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A15527 Saints by calling: or Called to be saints A godly treatise of our holy calling to Christ, by the gospell. With the seuerall gifts proper vnto the called: and their counterfeits in the hypocrites which are not partakers of this effectuall calling. Written by Thomas Wilson, minister of Gods word, at S. Georges Church in Canterbury. Wilson, Thomas, 1563-1622. 1620 (1620) STC 25796; ESTC S103067 273,228 442

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greeued with the spirituall euils of others taking their sins to heart no lesse if not more then their corporall wants Mourning for their ignorance and hardnesse of heart praying instantly the Father of al mercy to open their eies to draw them out of darknesse And this they doe instantly euen where they are prouoked and not onely to their friends As Christ wept ouer Ierusalem which crucified hirn so true Christians haue compassion towards their enemies Further when mercy is to be practised vpon offered occasions they stay not till they be entreated but be hartily glad that they may be a mean of comfort to any distressed Euen as they would haue refreshing help in their own afflictions trobles so they are willing to respect others out of a great desire to be like their mercifull Father and to adorn the Gospell of his Sonne with the workes of mercy Moreouer where others take occasion of scorning their Brethren of reioycing or triumphing ouer them euen from these occasions the godly do prouoke them selues to pittifulnesse with sighs and groanes to 〈◊〉 and bewaile the follies and falles the damages and distresses which happen vnto others Yea the mercy of a righteous man rcacheth vnto beasts not his owne onely but vnto the beasts of his enemies to pull them out of the pit or to bring them home being straglers And whensoeuer they faile in these or in any other dutie of mercy either for substāce measure or maner they haue sorrow in themselues and flye for pardon to the throne of grace so farre off they be from putting trust in their owne deeds and all this without desire or care to bee knowne or seene of men further then needes must or may bee for their example and encouragement to the like mercifull workes as they thinke it sufficient that God who knoweth the heart Math. 6 2 3 4. is witnesse to the tendernesse of their affections towardes such as are in any necessity or want As touching the next vertue it is taking of things in good part when any doubtful speeches or actions happen which may be taken in euill part and breed matter of dislike debate These do the godly vse to interpret well inclining alwayes to the best constructions which can be made of mens doubtfull words or doings For as in euident euils they will not suffer a curtaine to bee drawne ouer the eyes not to see that which all men behold so in such things which may haue a good sence they will not be so vncharitable as to make a bad interpretation Neyther will they for some blemishes in a mans person or deede condemne all that is good as if for a wart or scarre one should despise great fauor and beauty but they easily winke at that which is amisse seeking by priuate louing admonition to mend it and 〈◊〉 ready to commend that which is as it ought to be making the best of euery thing so farre as with good conscience they can In the wicked it is quite contrarie for they wrest mens words and actions quite beside yea sometimes cleane contrary to the intention of the speaker and doer after the example of Dauids brethren 1. Sam. 17. and Hannuns seruants 2 Sam. 10 3. And if at any time they do take any doubtfull saying in the better part it is done partially because they would take part with some whom they affect They doe not mete like measure to all being also apt for some fewe and small spots to reiect many and excellent graces Apollos But friend Aquila amongst all the gifts that spring out of loue and accompany a peaceable spirit tend to encrease and preserue loue and peace ye haue scarse named or but onely named the gouernment of the tongue for speech and silence it being one of the graces proper to the elect to know when and how to speake For the righteous man ordereth his words with wisedome his speeches are seasonable and fit like pictures of siluer in apples of gold being powdered with salt Whereas the foole bableth out foolishnesse his words giue no grace to the hearer but with his lips hee speakes froward things which witnesseth the price of his hart tends to engender strife The good man out of the good treasure of his heart draweth out good things the euill man out of the euill treasure of his hart bringeth forth euill things Mathew 12. As there is nothing whereby a mans wisedome is better knowne then by his words so a mans folly 〈◊〉 by his talke which in euill men is either vaine or euill whereas the wise with their tongue spread knowledge and feede many with the fruites of their lips they shun all euill and ydle all contentious and vnlouing talke as a man wold eschew a dangerous rocke It fareth thus with them they feare God they choose rather to say nothing then to speake vnprofitable and friuolous vile and hurtfull thinges They haue learned that in much talk there is iniquity euen as a riuer that ouerfloweth the bank draweth with it much soyle and filth so many words haue alwayes some fault it being one of the hardest thinges in the world to say much and to say nothing amisse Also no danger is like the danger which cometh by the slipperinesse and foolishnesse of an hasty tongue It sildom repents a good man that he saith too little it often repents him that he spake too much His silence doth euer proue lesse greeuous to him then his speech For the godly finde by experience that both the peace of their owne conscience betweene them and God and also the mutuall peace betweene them and their Neighbors is more offended and hurt by saying much then by saying nothing So it is not without cause that silence is termed a holding our peace to shew this that peace is gotten and preserued both to our selues and with others by prudent silence Nothing is so sweete a friend to peace as silence as many words much offend it He is surely therefore an happy man and fittest to liue in the World that striueth earnestly with himselfe to get this good moderation of his tongue We might now passe forwards to speake of the vertue of temperance but that I would haue you to declare how the Children of God doe differ from others in this duty of selfe-preseruation for selfe-safety is a thing cared for of all men but not alike of all men Aquila This was well remembred of you I had like to haue done as hee did who told ouer the company twice and still forgot himselfe for indeede all the forenamed graces be such as serue to procure and preserue the safety of our Neighbour his person and life of his soule and body is by the former gifts aduanced saue that the last which you named to wit the well ordering of the tongue is a great meane as any other of selfe-safety Life and death are in the hands of the tongue many a man
reason why the more simple and needy are more commonly drawne to Christ because such being void of those goodly things wherein men vse to place their felicity hauing the lesse to set their hearts vpon they are the sooner and more easily brought to see their spirituall pouerty and want and to seeke for the fulnesse of all good things out of themselues in Christ Iesus In whom are hid all the treasures of wisedome and knowledge Col. 2. 3. Of whose fulnesse we receiue grace for grace Ioh. 1. 16 As being the most rich store-house of all heauenly goods without whom whosoeuer are rich they are but poore and very fooles whosoeuer are wise without him Apollos Ye haue spoken of the quality and condition of such persons as are made partakers of a true calling Now let mee heare you deliuer the signes whereby one that is called may know his calling for I thinke you are of this minde that one which is truly called may know he is so and that the Word hath taught markes to discerne of their calling Aquila It is right Whosoeuer be called if they be of yeeres know that they be so for so saith the Apostle We know by the Spirit the things which are giuen vs of God 1 Cor. 2. 12. Now amongst other things giuen vs of God our calling is one and the first Againe our calling as the word of God teacheth It is an opening of the eyes of the blind Acts 26. 18. A setting at liberty such as were in prison Luk. 4. 18. A quickning of the dead a translating from darkenesse to light from Sathan to God Ephe. 5. 8. A separation of the wheate from the chaffe Mat. 3. 12. Now all these comparisons may teach that calling is such an action of God as is discernable to them in whom it is wrought for can they be enlightened being blind before Can they come out of a darke dungeon of ignorance vnbeliefe and sinne wherein they were detained as prisoners in snares and be restored to liberty in freedome of minde and heart to serue God and not perceiue it Is it possible that they that were dead before should liue and doe the actions of a spirituall life to mooue and walke towards Heauen but that this worke of the Spirit should be somewhat felt Againe such as truly beleeue may know their owne faith as the man in the Gospell I beleeue Lord and faith euer goeth with an inward calling therefore our calling may be knowne to vs. Moreouer we haue examples of such as did know themselues to be called and haue ioyed vpon the certainty thereof as Abraham Zacheus the beleeuers at Samaria the Eunuch Yet further what Christian comfort or true inward reioycing can there be in any persons touching good things promised and to come if they had not a certainty and sure vnderstanding of their present good estate by their heauenly vocation For ioy is not of vncertaine doubtfull and vnknown things but of things surely comprehended Adde hereunto that no Christian could with any courage or heart set himselfe presently to doe the worke of Christianity if his calling and conuersion to God were not reuealed to him to certifie him of Gods good acceptance of himselfe and shew it through Christ. Finally our Iustification and Sanctification which are the nearest effects of calling and euer goe together with it may these I say bee knowne as it is written Being iustified by faith we haue peace with God Rom. 5. 1. And we know that our old man is crucified with Christ Rom. 6. 6 and shall not calling the roote of these graces be discerned Yea by the knowledge of these graces it is traced found out and descried Therefore howsoeuer at the instant of ones calling haply a Christian may be so weake such a babe in Christ or in a strange or strong fit or pang of temptation when a quaume of soule affliction and trouble comes ouer the heart or after some grosse and greeuous fall a man being as it were for a certaine time in a trance or extasie 〈◊〉 and fencelesse one may in such cases doubt of their calling yet assuredly at other times it doth so euidence it selfe as the parties called can with gladnesse of heart glory in their caller and heartily thanke him Which if others vpon the demonstration of it by the fruites can doe and often doe it in their behalfe as Rom. 6. 17. Paul for the Romans and elsewhere for other Professors of Christ then much more the called themselues vnderstand it and breake forth into cheerefull mention of it True it is and cannot be gaine-saide that many presume of a true effectuall calling who indeede were neuer so called and thus are deceiued by imagining to haue that which they alwayes lacked as they Iohn 8. 41. Which say God is our Father As men that dreame doe fancy bagges of gold and fulnesse of meate being empty poore and hungry when they awake yet they who are in truth made partakers of this holy calling in iudging themselues to be called are therein no whit deceiued For they haue a sure witnesse in themselues Rom. 8. Yea sundry witnesses 1 Iohn 5. 8. Whereas ye desire to heare the markes and meanes whereby Gods children are brought to the knowledge of their owne calling beside that which in my former speech I haue let fall to that purpose there be some other tokens which I will now rehearse The first is a spirit of discretion enabling them to discerne the voice of him who hath called them out of darkenesse into his maruellous light according to that which is written I am the good Shepheard my Sheepe heare my voyce the voyce of a stranger they wil not heare but flie from him Iohn 10. 5 6. And a little after I know mine and am knowne of mine Also Ye haue an annointment from that Holy one and know all things yee know that no lie is of the truth 1 Ioh. 2. 20 21. Meaning hereby that the truth of heauenly doctrine by the illumination of the spirit was in such cleere wise knowne vnto them as they could distinguish it from a lie putting a difference betweene erroneous and sound teaching euen as sheepe by naturall instinct and partly by custome can skill the whistle and call of their own Shepheard euen so Christians after the grace of their calling doe very well discouer the wholsome call and voyce of Christ their heauenly and spirituall Shepheard from the howling of Wolues and call of Theeues and hirelings which speake not but to deceiue and destroy You will say peraduenture that this token is common to the true Christian with other who haue but an outward calling yet by the light of their knowledge which they haue attained can both bewray and conuince errour euen whatsoeuer is contrary to the voyce of Christ. Yea some of these are able very learnedly and iudiciously to doe it Therefore we are to know that the
