faith is 257 Diuers kinds of Faith 208 True iustifying Faith 210 Faith especially to be taught and learned 199 The excellency and necessity of Faith 198 Faith cōmendeth Gods properties 200 How Faith resteth on Gods iustice 202 Great is the need of Faith 284 And great is the worth of it 279. 285 Faith maketh the Word profitable 323 Faith and righteousnesse haue distinct vses 152 How Faith hope differ agree 298 How Faith and presumption differ 287 Faith fitly compared to a shield 214 Faith fitly compared to Balsom 283 How Faith is gotten The Author of it 216 The meanes of getting Faith 218 The order of working Faith 220 Faith presupposeth knowledge ibid. Faith ariseth from sence of misery and desire of remedy ibid. What man must do to haue Faith 223 Motiues to Faith 224 Faith not hard to the willing 289 Mans vnworthinesse no hinderance to Faith 227. 292 Triall of Faith It may be knowne 235 Imperfect Faith may be sound 292 True Faith may stand with doubting 238 Faith operatiue as fire 245 Faith the first grace A mother grace 202. c. Faith workes loue other graces 203 Faith causeth a quiet conscience 247 And a cleare conscience 252 Faith causeth a pure heart 255 Faith may be as a tree in winter 252 How farre Faith may be lost 259 Faith falleth not cleane away 293 How Faith may bee preserued and encreased 263 How Faith is well vsed 266 Two vses of Faith in prosperitie and two in aduersitie 267 Helpes of
Faith 268 Faith onely keepeth off the Diuells darts 281 And quencheth the fire of them 283 Wretched are such as want Faith 284 Satan most assaulteth Faith his wyles against it 286 Faithfulnes required in Ministers 540 Wherin their Faithfulnes consists 540 Fasting 446 The seuerall kinds of Fasting 446 The difference betwixt a religious Fast and other Fasts 448 How farre al sustenance is to be borne in the time of a Fast 449 What other things beside food are to be forborne in a Fast 451 How far the body is to be afflicted in a Fast 453 The occasions of a Fast 454 Of set times for a Fast 455 The continuance of a Fast 456 A Fast in whole and in part 456. 457 Supplication the principall end of a Fast 459 Examination another end of Fasting 460 Humiliatiō a third end of Fasting 461 Mortification a fourth end of Fasting 462 Grounds of Fasting vnder the new Testament 463 Motiues to Fast 463. 464 Publike and priuate Fasts 467 Fearefulnesse 8. 261 Flesh and Blood 53 Our enemies more then Flesh and blood 54 Flying affoords no safetie 119 Forgetfulnesse of Gods promises dangerous 269 Forgiuenesse of sinne See Sinne. G GHOST How the Holy Ghost is gotten 485 How knowne when the Holy Ghost is in vs. 484 How the Holy Ghost prayeth for vs. 482. c. Why needful that the Holy Ghost pray for vs. 483 Prayer wrought by the Holy Ghost commeth out of mans spirit 486 How the sinne against the Holy Ghost may be discerned 382 Who commit that sinne are not to bee prayed for 381 Gods properties commended by faith 200 Gods grace mercy power truth props to Faith 225 Goodnesse of God See Mercy Gospell what it is 165 Why peace is attributed to it 167 The Ghospell of peace prepares a mans heart against trouble 168 The Gospell assureth that nothing shal hurt vs. 170 Operations of the Holy Ghost 597 How sin is committed against the Holy Ghost 596 Blasphemie accompanieth the sinne against the Holy Ghost 598 What is the sin against the holy Ghost 598. c. Difference bewixt the sin against the Holy Ghost and other sins 603. c. Who may fall into the sin against the Holy Ghost 605 They who neuer professed the Gospel may sin against the Holy Ghost 606 The Scribes and Pharisies sinned against the Holy Ghost 607 The sin against the Holy Ghost cannot be pardoned 608. 614. c. Why the sin against the Holy Ghost is vnpardonable 615 The certainty of his damnation who sinneth against the Holy Ghost 617 How the sin aginst the Holy Ghost may be preuented 622 The Elect cannot fall into the sinne against the Holy Ghost The Gospel assureth that all things shal turne to our good 171 The Gospell reuealeth a remedy for mans misery 221 The Gospell is a mystery 528 The Gospell is the proper obiect of preaching ibid. Difference betwixt Law Gospell 101 A blessing to haue the Gospell 168 Grace of God free 227 The Graces of God to be imploied 24 Spirituall Graces for defence 19 Euery Grace to be manifested 26 Grace to be added to Grace 29 Grace decayed may be repaired 100 Spirituall wounds healed 285 Griefe of heart before faith 240 Causes and fruits of true griefe 242 H HEretikes peruert the Word 331 HEART A pure Heart Integrity of Heart 255. c. Heauen How far we may be made partakers of it while here we liue 411 HOPE What Hope is 296 Why it is called Hope of saluation 295 Assurance and patience are properties of Hope 297 Vncertainty no property of Hope 298 How Hope faith agree differ 299 Hope fitly resembled to an helmet 300 The vse of Hope 301 Hope necessary in foure respects 302 How Hope is gotten preserued 305 The end of Hope oft to bee meditated on 307 Hope an anchor 308 Hope to bee cast on a sure ground fast fixed and the hold of it oft renewed ibid. Satans wiles against Hope 309 False grounds of Hope 310 Humiliation an end of fasting 461 I IEalousie Good Iealousie 557. 559 Ignorance a fearefull sin 338 Jgnorant persons the diuels vassals 76 Illumination before Faith 239 Imprecations lawfull and vnlawfull 397. c. Vsuall Imprecations taxed 395 No man may pray against himself 394 Incredulity a grieuous sinne 234 IOY Spirituall Ioy. Notes thereof 250 Ioy of Hypocrites not sound ibid. Iustice See Righteousnesse Who are Ouer-Iust 158 Seuerity of Iustice caused by abuse of mercy 595 K KNowledge of the Word necessarie 321. 337 Meanes to get Knowledge 321 Things Known to be made Known 527 L LAw worketh a sight and sence of our misery 220 The Law is a rule of righteousnes 143 The Law and Gospell differ 101 Libertines carelesse in doing what they may 30. 31 Loue commeth from faith 203. 253 Loue the ground of a cleare conscience 253 Exhortations in Loue. 6 M MAgistrates must cut off enemies 314 Magistrates ought to punish blasphemers 581 Man the obiect of Gods mercy 584 Mans vngratefulnesse 586 Sonne of Man See Sonne Meanes take not away the vse of faith 292 Neglect of Meanes a tempting of God 31 The danger of neglecting Meanes 33 Mercy of God abundant 101. 227. 572 Gods Mercy in forgiuing sinne 572 The extent of Gods Mercy in forgiuing all sins 574 Man the principall obiect of Gods Mercy 584 Mercy of God offered to all 587 Mercy of God ouercomes mans vngratefulnesse 593 Mercy of God abused turned into seueritie 595 Merit What is required to cause merit 149 Mans righteousnesse cannot bee meritorious 150 Millenaries see Chiliasts Ministers Ambassadors 535 Ministers dignitie and duties 538 539 Ministers haue no ability of themselues 513 Ministers calling most excellent and difficult 510 Ministers most opposed against 511 Ministers false most dangerous 512 Ministers to be prayed for 509 Especially if restrained 556 Ministers to be highly esteemed 537 Ministers may not be disgraced 538 Ministers comfort and encouragement 539 Ministers must make knowne what they themselues know 527 Ministers must deliuer nothing but what they haue receiued 540 And al that they haue receiued 541 Ministers must deliuer the Word as Gods word 541 In Ministers is required Grauitie Authority and sinceritie 542 Ministers boldnesse 522 Ministers must refute errours and reproue vices 315 Ministers must carry themselues according to their present cōdition 562 Ministers must vse what libertie they can 553 Ministers inhibited whether they may preach 554 Ministers are preachers to themselues 52 Gods mercy in ordaining Ministers 554 The word may not be reiected because Ministers are men 545 Ministers oft vsed as malefactors and why 547 Mans weaknesse succoured and faith supported by the Ministery of men 544 Mortification an end of fasting 462 MYSTERY What a Mystery is 529 The Gospell is a Mystery ibid. A Mystery requireth study and prayer 530 Knowledge of a Mystery no matter of boasting but of thankesgiuing 531 No maruell that many erre in Mysteries ibid. N NIght-vigils 489 Vncertaine whether Christs comming to iudgement shall
were as good be without treasure as haue abundance for he wanteth in his greatest abundance because hee vseth not that he hath but bringeth forth and imployeth it for his own and others good so doth a good man with the treasure of grace which God hath bestowed on him Excellent Metaphors to illustrate and vrge this point All the benefit and good of a thing commeth from the vse of it as armour rusting by the walls side as fire smothered with ashes as money cankering in chests so are the graces of Gods Spirit if they be not imployed though in themselues they be neuer so excellent yet to vs and others they are fruitlesse and vnprofitable without a right vse of them This Dauid no doubt well knew and therefore hid not Gods righteousnesse in his heart Vse 1 Farre short come they of this Apostolicall direction who vpon conceit that they haue as good armour as the best please themselues therein and yet shew forth no practise thereof knowledge they haue and well are they able to discourse of the kindes of graces and of the differences betwixt current and counterfeit grace as also of the many wiles of Satan and of the meanes to auoid them and yet no proofe doe they giue of the soundnesse of any grace in themselues For example many imagine that they haue very good and sound faith and yet liue altogether by sence for while all things goe well according to their desire they can beleeue and depend vpon God but when any crosse falleth vpon them then their shield of faith is to seeke euery dart pierceth them to the very heart Other conceit they haue a good brest-plate of righteousnes and yet no practise of pietie none of charitie to be obserued in them They are like those of whom Saint Iames speaketh that can say to such as are naked and destitute of daily food bee you warmed and filled notwithstanding they giue them not those things which are needfull for the body Vse 2 Let vs for our parts make proofe of the graces wee haue what armour wee seeme to haue let it bee seene on our backes Thinke we that we haue the shield of faith Let vs liue by our faith as the Patriarches did or the brest-plate of righteousnesse Let it couer vs as a robe let vs be so conscionable in practising the seuerall duties thereof that with the testimony of a good conscience we may say to God as Nehemiah did Remember me O my God in goodnesse for all that I haue done for thy people Or the girdle of verity let vs so vprightly and sincerely behaue our selues as we may with comfort say with honest Hezechiah Lord remember how I haue walked before thee in truth Thus may the generall doctrine be applied in all the particular branches of this Christian armour which that we may the rather doe note what is further required that the whole armour be put on §. 7. Euery grace to be vsed AS this particle whole is annexed to armour to commend vnto vs the sufficiencie of the armour of God whereof we haue heard before so this compound word whole armour is inferred vpon that action of putting on to teach vs that it is not sufficient to put on some parts and peeces thereof but euery part and peece the whole armour must be put on From the true scope of the Apostles meaning I gather that The power of euery sanctifying grace must be manifest in the life of a Christian This was it whereunto he exhorted before saying Let vs in all things grow vp c. There he vseth a Metaphor taken from the members of a naturall body implying that spirituall graces are to the spirit as fleshly members to a body now if the body grow in some parts only and not in euery part proportionably as if it should grow all in the head and not answerably in the legs or all in the shoulders and not at all in the thighes it would bee but a monstrous body or if it abound with noisome humors which make it swel in some parts those humors wil be so far from preseruing the body that they will rather impaire the health and shorten the life of it So if a Christian shall be hot in faith and cold in loue or haue great knowledge and shew little obedience or bee full of deuotion and empty of discretion surely hee is a monstrous Christian the want of some graces make the other to bee of no vse Such professors are a shame and dishonor to others they are full of noysome and distempered humors which will destroy that shew of spirituall life which they seeme to haue Fitly may they be compared to Nebuchadnezzars Image whose head was of gold but his feet of yron and clay what was the end of that Image the feet therof were smitten and so all broken together Such is like to be the end of al monstrous Christians But is it possible that any one Christian should haue all sanctifying graces Yea verily it is not onely possible but also necessarie that not onely any one but euery one be endued with euery kinde of sanctifying grace which appertaineth to the essentiall being of a Christian For regeneration is as perfect in the kinde thereof as our naturall birth Men ordinarily are borne with all the parts and members of a man if not they are eyther monsters or at least imperfect but in the spirituall birth which is from aboue euen of God there is no imperfection of parts there are no monsters all that are borne of the Spirit haue all the essential parts of the Spirit thus are al alike though not in measure yet in number of graces For as the flesh hath corrupted euery power of the soule part of the body so doth the Spirit renew euery power and part of both The Apostle testifieth of the Corinthians that in all things they were made rich and not destitute of any gift Forceable and weightie motiues there are to vrge this point as 1. God maketh nothing in vaine Now then God hauing made this whole armor whole armour must be put on If a carefull and wise Captaine should prouide sufficient armour for all his souldiers and some of them bee carelesse in putting on euery peece thereof might hee not bee offended with them and that iustly Much more should we prouoke God by neglecting any thing which he in his good prouidence hath prouided for vs. 2. Wee stand in great need of euery peece of this armour for vnlesse we put on euery peece we lye open to our enemies euen as if we had put on neuer a peece for they are very subtil they narrowly view vs on euery side and soone can espie if any part be naked What if a souldier haue an helmet and want a brest-plate if a dart light vpon his brest and pierce to his heart what good getteth he by
likewise truth in all these doth very much strengthen and vphold a man in time of triall and keepeth him from fainting This was the ground of Iobs courage and constancy This added an edge to Hezek●ahs prayers This made Dauid bold to referre himselfe to Gods triall examination This vpheld Paul against all that could be laid against him §. 5. Of getting truth Point 3 THe account which wee are to make of this spirituall belt is declared by Solomon who exhorteth to buy the truth and not sell it This aduice concerneth two sorts of men 1. Such as haue it not they must labour to get it 2. Such as haue it they must hold it fast That this direction may bee the better applied wee are well to search whether we haue this girdle of verity or no. Fitly may I apply that to truth which the Apostle speaketh of faith Examine your selues whether yee haue truth proue your selues There is no grace which maketh a more sensible difference betwixt the children of God and of the Diuel then truth In this examination we must proceed in order §. 6. How triall of truth may be made 1. TRiall is to bee made of the truth of our iudgement whether the religion which we professe and all the principles thereof be assuredly sound and true To this tendeth that exhortation of Saint Paul Trie all things and that of Saint Iohn Trie the spirits For this end the direction giuen by Christ Search the Scriptures is to be obserued and followed as it was by the men of Berea for the Scriptures are the word of truth and the voice of God the highest and chiefest Iudge a most perfect sufficient impartiall Iudge They who make any other Iudge may soone be deceiued Here see what wrong Popish guides doe to their followers in keeping from them this touch-stone of truth See what ideots they bee who thinke it sufficient to beleeue as the Church doth Such are they among vs whose onely ground of faith is the common receiued Doctrine be it true or false No maruell they be soone shaken and remoued they want this girdle of truth which should strengthen them 2 If wee find truth seated in our vnderstanding then are we further to obserue whether like the ointment powred on Aarons head and the dew that fell on the mountaines of Sion it descend from the head to the heart whether the heart be vpright before God or no. It appeareth that Dauid thorowly searched his heart for the truth thereof or else durst he not with such boldnesse and confidence haue referred it to Gods triall the like I might instance in Iob Hezechiah Paul and many others Great neede there is of thorow trying the heart for it is deceitfull aboue all things and that not onely to others who cannot discerne the secrets thereof but also to men themselues if at least they diue not into the bottom of it Some be such grosse hypocrites that they cannot but in their hearts condemne themselues as Ananias and Saphira others so simple as they beguile themselues like Peter and the other Disciples In all ages many haue thought better of the integrity of their heart then by proofe and euent it hath fallen out to be The best triall of our heart will bee by our disposition when wee are alone or when wee can conceale our thoughts and cogitations from all men yea euen from the very suspition and coniecture of men if then they be vpright and therefore vpright because we desire to approue our selues to God as Ioseph then may we be assured there is truth in them 3 From the heart which is a fountaine we are to proceede to the streames thereof our speeches and actions and search whether from this cleare spring there flow forth cleare waters and so see what correspondency there is betwixt them Now here we are not onely to obserue whether our speeches doe agree with our knowledge of the thing we vtter and with euidence of the thing it selfe or whether our actions be plaine or fraudulent and deceitfull but also whether that true and good communication which we vtter and those true and honest actions which we performe doe come from the good treasure of a true heart For our helpe in this triall note these few directions §. 