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heart_n flesh_n new_a stony_a 5,704 5 12.0562 5 true
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A93368 Soule-reviving influences of the sun of righteousnesse, or Some bright beames of light and love, sparkling from Christ upon the darke and drooping hearts of sin-weakend and clouded believers, even while we are in this solitary wildernesse, not yet arrived at the land of spirituall Canaan; but taking a turne in the darke and dampe valley of the shadow of death. With several evangelicall and heart-winning incouragements to the life of faith in the Sonne of God, notwithstanding our manifold weaknesses and hainous provocations; yea to the keeping up of the same comfort, hope confidence, and joy in him in the sadest straights, of the sorest darknesse. Smith, John, of Badgworth. 1654 (1654) Wing S4091A; Thomason E1485_1; ESTC R208761 97,631 237

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so adamantinely hard that I can be affected neither with the chastisements nor mercies of the Lord. There is indeed much hardness of heart in the deare children of God their hearts have been as hard as a rock adamant or flint they and they only feel it complaine of it and mourn under it and this is tendernes or the effect of an heart of flesh It is the frame of a new heart and the temper of an experienced gracious spirit to lament from the sense of its own hardnesse of heart O Lord why hast thou made us to erre from thy waies and hardned our hearts from thy feare Doubtlesse thou art our father c. Their hearts were hardned from Gods feare and yet they were the children of God Poore soule I would be acquainted how thou camest to know thou hast an hard heart who told thee so art thou certaine thou art not mistaken if thou replyest that thou seest or feelest it I reply if it be so then thou art happy for thou ha●● the inbeing of the Spirit of Christ it is none other then the Spirit of the Lord Jesus that discovers to a man his own darknesse and convinceth him of his own deadnesse and hardnesse of heart yea none but this Spirit lusteth against the flesh and thou livest to God truly though not so holily and sensibly as thou mightest and oughtest for how should a senselesse stone feele its own hardnesse or he that is soundly a sleep perceive himself to sleepe or the dead man feele himselfe to be so Sense or feeling is an evident demonstration not only of life but of life in action Consider thy selfe as thou art in Christ in union with him what is his is thine Christs fruitfulnesse is thine in him is thy fruit found and if hee hath not as yet poured forth plentifully of the Spirit of grace and Supplication upon thee thou hast his promise for it hee hath offered up strong cries and teares unto the father for thee thou daily committest sinne from a body of death and corruption thou carriest with thee let thy glory and reioycing be that thy sinnes are forgiven and shall be remembred no more and rest satisfied in point of salvation in what Christ hath done Thy best works cannot save thee nor thy worst destroy thee Thanks be to God who hath given us victory by Jesus Christ Fetch thy comfort from him and not from what thou findest or possibly maiest find or feele in thy selfe We are not to judge of our eter●all condition and of Gods love to us by the hardnes or softnes of our hearts or by what workes of righteousnesse wee see and feele in our selves but to live by faith in the sonne of God who hath promised that hee will take away the stony heart out of thy flesh and give thee an heart of flesh and that hee wil turne the flint into a fountaine of waters Because I feele not my selfe sanctified I ●eare I am not justified Believers must not say they have no sanctification because they see and feele none David cried out in the bitternes of his soule that his sin was ever before him and then his sanctification was out of his sight and that God had forgotten to bee gracious but afterwards he said of it This is my infirmity You know in an house when it is darke there may bee all things that were there when it was light but you see them not till the candle be brought in The womans grote in the parable was in the house but shee found it not till she had lighted her candle therefore say with David Light my candle Oh Lord and the spirit of man is the candle of the Lord. Sanctification or the fruits and effects of the spirit in a believer do indeed comfort our faith in their kind and degree they are given to bee a light in some measure to our own consciences and to others Let your light so shine before men And glorifie God in your bodies and spirits Shew me thy faith by thy works they are the bracelets of the Spouse they are the beames of Christ the sun of righteousnesse but they are not Christ now clouds may hinder the beames from inlightning a roome but the Sun is still where it was the tree you know is there where it was when the Apples or fruit thereof may be blowne down by the