troublesome by my long discourse of it let me tell you that this is a chiefe ende which God lookt vnto in the calling of sinners vnto repentance as in regard of himsele euen the praise of his glorious grace as the Apostle hath three seuerall times affirmed Ephe. 1. 7. 12. 14. That there being not onely nothing in vs to further it but our selues and the gates of hell against it it might be saide O Lord this is thy worke thy owne hand hath done it euen with thine owne hand arme thou hast giuen vs the victory ouer all our spiritual hellish enemies To thee therefore the King euerlasting immortall inuisible vnto God onely wise be honour and glory for euer and euer Amen Apollos I thanke ye for your willingnesse to enter into and to continue this discourse Also I commend your good remembrance of these matters it being so long since they were taught but as you holpe your self in some thing that was almost slipt from you so ye shal suffer mee to helpe you in that which I my selfe almost had and as it seemeth ye haue altogether forgot For by the closing of your speech I perceiue that ye haue spoken what ye are minded to say of this argument and yet that you were willing to speake of it what you remembred but I maruell not if some things are slid from you I rather maruell the frailety of our memory being considered that ye kept so many things Therefore vnto all that which hath beene recorded by you there be other foure points which I will briefly adde First touching the impulsiue mouing cause which inclineth God to the effectuall calling of some whereas he passeth by othersome which are no more vnworthy then such as are called and haue the selfe same outward meanes being all alike sinners and enemies to God by nature and all equally partakers of the word and Ministerie yet some of them are left in their corruption others being gathered to Christ. It was tolde ye this proceedeth meerely of the purpose and good pleasure of God which is made plaine by expresse authority of Scripture which ioyneth Gods purpose and calling together Euen to them that are called of his purpose Rom. 8. 28. and affirmeth that God hides those things from some which he reueales to others euen because so it pleaseth him Mat. 11. 26. there being no other reason of Peters calling rather then Iudas but this it was his good pleasure For seeing effectuall calling as you well remembred floweth from election and is peculiar to the chosen thereof it followeth that that which makes the difference betweene some who are otherwise alike in Adam is the election of God ordaining some to life and so to the meanes in their calling to Christ whereas others are refused yet so refused in the counsell of God as they make themselues vnworthy and vncapable of calling by refusing willingly and reiecting wilfully the voyce of Christ shutting their eyes that they may not see and their eares lest they should heare and making fat their owne hearts lest they should vnderstand Acts 28 27. Which sheweth thus much that as the not calling of some is iust so the calling of othersome is most free depending vpon the good pleasure of Gods will This is such a matter the consideration whereof must moue Gods children by calling to be very thankefull with great feruent loue towards God for this happy worke Sithens finding nothing in them at all hee did fetch from himselfe the cause which moued him to reueale his Son in them by the Gospel whereas he would not doe so to others who were by creation as good as they and by nature no worse yet God to leaue others to giue them ouer to their blindnesse and to open to those the mystery of his will and that according to his good pleasure which he purposed in Christ how doth this deserue that they should from the ground of their heart blesse God the Father of our Lord Iesus Christ for this most gracious spirituall blessing The second thing vnmentioned by you because vnremembred was this that as amongst men Gods will puts a difference betwixt man man as being all subiect to him as clay to the potter caling these hardning these so in those which are truly called he keepeth not one tenor some of his elect childrē euen at the instant of their calling being strong men in Christ able to goe walk run as Zacheus which at his conuersion was filled with ioy power giuen him to shake off his great sins to shake himself presently not only out of them but out of his goods by restitution of ill gotten contribution of the rest well gotten which argueth a great measure and force of grace there being sundry which long after their cōuersion can hardly ouercome themselues to doe that which Zacheus did at his new birth the 1. hour he came into the world The like is to be seen in Paul the Apostle who immediately vpon his calling coming out of the darknes of Iewish pharisaisme vnto the light of Christianisme and from Satan to God he had such a portion of the strength of grace as he could preach Christ and was ready to suffer for him being ready to the perill of his life to teach them whom hee had lately persecuted to death Now there be others againe at the time of their calling yea and a good while after which are so weake as young Babes both for knowledge and practise as appeareth in Peter and in the other Apostles who being called euen with a more peculiar calling to be the members of Christ and not onely with a general vocation to be the Ministers and Apostles of Christ yet by the story of the Euangelist it doth plainely appeare that for a great while after euen till the ascension of Christ they were exceeding infirme both in iudgement and affection not knowing distinctly the meanes of their redemption to be Christs sufferings and resurrection though it were most plainely and often tolde them and tripping and failing by pride and ambition contention and otherwise Againe some of his elect children at their first calling are brought forth by their Mother the Church with great paine and hazard to themselues being before and about the time of their calling much afflicted full offeares and anguishes by reason of their manifold greeuous sinnes laide before them by their inward monitor their conscience accusing them and the outward admonition and threatnings of the Law the light of Gods Iustice shining into their mindes and striking them as lightning and thunder from Heauen Thus it fared with the fore-named Paul at his conuersion which was with trembing and astonishment Acts 9. 6. As also with them Acts 2. 37. whose soule-horrors as daggers or kniues pricked their hearts Now on the other side some there bee which at their first calling feele no such thing but are deliuered from their bondage
to Satan and sinne with great case nay with maruellous ioy and alacrity osspirit as it is to be seene in Lydia Acts 16. 15. who as one feeling nothing lesse then anguish did cheerefully entertaine Paul vpon her new birth and calling The Samaritanes Acts 8. 9. at their conuersion by the preaching of Philip had great ioy it being in this case as in the naturall birth where some come into this World with great facility and others with very great danger and according to this different proceeding of God in this worke it is that some of the Elect doe sooner and far more easily see their owne calling then others doe The consideration of this second point is for comfort of them who being certainely called yet are troubled that the strength of grace is so little their infirmities so many their ioy and cheerefulnesse very small which should not so greeue them if they would remember that this case hath beene the condition of others and withall that the troubles and griefe which they finde in themselues by reason of their wants doth argue and proue to them their owne conuersion to bee true and sound which should more preuaile to comfort them then the sight of any defect and weakenesse to discourage let them reioyce in the truth of the grace which cannot reioyce in great measure of grace The third thing which I adde is this that election necessarily bringeth forth a true calling to Christ as a proper effect of it Therefore all good Christians are by their calling to iudge of their owne election and consequently of their owne saluation for as they must needes be saued which are elected because God changeth not and nothing can hinder his purpose so they are certainely elect who be effectually called It is not then for any to search curiously into Gods counsel and to begin there to find the assurance of their owne saluation but wee are to begin at another end and as wee discerne iudge of the roote by the fruite of the fountaine by the water which runneth from it and of the cause by the effect so we must rise vp to the sight of our election by the worke of our calling which is an hand to conduct vs into Gods Counsel-house Thus Paul the Apostle hauing taught and established that heauenly doctrine of Predestination Rom. 9. at the 24 verse hoe declared that the witnesse of it is to be sought not out of our selues in Gods secret will which is an obiect too excellent for our weake eyes directly to look vpon but in our selues to wit in our vocation to be Gods people which before were not his people Also Ioh. 6. 37. it is laide downe as a note whereby to know who be giuen to Christ of his Father in his eternall election that such shall come vnto him and see him All that the Father giueth me saith Christ shall come vnto me Now this comming vnto him is vpon their obedience vnto his call To be short for in a plaine matter few proofes be best as Christ proued the Iewes to whom then hee spake not to be the elect sheepe because they refused to heare his voyce and to beleeue so he describeth his sheepe which are chosen indeede by this marke that they heare and follow Wherefore as in vaine they presume of their election who neuer were called to faith in Christ so whosoeuer by the due tokens which you before haue laide forth and are about to doe hereafter when ye come to the effects of calling shall finde their owne effectuall calling to be soundly and surely wrought let them gather thereby vnfallibly their election to life Be of good comfort say the people vnto the blinde man in the Gospell the Master calleth thee so I say to these take to ye good heart for Christ the Master hath called you Not more certainely by the rayes and beames doe ye know the Sunne to be a lightsome creature then yee may determine of the loue of Gods gracious purpose towards you from euerlasting by this fruit of it in your effectuall vocation by the Gospell The fourth thing omitted by you it is this that the times of calling being so vncertaine wee should neuer cast away our hope of others who doe liue vnder the meanes though they liue wickedly vnlesse God doe giue vs any apparent signe of their reiectiō from grace as in 〈◊〉 Iulian and others otherwise to keepe vs from iudging especially of the finall estate of any because wee cannot tell what to morrow day may bring forth Therefore the Ministers of the word are still to be sowing and casting abroade their seede early late they know not which will take place this or that the people still to approach to Gods house to heare the word of God calling them They cannot tel which shal be the houre of their calling which as it cannot be preuented one minute so being once come all the strength of hell cannot holde them from obeying the voyce of their caller Aquila Sir I thanke ye for your good remembrance of these things which indeede were gone from mee May it please you now we will resort home for it very neere draweth to night and deferre other things to another time Here endeth the first part of the dialogue touching our effectuall calling The second Part of this Dialogue concerning the Graces which accompany and come from this effectuall Calling Aquila SIR ye are againe wel met here I thanke ye for your last conference in this place my mind hath been the more quiet euer since euen as my body fareth the better after a wholsome moderate repast or sweete rest may it please you that we should spend another houre in that sort setting on there where we left and broke off Apollos I am well pleased with your motion both that we should feed one another with the fruites of our lippes and that we go forward in that argument which wee haue begun Howbeit wee will alter our course whereas I put you to answere my questions and so put you to the more paine I will now take vp that burthen and you shall haue the easier and lighter ende of the staffe doe you aske and I will answer Aquila It pleaseth you to fauour me yet I iudge it no lesse hard to propound wise questions then to make true answeres One that hath any good measure of knowledge may better or as well replie when matter is offered by questions to worke vpon as to inuent and deuise still to propound new matter but I will agree to your order on this condition that where my questions shall be short or vnpertinent ye will correct faults and supply wants to make them more fit and full Tell me then what is the first sauing Grace which the holy Spirit workes in our Calling Apoll. All the sauing graces of the Spirit are wrought in the Elect to be giuen them simul semel at once and together In respect of time there is not