7. Directions for triall of truth in speech and action 1. VVHat is the ground of truth in our words and actions what moueth vs thereunto whether popular applause as the Sribes and Pharises who did all to be seene of men for they loued the praise of men more then of God or credit and estimation as Saul or profit as the Schechemites or respect to some men as Ioash and his people or desire of quiet and auoiding trouble as they which became Iewes in Mordecaies time or company and example of others as Ananias and Saphira or intent to worke some mischiefe as Iezabel and Ishmael These and such other by-respects being the ground and cause of our actions doe plainely argue that there is no sound truth in them 2 What is the extent of that truth we make shew of whether it be in all things This was the proofe of the Apostles good conscience for truth is a leuen which seasoneth the whole lumpe So as they which at sometimes and in some things are watchfull ouer their words and actions but carelesse at other times in other things want this leuen of truth as Herod 3 What the things are wherein wee are most strictt whether they be matters of greatest weight and moment They who pretend much truth in smal and light matters and are carelesse and dissolute in great and weighty matters haue no sound truth in them Such were the Scribes and Pharises 4 What order we obserue whether first we beginne with our selues and looke to our owne speeches and actions Many will be more forward and zealous in stirring vp others to all manner of truth then themselues yea they will checke others for failing in such things wherein themselues are most faulty surely there is no sound truth in such Christ maketh this a note of hypocrisie §. 8. Of buying truth THus are wee to search our selues thorowout and if vpon this search wee cannot find that wee haue this girdle of verity then we must obserue the first part of the Wisemans aduice Buy the truth that is vse all the meanes which possibly we can for attaining vnto and possessing it yea though it be with a departing from and forsaking of many things which seemed profitable and pleasant vnto vs because they and truth could not well stand together The Metaphor of buying implieth a letting goe of some things for the attaining of other things Excellentlie is this set forth vnto vs by two parables which Christ vttered one of a man
For auoiding this we are duely to weigh what is the end and vse of Righteousnesse Though it be not a meritorious cause of saluation yet is it a meanes of attaining to saluation the way appointed of God for vs to walke in thereunto so that although we bee not saued for our Righteousnesse yet we cannot be saued without it The vnrighteous shal not inherite the Kingdome of God Without holinesse no man shall see God For God hath chosen vs that we should be holy and Christ hath redeemed vs that we should serue him in holinesse and Righteousnesse For this end appeared the grace of God which bringeth saluation vnto all men that we should liue righteously Vnto holinesse God hath called vs and we are created vnto good workes Thus we see how false a suggestion it is that Righteousnesse should be needlesse It is cleane contrary to the expresse charge of the Apostle that we should learne to shew forth good workes for necessary vses Whereas it is pretended that the shield of Faith is sufficient we are to hold it for a ruled case that God maketh nothing in vaine Those things which God hath ioyned together let no man put asunder Wherefore though we saw no diuerse and distinct ends of Faith and Righteousnesse yet God hauing appointed both both must be vsed But there are diuers vses apparent to all that will obserue them Righteousnesse is needfull to testifie our obedience and thankfulnesse to God to profit our brethren to proue our faith to giue euidence of our election vocation and iustification and to maintaine our cause against the cauils of profanesse impiety wickednesse c. Faith is needfull to apply Christs Righteousnes to support vs against the imperfections and defects of our Righteousnesse and for many other good vses whereof wee shall heare on the 16. verse §. 9. Of the issue of Righteousnesse A Third sleight that the diuell hath is to perswade men that this Brest-plate of Righteousnesse is very combersome and toilesome and it wil make vs weary for it is against our naturall disposition and wil be an hinderance of honour wealth ease pleasure c. Herewith he beguiled Esau Demas and many other I may too truely say it that herewith he beguileth most which professe the truth of Religion Some cast away this Brest-plate for promotion sake not caring how they bribe flatter please and fawne vpon great men others for wealth oppressing defrauding and may wayes wronging their neighbours others for their pleasures profaning the Sabbath swearing eating drinking vnto gluttony and drunkennesse vsing vnlawfull games immoderately pursuing lawfull pastimes attyring themselues in strange apparrell aboue their estate vnbeseeming their place c. Others to auoid outward reproch for feare directly against their heart and conscience I speake it with great horror of heart are profane and vnrighteous because it is counted a disgrace to be Righteous For auoiding this we must haue more respect to the assured issue of Righteousnesse then to some present seeming inconueniences thereof We know that the Armour which souldiers weare on their bodies is for the time combersome and heauy yet for safety they refuse not to weare it they consider that it is much better to endure a smal burthen for a while then to endanger their liues and lose the victory Now such is the blessed fruit and issue of Righteousnesse that all the honour profit and pleasure that can be lost or all the reproch or shame that can be endured for it are not worthy of the Crowne of Righteousnesse which the Lord the righteous Iudge will giue vnto his righteous seruants It were almost an infinite taske to declare what the Scripture the word of Truth hath deliuered concerning the issue of Righteousnesse Generally it saith The Lord loueth Righteousnesse Verily there is a reward for the Righteous Blessings are on the head of the Righteous c. Particularly for the righteous person himselfe in this life it is said that The eyes of the Lord are vpon the Righteous God will grant the desire of the Righteous The Lord deliuereth the Righteous out of all trouble The Righteous shall neuer be forsaken The Righteous shall be glad The Righteous shall flourish like a Palme tree The Righteous are hold as a Lyon The way of the Righteous shineth as the light c. For his death The Righteous hath hope in his death The Righteous are taken away from the euill to come After death The memortall of the Righteous shall be blessed The Righteous shall be had in euerlasting remembrance At the resurrection The Righteous shall goe into life eternall The Righteous shall shine as the Sunne in the Kingdome of their Father For their posterity The generation of the Righteous shall bee blessed Their seed shall not begge their bread c. Heere we see matter enough to answere all the discommodities that may be obiected against Righteousnesse Moses hauing an eye to the recompence of the reward forsooke the honours pleasures and riches of Aegypt three such baits as all the world most greedily snap at Christ for the ioy which was set before him endured the crosse and despised the shame Thus if we set the end and issue of Righteousnesse before vs it will make vs to let goe all earthly matters to hold it fast for our soules find much ease through the burthen that the flesh feeleth hereby In a word great is the dignity and admirable are the priuiledges of the Righteous §. 10. Of the Comfort of Righteousnesse OVt of the answer to his first suggestion if the diuell preuaile by none of the former he will seeke to perswade vs that this Brest-plate of Righteousnesse can stand vs in no steed because All our Righteousnesse is as a menstruous cloath all is but dung and losse Thus hee beguileth many weake Christians and often bringeth them to vtter despaire Answ For auoiding this we are to be informed that though our Righteousnesse considered in it selfe and compared with the perfect rule of the law be exceeding defectiue or opposed to the Righteousnesse of Christ be dung and losse yet as it is a worke of Gods holy Spirit in vs proceeding from an heart purified by faith all the imperfections therof being couered with the perfect Righteousnesse of Christ it is acceptable vnto God and such a thing as we may receiue much comfort in Therefore though our Righteousnesse in it selfe affoord no matter of boasting yet in regard of Gods gracious acceptation it is a thing much to be laboured after yea also to be reioyced in §. 11. Of all the parts of Righteousnesse vnited IF the diuell cannot by any meanes bring vs wholly to reiect all Righteousnesse he will endeuour to make vs carelesse in some parts thereof or at least negligent in taking the
of true Patience FRom that which hath beene deliuered of the Gospel of Peace that maine point which we haue in hand by necessary consequence followeth that the onely meanes of preparing our soules patiently to beare all crosses and constantly to goe through all troubles in our Christian course is a right knowledge of the glad tidings of our reconciliation with God It was this Gospel of Peace wherewith God encouraged Abraham to come out of his owne countrey and with a patient and prepared heart to passe ouer all these difficulties whereunto he should be brought This was that glad tidings which the Lord brought to Moses to Ioshua to Gedeon and many others for that very end I might instance this in many thousand examples and shew how the courage and patience of the Saints which hath beene admirable to the world hath beene grounded on this sure foundation the Gospel of Peace For the truth is that all the Prophets all the Apostles all the true Christian confessors and Martyrs in all ages who haue endured more then flesh and blood could possibly with patience beare haue had their feete shod that is their hearts armed and prepared with assurance of their reconciliation with God but hauing such a cloude of witnesses I will content my selfe with naming two or three Many and sundry were the troubles inward and outward by open enemies and deceitfull friends on Sea and land which Saint Paul went thorow and that with an inuincible courage and resolution the cause of all is euident to be that knowledge which he had of Gods loue to him and of his reconciliation with God On this ground of confidence he did after an holy manner insult ouer all aduerse power But Iob yet suffered much more and his patience was so admirable that the holy Ghost maketh choice of him aboue all other as a marke to behold and a patterne to follow What was the ground of his patience surely many of those diuine speeches which he vttered to his wife and friends euidently shew that the knowledge of his reconciliation with God was it which made him so confident and patient There is yet another who farre exceeded these and all other Saints both in suffering and patient bearing namely Christ the assurance of his Fathers loue was the ground of his patience as appeareth both by that profession which he made thereof a little before his suffering saying vnto his Father Thou louedst me before the foundation of the world and also by those titles which in his most bitter agony he gaue vnto God as in the Garden O my Father c. On the Crosse My God my God §. 8. Of the meanes whereby Patience is wrought THus we see the truth of this point sufficiently proued that the Gospel of Peace is the ground of Patience now further consider how it doth prepare the soule of man to endure This it doth by perswading mans mind and resoluing his heart of these two principles 1 That nothing shall hurt him 2 That all things shall turne to his good For the first most sure it is that nothing can make vs miserable but onely sinne Sinne is the very sting of all troubles aed crosses sinne is it which maketh them to be heauy burdens this maketh trouble of conscience to be intollerable death and the graue to be most terrible the diuell which hath the power of death to bee so horrible yea the Law of God and God himselfe to bee so full of dread and terrour Let sinne be remoued and our conscience assured thereof then may we then will we comfort our selues in all troubles for then shall we appeare before the Throne of God as before the mercy-seat of a gracious Father and take his Law as a direction to teach vs how to please him Then shall wee esteeme all crosses as corrections of the Lord for our profit yea as his physicke to purge out our corruptions as proofes of his graces in vs. Then will our conscience rest quiet and well contented then shall we thinke of death as of a gate to heauen and of the graue as of a sweet bed to rest in till the day of the consummation of our eternall blisse in body and soule yea then shall wee not need to feare the diuell because he can haue no power ouer vs much lesse hell and the torment thereof Therefore doth Dauid annexe blessednesse to remission of sin so that vpon this ground might Christ well say to the man sicke of the palsie Sonne be of good comfort This being so the Gospel of Peace which assureth vs of our reconciliation with God and of the remission of our sinne assureth vs also that nothing can hurt vs because the sting of euery thing which is sinne is pulled out If the forked tongue of an adder the poysonous teeth of a snake the sharpe sting of a waspe be pulled out what hurt can they doe For the second by the Gospel c We know that all things worke together for good vnto them that loue God For the Gospel assuring vs of reconciliation with God how can we but be assured that he tendereth vs as his children and with a fatherly affection seeketh our good in all things which by his good prouidence he bringeth vpon vs. The prosperity of those with whom God is reconciled is a blessing afflictions are for their good so is death and the graue yea I may truly say that the sins of those who are accepted of God do turn to their good not that sinne is any way good in it selfe being in it selfe the greatest euill that is or can be and the cause of all euill of punishment but that God through his infinite power and wisedome who can bring good out of euill ●s at first he caused light to shine out of darkenesse doth so order it like vnto a skilfull Apothecary who can so order and temper ranke poison as it shall proue very medicinable Quest What is that good can come from sinne Answ 1 In regard of God whose mercy and grace is manifested and magnified in forgiuing sinne for Where sinne abounded there did grace much more abound 2 In regard of sinners I meane repentant sinners for of their sinnes I speake it worketh in them godly sorrow a sorrow not to be repented of because of the excellent fruits thereof noted 2. Cor. 7. 10 11. It worketh also an high esteeme of Gods free grace and rich mercy a longing desire after Christs righteousnesse a diligent watchfulnes our our selues for the time to come a Christian readinesse to beare with the slips and infirmities of other with the like These are two such grounds of Patience as all the writings of all the men in the world cannot affoord the like It is the Gospel and the Gospel alone which hath made them knowne and not onely so but also instrumentally worketh faith in our hearts