winde of Temptation spoken of in the Parable yet then such promises as these are laid in for such a season Who is among you that fears the Lord that obeys the voice of his servant that walks in darknesse and sees no light let him trust in the Name of the Lord and stay upon his God And the vision is for an appointed time but at the end it shall speake and not lie though it tarry wait for it wait for it because it wil surely come and not tarry But the just shall live by faith Consider seriously how can any good assurance arise from the change that is in any child of God in this life or his sanctification it being not such in any particular act or worke wherin is no spot of sinne is it not a mixture of flesh and Spirit why then feelest thou after it as thou dost Since the best and most through sanctification in any is not pure enough for the eyes of the Lord why then make you it any bottom for assurance Observe that all the while you or any others have so done you and they like Noahs Dove can find no resting place the soales of your feete for the Spirit of Christ tells us when we have done all we can we are but unprofitable servants and that all our righteousnesse is but as menstruous cloaths And while we gaze upon the work of sanctification in us we find stil a rottennesse in every part of it call all into question and find fault with our repentance mortification new obedience c. therefore let us be sure still to take Christ in here who is a believers sanctification as wel as his righteousnesse In order to the removing of this discouragement consider a few particulars 1. If you suppose that God takes in any part of your faith repentance new-obedience or sanctification as a ground upon which he justifies or forgives you you are absolutely against the word for if it be of works it is no more of grace otherwise work is no more worke 2. It must then be only the evidence of your being justified that you seeke for in your sanctification These two things thus premised I proceed 1. We must allow any believer to take in any thing of his sanctification to help his assurance which the word allowes of as the Spirit and the fruits thereof that is to say repentance mortification of sin new obedience c. but then it
reason of strong motions in the flesh he would not repent yet he cannot resist this law of his mind he must performe it when the Lord saith in his word repent and seeke my face hee this poor child of God replies Thy face Lord wil I seek the very same lesson that he is taught outvvardly by the vvord he is taught inwardly by the annointing spirit yea it is even his meat and drink to do the wil of God 2. Repentance in the hypocrite proceeds from a servile fear he being begotten under a covenant of works is through fear of death subject unto bondage all his life long and though he look to be saved by faith and repentance being instructed out of the Gospel yet he dares not expect grace and pardon any further then he sees himself work for he looks to be saved though not altogether yet as it were by the works of the Lavv thinking that mercy and pardon must needs follovv his vvorks and this is that which makes him take a great deal of pains in the Church yea he wil bear the burden and heat of the day and performe abundance of hypocriticall service unto the Lord yea til he troubles the Lord therewith and makes him weary thereof But the child of God is begotten under a Covenant of grace and hath not received the spirit of bondage again to fear but the spirit of Adoption to cry unto God Abba Father and being delivered serves God without fear in holinesse and righteousness all his dayes he knows very wel that sin cannot damn him being delivered out of the hands of his enemies by the blood of Christ And hence though God break him in the place of Dragons and cover him with the shadow of death yet wil he not forget God nor deal falsely in his Covenant His repentance in that sin cannot damn him is not arbitrary he is bound to it by the Covenant of grace his faith works by love the love of Christ constrains him many waters cannot quench this love neither can the floods drown it if a man would give all the substance of his house for love it would utterly be contemned the more sin the Lord hath forgiven him the more he loves God and repents mourns and weeps bitterly because of sin as it is an injurious offence against so merciful a Father instance Peter and Mary Magdalene who thought nothing too dear for a Christ from whom they had received a free and ful discharge from all their sins and provocations the hypocrite repents from a principle of slavish feare but the poore believer from a principle of a child-like love 3. An hypocrite never turnes to the Lord with his whole heart as the Lord requires for he is double minded True it is he may walk according to the dictate of his conscience as far as he is inlightned by the word of God leading a blamelesse life and may doe that which he does out of the integrity of his heart with Abimilech