first and second one before another after for it is not in this new creation when this our little World of our selues is brought out of the world of sinne and vnbeliefe vnto the Christian World of grace as it was in the creation of the great World of Heauen and Earth when the parts of that world were made one after another in order of time the worke being distinguished according to the number of dayes in the weeke but here in this new creation we haue the blessed sauing workes and graces of the holy Spirit powred into vs all at one instant We are not at one time called and at another time iustified and at another time sanctified and then receiue graces of hope and loue and wisedome c. but these come as Iosephs brethren came into AEgypt for Corne all together As the prodigall childe returning to his Father did at once receiue all those fauours from his kinde Father of kisse embracing ring robe and charge to kill the fat Calfe Indeede the sauing graces for their encrease and growth to perfection require succession of time euen as Infants become not tall men till after many yeeres but these graces at the beginning and first begetting like grapes in a cluster doe all come together Euen as it standeth with the naturall body in the quickning of it the soule comming into it giueth power of motion and sense to euery member at one instant not to one sooner to another later so in our new birth all the faculties of the minde and body being before dead in trespasses and sinnes are by grace the soule of the soule spiritually at once reuiued and enabled to all functions duties of godlinesse The truth whereof appeareth in that Paul reports of the Romans that being made beleeuers they were iustified and being iustified by faith they had withall other graces as peace with God hope of glory ioy in that hope sense of Gods loue And of the Ephesians he saith that when they were called and heard the Gospell with an obedient care they also beleeued and had the seale earnest of the Spirit In a word the Elect comming to Christ at the time of their calling and Christ with his merits graces being so ioyned as one cannot haue himselfe but withall he hath all his It is therfore an vndoubted truth that howsoeuer some sauing graces may appeare before others or be felt sooner then others yet they are put vpon into the Elect at one and the same time but in order of causes one grace doth precede afore another and they are to be handled of vs one after another according to that order as neere as we can hit vpon Aq. Wel then I yeeld willingly vnto this truth acknowledge that that most mighty God that at one moment could deck adorn the firmament of heauen with so many glorious stars he also is able to fixe so many sundry glorious graces at once in the firmamet of mans heart But seeing the God of order in this supernaturall work doth obserue a natural order according to which some graces must be first as causes others must follow as effects of those causes would it please you then to declare vnto me which grace is first in the order of causes Apol. As I conceiue of it I will declare vnto you and I verily trust that I conceiue aright thus the case stands Before our effectuall calling our mindes are couered with darknesse of ignorance vnbeliefe our hearts being ful of obstinacy by reason therof so as we are wholy estranged from God Now in the worke of God in our calling the Spirit of Christ by the Gospell hauing mightily cast downe these strong holds and scattered these foggy mists doth illuminate effectually the mind and vnderstanding distinctly soundly to know beleeue the promises of forgiuenesse reconciliation by Christ made 〈◊〉 the word withal 〈◊〉 opening the heart obediently to assent to it and embrace it with a faith affiance in the mercy of God the promiser the by this faith of the promise the elect is brought euen to Christ to be neerely vnited 〈◊〉 to him who being a stranger before now by faith dwels in the heart as a familiar guest rather as the master of the Family to guide rule keepe in order all Now being made one with Christ they straight way haue comunion first with his righteousnesse actiue passiue for iustifying them to the great tranquility ioy of the conscience and also to the raysing vp of their hearts to a sure certain hope expectation of heauenly glory Then afterwards they haue fellowship with his Spirit for sanctifying in which work of their sanctification is giuen that excellent grace of repentance or turning to God also of hearty loue toward God their father now reconciled appearing so to the cōscience quieted 〈◊〉 through the atonement felt perceiued this begetteth loue to all men especially to the Saints carieth with it all the traine of Christian vertues It coming hereof that the Elect are patient temperate peaceable meeke good long suffering modest humble c. because through that faith hope which they haue in God by Christ they are moued so to loue him to be affected to seek his honor to doe his will as withall their heart is affectioned in all things which concerne him themselues or others to please him by obedience and practise of his Word in sincerity and truth Aquila By that which hath beene spoken I perceiue what order ye thinke to be kept of God in the working the workes proper to the Elect. First there is calling in which there is 2 illumination or opening of the eye Thirdly opening of the heart Fourthly liuely faith Fiftly vnion with Christ or our incorporation into him Sixtly Iustification or imputation of Christs righteousnesse Seuenthly peace of conscience Eightly Ioy in the holy Ghost Ninthly hope of glory Tenthly Sanctification 11. Repentance called our turning from sinne 12. Loue of God 13. Charity to our neighbour 14. Patience in affliction 15. Obedience to the will of God Let me aske of these in order what I am desirous to know for my further instruction and first touching illumination where doe yee finde ground in Scripture for it Then describe it and shew what it is and what kindes there be of it and how the illumination of the Elect doth differ from the worke of the Spirit in illuminating some of the reprobate Apollos In the calling of a sinner to faith there are two workes of the Spirit The one opening of their eyes Acts 26. 18. The other the opening of their hearts Acts 16. 14. The Lord opened the heart of Lydea the former is Illumination or enlightning whereof the holy Ghost speaketh in Heb. 6. 4. They which were once enlightened And Luke 1. 79. To giue great
light to them that sit in darknesse And againe The people which sate in darknesse saw great light Mat. 4. 16. In respect of this worke of the Spirit Christ is said to be the light of the Gentiles Luke 2. 32. And the Ministers who are but Instruments of this worke are called Lights of this Word and Lights of the blinde Mat. 5. 14. Rom. 2. 19. This worke of illumination or enlightning it is that whereby the Spirit first purgeth the mind vnderstanding from darkenesse and vanity which was in it through ignorance of God also the iudgement from that peruerse corruption of it in things belonging to God whereby it could not put a difference betweene good and euill and secondly putteth into the vnderstanding and iudgement a new light of knowledge and discretion whereby the soule knoweth and discerneth aright the truth of saluation by Christ euen particularly in the seuerall doctrines This enlightning is twofold The first is generall and slight whereby the minde is enlightened vnto an idle and vnfruitfull knowledge of God The latter is a speciall and through-enlightening vnto a diligent and profitable vnderstanding of Christ. These two kindes of knowledge whereof the one a wicked man may haue the other is giuen to none but to the Elect though they both be the gifts of the Spirit and also be of the same things yet they differ very much For first the knowledge which a godly man receiueth in his illumination it is certaine and distinct so as hee is able to applie the threatnings of Gods iudgements to the humbling of himselfe and the promises of God to raise and comfort himselfe the wicked by their knowledge cannot doe so hauing but a naked and bare speculation without any particular application of the same for humbling or comfort Againe the knowledge of the godly is sufficient to direct them generally and in euery particular duty whether it be for auoyding euil or for doing any good but the insight and knowledge of the wicked is vnsufficient and vnable to direct them in their singular and particular actions either for omission of euill or practise of good The former knowledge is full of good workes and directs them in whom it is to doe good things constantly but the latter is barren and fadeth before the end or leaues them in the end In respect of these differences the knowledge of the Elect for the cleerenesse sufficiency and certainty of it is likened to the light of the Sunne and the knowledge of the reprobates for the confusednesse vnsufficiency vnstablenesse is compared to the Lightening which doth not giue any certaine light it doth not continue any certaine time and when it is gone men see worse then before So doth it fall out with the wicked for their knowledge doth soone vanish and while it lasteth it is very vncertaine and there is in them afterwards greater and more dangerous darknesse then before for because they winke with their eyes and make their hearts fat striuing willingly not to see that they cannot but see wilfully blinding and hardening themselues therefore as a punishment of this sinne they are giuen ouer to haue dull and heauy eyes and eares so as they shall see and not perceiue heare and not vnderstand Acts 28. 27. Whereas the knowledge of the godly encreaseth in brightnesse like the Sunne which shineth more more cleerely vnto the perfect day Prou. 4. 18. So as the godly are very greatly bound to praise God for such their light of knowledge and to endeauour to walke in that light answering such a grace by thankfulnes in tongue and obedience of liues and workes as becommeth children of such light translated out of such darknesse Aquila Now that ye haue spoken of illumination or opening the eyes will it please you to say somewhat of the other worke of the Spirit which ye call the opening of the heart what may this signific or how may it differ from the former worke of enlightening Apollos By the heart according to Scripture phrase is signified not the fleshy part of the body which is thought to be the fountaine of life and seate of the affections but the faculties of the soule especially the vnderstanding and will For the heart is as it were the chaire of estate for the soule where the soule sheweth her selfe in presence therefore it is so often put for the soule and the chiefe powers thereof as God opened Lydiaes heart that is her soule Now this opening sheweth and teacheth vs that the soule is as a Chest fast lockt and barred into which while it is so there can no treasure be put So it is with the soule before our effectual calling it is close shut vp and lockt vp through ignorance and vnbeliefe sinne so as no sauing grace can drop into it but it is kept from all sight and feeling of Gods peculiar mercies Therefore this opening of the heart besides the illumination already spoken of whereby the Spirit piercing into the minde endued it with that heauenly light before touched that it may cleerely and certainely vnderstand the whole truth of the Word but chiefly the promise of the Gospel it hath also the mouing and bowing of the will with affection to receiue and embrace this promise the Spirit enduing the soule with a sweete feeling of the most mercifull goodnesse of God therein And of these two workes of the Spirit in opening of the eyes and the heart ariseth that third worke called Faith which is a gift powred into the soule knitting it vnto Christ with whom being vnderstood and knowen as hee is reuealed in his Word and embraced with affection both of the mind will it now resteth satisfied as one that hath found a rich treasure or great spoyle Aquila But I am not yet satisfied with this that you haue said about these workes of the Spirit Therefore I pray you yet more plainely and particularly lay forth the actions of the Spirit tending to the engendring of faith in the heart of an elect sinner Herein I will doe mine endeauour to giue you satisfaction the Spirit of God as in our first conference you rightly told vs worketh both by the Law and the Gospel In the preaching of the law it worketh first a knowledge of God as he is God the Creator and preseruer of all things reuealing his most great maiesty power iustice and wisedome making vs to see him a mighty terrible Iudge extremely hating and infinitely recompencing all iniquity Then it goeth on by the Law to shew vs our sinnes against this God The knowledge of sinne is by the Law Rom 3. 20. especially reuealing vnto vs that the very first motions of our minde and will against God or our Neighbour are damnable sinnes and breaches of Gods Law Rom. 7. 7. Our sinnes being thus vttered vnto vs in the very particulars as well actuall as originall as well of omission as of commission in our thoughts words and workes