faith From Faith proceed all good workes For it is faith in Gods loue which moueth a man to loue God againe and loue to God is it which moueth a man to loue his brother which is made after Gods Image and standeth in Gods roome and steed Now there can be no stronger motiue to stirre vp a man to any duty then loue A louing childe will much more seeke to please his father then a seruile bond-slaue and a louing friend will doe much more kindnesse for a friend then a stranger though he be hired thereunto He that indeed beleeueth that God so loued him as he spared not his onely begotten Sonne but gaue him a price of redemption that in his Sonne God hath vouchsafed to bee reconciled to him to giue him pardon of all his sinnes freedome from hell and damnation and to bestow on him all things pertaining to life and happinesse hee that is thus perswaded of GODS loue to him cannot but haue his hearten arged to doe what may be pleasing and acceptable to God no hope of reward no feare of reuenge can so prouoke a man to all good workes as loue which Faith worketh Besides whatsoeuer is performed without Faith and loue is no whit acceptable to God God accepteth a cup of cold water giuen in Faith and loue infinitly much more then thousands of rammes or ten thousand Riuers of Oyle giuen in way of presumptuous merit or else of slauish feare The obiection therefore of our aduersaries against the Doctrine of Faith is a meere cauill and slander They who take liberty thereby either to commit any euill or to omit any good turne the grace of our God into wanton●esse Iude 4. and peruert it to their owne destruction 2. Pet 3. 16. §. 11. Of Faith in generall THus much concerning the Transition The Exhortation followeth wherein we are first to consider the thing simply set downe and to shew what faith is Point 2 Faith in generall is a beleeuing of a thing to be true Our English word Faith seemeth to be taken from the Lattin fides which according to the notation thereof is as much as fi●t dictum be it so as is spoken The notation of the Greeke word implyeth as much so also of the ● Hebrew in which language one and the same word signifieth Truth Faith from whence is deriued that common Hebrew word which is vsually vttered at the end of our prayers Amen which signifieth an assent of the mind to that which is spoken as to truth §. 12. Of the kindes of Faith THis assent may be either to the word of the Cre●●● or of the creature The faith of which now we speake hath reference to the Creator and his word and may in generall be defined a beleefe of the truth of God Faith thus taken is either common to al or proper to the elect That common faith is extraordinary or ordinary Extraordinary Faith is a beleefe that some extraordinary and miraculous thing shall fall out This is grounded either vpon some especiall promise or extraordinary reuelation made to the party in whom it is and it is giuen but at some speciall times to some speciall persons on some speciall occasions by it things to come may be foretold or other great workes done It is a gift of the Spirit but one of those which are giuen rather for the good of others then of that party which hath it so as it may bee in a wicked reprobate as in those who shall pleade it at Christs Iudgement Seate but in vaine This is that which commonly is called a Miraculo●● Faith Ordinary Faith is either that which resteth onely in the minde of a man or else draweth the will also The former of these is that Faith whereby an assent is giuen to the truth of Gods word This is commonly called as historicall Faith because thereby credence is yeelded to the History of Gods word that is all things which are written in Gods word are beleeued to be true This may one doe which is not any whit the better affected 〈◊〉 Gods word either to loue God or feare him or trust in him the more for this faith For thus the very Di●el● are said to beleeue The latter kind of ordinary faith common to all sorts as well reprobate as elect is that faith whereby such an assent of the mind is giuen to the Gospell and to the gracious promises thereof as the heart is affected with them and reioyceth in them for a season This was in Simon Magus who in regard thereof yeelded to be baptized and in those Iewes who were willing for a season to reioyce in Iohns light This is commonly called a temporary Faith because it lasteth not for euer but cleane fadeth away and that for the most part while a man liueth here in this World especially if hee be brought to any triall Christ fitly compareth this faith to corne sowen in stony ground I deny not but that it may continue so long as a man liueth but then with his life it endeth without any fruite as smoake that cleane vanisheth away to nothing in which respect The hope of a wicked man is said to perish when he dieth This faith is also called an hypocriticall faith not because hee that hath it doth onely make an outward flourish in shew purposely to deceiue men for then could not the heart be affected nor the man reioyce therein but because it is not sound but appeareth both to the party himselfe and also to others to be better and sounder then indeed it is for there is a double hypocrisie one whereby men purposely seeke to deceiue others as the Pharises another whereby they deceiue themselues as Paul That former ariseth from vaine-glory couetousnesse and such by respects this latter from ignorance simplicity slothfulnesse carelesnesse security and the like which keepe men from trying that grace which appeareth to bee in ●hem whether it be sound or no. This faith is called hypocriticall in opposition to an attribute proper to true ●auing faith namely vnfained §. 13. Of the titles giuen to true Faith THe faith which is here meant by the Apostle is a farre more precious Faith then any of these it is proper to the Elect and by a propriety called The faith of Gods Elect for none but the Elect haue it and all the Elect haue it at one time or another when once they haue it they neuer vtterly or totally lose it but it continueth with them till it hath brought them to the purchased inheritance euen to the possession fruition of that which they beleeued at which time they shall haue no more need of it It is therefore called sauing Faith because it bringeth vs vnto saluation and iustifying Faith because it is that meanes or instrument which Gods Spirit worketh in vs whereby we apply vnto our selues Christ Iesus
in and by whom wee are iustified and sanctifying Faith because by it God purifieth our hearts §. 14. Of the definition of iustifying Faith THis true sound vnfained iustifying sanctifying sauing Faith whereof wee now speake I say this Faith is a beliefe of the Gospel whereby Christ and all his benefits offered therein are receiued In this definition note the two vsuall parts of a definition 1. The common matter of it A beliefe of the Gospell 2. The particular forme or difference whereby Christ c. The former sheweth wherein true iustifying faith agreeth with other kinds of faith the latter wherein it differeth from them 1 It is a beleefe this it hath common with all kindes of faith where there is no beleefe no credence no assent giuen there is no faith at all 2 Of the Gospell though the whole word of God bee the generall obiect of iustifying Faith yet the Gospell is the speciall obiect thereof by it is the heart of a beleeuer especially moued and affected and this is it which iustifying faith hath common with that kinde of faith that commeth nearest vnto it and is hardly distinguished from it namely a temporary faith What the Gospell is wee haue shewed before The summe of it is plainely and fully laide downe by Christ himselfe in these words God so loued the World that hee gaue his onely begotten Sonne that whosoeuer beleeueth in him should not perish but haue euerlasting life 3 Whereby Christ and all his benefits offered therein Christ Iesus is the subiect matter and very substance of the Gospel and so the proper and peculiar obiect of iustifying faith Christ I say not barely and nakedly considered in himselfe for then were he no Sauiour but accompanied with all those benefits which as our Mediator and Redeemer he wrought and purchased for vs. The Apostle setteth downe foure of those benefits Wisdome Righteousnesse Sanctification Redemption vnder which the other may bee comprised These are said to bee offered in the Gospell 1 Because of the necessary relation betwixt receiuing and offering for receiuing presupposeth an offering 2 To shew the ground of our receiuing which is Gods free offer 3 To shew that all they who receiue not Christ plainly reiect him and so are iustly condemned for reiecting him 4 Are receiued In the act of receiuing the nature of iustifying faith especially consisteth for thereby is Christ made a mans owne in this the best temporary faith that may be commeth short of iustifying faith for all that ioy which temporary beleeuers conceiue ariseth not from any true possession of Christ but onely from some apprehension of those great and excellent things which in the Gospell are promised Iustifying faith is as it it were the hand of the soule a spirituall instrument framed in our hearts by the Spirit of God whereby we lay hold on Christ and apply or take vnto our selues and receiue those things which God in the Gospel offereth vnto vs. This word of receiuing fitly answereth that metaphor of eating and drinking so oft vsed in the Scripture to set forth the nature of Faith Ye know that all the benefit we receiue by food cometh from our eating drinking it though there be set before a man great plenty of dainty and wholesom cheare yet if it be not eaten where is the benefit of it so in vaine is Christ with all his benefits offered if he be not receiued Fitly also doth it answer another excellent metaphor namely of marriage which is oft vsed in the holy Scripture to set forth that neere vnion which is betwixt Christ and the faithfull God maketh offer of his Sonne in marriage to mankinde Christ came downe from heauen to be a suter and to bee espoused Ministers his friends intreat vs in Christs steed to accept him when in our hearts we accept this offer and receiue this Sonne of God to be our husband then in truth and indeed wee beleeue and not before Thus haue I opened this definition of Faith in the seuerall parts thereof out of it two especiall points are to be noted 1 That euery faithfull soule euery true beleeuer giueth a full assent in his mind to the truth of the Gospel that God so loued the world that he gaue his onely begotten Sonne that whosoeuer beleeueth in him should not perish but haue euerlasting life so as heere is excluded a wauering opinion for beliefe is a strong perswasion and also a presumptuous conceit for the Gospel is the Word of Truth which cannot deceiue 2 That with the assent of the mind there goeth a consent of the will soas what the beleeuer conceiueth in his vnderstanding to be true he embraceth in his will to be good and so in his heart ioyfully receiueth that fa●●r which God freely offereth vnto him namely Christ Ie Iesus and in with him all things needfull to saluation Thus by Gods offer of his Sonne in the Gospel and our receiuing of him by Faith we come to be espoused to Christ as a Bride to her Bridegroome to be in graffed into him as sciences into a stocke to be of one body with him he the head we the members and so he and we to make one Christ By the Faith here spoken of Christ dwelleth in our hearts he is ours and we are his This and nothing but this is it wherewith we shal be able to quench all the fiery darts of the wicked §. 15. Of the resemblance betwixt Faith and a Shield NOw further marke how fitly this Faith is compared to a Shield A Shield is a generall fence for the whole body especially for the principall parts the head and heart There are sundry kindes of shields bucklers and targets vsed in warre some round and small some square some like an halfe moone some after one fashion some after another and accordingly they haue diuers names The Greeke word which heere the Apostle vseth is taken from a doore or gate so as it signifieth a long broad large shield wherewith the whole body was couered The vse of it is both to auoide handy blowes strokes foines pushes and the like made with Sword Halberd Sp●are and such like weapons and also to keepe off Darts Arrowes Bullets Stones and such annoyances as were shot and flung afarre off so as it is a common defence against all sorts of weapons all kinds of assaults Of this vse is Faith able to defend the whole man from al sorts of temptations cast against him by any of his spirituall enemies the flesh world or diuell By Faith the beleeuer holdeth out Christ himselfe and the power and efficacy of his obedience and suffering against all spirituall assaults if this defend him not from all what can This will keepe vs safe from temptations taken from the corruption of our nature imperfection of our obedience
innumerable number and infinite weight of our sinnes from prosperity aduersity or the like if at least it be well vsed Of the well vsing of it we shall afterwards heare §. 16. Of the meaning of the word Take THe next point to be handled is the Action whereunto we are exhorted in this word Take which is the very same that he vsed before verse 13. it is heere vsed in as large a sence both to take vp or to take vnto one and also to take againe and recouer a thing Souldiers let not their Shield lie on the ground but take it vp in their hands hold it our against their enemies mouing it vp and downe euery way where the enemy strikes at them if the enemy continue to fight or renew the fight they still hold it out againe and againe yea if by their owne weakenesse or thorow the violence of any blow they let it fall or slip they presently seeke to recouer it and take it vp againe Thus must we take vp and hold forth this spirituall Shield of Faith against all the temptations of Satan and if thorow our owne infirmity or our enemies fiercenesse we suffer it to faile and fall away then recouer it againe and continue to defend our selues with it so long as wee shall haue enemies to assault vs. This point of taking the Shield of Faith respecteth diuerse sorts of people 1 Them who haue it not they must labour to get it 2 Them who doubt whether they haue it or no they must proue it 3 Them who feare they may lose it they must seeke to preserue it 4 Them who are established therein they must well vse it I wil therefore in order shew how faith may bee 1 Gotten 2 Proued 3 Preserued 4 Well vsed §. 17. Of the Author of Faith FOr the first note first the Author of Faith Secondly the meanes whereby it is wrought 1 The Author of Faith is euen he from whom euery good giuing and euery perfect gift commeth Faith is the gift of God This is the worke of God that yee beleeue c. Now because this is one of those workes of God which are said to be without towards the creature it is in Scripture attributed to all the three persons and to euery of them To the first where Christ saith No man con●●me vnto me i beleeue except the Father draw him To the second where the Apostle calleth Iesus the Author and finisher of our Faith To the third where the Apostle reckoneth Faith among the fruits of the Spirit §. 18. Of the motiue and end why God worketh Faith IN declaring why God worketh Faith obserue 1 What moueth him thereto 2 What hee aimeth at therein Nothing out of God can moue God to worke this precious gift in man It is his meere good will that moueth him as Christ expresly declareth in his thanksgiuing to God saying It is so O Father because thy good pleasure is such The end which God aimeth at in working this grace is principally in respect of himselfe the setting forth of his owne glory as we shewed before but secondarily the saluation of mankind Therefore Saint Peter termeth saluation the end of our Faith Vse These points I thought good thus briefly to note 1 To commend vnto you this precious gift of Faith For how much the more excellent the Author of any thing is and the end which he aimeth at therein so much more excellent is the thing it selfe 2 To take away all matter of boasting from them who haue this gift though it be a most precious grace yet it affordeth no matter of glorying to vs in our selues because we haue it not of our selues 3 To stirre vs vp to giue all the praise and glory thereof to God vpon this very ground doth the Apostle giue glory to God because of him and through him and for him are all things 4 To shew that it is not in mans power to haue it when he will that so ye may be the more carefull in vsing the meanes which God affoordeth and appointeth for the attaining thereto Is it not a point of egregious folly to be carelesse in vsing or negligently to put off those meanes of obtaining any excellent thing which he who onely can worke and bestow that thing hath appointed for the obtaining thereof §. 19. Of the meanes of working Faith IN laying downe the meanes which our wise God hath appointed to worke Faith I will shew 1 What God himselfe doth 2 What he requireth man to doe In considering what meanes God vseth let vs all note what order he obserueth in making the means effectuall The meanes are Outward Inward The outward meanes are either such as both worke and strengthen Faith as the word of God or onely strengthen it as the Sacraments Hereof I shall speake heereafter Concerning the Word the Apostle saith r How shall they beleeue in him of whom they haue not heard and therevpon thus concludeth Faith commeth by hearing and hearing by the word of God Rom. 10. 14 17. Of Gods word there be two parts the Law and the Gospel Both these haue an especiall worke for the working of Faith The law to prepare a mans heart for Faith in which respect it is called our schoole-master to bring vs to Christ that wee may be iustified by Faith The Gospell to worke further vpon the heart so prepared and to accomplish this worke of Faith whereupon he termeth the Gospel by a propriety The Gospel of Faith and saith of the Ephesians that they beleeued after that they heard the Gospel Quest Whether is the Word preached onely or the Word read also a meanes of working Faith Answ It may not be denyed but that the holy Scriptures themselues and good Commentaries on them and printed Sermons or other bookes laying forth the true doctrine of the Scripture being read and vnderstood may be the blessing of God worke Faith but the especiall ordinary meanes and most powerfull vsual meanes is the word preached this is it which the Scripture layeth downe How shall they bele●ue in him of whom they haue not heard how shall they heare without a Preacher It pleased God by preaching to saue c. Yee receiued the Spirit by the hearing of Faith Thus we see that preaching is Gods ordinance wherevnto especially without question he wil giue his blessing Besides it is an especiall meanes to make people to embrace the promises of the Gospel when Gods Ministers to whom is committed the word of reconciliation and who stand in Christs steed as though God did beseech vs shall pray vs to be reconciled to God and make offer and tender vnto vs of all the promises of God The inward meanes or rather cause is the sanctifying Spirit of God who softneth quickneth openeth our hearts and maketh them as good ground so as the