he perswades himselfe he is in the right when in truth he is farre wrong and because he received not the love of the truth that he might be saved the Lord gives him up to strong delusions to believe a lie that he might be damned who believes not the truth He may indeed seemingly turne unto the Lord in respect of many glorious actions but he hath not a new heart nor a renewing Spirit within him and if that action that as he thinks he doth most uprightly were put into an Evangelical frame he would most exceedingly ha●e it because the carnal mind is at enmity against God for it is no● subject to the Law of God nor indeed can be his best duties proceed but from flesh and nature and from the old man which never turn'd to God and as for that which should give a spiritual being to those actions namely faith in Christ and the Spirit of grace these he hates from his heart But the child of God hath a new heart and a new Spirit he is a new creature all things are become new and although the flesh lusteth against the Spirit yet this new creature turneth wholly unto God and is all for God such a man seeks the Lord with his whole heart and all that is within him praises the Lords holy name 4. The hypocrite in his repentance and all his performances aimes at himselfe he doth them for corn wine and oyle when he fasts and mourns he doth it for himselfe and not unto the Lord the salvation of his soul is his utmost end But the child of God the believer doth all for Gods glory he desires the Salvation of his soul but he hath a further end hereby the Lord manifests his truth and mercy and gets himselfe a name Saith blessed David save me for thy mercies sake for thy Names sake and when he repents and confesses his sinne it is principally that he may give glory unto God and in all his actions terminates not in himself but doth them to the end that Christ may be magnified and esteemed all in all Sixteene precious and soul establishing considerations deduced from the Covenant of Grace The new Covenant of grace is held forth principally in these places of Scripture viz. 8. Heb. 10. Jer. 31. 31 33 34. 36. Ezek 25 26 27 29 31. Ezek. 16. 3 4 5 6 8 9 10 11 59 60 63 Jer. 32. 40. Jer. 33. 20 Heb. 6. 17 18. Heb. 12. 24. Heb. 13. 20. Mic. 7. 20. Psal 89. 28. 31 32 33 34. 1. Consideration His Covenant is a free Covenant being the offspring of the free love meer grace and rich mercy of God whereby he is pleased to make a blessed agreement with his Sonne Christ to save poore lost man yea the worst most vile despicable and helpless creatures in the world and of this sort of mankind doth God usually please to take into covenant with himself for he doth not as many would insinuate therfore take men into this covenant because they believe and are holy but that they might have faith and be holy in this covenant he promises holiness and through it conveys holinesse unto men as for example the Idolatrous Ephesians the profane Corinthians the vile Publicans the filthy Harlots yea the poore thiefe even at the last hour when he could neither serve nor glorifie God so much as one hour on earth and these when they were at the highest of their provocations and when no eye pityed them yea when their own eyes pittyed them not then was the time wherein the Lord out of the riches of his grace and soule astonishing love sware unto them and entred into covenant with them and this was likewise the time vvherein they became his as in that pregnant place of Scripture vvorthy to be vvritten in indelible characters of Gold upon the memory of
saith the Lord from all your uncleannes what is the effect of this then shall ye remember your own waies and doings that were not good and loath your selves in your one eyes for all your abominations thus the Lord brings his people to repentance And I will pour upon the house of David and upon the Inhabitants of Jerusalem the spirit of grace and supplication and they shall looke upon him whom they have pierced and mourne c. That is I will give them such a spirit as shall abundantly manifest unto them my rich love and sinne-pardoning grace and this produces mourning yea bitter and solitary mourning such as of Hadad rimmon in the vally of Megiddon where the nobles of Israel cast away their musicall Instruments and clad themselves in sable or sacke-cloath and breathing forth their mournful elegies cryed out our Growne is fallen from our heads woe woe unto us wee have sinned Sorrow for sinne in the glory of the gospel proceeds from Christs peircing wounding melting the heart from Christ discovering sin pouring water upon the dry grounds and dropping the dewes of Hermon hill upon the thirsty lands 2. Consider that God deales not with all his alike hee knowes best what is meet for us Physicians know that such a physicall potion is necessary for one as will kill another All that believe have not the same measure of sorrow for ●inne Lydia received the word with joy but the Jaylor trembled being in feare 3. The greatest measure of sorrow