of an earthly Monarchy full little then thinking that the life of the Lord and Master should be the worlds ransome and that his resurrection should be the worlds conquest and victory they dreaming of an outward glorious reigne ouer the World and hoping to be great men in great place vnder him howbeit they giuing credit to his doctrine and embracing him for the Messias depending vpon his mouth in matter of duty and saluation they had a measure of faith though a little and weake one as Christ himselfe doth testifie of them all O ye of little faith and of Peter by name O thou of little faith wherefore didst thou doubt Mat. 14. 31. and as they signifie of themselues by their owne petition Luke 17. 5. Lord encrease our fasth The other sort of weake ones in faith be such as hauing more knowlege in the mystery of Christ touching the worke of saluation by his sufferings and righteousnesse yet doe very weakely apply this their knowledge not being perswaded of the forgiuenesse of their owne sinnes and of their reconciliation with God but earnestly desiring to embrace and beleeue the promise of it and of this sort of beleeuers there haue been in all ages very many in the Church of God euer since the ascension of Christ as daily experience proueth in many honest Christians which can speake well and distinctly of the doctrine of grace and yet haue laide but poore hold of it for their own safety and comfort much doubting themselues Aquila But Sir by this meanes it wil come to passe that many which are farre enough from true faith will be ready to imagine themselues to haue some measure of faith for euery one will by and by alledge for himselfe that he hath a good desire to beleeue in Christ and so be lulled asleepe to their own perdition presuming of that which they in truth doe want Apollos Indeed Aquila you say well this is a thing may be feared howbeit there be diuers good and sure workes to discerne a sound desire to beleeue in Christ which is the lowest degree of a liuely faith from all vaine desires of wicked men hypocrites which may pretend to haue it and yet haue it not The first is that in them whose desire is sound and godly there is a coueting rather of reconciliation then of saluation rather to bee in grace and fauour with God then to bee happy in heauen for their desire commeth from a brused heart greeued and cast downe for the offence of God and his displeasure conceiued against their sinne so as to haue but one good looke of God one smile of his louing countenance it is more desired of them then the World nay then the glory of Heauen as Dauid prayeth O lift thou vp the light of thy countenance vpon vs Psal. 4. 7. And elsewhere the Church prayeth Returne and let the light of thy countenance shine vpon vs and we shall be whole Psal. 80. 3. And in another place the godly professe saying In thy fauour is life It is true that one cannot haue the fauour of God but he is sure to be saued and it is lawfull to desire saluation but yet the thing which the beleeuing broken heart doth cheefly looke vnto it is to be loued and fauoured of God Againe this godly desire is vehement not slight or light but very feruent like to the desire after meate of one pinched with hunger which is very earnest as we say hunger wil breake the hard stone wals or to the desire and longing of a woman with childe which vseth to be very vehement such is this sound desire of them who begin to beleeue they couet more to be satisfied with a full sight of Gods face then worldlings desire siluer and gold the doctrine of grace being to them more desirable euen then the finest gold Psal. 19. Wee haue heard of the desire of the Cananitish woman for her Daughter being vexed with a Diuell and we reade of the chased Hart breathing panting after the coole water brookes euen so the soule chased by temptations scorched with the heate of sinful lusts hauing begun once to taste the sweetnesse or but to feele the neede of sauing mercies doth most eagerly and sharpely desire to attaine vnto them This earnestnesse of desire it is not in them by fits and starts like Pilates desire to know the truth Iohn 18. which as a weake sparkle quickly died of it selfe but it is constant as is the desire of a thirsty man whose desire ceaseth not till his thirst be quenched such as Anna her desire was after a childe it was great and continued till the thing was granted which she did desire so it fareth with a sound desire to beleeue and find Christ it lasteth till faith bee formed in the heart and Christ be borne in them they are not quiet till then nor then neither still more and more desiring to bee knit and ioyned neerer to Christ their loue their ioy their crowne their treasure Lastly this witnesseth the soundnesse of this godly desire to beleeue in Iesus Christ that it bringeth forth some good affections which are accompanied with some reformation of life and manners They in whom it is being carefull according to that they know to obey and please God hauing with their desire to beleeue ioined an vnfained desire to repent and to liue honestly keeping a good conscience towards God and men in all things There is the quite contrary of all these to bee seene in vnfaithfull men for their desire it is of happinesse and not at all of Gods loue as Balaam would be blessed but tooke no thought to be reconciled to God or to reforme his way Againe their desires be faint and be soone quelled being neither vehement nor constant and no maruell for they are vnsound rather seeking themselues that it may be well with them then that God may set his heart vpon them and loue them and be glorified in his mercies towards them And finally they desire to be forgiuen saued but it is without desire to repent and amend their liues they like Heauen well but not the way that leadeth thither their desire being to bee glorified with God by hauing his blessing and ioy and not to glorifie him by doing his will Aquila Will not this thinke you doe some hurt to teach that there is a desire of faith which is an acceptance with God for faith it selfe may it not cause men thus to content themselues seeing now they haue some measure of faith which is sufficient to saue them Haply it will be thought that here they may fixe their staffe and set their rest Apollos No Aquila there is no feare of this in this sound godly desire that being a portion of sauing grace whose property is to grow still and waxe greater euen as young figges or raysins grow till they be ripe and come to their full bignesse as all things which haue a vegetatiue or
comfort thereof for the time And sure this is a greater degree of the twain it is not a thing of such strength nor a matter so great in ioyfull feelings to beleeue Gods loue one hauing as it were a pawne of it in their hand as when one hath God frowning vpon him and lieth in some greeuous distresse outward or inward or both then to beleeue fully and strongly that God is still a Father and will saue and deliuer him argueth a mighty faith When Abraham sawe the day of Christ with reioycing at that sight and Mary so beleeued in Christ her Sauiour as her soule reioyced in him Luke 1. 46 when Paul and other beleeuers through their strong faith reioyced vnder the hope of glory Rom. 5. 2 This was nothing such a 〈◊〉 and height of faith to loose your third linke as for Iob when hee was in greeuous affliction God hiding his face from him Iob. 13. 24. and taking him for an enemy shooting his bitter arrowes against him which pierced his reines making him to possesse the sinnes of his youth to the terrour of his soule then and in that case to say I am sure my Redeemer liueth and I shall see him with the same eyes Iob 19. 25. and If he should kill me yet will I trust in him Iob 13. 15. Or for Dauid when his soule was cast-downe and vnquiet within him and all the waues of God came ouer him yet then to say Hee is my present helpe and my God Psal. 42. 5 11. I will yet giue him thanks Or for the man in the Gospell who cried with teares saying Helpe my vnbeleese yet could then say Lord I beleeue Marke 9. 24. And this it is which you did aduertise me of as thinking I had forgotten it that there may be a true faith yea and a great measure of it too for a time where there is no comfortable experience and feeling For as the Sunne may for a time cast forth his beames to the giuing of light when there is no heat nor warmth so the Sunne of righteousnesse Christ Iesus may kindle a light of some knowledge in the promise of mercy before there come to the soule the heat and warmth of ioy and comfort And where both light and heate haue beene giuen hee may seuer them at his pleasure which he is pleased sometimes to do denying to his members a ioyfull sence of mercies for some space for very good causes and respects First vpon some sinne committed he with-draweth his louing countenance taking from them inward ioy of heart that by the absence of it they may be humbled for their sinne as a father for the better humbling of his childe after some fault will denie him wonted fauour and looke vpon it with a displeasant eye and by this meanes also Gods children are brought the better to consider the greatnesse of their offence not onely for humbling but for whetting their prayers to moue them to more earnestnesse in 〈◊〉 of pardon and the restoring of their ioy vnto them as is to be seene in Dauids example Psalme 51. Also herein God taketh great triall of their faith and loue and hath occasion on the other side to expresse and giue his children experience of his mighty grace in sustaining and releeuing them his power is knowne in weakenesse and lastly it serueth for the awing of others to keepe them in feare of offending lest they also loose the ioy of their heart in Gods countenance as a Father will shew anger to one childe to informe and terrifie the rest vnto which wee may adde another consideration that ioy is often clouded or ecclipsed that when it breakes out againe and the minde is cheered and refreshed afresh then the comforts of the Spirit may be more esteemed more thankfully receiued and carefully retained Things lightly come by are lightly set by but euery thing is more accounted of the more hardly we get it therfore as we see a faire day more welcome after a soule or a calme or rest more embraced after a storme or trouble so is ioy of spirit more valued when it commeth after deepe heauinesse and much anguish of spirit for these respects Gods children must haue patience and striue to endure the lack of comfort considering it will returne with such aduantage yea and bee thankfull for such a schooling that it hath pleased God to send them such a bitter remembrance for so good ends for though it be the most greeuous thing in the World to haue our spirit wounded which should sustaine and beare vs out in all infirmities and afflictions Sand and Iron not being so heauy as anguish of heart yet surely in all Gods Children it hath a comfortable issue for which as God is to be waited on till it come so also he is to be praised for ministring such strength of faith as to be able to beleeue in him when nothing is seene and felt but terror and griefe and matter of despaire And where as yee asked how and by what steppes Gods people doe climbe vp vnto this height of beleefe in this I will satisfie you that there are sundry duties and meanes which thorough Gods blessing bring faith in time to such a great measure As first of all the duty of feruent prayer which being an exercise of faith as the body is encreased by exercise being moderate so is faith encreased by this exercise of prayer which springing of faith as a daughter like a good childe helpeth the mother Againe feruent prayer is like to a key or a bucket which doth vnlocke and draw out the treasures of Gods mercies Hence it is that such as haue beene most frequent in prayer haue proued fullest of knowledge faith loue and other graces Let Dauids example teach this none oftener in prayer none more rich in faith Paul full of faith because plentifull in prayer The second duty to adde vnto the strength of faith it is the often religious receiuing of the Lords Supper which for so much as by the vertue of Gods ordinance it signifieth and sealeth to euery beleeuer in particular the good will of God in Christ for forgiuenesse of sinnes and withall containeth a sacramentall promise of Christ and all his benefits to be distributed to due Communicants euen to euery faithfull receiuer Mat. 26. 26 27 28. Hence it is that it serueth greatly to the encrease of faith especially when therewithall is ioyned the diligent and obedient hearing of the Gospell preached which as it is the seede to beget faith so it is as foode and solid meate to confirme it by the ordinance of God And this effect it hath the rather if it be coupled with meditations of the Euangelicall promise the very nourishment of true faith which made godly Dauid to be much in meditations as Psalm 119. doth witnesse so earnestly to commend it to other Psal. 1. 2. Besides all this the long experience of Gods mercies and bounty in outward benefits and in inward