good seed of Gods word being cast into them taketh deepe rooting bringeth forth the blessed fruit of Faith The Apostle saith that his preaching was in demonstration of the spirit that their Faith might be in the power of God It is noted that the Lord namely by his Spirit opened the heart of Lydia that she attended vnto the things which Paule spake In respect hereof the Apostle termeth the preaching of the Gospel a ministration of the spirit yea he vseth this phrase the spirit of Faith because Faith is wrought inwardly by the Spirit §. 20. Of the Lawes worke towards Faith THe order which God vseth is this First hee worketh on the vnderstanding and then on the will The vnderstanding he inlighteneth by his Word as in all fundamentall necessary points of Christian Religion so in two especially First in the misery of a naturall man Secondly in the remedy thereof That the Law discouereth This the Gospell reuealeth Touching mans misery Gods Spirit by the Law informeth a mans iudgement both of his wretchednesse thorow sinne and of his cursednesse thorow the punishment of sinne The Law discouereth such an infinite multitude of sinnes as otherwise man could not possibly find out It discouereth not onely notorious sinnes of commission but many other transgressions which naturall men count no sinnes many sinnes of omission many sinnes of thought and heart yea the very seed of all sinne the contagion and corruption of our nature Saint Paule expresly saith I knew not sinne but by the Law for I had not knowne lust except the Law had said thou shalt not lust The Law also maketh knowne the hainousnesse and greeuousnesse of sinne how it is out of measure yea infinitely sinfull because it is committed against an infinite Maiesty and that also against his expresse will reuealed in the Law so as sinne being directly contrary to the pure holy and blessed will of God cannot but make vs more odious and abhominable before God then any venimous Toade Adder or any other poysonous creature is in our sight Further the Law manifesteth the punishment of sin which is Gods infinite wrath for the least breach of any one branch of the commandements for it saith Cursed be he that confirmeth not all the words of the Law Now the fruits of Gods wrath are all plagues and iudgements in this world both outward in our estates and on our bodies and inward in our conscience and soule in the and death which is exceeding terrible to a naturall man and after all the torment of hell fire which is intollerable and euerlasting neither doth it reueale vnto vs any remedy of helpe but rather sheweth that we are vtterly vnable to helpe our selues and that no creature in heauen or earth is able to afford vs helpe or succour but vile wofull wretches as we are so shall we continually remaine Thus the Law sheweth vs to be such creatures as it had been better for vs neuer to haue beene borne or if borne then to haue bene any other then such as we are wretched cursed men §. 21. Of the Gospels worke in Faith BVt yet by the preaching of the Gospel the Spirit further enlighteneth our vnderstanding in a remedie which God in the riches of his mercy hath afforded vnto vs and in the benefit thereof For the Gospel reuealeth Christ Iesus who being the true eternall Sonne of God euen euery God and so able to beare the infinite wrath of his Father and procure his fauour tooke vpon him into the vnity of his person mans nature wherein he subiected himselfe to the Law and both fulfilled the righteousnesse and also vnderwent the curse thereof This is the remedy The benefit hereof is that God is reconciled to the world his wrath being pacified his fauour procured that remission of sinnes and deliuerance from the punishment thereof both in this world and in the world to come are obtained that all needfull blessings for this temporall life all needfull graces for a spirituall life and eternal life and happinesse in the world to come are purchased Without knowledge of these points concerning the forenamed misery and remedy it is impossible for any man to haue Faith and yet may men haue and many haue this knowledge who neuer attaine vnto Faith so as this is not sufficient Wherefore the Spirit proceedeth further to worke vpon the will of man §. 22. Of Griefe going before faith TWo especiall workes are wrought vpon the will one in regard of mans misery the other in regard of the remedy The first is to be pricked in heart grieued in soule wounded in conscience and brought in regard of any hope in our selues or any other creature euen to dispaire yea and to tremble againe within and without in soule and body for our sinnes and the punishment due to them Thus were the Iewes pricked in their hearts and the Iaylor so terrified with Gods iudgements that hee trembled againe and thereby their hearts were prepared vnto Faith For the measure of griefe it is not alike in all in some it is greater in some smaller yet in all there must be as a sight of sin and of the misery thereof so a particular sence of that wretchednesse wherein we lie by reason of it an vtter despaire in our selues true griefe of soule and compunction of heart for it §. 23. Of Desire going before Faith THe second worke is to desire aboue all things in the World one drop of the infinite mercy of God and to be willing to giue all that a man hath for Christ accounting him more worth then all things beside in heauen and earth as the Merchant in the Gospell esteemed the pearle which he found This earnest desire is in Scripture set forth by hungering thirsting panting longing c. All which imply a very vehement and vnsatiable desire so as they which haue this desire wrought in them will giue no rest to their soules till they haue some sweet feeling of Gods loue to them in Christ and some assurance that Christ is theirs whereupon God who hath offered to satisfie the hungry and thirsty and to satisfie the desire of such as pant and long after him by his Spirit worketh in such as are so prepared such an inward assent of minde and credence vnto the promises of the Gospell that particularly they apply them vnto themselues and gladly accept the free offer of God and so receiue Christ with all his benefits This is that onely ordinary meanes and the order thereof which God for his part hath set downe to worke faith in man §. 24. Of mans endeauour to get Faith THe meanes required on mans part are next to be declared Here I will shew what man must doe that he may beleeue and what motiues there be to stirre him vp to beleeue Two things are to be done of man one that to his vttermost power he vse and well
imploy that ability whatsoeuer it be that he hath by nature or speciall gift Because God in wisedome hath appointed the preaching of his word to be the meanes of working Faith man must diligently vse that meanes and constantly attend thereupon not giuing ouer till hee find the blessed worke of Faith wrought in him A naturall man may goe to Church and with his outward eare hearken to the Word and wait vpon it And because prayer is a meanes to moue God to giue his Spirit and thereby to open mans heart to receiue the Word into it and to make his word powerfull and effectuall he must also as well as he can pray to God for his Spirit and for his blessing on his Word For a naturall man may pray though not in Faith and God doth oft heare the desire of such as he heareth the yong Rauens when they cry for want of their meat The other that we resist not any motion of Gods Spirit like the rebellious Iewes nor putte off from vs the promises of the Gospel as if they belonged not vnto vs and thinke our selues vnworthy of eternall life §. 25. Of Gods offering Christ FOr motiues to make a man bold to apply vnto himselfe the promises of the Gospel there are none at all in himselfe he must cleane goe out of himselfe and duely weigh these three points 1 The author of the promises of the Gospel 2 The cause of the promises of the Gospel 3 The extent of the promises of the Gospel For the first It is God that made the promises he it is that maketh offer of Christ Iesus and in him of all things belonging to life and happinesse GOD so loued the World that he gaue his onely begotten Sonne c. With what face may the creature refuse to receiue that which his Creator offereth Now that we may not doubt but be assured that he will make his word good we are especially to consider two properties of God 1. His Power 2. His Truth The one sheweth that hee is able to doe what he hath promised The other that he will not faile to doe it §. 26. Of Gods Power to make his offer good NO question can iustly bee made of Gods almighty Power for the Scripture expresly saith With God shall nothing be impossible Luk. 1. 37. All things are possible to him Mar. 10. 27. Which is to be noted against our deadnesse dulnesse and vntowardnesse to beleeue in regard whereof wee may thinke that a man naturally dead may as easily eate and drinke as we beleeue but when we consider the Power of Gods might how hee is able of stones to raise vp children vnto Abraham wee may well thinke that hee is able to take away our stony heart and giue vs an heart of flesh Abraham looked to Gods power and thereby was moued to beleeue that God would performe his promise though I saacke in whom the promise was made were to be sacrificed He did not doubt of the promise being fully assured that he which had promised was also able to doe it This motiue taken from Gods almighty Power is in Scripture oft vsed to stirre vp men woemen to beleeue the promises of God It was vsed to Sarah to the Virgin Mary to Ieremiah to the Disciples of Christ And it is the rather to be thought of because we are very prone by nature to make doubt thereof for albeit in our iudgements wee are well perswaded of Gods Omnipotency and with our mouthes can professe as much yet when we are in great straits brought to a pinch and see no ordinary meanes for the effecting the thing which wee desire then we thinke that God himselfe is not able to doe it like the incredulous Prince and not he onely but the vnbeleeuing Israelites also though they had beene long nurtured vnder Gods speciall gouernement and seene many of his maruellous workes yea Moses himselfe was subiect hereunto §. 27. Of Gods truth in making good his offer NO more question can be made of Gods truth then of his power for he is the Lord God of truth with him is no variablenesse nor shadow of turning Hee cannot lie it is impossible that he should for faithfull is hee which promiseth the Gospell in which his promises are made 〈◊〉 the word of truth his Sonne who declareth them 〈◊〉 faithfull and true witnesse His Spirit which sealeth them vp a Spirit of Truth This truth of God is to be meditated of in regard of the greatnesse of Gods promises for when man heareth of Christ and all his benefits offered in the Gospell hee will be ready to thinke and say Oh here are sweete and excellent promises but they are too good to be true I feare they are too great to be performed But if that man remember how faithful and true God is that made them it will make him thinke againe and say though they were much greater yet God who is able assuredly wil not faile to performe what he hath promised §. 28. Of Gods free offer ● FOr the cause whereby God is moued to offer Christ and all his benefits it was his owne goodnesse and nothing else Now there are two things which doe highly commend Gods goodnesse First the freenesse of his grace Secondly the riches of his mercy Gods grace is euery way so free that the goodnesse which he sheweth to his creature is altogether of himselfe from himselfe God so loued the world that he gaue c. When we were enemies we were reconciled to God When there was none to mediate for vs God offered grace and gaue his Sonne to be a Mediator This is to be noted against mans vnworthinesse for he is ready to looke downe vpon himselfe and say Ah I am too too vnworthy to partake of Christ what can there be in me to moue God to beftow his Sonne on me and thus keepe himselfe from beleeuing But if we consider that God respecteth his owne goodnesse and not ours in giuing vs his Sonne and that his grace is euery way free that conceit of our vnworthinesse can be no iust impediment to Faith §. 29. Of the Riches of Gods Mercy AS for the Riches of Gods Mercy they are vnutterable vnconceiuable I may well crie out and say Oh the deepenesse of them how vnsearchable are they and past finding out According to Gods greatnesse so is his mercie it is infinite and reacheth aboue the Heauens so as God may well be said to be rich in mercy and abundant in goodnesse This is to be noted against the multitude and haynousnesse of our sinnes which because they are innumerable and infinite keepe many men from beleeuing the pardon of them But the consideration of the infinitenesse of Gods mercy which is as an Ocean sufficient to swallow them all vp though they were more
Christs feete with her teares and of others is recorded But the griefe of the theefe is implied both by reprouing his fellow and also by acknowledging his owne guiltinesse Rahab saith That their hearts melted Obiect That which is said of Rahab is said of others also who beleeued not Answ Though the same affection be iointly attributed to all yet it was very different in the kinde manner and end thereof The heart of others melted for feare of a temporall destruction it was a worldly sorrow but hers a godly sorrow because shee was an aliant from the common wealth of Israel and out of the Church of God and therefore so earnestly desired to be one of them Lydia might bee prepared before shee heard Paul for shee accompanied them which went out to pray and shee worshipped God or else her heart might bee then touched when shee heard Paul preach The like may be said of those which heard Peter when hee preached to Cornelius and of others Certaine it is that a man must both see and feele his wretchednesse and bee wounded in soule for it before Faith can be wrought in him Yet I denie not but there may bee great difference in the manner measure of greeuing Some draw water and poure it out before the Lord Their heart poureth out abundance of teares Other tremble and quake againe with horror Other long continue in their griefe Other are so deepely wounded within that they cannot expresse it by outward tears but are euen astonished as with a wound that bleedeth inwardly Other see in what a wretched and cursed estate they lie and are greeued and euen confounded that they can greeue no more yet it pleaseth God after hee hath shewed to some their woefull estate thorow sinne and touched their heart therewith bringing them thereby to loath their owne naturall estate to despaire in themselues and to condemne themselues vtterly renouncing all confidence in themselues presently to stirre vp their hearts to desire and embrace the sweete promises and consolations of the Gospell Faith therefore is not to be iudged by the measure but by the truth of griefe which may be knowne by the causes and fruits thereof §. 43. How Griefe which worketh Faith is wrought FOr the causes true griefe which worketh Faith ariseth 1 From the word of God whereby sinne and Gods wrath for the same is discouered Obiect The Iaylor was humbled with an extraordinary iudgement Answer No doubt but he had heard the word of God before for Paul had beene sometime in that City so as that iudgement was but as an hammer to driue into his heart the nailes of Gods word for it is the proper vse of Gods iudgements to beate downe the hard and stoute heart of man and so to make him sensibly apprehend Gods wrath denounced in his Word against sinners So was Manasseh brought to apply the threatnings of Gods word to himselfe by a great iudgement 2 From despaire of all helpe in our selues or any other creature This made the Iewes and Iaylor say What shall we doe So long as man retaineth any conceit of helpe in himselfe all his misery and griefe for it will neuer bring him to Christ 3. From our wretchednesse and vildnesse by reason of sinne whereby God is offended and his wrath prouoked as well as from our cursednesse by reason of the punishment and fearefull issue of sinne Thus was the prodigall childe grieued because he had sinned against his Father §. 44. Of the effects which that Griefe that causeth Faith bringeth forth GRiefe thus wrought bringeth forth these and such like effects 1 Shame for the euill which hath beene done 2 A true and thorow resolution to enter into a new course Surely they which came to Iohn and said What shall we doe were thus minded 3 A renewing of griefe so oft as occasion is offered True spirituall griefe which worketh Faith is neuer cleane dried vp because sinne the cause of it is neuer cleane taken away Thus the griefe which breedeth Faith continueth after Faith is wrought though not in the same manner and measure for before Faith it cannot be mixed with any true ioy and sound comfort as it may be after Faith is wrought Many who haue no better then a temporary Faith are at first much grieued and wounded in conscience but after they receiue some comfort by the promises of the Gospell are so iocund and ioyfull that they grow secure againe and neuer after let griefe seize vpon them no though they fall into such grieuous sinnes as might iustly renew their griefe they put off all with this That once they grieued Dauid Paul and many other faithfull Saints of God were otherwise affected as is euident by those many grieuous groanes sighes and exclamations which are recorded of them §. 45. Of that Desire which causeth Faith THe second thing to be examined in the disposition of a mans heart for the proofe of Faith is the Desire of it after Christ greefe at our misery without desire of the remedy is so farre from being Faith that it causeth desperation That true desire which worketh Faith may be knowne 1. By the Cause 2. By the Order 3. By the Quality 4. By the Fruits 5. By the Continuance of it 1 It is the Gospell and nothing but it that can worke in mans heart a true desire after Christ because by it alone is Christ reuealed and offered 2 It followeth vpon the fore-named griefe for sinne and despaire of succour in our selues or others The Apostle vseth this as a motiue to stirre vp men to beleeue in Christ that there is not saluation in any other 3 It is both an hearty and true desire and also a vehement and earnest desire For the first of these it is not onely an outward desire of the tongue but an inward desire of the soule My soule panteth my soule their steth for God saith Dauid This inward hearty desire is best knowne to a mans owne selfe for what man knoweth the things of a man saue the spirit of a man which is in him For the second it is a greater desire then the desire of any other thing can be No man so desireth any earthlie thing as the poore sinner desireth Christ if it be a true desire therefore the Scripture vseth such metaphors to set it forth as imply greatest ardency as hungring thirsting c. wherof wee haue heard before Balaams slight wish could be no cause or signe of Faith 4. It maketh a man carefull and conscionable in vsing the meanes which God hath appointed to breede faith yea and earnest in calling vpon God to blesse those meanes and to be merciful vnto him as the poore Publican did 5 It still raiseth vp and preserueth an appetite after Christ euen after we haue tasted him