for sinne that ever any had was not the least cause of their being loved or saved it is a great mistake to thinke that God delights in feares or tears 4. A deepe sensibleness of sinne proceeding from feare and terrors hinders the soules believing and drives it from Christ and makes it say with Peter Lord depart from mee for I am a sinfull man 5. If God deales with thee as with Lydia more gently then with divers others thou hast no ground for complaint against it 6. That sensibleness of sinne that flowes not from the apprehension of pardon and love is of no value And remember wee to looke to Christ and not unto our sensibleness of sin 7. Our best and greatest sorrow for sinne is not free from sinne yea and deserves nothing but death 8. If thou hast seene thy selfe lost and fatherless so as nothing could satisfie thee but Christ this is a sweet supernaturall and glorious work of the gospel and such as is wrought upon none but such as shall be ●aved by thy renouncing thy owne sufficiency it appeareth that there is a greater a better come in places I feare I have no worke of grace wrought upon me because I feel not its power and am not able to subdue my passions and corruptions Thy complaint of the want of a sense and feeling of the power of the work of grace upon thee and of thine inability to subdue thy passion and corruption declares a weaknesse of grace and not a defect of the truth grace in the soule If thou dost what thou wouldst not mind what Paul saith that which I do I allow not for what I would that do I not but what I hate that doe I c. The strongest and most spiritual Christian is in himself very weake imperfect falls often and is not able to stand alone Among Christians some partake more of natural choller then others and they accordingly are more or lesse hastie and passionate a wicked man may naturally be patient and a child of God sinfully passionate Elias was a man subject to the like passions we are 2. Thou must not measure Gods love to thee nor the truth of his worke in thee by thy mortification of sinne 3. God may for ends best known unto himselfe leave thy passions and corruptions unsubdued yea suffer them to be too strong for thee it may be that thou mayst be abased more in thine own eyes and that thou mightest see thine own weaknesse and bee thereby the more sensible of thy necassity of Christs strength and depend daily upon him for it and that thereupon we might love and prize him the more in that we have such necessity of him to pardon and heale us and that he might hold forth the glory of his power in keeping alive a ●mal sparke of grace in us in the midst of the vast ocean of our corruptions God may leave thy personal sanctification the more imperfect that thou mayest the more mind and behold Jesus Christ and our righteousnesse in him and live the more upon him and his fulnesse and joy the more in our free justification by him 4. It is one thing to have thy sinne forgiven or not imputed unto thee and another thing to have thy sin subdu●d in thee the first may be where the later is wanting 5. The reason why sinne so much prevailes is because we live so much in discouragements Live in the apprehension of the love of God and down goes sinne and discouragements but while we lie in our discouragements sinne prevailes as appeares by 77. Psal 2. 7 8 9 10. verses 6. Thy comfort and happinesse depends not upon thy feeling but upon Gods never-failing covenant and promise confirmed by his oath and we are not to live by sense and feeling but by faith in the Sonne of God we are not to fetch our comfort from our subduing of sinne but from Christ who is made unto us both righteousnesse and sanctification Thankes bee unto God who hath given us victory by Jesus Christ when we are at the best we may not live in our selves nor by sight but by faith and when we are at the worst we are to remember that wee are not our owne but Christs and that wee ought to live upon him by faith and derive strong consolation from him and his leading of Captivity Captive I finde within my selfe no relish of spirituall things nor willingnesse to duties and I often omit them God may have begun his worke in thee although it be thus with thee though this be an argument of much corruption in the soule This distemper may arise from diverse causes as 1. From unbeliefe 2. From doubting of the acceptance of thy person and duties 3. From want of love to Christ 4. From loving of temporall things which deadens the heart and makes it carnall 5. From weaknesse of grace 6. From sloath and ease which slay the soule 7. From ignorance of the sweetnesse in spirituall duties 8. From the soules sicknesse and distemper for as the body when sick oft cannot relish its food so this soule-distemper hinders its relish of spirituall things and thereby brings weaknesse a knowne enemy to action My flesh and my heart faile but God is the strength of my heart and my portion for ever He never failes I feare that that worke of grace which I once felt is