doth 〈◊〉 him when he commeth in to sup with her 〈◊〉 3. 20. Can our time be better employed then in taking a more particular large suruey of these iunkets and robes to satisfie our selues with some sight and taste of them But ere this can be done there is one office more for you to doe and that is I would entreate you to acquaint me with all the encouragements ye can thinke of which may whet on our faith and prouoke vs to beleeue God in his Word also how the hinderances of our faith as blockes in our way may be remoued Apollos Good friend Aquila but that I may denie no seruice which you will put me to performe else this taske were fitter for you to vndergoe as one that haue had your faith much exercised with sundry conflicts wherein you haue through Gods mercy stood fast and quitted your selfe like a man therefore if I by lacke of experience haply passe by any matter of moment in this businesse doe ye recall me and remember me of it Great and many are the impediments to withdraw and pull the faithfull from the holde of their faith and to draw them to distrust but on the other side also very strong and plentiful are the encouragements which the word from Heauen affordeth them to stay themselues vpon Gods promise for all things that pertaine to euerlasting happinesse First of all this is not the least that the great God by his cōmandement hath laid a charge vpon all his children to beleeue his promises and albeit this alone were sufficient to moue them to doe so lest they be found disobedient to God and to striue against his holy will who beares them so much good will yet it pleaseth him not onely to vse his authority in enioyning them to haue faith in his Son for their saluation but he also in the person of his Ministers out of his clemency descendeth so farre as to entreate and beseech them that they would accept reconciliation and peace with him through Christ Wee as the Ambassadours of Christ saith Paul as though God did beseech you through vs exhort you to be reconciled to God 2 Cor. 5. 20. What heart would not relent when his Prince with 〈◊〉 in hand as it were should 〈◊〉 to 〈◊〉 him being an offendor to accept his pardon And shall wee doubt to beleeue and giue credit to that God that is so desirous of atonement with vs as to beseech vs to admit it whom hee might command compell 〈◊〉 confound if wee should distrust him 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that it pleased our most good God to promise Christ and all good things with him vpon no other condition then this onely that we doe by faith beleeue his promise for our obedience to the commandement for 〈◊〉 of life is no condition of the promise of grace 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 onely of our faith Rom. 6. 22. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 onely condition of the 〈◊〉 of mercy As it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 God so loued the World that begane his onely begotten Son that whosoeuer beleeueth in him should 〈◊〉 for euer And againe in the foureteenth 〈◊〉 of that Chapter 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 beleeues in him should liue euerlastingly To which 〈◊〉 Marke 〈◊〉 16. He that beleeueth shall be 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 3. 11 12. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 4. 3. and in 〈◊〉 other places to this 〈◊〉 so 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a necessity that wee constantly beleeue For as in humane contracts there is no enioying the bargaine if the condition be broken so it is here if we bring not this condition of faith with vs God is not bound to stand to the couenant but as Christ saith Except ye repent ye perish Luke 13. so much more Except ye beleeue ye perish For he that beleeueth not shall be condemned Marke 16. 16 17. It must be further considered that God the Author of the couenant of grace and life is omnipotent to whom nothing is impossible who as for his holinesse and truth he will promise no more to his children then he meaneth in good sooth and earnest to doe so he lacketh no power nor might to effect what hee meaneth The Apostle Saint Paul 2 Cor. 6. 18. in coupling the almightinesse of God with this couenant saying I will be your Father and you shall be my children saith the Lord God Almighty purposed to minister good heart and courage to the faithfull by this very consideration that they are in a league of saluation with him that can doe what he will doe Abraham strengthened his own heart in beleefe by remembring that God the promiser was able to doe it Rom. 4. 20. But when a true beleeuer taketh hold on his truth and ioyneth that with his Almightinesse by thinking seriously especially in the houre of any temptation that hee hath to doe with a God which is truth it selfe author of all truth in others and an infinite louer of it also a hater and 〈◊〉 of all falshood and lies who hath giuen proofe of his fidelity euen in the least promise concerning this life feeding defending and otherwise blessing his Children according to his word they may with much comfort resolue and set it downe in their minde that his faithfulnesse will much more appeare in this great promise of remission of sinnes and of eternall life Thus very often to confirme and establish the mindes of the Saints Saint Paul telleth them Faithfull is hee which hath promised which will doe it 1 Cor. 1. 9. 1 Thes. 5. 24. Dauid assured himselfe of mercy promised him vpon this meditation that all the words of God were true 2 Sam. 7. 28. yea so true that hee fulfilleth his words euen towards such as are treacherous and persidious to him Againe as God is to be reuerenced for his mercies There is mercie with thee O Lord that thou maist be feared Psalme 130. 4. so is hee to be trusted and beleeued in for his mercies The eye of the Lord is vpon them that trust in his mercies Psalme 33. 18. Againe Let thy mercies and truth preserue me Psalme 40. And Psalme 51 and verse 1 Dauid is encouraged to come to God after his fall for pardon with good trust to find it because of his most mercifull nature ready to forgiue poore offenders And the Apostle in 1 Tim. 1. 9 10. reporteth that the mercie which he found being an oppressour a blasphemer a persecutour did serue to encourage other sinners in time to come to beleeue on God and to cast themselues on his kindnesse for pardon Which is an occasion to remember a new encouragement to faith in God namely the example of others who hauing sinned much against God yet beleeued the promise and were forgiuen as Lot Moses Dauid Peter Paul and infinite others mentioned in the holy Scripture which examples are registred there for our learning that thereby we might haue comfort
and hope Rom. 15. 4. Therefore let faint sinners plucke vp their feeble hands that hang downe and their weake knees and the rather calling to minde that they haue by vowe in their Baptisme and by promise often iterated in the profession of Christianitie bound themselues as to doe the cōmandements so to beleeue the promises of God And better it were wee had neuer made such a vow then to breake it hauing once made it Eccl. 5 5. But what encoragement shold this be to thinke not onely of that band wherewith we haue obliged our selues to God to beleeue him vpon his worde which as a pure virgin neuer was defiled with any vntruths but also to weigh the bond wherewith God hath bound himselfe to vs not onely in our Baptisme but namely in the Lords Supper where vnder his seale hee assureth euery true beleeuer that examineth himselfe and so eateth and drinketh that he is as verily partaker of Christ and of his passion with all the fruits thereof to remission and mortification of sin as he is partaker of the outward pledges of his body blood they being particular testimonies of assurance to euery one of his owne saluation by Christ according to the tenor of the couenant so as a token from a most trusty friend cānot more confirme our perswasions of his loue towardes vs then the Lords Supper duly receyued may warrant and assure our heartes of the especial loue of God in Christ for our eternal happinesse Vnto all this we may adde as a spurre to quicken vs the great and diuers hurtes which will redound to our selues if we beleeue not God and the maruellous dishonour that thereby should be offered to himself For if once vnbeleefe take roote in our hearts a bitter root or roote of bitternesse it will prooue For by it all our actions naturall ciuill religious indifferent good actions will be defiled and made hatefull to God For Whatsoeuer is not of faith it is sinne Rom. 14 23. And without faith it is impossible to please God Heb. 11 3. and to him whose minde and conscience is vncleane thorow infidelity and sinne all things are vncleane Titus 1 5. And what a matter this is let any man duly consider of it that as faith gets all sinnes both to bee forgiuen and to turne to our good Rom. 8 28. so infidelity gets all our best workes to become naught to turne to harme to vs and offence to God Neither this onely but through vnbeleefe we do euen bind vp the hāds of God and seale vp the fountain of his liberality that it should not flow vpon vs either in earthly benefites or heauenly graces His protections and deliuerances in our dangers and against our enemies are withhelde As it is sayde in the Gospell Christ could doe no great workes there in Capernaum because of their vnbeleefe so our vnbeleefe doeth after a sort disable God at the least it depriues vs of his gracious good things and great preseruations Neither onely doth it keep good things from vs but pulleth down euill things yea euen vpon Gods Children their particular and partiall vnbeleefe draweth many and greeuous iudgements from heauen Moses for his distrust died in the Wildernesse and might not be suffered to enter the Land of Canaan Deuterono cha 4 4. Also Zachariah otherwise a iust man yet for his vnbeleefe sake was stricken dumbe and for manie moneths was not able to speake Luke chap. 1. vers 22. If the vnbeleefe of the godly being but an infirmitie of faith were so sharpely chastised what marueile if the infidelity of the wicked being a meere absence of faith do cause vnto them many heauy plagues in this life Examples whereof are rife in the Book of God and in common life but the chiefe hurt of incredulity is that it shutteth out from the blessed and glorious kingdome of God For without shall be fearefull vnbeleeuers Reuel 21. 8. yea and throweth downe head-long into eternall perdition to suffer vengeance in flaming fires because they obey not the Gospel of Christ For he that beleeues not the wrath of God is vpon him Iohn 3. 36. and such shall be condemned Marke 16. 16. So as if obtaining of all promised good things cannot be offorce sufficient to stirre vp our dul hearts to embrace the promises yet when the manifold and certaine euils which befall men for want of faith be thought vpon this should helpe to awake our heauy mindes to make vs abhorre euery vnbeleeuing thought chiefly considering that the danger to our selues by yeelding to vnbeleefe is nothing though it be much most fearefull being compared to the dishonour that will thereby redound to God for by our vnbeliefe he is spoiled as much as in vs is of his essence being namely his mercy truth and power which is to make him no God For if we make him a lyar as euery one doth which beleeueth not in the onely begotten Son of God 1 Ioh. 5. 10. then we strip him and rob him of his chiefe glory yea of his very essence Nay which is yet more feareful we doe equal match him vnto Satan as if there were no more truth in his sayings then in the father of lies as on the one side then they doe much glorifie God that doe beleeue his word witnessing of him that he is true in his promises able for performance Rom. 4. 21. yea they do themselues a speciall honour for they doe make God a testimoniall as it were and set to their hand seale that he is faithfull Ioh. 3. 33. So on the other side they do exceedingly dishonour themselues and God also which doe through infidelity cast away his promises Thus you haue heard good friend Aquila the best encouragements which I can thinke of to quicken a fainting faith which if they hit vpon a presuming heart will make it more presumptuous but if they meet with a beleeuing humbled heart for whose sake I haue collected them then they will be as drie sticks heaped vpon a dull dying fire to reuiue and cheere it Now that ye are so well acquainted with the vsuall discouragements hinderances of faith you hauing had so many strong assaults made against your faith if you wil deliuer them and also shew how they may be repulsed ouercome it will doe well in my opinion and so wee will shut vp our conference about faith Aquila I haue a good mind to doe the one that is to lay forth the obiections which the flesh Satan make against the stedtastnesse of faith to shake it but for the other you that haue truly opened the encouragements can also tell how for to fit them for the resistance and beating backe of hinderances First how shall I be assured that the gracious promises offorgiuenesse by Christ and other promises of the Gospell are from God and not deuised by men Apollos Tell me haue you not been moued to doubt whether there