Desire after Christ before we beleeue ariseth from that sence we haue of the want of Christ but after we beleeue partly from the sweet taste we haue felt of him and partly from the want we still feele of him so as we can neuer be satisfied Hereby is the couetous mans true desire of mony manifested because he can neuer be filled but the more he hath the more he desireth An vnsatiable desire of Christ is a good couetousnesse The Apostle exhorteth to desire the sincere milke of the Word to grow thereby not once onely to taste of it If euer a man be satisfied with Christ and begin to loath him he neuer truely beleeued in him For first Christ is not like corporall meates which with abundance may cloy the stomach the more he is tasted the better and greater will our appetite be Secondly no man in this world can receiue such a measure as to be filled thereby If therefore a man desire Faith and fall away that seeming desire which he had neuer bred Faith in him §. 46. Of ioyning the effects with the causes of Faith in the tryall thereof IF vpon that fore-named illumination of the mind and disposition of the heart the Spirit of God hath drawne vs to accept of Christ Iesus tendred in the Gospel then hath Faith been kindly wrought and by this manner of breeding Faith a man may haue good euidence of the truth of it especially if he also finde that his Faith doth kindely worke and bring forth the proper fruits thereof For Faith is operatiue euen as fire Where fire is there will be heat the more fire the greater heat if but a little heate there is a small fire if no heate at all surely no fire I deny not but fire may be so couered ouer with ashes that the heat will not sensibly appeare but yet heate there is within so as if the ashes be remoued the heat will soon be felt so surely where true and sound Faith is there will be some holy heate some blessed fruits thereof it may for a time through the violence of some temptation be so smothered and suppressed as it cannot be discerned but when the temptation is ouer it will soone shew it selfe if not I dare boldly say there is no true liuing iustifying Faith but a meere dead Faith I haue my warrant from an holy Apostle so to say Iam. 2. 20 26. It is a working Faith which is the true iustifying Faith and this is the constant doctrine of our Church taught in our Vniuersities preached in pulpits published in print by all that treat of Faith That which our aduersaries obiect against the orthodoxall and comfortable doctrine of Iustification by Faith alone that we make iustifying Faith to be a naked dead Faith without all good workes is a meere cauill and a most malicious slander for though we teach that in the very act of iustification Faith onely hath his worke without workes yet we teach not that this Faith is destitute of all workes but that it is a Faith which purifieth the heart and worketh by loue Thus in regard of the office of Faith we teach as wee are taught by Saint Paul that a man is iustified by Faith without works and in regard of the quality of Faith we teach as wee are taught by Saint Iames that of workes a man is iustified tha● is declared so to be and not of Faith onely Wherefor● for the sound proofe of Faith we must haue also recourse to the fruits of it §. 47. Of the fruits of Faith IT were an infinite taske to reckon vp all the fruits of Faith For all the seurall and distinct branches of piety and charity if they be rightly performed are fruits of Faith Faith is the mother of all sanctifying graces for by it we are ingraffed into Christ and so liue the life of God Euery sanctifying grace therefore is an euident signe of Faith But that I may keepe my selfe within compasse I will draw the principal effects of Faith wherby it may be best proued vnto two heads First a quiet conscience Secondly a cleare conscience This hath respect to that benefit which we receiue by Faith That to the author thereof §. 48. Of a quiet conscience proceeding from Faith A Quiet conscience is that which excuseth a man before God so farre it is from accusing that it excuseth whence ariseth an admirable tranquility of minde which the Apostle calleth The peace of God which passeth all vnderstanding It is euident that Faith breedeth this for being iustified by Faith we haue peace toward God So soone as a sinner truely beleeueth he hath some peace of conscience the more his Faith increaseth and the stronger it groweth the more peace he hath in his soule From Faith then ariseth this peace and from nothing else For it cannot possibly come from any perfection in man Indeed Adams conscience in his integrity did excuse him before God because there was nothing in him blame-worthy but so could no mans since his fall for besides those palpable euill deeds whereunto euery mans conscience is priny whose conscience can excuse him in the best workes that euer he did Is not all our righteousnesse as filthy clouts this Dauid well knew when he thus prayed Enter not into iudgement c. but Faith assuring the conscience that We haue an aduocate with the Father Iesus Christ the Righteous that he is the propitiation for our sins purging our soules with his owne most precious blood pacifieth it so that where this peace of conscience is there must be a true iustifying Faith §. 49. Of the difference betwixt a quiet conscience and a not-troubling conscience Obiect THe conscience of many wicked men lyeth quiet and troubleth them not Answ Their conscience is improperly said to be quiet it is either a slumbring cōscience which though for a time it seeme to lie quiet yet when it is awaked roused vp it will rage and raue like a fierce cruel wilde beast as Iudas his conscience did or else which is worse a seared and dead conscience which will drowne men in perdition and destructiou before they be aware of it Such a seared conscience had the ancient Heretiques Now these two maine differences there are betwixt these not-troubling consciences and that quiet conscience First they onely accuse not this also excuseth Secondly they lie still onely for a time at the vttermost for the time of this life this is quiet for euer euen at the barre of Christs iudgement Seate §. 50. Of the difference betwixt conscience excusing and not-accusing 2 Obiect MAny wicked men in doing euill haue thought they ought to doe so yea that they did God good seruice therein their conscience therefore must needs excuse them Answ Nothing so for because they had no sure warrant out of Gods Word for that which they did their conscience could not excuse
them onely it accused them not and that by reason of the blindnesse of their iudgement It remaineth therefore to be a proper worke of Faith gounded on the Gospel the word of Truth to cause a quiet conscience §. 51. Of Security arising from a quiet conscience FRom this quiet conscience proceed two blessed fruits which are likewise effects of Faith sure tokens therof First an holy security of mind Secondly a spirituall ioy of heart For the first a beleeuer hauing in his conscience peace with God resteth secure for saluation and for all things that make thereunto so as with Dauid he may say I will both lay me downe in peace and sleepe c. This security is ●in regard of the issue not of the meanes For herein lyeth the difference betwixt the godly and worldly security to be secure and carelesse in vsing the meanes of saluation which God in wisedome hath appointed is a carnall sinfull security but to rest on God for a blessing on the meanes and to be secure for the euent is an admirable worke of Faith This is that casting of our care and burden on God and resting vpon him which the holy Ghost oft vrgeth they onely who by Faith haue receiued Christ and haue their consciences quieted through his blood can thus securely cast themselues vpon God well and fitly therefore said Ieho●aphat Beleeue in the Lord ●our God so shall ye be established §. 51. Of ioy arising from a quiet conscience FOr the second that spirituall ioy is an effect of Faith following vpon peace of conscience the Apostle sheweth for he ioyneth them together and saith Being iustified by Faith we haue peace toward God c. and reioyce It is noted of the Eunuch that after he beleeued and in testimony thereof was baptized he went away reioycing and of the Gaoler that he reioyced that he with all his houshold beleeued in God and of the faithfull Iewes that they beleeued and reioyced with ioy vnspeakeable and glorious This ioy ariseth from Faith in regard of that benefit which Faith bringeth with it which is no lesse then Christ himselfe and in and with him all things needfull vnto full and compleate happinesse so that we may wel conclude where true spirituall ioy is there is true iustifying Faith §. 52. Of the difference betwixt the ioy of the vpright and hypocrite Obiect MAny that haue no better then a temporary Faith haue great ioy wrought thereby in their hearts Answ Their ioy is no true sound solid ioy but a meere shadow and shew thereof which is euident both by the birth and also by the death of it The birth is too sudden to be sound that which suddenly sprouteth vp can haue no deep rooting Christ fitly compareth such ioy to corne sowen in stony ground The death of it is irreconerable it cleane drieth vp and vtterly vanisheth away which if it had substance it would neuer doe therefore the Scripture maketh it a property of an hypocrites ioy to be but for a moment as dew vanisheth away by the Sunne so may their ioy by persecution True spiritual ioy which ariseth from Faith is wrought by degrees for it followeth after a continuall affection namely sorrow they that mourne shall be comforted Mat. 5. 4. As sorrow is lessened by Faith so is ioy encreased but yet alwayes there remaineth a mixture of griefe and ioy because there still remaineth in man cause of mourning and reioycing namely the flesh and the spirit Yet this ioy is so fast rooted on a sure ground which is Christ apprehended by a true and liuely Faith that it continueth for euer and neuer vtterly vanisheth away It may be obscured by temptation as the shining of the Sunne by a cloude but as light can neuer be taken from the Sunne so ioy neuer vtterly seuered from Faith hee that can and will performe it hath said it Your ioy shall no man take away from you Such is the power of Faith which breedeth this ioy that the heate of afflictions cannot dry it vp but oft times it causeth it to grow and increase for we reioyce in tribulations The Apostles reioyced because they were counted worthy to suffer rebuke for Christs Name The Hebrewes suffered with ioy the spoiling of their goods This hath in all ages been verified in many Martyrs §. 53. Of Faith when the fruits of it appeare not Quest VVHat if a man cannot find in him these effects of Faith as peace of conscience security of minde ioy of heart hath he then no true Faith at all Answ I dare not so pronounce for true beleeuers may be much troubled in their minde fearefull of their estate full of griefe and mourning and seeme to be farre from those fore-named signes both in the beginning while Faith is as it were in the bud and also in the time of temptation as it were in winter time But yet there may be obserued in such persons an inward panting and breathing which are signes of life namely a groning greeuing that they want those fruits of Faith and an earnest desire of them Such weake ones are to haue recourse to the causes of their Faith and thereby to support themselues till the winter season be passed ouer and till it please the Lord to vouchsafe vnto them a pleasant spring wherein their Faith may send forth the fore-named fruits yet in the meane while let them obserue such fruits of Faith as vsually are in the weakest namely loue of God and Gods children desire and endeauour to please God and feare to offend him with the like which are branches of a cleare conscience §. 54. Of a cleere conscience proceeding from Faith BY a cleere conscience I meane a faithfull endeauor to approue our selues vnto God and that on the one side by doing that which is pleasing and acceptable vnto him and on the other by auoyding that which is offensiue to his excellent Maiesty greeueth his good Spirit This proceedeth from Faith and that in a double respect 1 Because Faith is the instrument wherby we draw all that vertue and grace from Christ our head which enableth vs to keepe a good conscience I liue saith the Apostle meaning a spiritual life By the Faith of the Son of God 2 Because it assureth vs of Gods loue and kindnesse to vs and thereby perswadeth and euen prouoketh vs in all good conscience to serue him the Apostle therefore who said I liue by the Faith of the Sonne of God addeth who loued me c. wherby he implieth that the loue of Christ made knowne to him moued him to liue that spirituall life for when a sinner once beleeueth that God hath indeed so loued him as to giue his onely begotten Sonne for him his heart is so affected as Dauids was thinking what to render vnto God but finding nothing to giue he seeketh what may
please God and setteth himselfe in way of thankefulnesse to doe that as faithfull Enoch who had this testimony that he pleased God being very fearefull to offend him as faithfull Ioseph who being tempted to doe euill said How shall I doe this and sinne against God This cleare conscience being a proper worke and fruit of Faith must needs be a sure note and euidence thereof which the Apostle implieth by ioyning them together They who indeed haue a good conscience haue a sweete sensible and powerfull proofe of the truth of their Faith I will therefore a little longer insist vpon this point and distinctly shew 1 What is the groud or fountaine of a cleare conscience 2 What the inseparable properties thereof are 3 What the extent of it is These points I will the rather note out because they are further euidences and proofes of Faith §. 55. Of loue arising from Faith THe ground-worke of a cleare conscience is loue for Faith giueth assurance of Gods loue a sence of Gods loue worketh loue to God as fire causeth heate so loue causeth loue We loue God because he loued vs first And this loue stirreth vs vp to endeauour to haue a cleare conscience before God I may not vnfitly resemble Faith loue and a cleare conscience to the sappe bud and fruit of a tree the tree is Christ the seuerall branches are particular Christians the sap which runneth thorow all the seuerall branches and is the very life of them is the Spirit that which receiueth and conueyeth the sappe into euery branch is Faith the budde which first sprouteth out is Loue the fruit which commeth out of that bud and manifesteth all the rest is that cleare conscience which now we speake of both fruite and budde spring out of the sappe yet the fruit commeth immediatly out of the bud so both loue and a cleare conscience come from Faith but a cleare conscience immediatly from loue Our loue to God is it which maketh vs carefull to please him fearefull to offend him Wherefore first make tryall of Faith by loue for marke what Christ said of the poore penitent sinner Many sinnes are forgiuen her for she loued much What was her loue the cause of the forgiuenesse of her sinnes No it was a fruit a signe a proofe thereof her sinnes being forgiuen and the pardon of them reuealed to her heart conscience she loued Christ and in testimony of her loue washed wiped and kissed his feete We loue God because we are first loued yea because the loue of God is first shed abroad in our hearts by the holy Ghost whereby we haue a sence of Gods loue to vs. Now because God who cannot be seene hath left vs a visible image of himselfe euen our brother whom he hath set in his owne steed therefore our loue to God moueth vs also to loue our brother and so endeauour to keep a cleare conscience before God and men Saint Iohn doth much presse the loue of our brother as an euident fruite and signe of our loue to God Among other notes of true Faith this especially is to be obserued as a tryall of the weakest Faith when other notes faile this may stand a poore Christian in great steed The Faith of many is so weake that it doth not pacifi● their conscience nor breed any ioy in them yet it worketh loue for aske one who is a weake yet a true Christian and findeth not in himselfe a quiet conscience spirituall ioy and such like euident testimonies whereof I haue before spoken which argues a strong Faith aske him if he loue God hee will not deny it but say Oh I loue God with all my heart If hee doe deny it further aske if he be not greeued for displeasing God if his desire and endeauor be not to please him or yet further aske if he loue not such as he is perswaded loue God Few that are indeed true Christians and not ouerwhelmed with some violent temptations will deny these Now these argue a loue to God in them which must needs proue that they haue Gods loue in some measure reuealed to them and that they beleeue God loueth them though sensibly they discerne it not §. 56. Of a pure heart arising from Faith 2 THe next thing which argueth a cleare conscience to be a fruit of Faith is an inseparable property thereof namely a pure heart These two doth the Apostle ●oyne and that together with Faith and loue ●ea hee ●placeth the testimony of a good conscience in simplicity ●and godly purenesse Now from Faith commeth purity of heart for Faith hath immediate respect to God alone who seeth not as man seeth but searcheth the heart and tryeth the reines in that respect causeth a man to walk before him in truth and with a perfect heart therefore is true Faith called vnfained faith so as hee that in truth dares say Iudge me O Lord for I haue walked in mine integrity hath a good euidence of Faith §. 57. Of keeping a good conscience in all things 3 THe last point is concerning the Extent of a cleare conscience which is without restraint and that in a double respect 1 Of the matter in all things 2 Of the continuance alwayes The generality of the matter hath reference to the rule of a good conscience which is his reuealed will to whom I desire to approue my self that is Gods word Because I desire to please God therefore whatsoeuer I know to be his will I endeauour to doe Thus did Dauid Ioseph Zacharie and Elizabeth Paul and many other testifie their good conscience to Gods word and therby gaue proofe of their true Faith This extent of a good conscience respecteth rather the integrity of the heart then the perfection of the work for perfection of the worke is a full and perfect fulfilling of all the commandements of God whereunto none can attaine in this world Integrity of heart is a true and equall endeauour to performe them all and that though they seeme neuer so contrary to our corrupt humor for herein lyeth a maine difference betwixt Faith vnfeined and hypocriticall The lusts of an hypocrite rule him preuaile ouer his Faith in such things as crosse not his lusts he can be content to obey but no further loath he is to try himselfe he endureth not that any other should try him But vnfeined Faith controuleth all naturall conceits and worldly desires it maketh both reason and will to yeeld to Gods word and will and so maketh a man ready to doe whatsoeuer hee knoweth to be Gods will yea it breedeth an holy iealousie of himselfe as Iob had of his children so as he is very carefull in examining his heart and wayes and willing that others should trie him yea desirous that God would sift him and discouer such hidden sinnes and corruptions as
Satan and our owne lusts as for a time he gaue Dauid ouer §. 62. Of the assurance of Faith THe ground of the latter extreame is that they feele the flesh in them they are very weake and prone to fall away and many in all times haue fallen away Answer These that are thus tempted must know that the cause of our assurance is not in our selues but in Christ our head as we lay hold of him so he fast holdeth vs for there is a double bond whereby we are knit vnto Christ one on Christs part the other on ours That is the Spirit of Christ Hereby wee know that wee dwell in him and he in vs because he hath giuen vs of his Spirit This is our Faith for Christ dwelleth in our hearts by Faith Now though our Faith should let goe her hold yet Christs Spirit wōld not let go his hold This ground of assurance the Scripture expresly declareth for saith Christ I know my sheepe I giue vnto them eternallife and they shall neuer perish now marke the reason There shall not any plucke them out of my hand My Father which gaue them me is greater then all and none is able to take them out of my Fathers hand Wherefore the Diuell and all his adherents can doe no more to put out the light of Faith and plucke vs from Christ then all Creatures on Earth can to extinguish the light of the Sunne For why The Sun from whence this light commeth is farre aboue all they cannot come at it So Christ on whom our Faith is founded is farre aboue all our enemies Christ must be plucked out of Heauen if true Faith vtterly fall away 2 Let the fore-named weake ones consider that as the flesh is in them to make them weake so also the power of Christs Spirit is in them to make them strong Though the spirit suffer the flesh sometimes to preuaile it is not because the flesh is stronger then the spirit or the spirit weaker then the flesh but because the Spirit in wisdome will haue vs see our weakenesse see in what need we stand of the power of God flie to God depend vpon him and at length the Spirit will preuaile and get full conquest 3 As for the fals of other wee know not what they were in truth §. 63. Of the grounds of Scripture for perseuerance TO be freed from this last temptation they which are subiect thereunto must seriously ponder those scriptures which set forth the certainty and perseuerance of Faith which are such as these He that beleeueth hath euerlasting life and shall not come into condemnation but is passed from death vnto life He that drinketh of the water that I shal giue him shall neuer thirst but the water that I shall giue him shal be in him a well of water springing vp into euerlasting life This is the victory that ouercommeth the World euen our Faith Hee that beleeueth on Christ shall not be confounded They that trust in the Lord shall be as Mount Zion which cannot be remoued but abideth for euer The grounds of this stability of Faith are in the Scripture noted to be these 1 The constancy of Gods loue mercy truth couenant calling gifts and the like which is set forth by these and such like promises as these be I haue loued thee with an euerlasting loue With euerlasting kindnesse will I haue mercy on thee My mercy shall not depart away from him The Lord hath sworne in truth hee will not turne from it I will make an euerlasting couenant with them The calling and gifts of God are without repentance 2 The perpetuall efficacy of Christs intercession manifested in one particular example which is to be applied to all his Elect for what he said to Peter I haue praied that they Faith faile not he performeth for all 3 The continuall assistance of the Holy Ghost in which respect it is said That hee shall abide with vs for euer and that hee which hath begunne a good worke will finish it If well we weigh and apply these and such like testimonies of Scripture though we worke out our saluation with feare and trembling yet shall we not be fearefull and doubtfull of the issue §. 64. Of preseruing and encreasing Faith AS a preseruatiue against those two poysonous potions and as a meanes to keepe vs in the right way from falling into any of the two extreames diligent care must bee vsed to preserue and encrease this precious gift of Faith for if Faith be kept aliue so as it may beare sway in vs it will keepe vs both from boasting and doubting Two especiall points there be which make to this purpose 1 A conscionable and constant vse of the meanes which God to this end hath appointed 2 Faithfull and hearty prayer for Gods blessing on those meanes The meanes are two First the ministery of Gods Word Secondly the administration of the Sacraments §. 65. Of vsing the word for increase of Faith VVEe haue heard before how Faith was bred by the word now the word is like to a kind natural mother which giueth sucke to the child which shee hath brought forth whereupon saith the Apostle As new borne babes desire the sincere milke of the word that yee may grow thereby He had said before That we were borne anew by the word of God Here hee sheweth that the Word hath a further vse namely to make vs grow For by the Word the promises of God which at first were made known vnto vs and whereby Faith was bred are againe and againe brought to our remembrance the tender and offer of them oft renewed so as thereby our Faith which otherwise might languish away thorow our own weakenesse and Satans temptations is not onely preserued but exceedingly quickened strengthened and increased Vse Our care therefore must be diligently to frequent the publike ministery of the Word for by it Christ is lift vp in the Church as the brasen Serpent was in the Wildernesse Yea also to reade and search the Scriptures in Families and with our selues alone We heard before that we must attend on the Word till we find Faith wrought in vs. Here we further learne neuer to giue ouer but so long as our Faith hath neede to be confirmed and increased which will be so long as we liue in this world to vse the Word Wee may not therefore thinke it sufficient that we haue had this benefit of the Word to beleeue we must labour for a further benefit to be established and confirmed thereby more and more in our most holy Faith §. 66. Of vsing the Sacraments for increase of Faith THe Sacraments are purposely added for this end to strengthen our Faith which they doe two wayes First they are Gods seales added vnto his word that by two immutable things Gods promise and Gods seale wherein it
is impossible that God should lie wee might haue strong confidence Secondly they doe as it were visibly set before our eyes the sacrifice of Christ which is the ground-worke of our Faith so as in and by them Iesus Christ is euen crucified among vs. The Apostle noteth that Abram after he beleeued receiued the signe of circumcision withal rendreth the reason because it was a seale of the righteousnesse of the Faith which he had therefore it serued to the confirmation and preseruation of his Faith To this end Philip baptized the Eunuch after he beleeued Vse God in wisedome hauing ordained these meanes to cherish our Faith we ought to bee conscionable in a frequent vse of them otherwise shall we shew our selues rebellious against GOD and iniurious to our owne soules §. 67. Of prayer for increase of Faith 2 PRayer is that meanes which God hath appointed to obtaine all grace all strength of grace yea and a blessing vpon all his ordinances as I will after shew so that it must needs in that respect be a notable preseruatiue of Faith Besides by prayer wee make our selues after an holy manner familiar with God and so haue more and more euidence of Gods loue and fauour to vs whereby our Faith must needs be much strengthened When Satan desired to winnow the Apostles what meanes did Christ vse to preserue Peters Faith I haue prayed saith he to Peter for thee that thy Faith faile not Thereby Christ also teacheth vs what we must do to preserue our Faith After that once Faith is bred in vs in Faith we may pray that it faile not but we cannot so pray to get Faith A man that heareth the sweet promises of the Gospel and withall heareth that Faith is that meanes whereby the benefit of them is receiued may earnestly wish for Faith and desire God to giue it him but in Faith which yet he hath not he cannot pray for Faith as after he hath it he may for the preseruation of it therefore faithfull prayer is a proper meanes to cherish keepe strengthen and increase Faith §. 68. Of well vsing Faith THe last point obserued out of this exhortation is How Faith may be well vsed The Apostle doth not simply say Take Faith but addeth this resemblance shield saying Take the shield of faith teaching vs thereby that we must vse Faith as souldiers vse their shield I shewed before how souldiers vse to hold out their shields against all the assaults and weapons of their enemies to keepe themselues safe they vse to lie vnder their shields and so couer and defend their bodies thus must we shelter our soules by Faith holding it out against all spirituall assaults and as I may so speake lie euen vnder it This in general is done by resting on Gods promises which are the ground-worke and rocke of our Faith For by true Faith we doe not onely giue credence to the truth of Gods promises but also trust to them and build vpon them assuring our selues that they shall be effected to our good and so remaine secure whatsoeuer fall out This vse is to be made of Faith both in prosperity and in aduersitie §. 69. Of the vse of Faith in prosperity IN prosperity Faith hath a double vse 1 It maketh vs acknowledge that it is the Lord which hath so disposed our estate as Salomon did saying The Lord hath made good his word c. For Faith hauing an eye to the promises of God and exercising it selfe about them when any good thing falleth out it attributeth and applyeth it to such and such a promise and so acknowledgeth it to be brought to passe by the word and prouidence of God 2 Faith maketh vs rest vpon God for the time to come that all shall goe well with vs as Dauid did For it maketh a man thus to reason God hath made many faithfull promises neuer to faile or forsake them that trust in him He hath hitherto made good his word to me He still remaineth the same God true and faithfull I will therefore trouble my selfe with vndue feares I feare no euill but beleeue that it shall euer go well with me Hereupon also faithfull parents exhort their children to trust in God yea quietly they commend their owne soules into Gods hands and commend their children to Gods prouidence and that vpon this ground exhorting them also to depend on God as Dauid did 1 Chr 22. 11. and 28. 9. For faith hath eyes whereby it doth after a maner see that to be true which yet it seeth not §. 70. Of the vse of Faith in aduersity IN aduersity it hath also a double vse 1 It vpholdeth vs in the present distresse when else we know not what doe instance Dauid 1 Sam. 30. 6. and Iehosaphat 2 Chr. 20. 12. 2 It moueth vs patiently to waite for deliuerance for God hauing promised to giue a good issue Faith resteth vpon it euen as if it were now accomplished Thus in generall we see how Faith hath his vse alwaies in all estates §. 71. Of oft calling to minde Gods promises I Will furthermore particularly shew how we come to shelter our soules vnder Faith For this two especiall things are requisite 1 A faithfull remembrance of Gods promises 2 A wise and right application of them For the first Dauid h hid Gods promises in his heart thus it came to passe that those promises vpheld him in his trouble and he receiued admirable comfort by them Assuredly if the beleeuer doe call to mind Gods promise of succour and redresse in his distresse it will quiet him for the time and make him rest in hope till he enioy the accomplishment of that promise While a beleeuer well remembreth and duely considereth what great and excellent promises are made how mighty faithful and mercifull he is that made them hee thinketh that the world may be as soone ouerthrowne as his Faith But the letting of Gods promises slip out of his memory is that which maketh him faint The Apostle hauing secretly intimated vnto the Hebrewes their fainting declareth the cause thereof by telling them they forgat the consolation for that which is not remembred is as not knowne Now Gods promises being the ground and very life of Faith what vse of Faith can there be if Gods promises be vnknowne or which for the time is all one not remembred As a lamp wil soon be out if oyle be not continually supplyed so Faith if it be not nourished with continuall meditation of Gods promises will soone faile Vse By way of exhortation let vs be stirred vp to search Gods word where his promises are treasured vp and note what promises are there made for our comfort and encouragement yea let vs vse the helpe of others especially of those to whom God hath giuen the tongue of the learned yea among and aboue all others of them whom God hath