shine afresh or as the trees in Winter which hauing neither fruite nor blossome nor leafe seeme to be dead yet haue life in the roote which appeareth in the Spring Or finally as with a man in a trance who in truth 〈◊〉 though for the time he haue no sense or vse of life euen so it is with Gods owne Children in the pang of some soule affliction or after some deepe fall by sinne there appeares in them for a season no fruits nor feeling of any sauing grace but all is clouded and dead to seeming yet not so in truth as both reason and the euent declareth For all sauing grace is of that nature as it perisheth not it neuer dyeth where it once liueth therefore called immortall And such as for a season haue feare and trouble and dulnesse with deadnesse in their conscience they doe afterwards recouer themselues the graces which seemed to be dead being stirred vp by the vse of good meanes are againe quickened And the best meanes for such as haue lost their former peace as touching all sense of it they are priuate prayer to God though it be with great vntowardnesse yea though they be troubled when they thinke on God yet still to make petitions vnto him in his Sonnes name Those very groanes and sighes which are so little as they cannot be vttered what they are yet being the worke of Christ his Spirit they are through the same Christ pleasing to God who despiseth not a contrite and broken heart therfore let not such forbeare to come but 〈◊〉 more seriously to renew their repentance taking the helpe of the prayers and comforts of the godly wise by whose counsell supplications many a weake troubled heart hath beene raysed vp to peace and rest in the Lord. For this being Gods ordinance to pray one for another and to confesse our sinnes one to another Iames 5. certainely God will blesse it to the good of his Children Therefore let such take good heart to them and for their better releefe of their distressed conscience let them remember the olde mercies of God toward them and what peace ioy and comfort they haue had heretofore in God and other the workes of his grace which they haue felt must assure them that that God which once had so farre exprest his loue towards them will be their God for euer These priuate meanes ioyned with the publike namely the reuerent vse of the Word and mysteries will againe so settle their heart in peace through Gods powerfull blessing as that they shall be occasioned to say with the Prophet Returne to thy rest O my soule for the Lord hath beene beneficiall to thee hee hath deliuered thy soule from death and thy eyes from teares Psal. 116. verse 7 8. Aquila Let me now remember you to proceede to the second fruite of Iustifying faith which with the Apostle you called Accesse into the grace of God what doe ye esteeme this to be declare it to me as I may conceiue it Apollos This third fruite which is the accesse or entrance into the grace of God it is a companion of the former following it at the heeles for our conscience being pacified through the hauing God pacified and reconciled toward vs the Christian soule assumeth and taketh great liberty in all necessities outward and inward to approach and come vnto this God thus become gracious and fauourable to vs in his Sonne and this is that accesse or entrance into his grace being the same with that which we reade of Ephesians 3. 12. Wee haue entrance with boldnesse through confidence and faith in Christ. And also one with that Heb. 4. 16. We may with boldnesse come to the throne of grace hoping to find helpe in time of neede or as before when our sinnes were vnpardoned they shut vs out of Gods presence so being now forgiuen and God reconciled to vs. We may freely vpon all occasions and doe with much liberty draw neere to him being made propitious to vs wee haue a certaine resemblance and shadow of this in naturall Children who dare not come into the sight of their Father all the while his anger is moued for some fault but flie rather his presence as did Absalon but attonement being once made and they certified thereof then Absalon dare freely shew himselfe before his Father so it fareth with Gods Children they shun and flie from God as Adam all the while they haue God angry for their sinnes and their consciences in that regard 〈◊〉 or disquietted but vpon reconciliation beleeued and the conscience thereby appeased they now with an holy boldnesse enter in to God to speake to his Grace for themselues and for others according to all their wants and distresses which how great a gift and priuiledge it is may be perceiued by the example of a base subiect through some capitall crime obnoxious by the Law to death and now by the clemency of his Prince not onely pardoned but honoured so and aduanced as hee may at all times haue accesse vnto his Prince to sue for himselfe and his friends But looke how much the fauour of God exceedeth the fauour of all earthly Monarchs and is farre more able to gratifie vs in things most neerely concerning vs enen eternall felicity so much doth this benefit of our accesse vnto God exceede that other and it is a benefit that no heart can thinke no tongue can vtter the vnualuable greatnesse of it that poore sinners should receiue this honour through the mediation of Christ and by his merits to haue free approch into Gods priuy chamber yea into his secret presence to acquaint him with all whatsoeuer wants wee haue and to talke with him as a childe with his louing Father or one friend with another Thus considering what neede wee haue of him and how able hee is to pleasure vs cannot seeme but a wonderous great mercy our vnworthinesse and his greatnesse being also coupled together Aquila The fourth fruite ye called a standing in this grace what is this I pray you Apollos It imports as much as a perseuerance and continuance of true beleeuers in that blessed estate whereinto they are brought by faith in Iesus Christ by whom they haue God fauourable not by fits and for dayes moneths yeeres but for euer and that such a thing is meant here by standing not only our common speech wherein wee call a place of continuance a station or a standing and of a man that is resolute and constant wee vse to say he stood well to it and when wee will stirre vp one to stedfastnesse wee bid him stand to it But the Scriptures also by this word expresse stablenesse both in euill Psalme 1. 1. and in good Psalme 122. 1 Corinthians 16. 13. Likewise where it is saide by Saint Paul The iustified by faith doe stand in that grace whereinto they haue sound entrance Hee intends to teach thus much that the Elect beleeuer as by
not make them ashamed Rom. 5 5. therefore they may surely and with certainty expect eternall glory in heauen Otherwise their hope would bring shame and confound them if they should misse of the thing hoped for Againe the beleeuers are said to reioyce vnder this glory Rom. 5 2. Now there is no reioycing with godly wise men but in things of certainty which be assured There is therefore certainty in their hope otherwise how could they pray vnto God and call him Father For his children shall certainly be saued and they may certainly looke for it and how could faith be a certain perswasion of the truth of the promise if hope were but an vncertain and wauering looking for the accomplishment of the thing promised Finally hope staying it selfe vpon the infinite truth mercy and power of God which cannot deceiue alter or faile therefore Christian hope of glorious happinesse is no opinion but a very certaine and steddy expectation Aquila Sir let me heere interrupt you a little without your offence Seeing the nature of hope is but to looke for something which as yet wee haue not and is to be had heereafter as the Apostle Rom. 8. argueth to wit when he saith Hope which is seene is no hope wee hope for such things as we see not whence then is that certainty and assurance which is affixed and ioyned vnto hope there being many things hoped for to bee had of vs heereafter which yet men neuer haue Apollos Neighbour Aquila this was well timely mooued For certainty is not of the nature of hope which being generally taken and in it owne nature is no more then as you haue saide an expecting of some future thing which is yet for to come therefore certainty or vncertainety goeth with hope according to the nature of the things hoped for which if they haue contingent causes so as they may come to passe or not then the hope of such things is euer with vncertainty and no better then a doubtfull opinion Hence it is that humane or ciuill hope which is of worldlie things which haue no certaine causes but may be or not be is euer with doubt and vnassured As for example when one hath promised to come to my house such a time to make merry with me or to pay me money I may say I hope such a man thus promising will come at the appointed time but this hope cānot make me sure For vpon good cause he may alter his mind or fall sicke or my selfe may haue necessary lets But now it is otherwise with Christian hope which is certaine and assoreth a man of the things hoped for as spiritual blessings and protection on earth and celestiall glory in heauen Which things because they are very certaine proceeding of most certaine causes as the vnchangeable mercy and truth of God purposing and promising eternal life with all things which belong thereunto and bring thither and hauing already giuen the elect in the worke of their calling and iustifying them by faith in pacifying their consciences by the feeling of their sinnes forgiuen and allowing them accesse into his grace and by other fruites of his couenant sure demonstration and experimentall knowledge of his truth and mercy Hence it is that they may with vndoubted certainty and doe assuredly looke for that which is yet behinde euen their glorious perfection in heauen And notwithstanding there bee in them still remaining corruption by strength whereof they often faile and offend by many sometime very great sins yea and their owne will is changeable yet seeing it is so that vnto beleeuers repenting all sinnes are forgiuen and God himselfe neuer changeth howsoeuer his children are subiect therunto yet he so reneweth them as he confirmeth their will and putteth strength into them by the might of his grace that though they may change cease to trust in God yet they are kept from it Hence it is for all the multitude of their iniquities and mutablenes of their mind that their hope is neuer vtterly quailed danted but standeth firme as mount Syon or as an hill of Brasse so as not onely for the present but euer for hereafter their hope shall be firme and good Which truth as it much correcteth the error of them which seuer assurance from hope of glory make of it but an opinion and wauering conceite as of a thing which they may haue or misse of a thing not to bee meruailed seeing some in part at least ground their hope vpon the merit of workes and vpon their seruing of GOD weake grounds to beare vp certaine expectation of glory so it ministreth much comfort to the faithful which haue receiued this Christian hope insomuch as whatsoeuer their afflictions enemies or sinnes be yet they cannot misse of glorious blisse in the end For God is faithful which hath promised and hauing also begun a good worke in them hee will finish it vntill the day of Iesus Christ. Finally whosoeuer hath this hope of the glory of God let him purge himselfe euen as hee is pure For if we looke for such a glory as is heauenly wee ought to be very diligent that wee may bee found of him in peace without spot and blamelesse Aquila You haue satisfied me in this fifth fruite of hope and by that which you haue deliuered I doe well obserue how three sorts of persons be hugely deceiued The first is of them who in some part doe build their hope vpon their owne good doings who must needes alwayes floate as a boate vpon the water with continuall vncertainties and doubtings of their saluation for that they can neuer be sure when their workes are sufficient and when they be free from being in some mortall sinne doe still perplex their hearts beside the great sinnes which they commit against God in whom alone the hope of his children is to be fixed as an anchor in the bottome of the water insomuch as they are pronounced accursed which hope in ought saue God and mens workes they are not good therefore popish hope is an accursed hope Indeede good workes and a iust and godly life may be vnto the Saints a secondary helpe and as it were some prop to stay their hope in this regard that to such persons as liue so is the promise of eternall life made but God his infinite mercy trueth and his Almightinesse manifested in the death and resurrection of his Sonne is the true and onely foundation of hope Thankes be vnto God saith Saint Peter who hath begotten vs to a liuely hope through the resurrection of Christ from the dead The second sort is of such as in their ignorance or mistaking thinke and speake no otherwise of Christian hope then of humane and worldly hope as if their hope of glory had no more certainty in it then hath their hope of a faire day when they see the morning cleere or of a good haruest when they see corne come vp in the blade and well eared