destitute of worldly things and in many troubles and tribulations §. 75. Of applying absolute promises 2 FOr the kinds of Gods promises some are absolute which God hath simply and absolutely determined to accomplish euen as they are propounded as before Christ was manifested in the flesh the promise of the Messiah and of calling the Gentiles since that time the promise of calling the Iewes and of Christs second comming in glory All sauing sanctifying graces being absolutely necessary to saluation are thus promised to all Gods children and the continuance and perseuerance of them vnto the end and also the end and issue of all eternall life The vse of Faith in these is to vphold vs against all feare and doubt euen when we haue not a sensible feeling of them for God who is able to performe whatsoeuer he hath promised and true and faithfull in all his promises hauing absolutely promised such such things though all things in Heauen and Earth should seeme to make against them yet would Faith beleeue them §. 76. Of applying conditionall promises OTher promises are conditionall which are no further promised then God in wisdome seeth to be most meete for his owne glory and his childrens good Thus are promised 1 All temporall blessings which Lazarus an holy Saint wanted 2 Freedome from all crosses and troubles What Saint hath not had his part in some of them who hath been freed from all 3 Freedome from all temptations As our head was tempted so haue his members from time to time 4 Lesse principall graces which are called restraining graces being giuen rather for the good of others then of them who haue them These the Spirit distributeth seuerally not all to euery one but some to one some to another 5 The measure of sanctifying graces for though euery Saint hath euery sauing grace in him yet hath he not a like measure some haue a greater and some a lesse Admirable is the vse of Faith in these conditionall promises for it maketh vs so to trust to Gods power as we subiect our selues vnto his will as the Leaper who said If thou wilt thou canst make me cleane and those three constant seruants of God who said Our God is able to deliuer vs from the hot fiery Furnace and hee will deliuer vs out of thine hand O King But if not be it knowne to thee O King that wee will not serue thy gods c. For Faith perswadeth vs that God is wiser then our selues and that he better knoweth what is good for vs then we our selues doe and so moueth vs to resigne vp our selues wholly to Gods good pleasure This is the generall vse of Faith in respect of these conditionall promises it hath also other particular vses as 1 For temporall things so to rest on Gods promise as we beleeue God will either supply our wants or inable vs to beare them as God had taught Paul how to want 2 For crosses so to beare them as being assured that God will either free vs from them as he deliuered Iob or assist vs and inable vs to beare them and turne them to our good 3 For temptations that God will stand by vs and giue a good issue 4 For restraining and common graces so to content our selues as we doubt not but also to haue such sanctifying as shall be needfull to our saluation which also is to be applied to the measure of sanctifying graces according to that answere of God to Saint Paul My grace is sufficient for thee §. 77. Of applying implicit promises FOr the manner of propounding Gods promises they are either expresly declared or else by consequence implied Expresse promises are either generally propounded to all of these we haue heard before or else particularly applied to some particular persons Some of these are such as are not proper to him alone to whom in particular they are directed but for the good of others also If we find such needfull for vs it is the vse of Faith to apply them to our selues with as strong confidence as if they had beene directed to vs. This the Apostle teacheth vs to doe for where God made a promise to Ioshuah I will not faile thee c. the Apostle applieth it to all Christians The ground of this application is taken from Gods vnchangeable and impartiall manner of dealing the same God that he is to one faithfull man the same he is to all If therefore he would not faile I●shuah neither will he faile any By consequence promises are implied either in the examples or prayers of faithfull Saints In their examples by those blessings which they haue enioyed For that which God bestoweth on one he is ready to bestow on euery one to whom it is needfull Gods giuing it to one is a promising of it to all So as we may with as strong confidence depend vpon God for such needfull things as if God had expresly promised them Thus doth Saint Iames vrge that end which God gaue to Iobs troubles as a ground of our Faith to make vs waite for a like deliuerance in our troubles In their prayers by those things which they haue praied for in Faith and obtained Their faithfull calling vpon God and Gods gracious hearing of them are as much as a promise that God in such and such things will heare vs calling vpon him thus did Dauid make this a ground of his faith Psal 22. 5. The vse of Faith in these implicit promises is to perswade our hearts that God will deale with vs as hee hath in former times dealt with his faithfull children §. 78. Of the true Heires of Gods promises THe last point to be noted for the right application of Gods promises is the persons to whom they belong Here note two points 1 Who are the righteous heires and children of Gods promises 2 How these heires are qualified 1 For the first Christ Iesus the true naturall Sonne of God as hee was Emanuel God with vs our Head and our Redeemer is properly the heire of all Gods promises In him they are yea and Amen That is to say In him they are propounded ratified and accomplished This is euident by those generall promises which are the foundation of all the rest He that is Christ shall breake thine head In thy seede that is Christ shall all the Nations of the Earth ●e blessed Now how is Christ the heire of Gods promises as a priuate person onely in himselfe No verily but as a publike person as the head of a body for Iesus together with all the Saints which were giuen him of his Father make but one mysticall body which is Christ so as all the faithfull together with Christ are heires of the promises they and they alone haue a right vnto them so as what the Apostle saith of godlinesse I may fitly apply to Faith
laboureth to spoile vs of the Girdle of Truth Brestplate of Righteousnesse and Shooes of Patience but his best wit and greatest force is bent against the Shield of Faith The first assault made against Eue was in regard of her Faith Hath God indeede said c so against Christ If thou bee the Sonne of God c. Herein did he oft tempt the Israelites yea Moses also in the wildernesse This was it for which he desired to winnow Peter and for which Paul feared lest hee had tempted the Thessalonians Lamentable experience sheweth how mightily hee preuaileth by this temptation in time of persecution he bringeth men hereby to renounce their profession and hereby at all times he bringeth many to the very pit of despaire That which hath been before deliuered concerning the excellency necessity vse and benefit of Faith declareth the reason why the Diuell so assaulteth it for hee being our Aduersary walking about and seeking whom to deuoure espieth that Faith is it which especially preserueth vs safe from being deuoured that this is the victory which ouercommeth both himselfe and his chiefe agent and instrument the world and therefore with all might and maine endeauoureth to spoile vs of this shield It is therefore needfull we should know what are his wyles and how they may be auoyded His sundry kindes of wyles may be drawne to two heads namely those wherby he laboureth either to keep men from Faith or else to wrest Faith from them I will in order discouer some of the principall in both kinds which are these §. 88. Answer to Satans Suggestion that it is presumption to beleeue 1. Suggest FIrst it is altogether impossible to attaine vnto any such gift as Faith is Secondly can any man be assured that Christ is his Thirdly whosoeuer hath any such conceit presumeth Fourthly to inforce this temptation the further he also suggesteth that the ground of Faith Gods word is vncertaine And fiftly though that Scripture were the certain Word of God yet the Ministery of it by man is too weake a meanes to worke so great a worke as Faith is thought to be this Suggestion hath preuailed much with Papists Answ First that which hath been before deliuered concerning the getting of Faith sheweth that this is a lying Suggestion Secondly it hath been expresly proued that a man may know he hath Faith Thirdly the differences betwixt Faith and presumption shew that assurance of Faith is no presumption 1 Faith driueth a man out of himselfe because the beleeuer can find no ground of confidence in himselfe therefore hee casteth himselfe wholly vpon CHRIST Presumption findeth something in the man himselfe to make him boast 2 Faith resteth on a sure ground which is Gods Word that both commandeth vs to beleeue and promiseth to performe that which we doe beleeue Presumption relyeth onely on a mans surmize and meere coniecture 3 Faith is ioyned with the vse of the means both of those meanes whereby it was first bred and also of those which God hath appointed for the nourishing of it Presumption not onely carelesly neglecteth but arrogantly contemneth all meanes 4 Faith is wrought by degrees first by knowledge then by griefe after by desire as we heard before Presumption is a sudden apprehension of the mind 5 Faith maketh a man worke out his saluation with an holy iealousie yea with feare and trembling oft calling vpon God and depending on him Presumption is ouer-bold 6 Faith maketh a man depart from all iniquity and keepe a cleere conscience Presumption is accompanied with much pollution at least inward 7 Faith is most sure in time of tryall then is the strength of it most manifested Presumption like a Bragadocha then maketh greatest florish when there is least danger 8 Faith continueth vnto the end and neuer falleth away Presumption is subiect to decay totally and finally 4 Of the certainty of Gods word we shal after speak 5 For mans Ministery it is Gods ordinance thence it hath that mighty power to worke Faith for God who at first brought light out of darkenesse can by weake meanes worke great matters Besides We haue this treasure in earthly vessels that the excellency of that power might be of God and not of vs. §. 89. Answer to Satans suggestion of the difficulty of getting Faith 2 Suggest IF it be not impossible to get Faith yet it is so difficult and hard a matter that not one of a thousand who seeke it obtaine it Herein Satan preuaileth with idle slothfull persons who in all things which they should enterprise pretend more dangers and difficulties then needes of purpose to find a pretence to their idlenesse Answer Though it bee hard to the carnall carelesse man yet as Salomon saith of knowledge Pro. 14. 6. Faith is easie to him that will beleeue not that it is simply in mans power but that Gods Spirit so openeth his vnderstanding in the mysteries of godlinesse so worketh on his hard and stony heart making the one capable and the other pliable as thereby the man is brought like softened waxe easily to receiue the impression of Gods seale Though man in himselfe be dead in sin yet Gods word is as powerfull to quicken him as Christs was to raise Lazarus Indeed many seeke and find not aske and haue not but why Saint Iames giueth one reason They aske and seeke amisse They seeke Faith in themselues and from themselues they seeke it by carnall and fleshly deuices they seeke it by their owne wit and reason Saint Paul rendreth another reason The God of this world hath blinded their minds that the glorious light of the Gospell should not shine vnto them Because they oppose against Gods truth so farre as it is made knowne vnto them or wittingly winke at it or turne from it God giueth them ouer in iust iudgement to the power of Satan who blindeth their minds But if we repaire to the Author who giueth Faith and to the spring whence it floweth if we rightly vse the right meanes of attaining it and waite at the doore of Wisedome till shee open vnto vs vndoubtedly we shall find Faith and not misse of it §. 90. Answer to Satans suggestion of the small need and vse of Faith 3 Suggest FAith is a needlesse thing This conceit the Diuell putteth into the mind of two sorts of people first of proud Pharisaicall Iusticiaries who trust to their owne righteousnesse these thinke that the brest-plate of righteousnesse is armour enough Secondly of secure carnall Gospellers who imagine that a good hope as they call it is sufficient there needeth not assurance of Faith Answer God maketh and ordaineth nothing in vaine as for the proud Iusticiary let him first know that righteousnes seuered from Faith is no righteousnesse though righteousnesse ioyned with Faith be of good vse yet seuered from Faith it is of no vse at all Secondly that the Brest-plate of
righteousnesse which the best men euer in this World had was full of crackes and holes full of many defects and imperfections through which Satan would soone haue wounded them euen to death if they had not had this shield As for the secure Protestant if euer hee feele the fire of Satans darts he will find that all the assurance which possibly he can attaine vnto is little enough That poore man which said I beleeue Lord helpe my vnbeliefe And the Disciples which said Lord increase our faith saw that a good hope was not enough As a preseruatiue against this poysonous temptation wee must labour for all the assurance of Faith that wee can §. 90. Answer to Satans suggestion of the damage arising from Faith 4 Suggest FAith is hurtfull to a mans credit honour profit pleasure c. Herein Satan preuaileth with worldlings whose hearts are onely on things here below Answer First the price of Faith yea of one graine of Faith is of more worth then all the treasure in the world this that good Merchant well knew who sold all to buy it Secondly they who are wounded with Satans fiery darts would willingly forgoe all credit wealth and pleasure that the World possibly can giue for a dramme of Faith Thirdly there can be no true credit honour c. without Faith all are sanctified by Faith otherwise they are meere shadowes and shewes §. 91. Answer to Satans suggestion of Mans vnworthinesse 5 Suggest FAith is too good and precious a thing for poore wretched sinners to haue herein hee preuaileth with distressed fearefull Christians Answer For remouing of this wee must remember what was before deliuered of Gods free grace and rich bounty which is not restrained by our vn worthinesse If the Diuell by these or such like meanes cannot keepe vs from getting faith he hath other wiles to wrest it from vs which follow §. 92. Answer to Satans suggestion of mans imperfection 6 Suggest THy Faith is not sound but counterfeit for it is mixed with many imperfections transgressions weakenesses doubtings there is no growth or increase of it many weake Christians are brought hereby to stagger Answer Oft proue thy Faith especially by the causes and by thy loue and true desire to liue honestly Know that euery thing here is imperfect yet that truth and imperfection may stand together striue against these imperfections and vse the meanes for encrease of Faith §. 93. Answer to Satans suggestion of trusting to meanes 7 Suggest THere are meete helps afforded for all distresses why may not men trust to them Is it not good to seeke to the Physician in sicknesse to trust vnto number and prowesse of men in warre and to friends in time of need Thus he maketh many to cast away the shield of Faith their confidence in God and to trust vnto outward meanes as Asa Answer All meanes are subordinate to Gods Prouidence and guided thereby therefore in the vse of them wee must looke vnto God and depend on him and call vpon him for a blessing neither supply of meet meanes nor want of them must any whit lessen our trust in God but to God must all the glory be giuen whatsoeuer the meanes be §. 94. Answer to Satans suggestion of apostacy 8 Suggest THou canst neuer hold out thy Faith will not onely be in vaine but thy latter end is like to be worse then the beginning How many haue fallen away in all ages and daily doe fall away Answer There are meanes to preserue and increase Faith as well as to get it let them be well vsed and thy Faith shall neuer faile Remember Christs prayer for Peters Faith as for others wee cannot so well know the ●oundnesse of their Faith as of our owne §. 95. Direction against Satans stormes IF he preuaile not by any of these or such like subtill suggestions he will try by all the stormes and troubles he can to shake and ouerthrow our Faith We must therefore be like sound Oaken Trees which the more they are shaken the deeper roote they get in the earth and know for our comfort the Diuel can raise no greater stormes then God in wisedome permitteth him God in the end will turne all to our good as he dealt with Iob Iob 42. 10. c. so that if we beleeue we shall surely be established Faith maketh men secure in perils THE SEAVENTH PART The Helmet of Hope Ephesians 6. 17. And take the Helmet of Saluation §. 1. Of the difficulty of a Christian Souldiers Estate EXcellent meanes of defence are those whereof we haue heard especially the last of them yet the Apostle thinketh them not sufficient but proceedeth to set forth other peeces of armour saying And take c. Whence wee may well gather that It is no easie matter to be a Christian Souldier and stedfastly to stand vnto the end against all assaults Many graces are needfull to be added one to another for that purpose One might haue though that when hee had named the shield of Faith he need haue added no more but God who knoweth both our weakenesse and pronenesse to faint and also the power and subtilty of our aduersaries better then our selues seeth it needfull that an helmet be vsed as well as a shield our care therefore must be to vse this also §. 2. Of the Spirituall Grace here meant THis fift peace of Spirituall Armour though it bee not plainely expressed is necessarily implied to be Hope for in another place where hee vseth this metaphor hee expresseth Hope Put on saith he for an Helmet the hope of Saluation What could more plainely be spoken and what better interpreter of the Apostles minde could wee haue then the Apostle himselfe Saluation is thus applied to Hope because 1 Saluation is the maine end of our Hope that which aboue all toher things wee waite for when we come to the possession of it then hath Hope her end and period 2 It is an especiall meanes of attaining vnto Saluation We are saued by Hope This is that coard whereby wee hold fast to Gods promises till they bee all accomplished which will not bee vntill wee enioy saluation 3 Herein lieth a maine difference betwixt the hope of worldlings and Saints their hope reacheth no further then to the things of this life therefore when they die their hope perisheth but these hope for an inheritance immortall c. Therefore they haue hope in their death for if in this life onely wee haue hope in Christ wee are of all men the most miserable Thus hauing shewed what this Helmet of Saluation is I will distinctly shew 1. What Hope is 2 How it differeth from Faith 3 How fitly it is compared to an Helmet 4 How necessary it is 5 How it is gotten preserued and vsed 6 What are Satans wiles against it §. 3. Of the definition of Hope HOpe
performe it vntill the day of Iesus Christ 3 Though we knew how to pray yet would not our prayer be acceptable to God except it came from his Spirit it is attributed as a proper worke to the Spirit that he maketh intercession according to the will of God that is so as is pleasing and acceptable to God for as God knoweth the meaning of the Spirit so the Spirit knoweth the will of God 1 Heere note how the whole Trinitie hath a worke in this holy exercise of prayer The holy Ghost frameth our requests The Son offereth them vp vnto his Father The Father accepteth them thus framed and offered vp 2 Note the reason why the prayers of the Saints are so acceptable and auaileable why they pierce thorow the clouds and haue accesse to Gods throne they are the groanes of Gods Spirit not that the Spirit groaneth but that our spirits are made to groane by Gods Spirit 3 Note what an admirable gift the gift of prayer is a singular gift peculiar and proper to the Saints who haue the Spirit of God if no man can say that Iesus is the Lord but by the holy Ghost surely no man can call vpon God as his Father but by the Spirit of God We haue therefore receiued the Spirit of adoption whereby we crie Abba Father 4 Note how we may know whether Gods Spirit bee in vs and whether we be Gods sonnes or no euen by the Spirit of prayer I meane not an outward formall vttering of words but true prayer comming from the heart §. 128. Of the meanes to pray aright in the Spirit THey who desire to pray aright so as their prayer should be acceptable to God must 1 Labour for Gods sanctifying spirit which is gotten by the ministery of the word as was set foorth by those extraordinary gifts which God bestowed on Christians while they were hearing the word preached as Saint Paul with great emphasis affirmeth saying receiued ye the the spirit by the workes of the law or by hearing of faith that is assuredly by hearing the Gospell which is the word of faith preached ye receiued the spirit in which respect the preaching of the Gospell is called the ministration of the spirit 2 Hauing the spirit we must goe along with him and follow his good motions powring forth those desires which he suggesteth vnto vs the fire which God would continually to burne vpon his Altar came out from the Lord. If sacrifices were offered vp with any other fire that fire was counted strange and the sacrifices no whit acceptable but abominable to the Lord the heauenly fire whereby our spirituall sacrifices of praier must be offered vp is that holy spirit which commeth out from God he carrieth the very image of God we must therefore giue vnto God that which is Gods 3 We must take heede we grieue not the holy spirit of God which is done by quenching the goog motions thereof thorow our carelesnesse or by resisting the spirit thorow our rebellion hence is it that many of the Saints are so dull and vntoward to this exercise by their security and carnality they haue grieued Gods spirit and he hath withdrawne his helpe and assistance Many hearing that the spirit maketh request for vs wil be ready wholly to giue ouer this duty vnto the worke of the spirit and so neuer rowse vp themselues but say when the spirit please it will make request for me These grieue the spirit because they stirre not vp the gift thereof §. 129. Of prayer comming from the spirit of a Man 2 FOr the second doctrine that Prayer framed by the Spirit of God floweth out of the very spirit and heart of a man it is also cleare by the forenamed place The spirit maketh intercession with groanes c. Now groanes proceede from the heart and spirit not from the tongue and lips but more expresly the Apostle saith that the spirit which crieth Abba Father is sent into our hearts Hence it is that they which pray in the spirit are said to powre out their soule and their heart to God The Virgin Mary who without all question praised God in the spirit saith My soule magnifieth the Lord my spirit reioyceth in God 1 The heart of man is as it were Gods chaire of state whereunto no creature can come it is proper to God alone it is his Pallace wherein he most delighteth wherefore Gods Spirit maketh his aboade there and stirreth that vp to pray 2 The heart is a fountaine whence commeth euery thing good or euill wherefore the Spirit doth especially purifie and sanctifie it Yea the heart is as a Queene shee hath a command of all the powers of the soule and parts of the body and therefore the Spirit giueth this gift of prayer to her §. 130. Of discerning when we pray in the Spirit Vse 1 HEreby may we iudge whether the Spirit of God be in vs and moue vs to pray or no. If our prayer come but from the teeth though it be neuer so well framed in regard of the forme of words and though our gesture be neuer so seemely sauouring of much reuerence and humility yet all is nothing the Spirit of God hath no part in this worke if thy spirit pray not Herein lieth a maine difference betwixt the manner of perswading God and man Man may be moued with faire speeches inticing words eloquent phrases as the people of Tyrus and Sidon with Herods eloquent Oration but all the eloquence in the World is no more to God then the lowing of an Oxe or the howling of a dogge if it come not from the spirit Hearty and vpright prayer is the best rhetoricke to moue God withall Vse 2 What matter of humiliation is ministred vnto most euen of them that are accounted the best how often doe such as heare others pray fall downe on their knees and so seeme to pray and yet know not what hath beene prayed Their thoughts haue beene vpon other matters Some manifest as much in that when the prayer is ended they testifie no assent thereunto by saying Amen Yea how often doe they who vtter the prayer Ministers in the Church other persons in other places tumble ouer words with their mouthes when their hearts are wandring so as little assent of spirit if any at all hath been giuen to their owne words Can such sacrifices be acceptable to God let vs be humbled for that which is past and be more watchfull ouer our hearts for the time to come THE FIFTH PART The helpe of Prayer §. 131. Of watching vnto Prayer THE fourth generall branch is concerning the helpe of Prayer Which is watchfulnesse noted in this clause Watch thereunto The originall word according to the proper notation of it signifieth to awake and abstaine from sleepe it is properly attributed to the body metaphorically and by way of resemblance vnto the
bee in the day or Night 490 O OPENING OF Ministers Opening their mouths 520 P PApists abandoned by preaching 78. 79 Papists enemies to Gods people 326 Pardon of sinne 572. see Sinne. PATIENCE What Patience is 162 Patience resembled to shooes 163 Patience how it is gotten 164 How patience may bee rightly grounded in vs. 168. 170. 173 How men may bee perswaded to Patience 174 The necessity of Patience 174. 188 The benefit of Patience 178. 188 How Patience hath a perfect work 179 Two extreames of Patience 181. 182 Counterfeit Patience 172 Satans wyles against Patience 186 Patience maketh many crosses light It preuenteth and remoueth many It inableth vs to beare all 188. c. PEACE Why attributed to the Gospell 167 Peace of the Gospell what it is 166 Peace with God keepeth away many euils 191 Peace with God altereth the nature of all crosses 192 Peace with God procureth assistance in all troubles and full freedome from all 194 Persecution no matter of Shame 548 Persecution honored by the cause 549 Persecution no sufficient cause to make Ministers cease preaching 555 What are those causes 550 Perseuere 116 Perseuerance in prayer 496. c. How long we must Perseuere 497 Difference betwixt Perseuering and praying alwayes 498 Difference betwixt Perseuering and much babling 499 Perseuering in prayer extraordinary 443 Perseuerance requireth that prayers be oft renewed and long held out 500 Petition for good things 367 Place Euery one abide in his owne place 114. 534 Giue no Place 63. 103 Power of God a mightie Power 12 The mightie Power of God a prop to faith 13. 225 The benefit of trusting to Gods Power 15 God able to performe his word 225 Prayer 340 Prayer an admirable gift 484 What Prayer is 345 Difference betwixt ciuill and diuine Prayer 347 Prayer a worke of the Holy Ghost see Ghost 482 Prayer to be made only to God 346 How Praiers of mē are to be desir'd 503 Of them prayers may be desired 507 The dead may not be praied vnto ibid. Nor prayed for 377 Why needful by prayer to make known our desire to God 347 What requisite to the right manner of praying 348 Prayer to be made in the mediation of Christ 349 In feare and reuerence 350 In faith and humilitie 351 With holinesse sence and feeling 352 In sinceritie in hart in spirit 353. 486 In feruency 353. 441 Motiues to Prayer 353 1 Gods charge 353 2 By prayer God is worshipped 3. Honoured 354 4 Prayer is absolutely necessary 355 5 Prayer is profitable 1 To obtaine euery good thing 356 2 To preuent iudgement 3. Preserue grace 4. Subdue sinne 5. Sanctifie all things 357. 358 6 Prayer is powerfull with the Creator 362 Prayer is powerfull with the creature 361 7 Prayer is a matter of great dignitie 364 Why prayer is not alwayes heard 359 501 The kindes of prayer 365 1 Petition for good things 367 2 Deprecation against euill 370 3 Intercession for others 374 Who are not to be prayed for 377 Who are to be Prayed for 383. 509 All in generall to be Prayed for 384 1 Saints 2. Magistrates and Ministers 386 Why Ministers especially 510 3 Kindred and friends 387 4 Strangers 5. Enemies 388 What is to be Prayed for in the behalfe of others 392 4 Imprecation against others See imprecations 394 5 Thanksgiuing 399 Prayer mentall or vocall 421. 422 Prayer sudden or composed 423. 424 Prayer cōceiued or prescribed 426. 427 Prayer publike priuate or secret 429 c. Prayer in family 437 Prayer extraordinary Motiues thereto 440. c. Who are to desire others prayers 506 Gifts bestowed to be prayed for 519 The time of prayer 471 How we may pray alwayes ibid. Set times of prayer for euery day 473 Constancy in keeping those set times 475 Whatsoeuer is done pray 478 Hearts alwayes ready to pray 479 Perseuere in prayer see Perseuerance Watch to pray see Watchfulnesse Body and soule must be roused vp to prayer 491 Drowsie praying 493 Preparation before prayer 424 Preparation against triall 106 Preparation of the Gospell of peace 160. c. Preaching the most proper meanes of faith 219 The Gospell is the proper obiect of Preaching 528 Preaching must be distinct and audible 521 Presume not 30. 342 Confidence in Gods power no Presumption 15 Whence Presumption ariseth 46 Difference betwixt Presumption and faith 287 Principalities 59 Priuate prayer in family 437 Proofe to be giuen of grace in vs. 26 PROMISES Promises of God offered to all 228 Remembrance of Gods Promises an helpe to faith 268 Generall Promises why to be obserued 270 Particular Promises needfull 271 Promises for al things needful 270. 471 Promises absolute 273 And conditionall 274 The diuers manner of propounding Promises 276 To whom Gods Promises belong 277 The time of accomplishing Gods Promises vncertaine 302 PROSPERITIE The vse of faith in Prosperity 267 Publike prayer 429 What persons are required thereto 430 The place of Publike prayer 431 Vnanimitie and vniformitie in Publike prayer 433. c. Motiues to Publike prayer 436 Pure heart see Heart Purgatory a fiction 378 R RElapse dangerous 624 Religion Wee cannot bee saued in euery Religion 136 Remembrance of Gods promises an helpe to faith 268 Remission of sinne 572 See Sinne. Repaire of grace decayed 100 Spirituall wounds Restored and healed 285 Repent alwayes when men will they cannot 157 Repetition of the same things 95. 96 Reproofe of impudent sins to be sharpe 567 Resolution of the Apostle inuincible 558 RIGHTEOVSNES What Righteousnesse is 143 Righteousnesse Legall and Euangelicall 144 Righteousnes fitly resembled to a brest-plate 146 How Righteousnesse is put on 147 The benefit of Righteousnesse 148. 153 154 Mans Righteousnesse cannot be meritorious 149. c. Righteousnesse needfull to saluation 152 Righteousnesse and faith haue distinct vses ibid. Righteousnesse acceptable to God 155 The parts of Righteousnesse may not be seuered 156 Direction for the vse of Righteousnesse 159 S SAcraments a means to increase faith 265 Sanctified how farre we may be sanctified 410 Satan see Diuell Scripture see Word Scoffes of wicked 304 Securitie carnall 105 Securitie holy 249 SINNE Sinne infinite in nature 620 Nothing but Sinne can wound the soule 146 Difference betwixt Sinnes of the regenerate and others 157. 620 Sinnes of impudent sinners to be plainly discouered 567 Sinne may be forgiuen 572 All Sinnes may be forgiuen 574 Pardon of Sinne offered to all 587 Sinne against the holy Ghost 598 See Ghost Sinne cannot be forgiuen in the world to come 607 Pardon of Sinne to bee sought in this life 614 They whose Sinne is not pardoned are damned 621 The proportion betwixt Sinne and the eternall punishment thereof 620 A Sinners will to sinne is infinite 620 Difference betwixt Sinners 613 How Sinne may be turned to the good of the Saints 172 How farre wee are freed from Sinne. 410 Sinne against the Holy Ghost see Ghost Sinceritie 542 See Truth Sonne of man 588 Who so called 589 VVhy Christ is called Son of
3. 14. c Ioh. 14. 17. 4 Gods goodnesse moued him to make his promises to man 5 Gods grace is free d Ioh. 3. 16. e Rom. 5. 10. f Gen. 3. 15. 6 Gods mercy is abundant g Psal 108. 4. h Ephe. 2. 4. i Exo. 34. 6. k Mat. 12. 31 32. l Gen. 4. 13. Simil. 7 Gods promises are offered to all m Luk. 2. 10. n Ioh. 1. 6. 7 o Mat 28. 19. p Mar. 16. 15. r Num. 21. 8. a Ioh. 3. 14 15 The generall offer of Christ a meanes to draw all to receiue Christ Obiect Answer b 2 Pet. 1. 10. c Deut 29. 29. Obiect Answer Quest 1. d Rom. 3. 33. Quest 2. a Mat. 11. 28. b Luk. 5. 32. c Tim. 1. 15. d Hab. 2. 3. e Heb. 10. 37. Est animi generosi perdurare quo ad Deus misereatur nostri Crys parad Theod. f Ioh. 5. 5. c. Obiect Answere None sinne in beleeuing * §. 88. g Ioh 3. 18. h 1 Ioh. 5. 10. i Mat. 22. 3 5 6. How man sinneth in not beleeuing k Mat. 22. 6. l Acts. 2. 13. m Acts 13. 45. 1 Cor 1 23. n Luke 14. 18. o Mat. 3. 7. p 13. 19 q 21 r 22. t Mat. 23. 37 Incredulity a grieuous sinne 1 Dis●honourable to God u Psal 78. 19 20. * 1 Ioh. 5. 10. x Gen. 4. 13. * Psal 10 4 5. y Gen. 3. 8. z Ioh. 20. 25. 2 Dangerous to men Filios Diaholi infide litas facit quod peccatum proprium vocatur quasi solum sit c. Aug. cont ep Pelag. lib. 3. c. 3 a Ion. 3. 18. b Act. 13. 46. V. Point The tryall of Faith Simil. c 1 Pet. 1. 7. Faith may be knowne d Psal 116. 10 e Ioh. 6. 69. f 2. Tim. 1. 12. g Act. 8. 37. h Ioh. 9. 38. i 2 Cor. 4. 13. k 1 Cor. 2. 12. l 2 Cor. 13. 5. m Ier. 17. 9. n Psal 12. 2. o Isa 38. 3. Though they which haue no faith may be deceiued yet they which indeed haue it may discerne it Isa 29 8. Simil. Though in a temptation a man doubt yet out of it hee may haue assurance Simil. True Faith may stand with doubting a 1 Cor. 13. 9. b Mar. 9. 24. Fidei praecipua virtus in eo est vt non ambigas Chrys in Tit. hom 3. How faith may be proued Note that many differences may be discerned in the causes of Faith after Faith is wrought which cannot be found before faith Causes of Faith 1. Illumination f Rom 7. 7 c g 1 Tim. 1. 13. 2 Compunction and griefe of heart a Mat. 9. 12. b Luke 4. 18 c Acts 16. 14 d Heb. 11. 31 c Luke 23. 42 f Acts 2. 37 g 16. 29 h Luke 7. 38 i Ios 2. 11 k Acts 16. 13 14. l Acts 10 44. 45. m 1 Sam. 7. 6 n Luke 7. 38. o Acts 16. 29 Causes of true griefe 1 Gods word worketh it p Acts 2. 37. q 16. 26 c. r 2 Chr. 33. 10 12 2 It ariseth from despaire in our selues ſ Acts 2. 37 16. 30 And from sence of Gods disp●easure t Luke 15. 18. Effects of true griefe u Ier. 31. 19 * Lu. 3. 10 12 14. Rom. 6. 21. Vbi dolor finitur deficit poenitentia Aug. de ver pen. c. 13. a Psal 6 2 3 32 3 51 1 c. Rom. 7. 24 3 Desire of Christ Proofes of true desire 1. The Cause 2 The Order c Acts 4. 12. 3 The Quality d Psal 42. 1. 2. 1 Cor. 2. 11. * §. 23. f Num. 23. 10. 4. The Fruits g Mat. 13. 44. h Luke 18. 10. 13. 5. Continuance Longe aberit a siti satietas longe a saetietate fastidium quia sitientes saturabimur satiati sitiemus Aug. de Spec. c. 29. i 1 Pet. 2. 2. Faith is operatiue as fi●e Absit vt sentiret vas electionis iustificari bominem per fidem etiamsi male vivat opera bona non habeat Aug. ●de gr lib. arb cap. 7. b Ephe. 2. 8 9 c Act. 15. 9. d Gal. 5. 6. e Rom. 3. 28. f Iam 2. 24. What is a quiet conscience Nihil eft quod ita voluptatem afferre solet atque pura conscientia Chrys●n 2 Cor. ho●● 12. i Phil. 4. 7. k Rom. 5. 1. A quiet conscience ari●seth from Faith k Isa 64. 6. l Psal 143. 2. m 1 Ioh 2. 1 2 No wicked ma●● consci●ence can be quiet a Mar. 27. 5. b 1 Tim. 4. 2. c Acts 26. 9 d Ioh. 16. 2. Holy security e Psal 4 8. f 1 Pet. 5. 7. g Psal 55. 22. h 37. 5. i 2 Chr. 20. 20. Spirituall ioy k Rom 5. 1 2. l Act. 8. 39. m 16. 34. n 1 Pet. 1. 8. o Luk. 8. 13 Ioh. 5. 35. The ioy of hypocrites not sound p Mat. 13. 20. q Iob 20. 5. Mat. 13. 21 Notes of spirituall ioy Fidelis etst timet a iudice sperat a saluatore cum iam in animo eius timor loetitia obequitent obuient sibi Bern in reg Nat Dom. se●m a Ioh. 16. 22. b Rom. 5. 3. c Acts 5. 41 d Heb. 10. 34 Faith sometimes as a tree in winter c Acts 24. 16. Heb. 13. 18. What is a cleare conscience h Psal 116. 10 11. i Heb. 11. 5. k Gen. 39. 9. 1 Tim. 1. 5. Loue the ground of a cleare conscience m 1 Ioh. 4. 19. n Ioh. 15. 5. Hab. 2. 4. Gal. 2 20. p Gal. 5. 6. a Luke 7. 47. b 1 Ioh 4. 19. c Rom. 5. 5. d Act. 24. 16. e 1 Ioh. 3. 17. 4. 20. Loue of our brother a note of the weakest faith Pia fides fine charitate esse non vult Aug. epist 83. A cleare conscience is alwayes accompanied with a pure heart f 1 Tim. 1. 1. 5 g 2 Cor. 1. 12. h Act. 15. 9. i 1 Sam. 16. 7. k Ier. 17. 10. l Psal 26. 1. m Heb. 13. 18. n Act. 24. 16. A cleare conscience extendeth it selfe vnto all things o 1 King 15 5 p 2 Kin. 23. 25. q Luk. 1. 6. r Heb. 13. 18. ſ Mar. 6. 17 c. a Iob 1. 5. b 2 Sam. 12. 13. Psal 51 c Rom. 7. 15 c. d Psal 119. 11. A cleare conscience endureth to the end e Reu. 2. 19. g Phil. 3. 13. c. h Iohn 7. 38. Two extreams 1 Ouer-secure boldnesse Obiect Answer e Phil. 2. 12. f 1 Pet. 1. 4. g Luke 8. 13. h Acts 8. 13. i 2 Tim. 4. 10. k Iohn 2. 23. How farre the sence of faith may be lost a 1 Cor. 10. 12. b Rom. 11. 20 c Heb. 12. 15 d 3. 12. e 4. 1. f Mat. 26. 41. g Heb. 10. 38. 2 Sam. 11. 2. 2 Ouer-childish fearefulnesse Assurance in Christ e 1 Iohn 4. 13 f Eph. 3. 17. g Ioh. 10. 27. 28. The power of Christs Spirit n the weakest a Iohn 5. 24. b 4. 14. c 1 Iohn