being herein not right though they little suspect so much by themselues The third sort is of such as hauing better knowledge of the truth of this doctrine touching the certainty of hope yet faile herein that they doe not labour to expresse the power of a true liuely hope in the purging of themselues their hearts and liues from filthinesse of sinne that they may become such as God in mercy will accept as meet and fit to enter into that vndefiled inheritance which they say they certainely by hope doe looke for But now Sir hauing dispatcht this fifth fruit of the hope of glory if it seeme good to you set vpon the next the sixth fruite Reioycing vnder this hope which is elsewhere called ioy in the Spirit or ioy of the holy Ghost and ioy vnspeakable and glorious and ioy of saluation I would haue you open this to me Apollos Ioy or reioycing generally taken it is a sweete motion of the heart vpon the presence or hope of some good thing Now as good things which are the obiects of ioy be diuers so reioycing is diuers If the good thing bee such as doe tend to the pleasing or preseruing of our Nature the ioy which is taken in it is fleshly and worldly such as reprobates wicked men of all sorts may haue But the reioycing which is peculiar to a beleeuing iustified person it ariseth and is occasioned by heauenly and spirituall graces and blessings either presently had and enioyed as calling to Christ remission of sinnes reconciliation with God peace of conscience repentance the graces of the new man faith hope loue c. or else certainly hoped for as eternall blisse and glory in Heauen Hence in Scriptures termed Ioy of the Spirit not onely because it is wrought by the Spirit but because spirituall blessings are the obiect of it And herein differeth Christian reioycing from worldly that as this springeth from the hauing and presence of earthly and perishing good things of this life and therefore lasteth not but is suddenly quailed vpon the change of estate and losse of temporall good things and euer it endeth in bitter sorrow Contrariwise the reioycing of the faithfull it is lasting and cannot be taken away such as cheereth the heart euen in afflictions as we shal heare anon because it commeth from a sence of Gods present fauour and the present enioying of many excellent heauenly fruits thereof and an assured expectation of full blessednesse to come their hearts being truly certified by the holy Spirit and assured by faith that as they now haue God propitious and gracious towards them for the free remission of all their sinnes so the day will come when all corruption of sinnes quite done away and all teares for sinne and misery being wiped from their eyes at a word when all euill being vtterly remoued from them they shall be perfectly blessed and glorified with God in which hope they reioyce and comfort their hearts lauding and praysing God with Psalmes The which their spirituall ioy comming from the feeling of Gods fauour and the looking for of Gods glory is a part of Gods Kingdome Rom. 14. The Kingdome of God is righteousnesse peace ioy in the holy Ghost And therefore of Saint Peter called Gloriousioy 1 Pet. 1. Vnto which the Apostle therefore earnestly exhorteth the faithfull Reioyce in the Lord Againe I say reioyce Phil. 4. 4. And Reioyce euermore 1 Thes. 5. 16. And this Dauid begs Psal. 51. Make me to heare of ioy and gladnesse Where obserue this that ioy is begotten by the promise of the Gospell being heard Let mee heare euen by that gladsome ioyfull tydings of forgiuenesse by Christ how it is nourished and encreased by that meanes and being at any time ouershadowed as it falleth out sometime with Gods deare Children that the sunne of their ioy is hid vnder a blacke cloude of sinnes and temptations then it is recouered and had again by the word of faith by the message and testimony of forgiuenesse of sinnes being yours and beleeued therefore it is that Dauid prayes to heare of ioy For when the ioy of the Christian heart is turned into bitter greefe there is nothing wil cheere and glad it sauing the promises of the Word I had vtterly fainted in my trouble had not'thy Word comforted me Psal. 119. All other solaces which wee vse to follow for the cheering of our spirit made sad with sinne are vaine and nothing worth It is the word of promise onely through the working of that Spirit of comfort that can fetch againe a fainting spirit or keepe it in ioyfull plight without fainting Therefore as God must be sought to for this ioy when any lacke it so hee must be waited on in his Word for the obtaining and encrease of it For sithence both faith and hope of glorie are bred and fed by the hearing of the Word of the Gospell by the same way our reioycing the fruite of our hope is to be gotten and preserued But that wee may not stay too long about any one thing hauing so many things to speak of we are to vnderstand that this former reioycing of a Christian heart vnder hope of Gods glory doth bring forth another branch of reioycing farre more admirable and that is reioycing in bitter tribulations which are greeuous to our Nature for this is not so much to be maruelled at if true beleeuers haue their hearts mooued to ioy and gladnes because they certainly looke to bee glorified with God in heauen for the hope of farre lesse matters vseth to cheere vp mens hearts but this is indeede very wonderfull that afflictions which haue in them matter both of shame and pain yea and carry a shew of God displeased and angry with vs that yet the godly beleeuers should be merry and cheerefull in the feeling of them this I say is strange yet it is most certainly true the Apostle affirming of them who be iustified by Faith That they reioyce euen in tribulations Rom. 5. 3. and experience proueth to vs the truth heereof The godly in their affliction euen in most bitter martyrdom suffering the spoyling of their goods and liues with ioy The reason is because the afflictions proceeding from Gods loue and speciall fauour as the faithfull are well perswaded being reconciled to him and for an especiall good end to try and encrease their faith therefore their afflictions do nourish in them the hope of their glory as seales and pledges thereof vnto them assuring them that rest will come after their troubles according to Gods faithfull promise Now the remembrance of that rest and happinesse in hope whereof they liue causeth all things to be sweete and pleasant vnto them which they meete with in their way as part of their way by which they are to passe toward that glorious and happie end They being not a little comforted heerewith in their greatest distresses and troubles to know that beeing now made partakers
with Christ and his afflictions suffering and dying with him they haue the Lords owne worde for their warrant that they shall also liue and reigne with him in glory So as with consideration of these things namely their conformity with Christ and that their light and momentany sufferings shall be turned into a glory immortall and weighty hence it is that looking for it looking vpon it and not vpon their temporall calamities they are very comfortable and coragious the ioy of good things to come swallowing at lest mitigating much the greefe of euil things present Aquila Sir you might now as I thinke proceede vnto the two last pointes of Iustification but that I would intreat you to loose two or three knots One is whether Gods children may imbrace worldly comforts And the second is sithence the hope of glorie breeds in them such ioy euen to the solacing gladding of their hearts in most irkesome and painfull sufferings how commeth it that sometimes some of the best and most faithfull men do strangely despaire and are not onely without hope and ioy but exceedingly appalled and danted despairing and full of discomfite Apollos Good friend albeit something hath by occasion bene said to this point twice or thrice heretofore if ye remember when wee spake of peace of conscience and of standing in grace and else-where yet I will answer your demand touching the despaires of the faithfull if first I speake somewhat of worldly comforts which as it pleaseth God sometime to afford his owne children and that in a good measure giuing them also power to apprehend them so there is great feare and danger of being deceiued by them as we see in the wofull examples of Salomons fall and Ezekiahs sinne and sundry others which haue lost the sense of spirituall ioy by being too much caried away with worldly ioyes not keeping a measure in them Therefore Gods children are to bee admonished of these few things about their ioy in earthlie comforts 1. First that simply considered it is common vnto them not onely with the vngodly but euen with sensuall beasts who are delighted when they haue things liking to their nature Thus wee see the Calues and Lambs to skip and sport themselues the very horse reioyce when he hath good prouender 2. Secondly too much worldly ioy when the hart is much and often cheered with pleasures of life is very perillous a great enemy to godlinesse hauing bene the baite wherein many a good soule hath bin caught so as there needs great caution to be taken about the well vsing of it especially it being so hard for vs to gouerne either our passions of greefe or ioy of feare or loue 3. Thirdly therefore prayer is to bee made vnto God to guide them in their mirth and to enable them to obserue a due measure therin that the heart be not deceiued thereby 4. Fourthly in the midst of mirth and worldly ioy when the heart beginnes to cheare much some sin of our life committed or some iudgement of God which we haue bene vnder for sinne or some threatning of the word against some of our sinnes would bee called to minde to checke the immoderatenesse of our affection and so to temper and take down our mirth that it be not with excesse 5. Fiftly as Chirurgeons are faine in some cases to diuert the course of blood for the healths of their patients so let Christians endeuour to turne theyr worldly mirth into a godly spirituall mirth by considering with themselues seriously that those earthlie pleasures and worldly comforts wherein their heart is delighted are the fruites of their redemption pledges to them of better things to come and so to learne to reioyce in the vse of them as testimonies of Gods loue and fauour in Christ. 6. Sixtly it would do well in their ioy for worldly things to thinke how sodainly and soone they may be lost and all turned quickly into the contrary Also to remember the afflictions of the Church of some chiefe members therof which mourne now when they reioyce that by a fellow seeling of others miseries their owne ioy may be layed and brought into better compasse 7. Seuenthly let them further call to mind how often they reade of Christs teares and sighings for sins miseries of others how sildome or neuer they reade of his laughter and mirth Which though no doubt he had and did partake of it being a man like to vs in all things saue sin and to reioyce is in it selfe no sinne yet likely it was sparingly and surely no mention is made of it in the story of the Gospell He was at some feasts indeede but no word of his mirth there 8. Lastly our mirth as it would bee by all good meanes moderated so there would care be taken that it be referred to a good end which hath a great stroke in the goodnesse of any action namely to take our worldly comforts with this purpose and mind that we may be the more apt to praise God with cheerefulnesse of heart and to goe through the laborious and irksome trauels of our calling with more alacrity and liuelinesse Thus there will not onely bee no harme in our worldly mirth whereof to repent but it will proue an helpe to vs vnto godlinesse and be as an hand-maide to that spirituall reioycing vnder the hope of glory Now to your other knot how it falleth our that beleeuing Christians notwithstanding their hope and ioy in God yet are sometime filled with despaire and discomfort if I should say no more but that they may often thanke the abuse of worldly ioy as the cause of those heauy gnawings of despaire which come ouer their stomacks I should say something and which were too true howbeit I will deliuer to you more fully what I iudge of the despaire of the beleeuers And first I iudge it a very strange worke of God that it should fall out that a true beleeuer should despaire considering that the hope which is put into his heart as an anchor sure and stedfast hath such firme ground-worke as the constant truth the omnipotent power the vnchangeable mercies of God the Father also the precious death perfect obedience powerful resurrection of Christ our Mediatour finally the sanctification and graces of the holy Spirit which as the first fruites of the Spirit as the earnest of our inheritance the beginnings of life eternall the peculiar ornaments of Christs Spouse serue to be as vnder helpes and props of hope there being also the Ministry of the Word and Sacraments and many other meanes to confirme hope I say that for all this they should be sometime in that case as if they had neuer heard of God of life euerlasting or had not known what hope had meant it is very strange indeede Yet all experience both old and new telleth vs that as in the Elect before their calling there is a meere want and priuation of hope so after their
mercies and goodnesse and in Christs death and passion they doe but abuse the mercies of God and the merits of Christ which are offered and preached vnto men to keepe them from sinning and to call them to amendment of life as it is written There is mercy with God that he may be feared Psal. 142. 4. And that the kindnesse of God leadeth to repentance Rom. 2. 4. For which purpose reade also Rom. 12. 1. Tit. 2. 12 1 Iohn 2. 1. Now the hope of the godly it is so far off that thereby they doe waxe bold to offend because they hope in Gods grace for pardon as contrariwise they are much moued to all good care of pleasing God in a new course of life to the end And as it is farre from them to grow secure in the carriage of their life vpon the hope they haue of Gods fauour and his glory so they doe not take heart to sinne as the wicked doe vpon opinion to repent at last for they know and consider that men may die suddenly And that as late repentance is suspitious not to be true so it is iust with God to forsake them in their death who haue forsaken his commandements in their life as also the longer it is ere one repent the harder it is sinne by custome hauing gotten strength as the further that one goeth out of his way the longer it is ere he can returne Howbeit it is certain that Gods faithful Children are subiect vnto sinnes of presumption else would not the holy Prophet haue prayed against them Psalm 19. 119. Yea and sundry times what for the better humbling of them what for the example of others to teach all men to feare themselues and to liue in awe continually of God and for the more full manifestation of this mercy toward the godly in pardoning euen their presumptuous sinnes for these and such like respects they are left of God to themselues to presume and be too confident not in Gods goodnesse and truth for that is the office of their hope but vpon their owne strength and outward prosperity forgetting the Lords goodnesse towards them and their owne great frailty as may be seene in example of Dauid Psalme 30. 6. In my prosperity I saide I shall neuer be moued And of Peter Mathew 26. I will neuer denie thee I will die rather whose presumption cost them much sorrow and many a salt teare therefore let all men be warned by their harmes But friend Aquila ye haue almost made me goe out of our way and kept me but too long in these fruits of iustifying faith of which there be yet two vnhandled which I will very quickly goe through that we may come to that other worthy benefit of our sanctification Sister or Daughter rather vnto iustification Aquila We haue indeede insisted in these matters through my fault but say then the next point is the shedding abroade of Gods loue in our hearts and our glorying in God through Christ the two last of the nine effects of iustification what doe ye vnderstand by them Apollos The loue of God that is not the actiue loue wherewith we loue him but the passiue loue where with we are beloued of him which giueth both strength to our hope and matter of our ioy is then saide to be shed abroade in our hearts when the sence and feeling of it is shed powred into the hearts of the faithfull whom God loueth in his purpose and decree from before the World was made and actually loued them at the time of their calling to faith in his Sonne the manifestation whereof vnto them when it is so expressed to them in the fruits of it as their hearts be affected with a ioyous feeling of it this is the shedding of it abroade which is the eighth fruite of Iustification It may be somewhat declared by this comparison of the boxe of precious ointment mentioned Mathew 26. which while the woman that had it kept shut gaue no sauour but hauing powred it out and shed it on Christs head it did yeeld a sweete and pleasant sent and smell to all which were in the house Euen so the loue of God is shut and pent vp in Gods purpose as it were till it be felt of the Elect but after they haue faith to beleeue the promise of saluation by Christ vnto their fellowship with Christ himselfe and all his benefits then his loue as an oyntment powred out doth plentifully refresh their hearts with the comfortable sence and feeling of it as the Apostle Rom. 8. 38 39. and the faithfull to whom Peter wrote 1 Peter 1. had good experience Wherein the wonderfull goodnesse of God doth vtter it selfe toward his chosen in this that hee doth not onely loue them in purpose but by speciall and singular fruites as pawnes and pledges and namely by giuing his onely begotten Sonne to suffer such a reprochfull and bitter death for them being sinners and his enemies doth assure them so of his loue as they know and beleeue they are beloued and are exceedingly cheered in their hearts with a certaine perswasion of his loue which verily is a great matter and serues them to great good purposes For as it is nothing to a blinde man to know there is a Sunne a glorious and bright creature when himselfe cannot enioy the sight of it or to a very poore man to know where much treasure is while himselfe cannot come at it to haue any part of it so it is nothing to heare and know that there is much loue hid in God except our selues feele it and become partakers of it but when the sence of this infinite loue of God is by a speciall worke of the Spirit giuen vnto the faithfull loe then there ariseth ioy and gladnesse in the soule euen vnspeakable and glorious ioy 1 Peter 1. 8. Also a great encrease of their hope in a more full assurance of enioying the blessing hoped for in as much as that God who hath so loued and so testified his loue cannot change and deceiue vs. And there is moreouer by the sence of Gods loue toward vs another loue in vs kindled toward him and toward all whom hee would haue vs loue as shall hereafter more largely be shewed But now I hasten to the ninth and last fruite which I called with the Apostle Aglorying concerning God Romans 5. 11. Which commeth herehence that beleeuers finding Gods loue so farre forth declared to them for his Sonnes sake as not onely to acquit them of all guilt and condemnation of sinne by his sufferings and death whereby of enemies they were reconciled to God But furthermore to allow them his perfect obedience and holinesse to be their owne by imputation euen to the interessing of them into the glorious inheritance of Heauen they doe thereupon greatly glorie and in a holy manner boast-and insult in their spirits ouer all the Enemies of their saluation that God is become so exceeding
Finally which is an admirable thing euen by the grosse sinnes of his Children it pleaseth God to doe them much good both to greeue them for that is past to humble them and shame them for the present to worke more feare and warinesse for the time to come Besides it turnes greatly to Satans great confusion their fales prouing medicines and remedies and preuentions of future sinnes and this as it much redoundeth to Gods honour so it cannot choose but vex Sathan at the heart that such sinnes as he hath drawne the godly into with great diligence and long deuice hoping therby to choke them and quite to spoile them should bee made meanes through Gods wonderfull goodnesse and wisedome euen to whet and sharpen them the more against Sathan the procurer of their wounds and woe by stirring vp themselues and strengthening others vnto all good duties He had been better to fit still then to haue tempted Dauid and Peter to such sinnes as he did as I could further proue saue that in our conference of Repentance this very thing wil be happily reuiued and come againe to be spoken of but it is now meete that wee seeke out the markes whereby Sanctification is knowne to be truly wrought and to speake of the duties of sanctified persons Apollos I doe well allow of your purpose onely by the way let me put you in remembrance that by the remainder of sinne in the new borne Christians and by those daily bitter fruits which spring from thence there is more occasion giuen to the godly to exercise their faith touching the forgiuenesse promised and their hope touching the blessednesse to come and all other their graces which if they were perfect and all sinne done away at their regeneration then what great vse of faith or hope when there should bee no vnbeleefe or doubting within them or what vse of any other vertue when it lacked the opposition resistance of the contrary vice to set it on worke Here is our warfare and there must be a continuall strife inwardly in our selues betweene grace and sinne as well as out wardly against the wicked In Heauen our warfare shall be ended and not before and further by how much the godly oftner sinne here so much the mercies of God in pardoning and Christs righteousnesse in couering such and so innumerable transgressions are manifested to bee the more glorious and excellent There being no lesse grace if not more expressed in forgiuing sinnes done after the Spirit of God and faith receiued then such as were done before Sithence the more Gods Children are beholden to God and the more meanes they haue against sinne and the more they are enlightened to vnderstand their duty the more grecuous is their fault which yet being all remitted freely vpon their repentance it declareth the abundance of the grace of God toward them Aquila It was well thought vpon by you for I had forgotten these things but now to follow my purpose Amidst so much darknesse of minde as yet remaineth after regeneration in Gods Children and so many and great imperfections Sathan also with his iuglings laboring to trouble their iudgements it seemeth then a hard thing to discerne that true sanctification of the Elect from that generall grace whereby a naturall man may liue for outward comfort and carriage as if hee were truly sanctified There bee sixe or seauen tokens by which the difference is to bee found and euery sanctified person shall by them know of himselfe that hee is gone beyond a ciuill life First a sanctified man hath care to order his life his whole way and euery step of it by the knowledge of the Word of which he enquireth what hee may doe and what not still taking counsell from thence doing all his things as necre as hee can by that diuine direction and with application of Christ beleeuing that his weaknesses are in him hidden and the vncleannesse of his worke wiped and purged by his death whereas the ciuill man dependeth vpon the allowance and reputation of men which if hee obtaine it contents him he lookes no further but to haue a good estimation in the World And whereas the sanctified man aymeth at this most how to please God euen with the deniall and displeasure of his owne corrupt heart the ciuill man doth not take thought nor trouble his head about the pleasing of God in the good he doth nor in leauing euils for the offence of God but seeketh and studieth to please himselfe and such whose fauour hee desireth to liue in ordering his course to his owne and their liking Thirdly whereas a ciuill man is very carefull in duties that concerne affaires and dealings with men that hee may get a good report that way and doth religious duties coldly and of custome the sanctified man though he will not be negligent in workes that belong to his calling yet he is cheefely 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 duties which concerne God and his 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that both publikely and priuately Adde heereunto fourthly that ciuil 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 no great conscience of smaller sinnes as 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 talke lesse oaths gaming c and not at all 〈◊〉 against naturall corruption to get it killed nor in 〈◊〉 bled for it It is otherwise with a sanctified man he laboureth most against the roote of sinne to get it mortified to haue the fountaine drained hee 〈◊〉 him and conceiues much 〈◊〉 euen for the 〈◊〉 of sinne Psal. 51 4 5. Hee hath a great care to meete with sin in the bud to resist it in the 〈◊〉 and euill desires and auoyding conscionably euen such offences as the most men iudge but 〈◊〉 For hee 〈◊〉 the danger of death the displeasure of God in euery sin euen the least Dauid will greeue for touching the lap of Sauls garment the Lords annointed The heart of a godly man wil smite him euē for a vile vnhonest thoght for euery little ouer sight if it be but in a circumstance of an action Yet 〈◊〉 ciuil men neuer take any 〈◊〉 to auoid the sins of the time or of their 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 turall peculiar sinnes the sanctified man of all other most setteth himselfe against these And to shut vp because the differences are infinite the euill man is 〈◊〉 about the 〈◊〉 of grace to get more strength against 〈◊〉 more power to obey God he doth not marke in himselfe the decrease of grace or increase of sinne that being humbled therefore he may vse the means appointed without 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and faintnesse not by fits and girds It 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 with the sanctified person who 〈◊〉 how corruption workes and how grace decayes betakes himselfe vnto the vse of al good means 〈◊〉 all good care and conscience for the helping him 〈◊〉 a greater measure of the Spirit that he may grow vp in grace and knowledge For he considereth 〈◊〉 himselfe amongst sundry other things what duty he 〈◊〉 to God and to his owne soule and that this 〈◊〉 is laid vpon him by
must be a continuall repentance There being some sinnes not yet espied therefore not particularly repented of some espied and yet not sufficiently hated striuen against and mastered and some good duties not yet knowne to vs and such as are knowne not so zealously followed nor so wisely as becommeth the redeemed by Christ which looke for eternall glory Aquila Now Sir you haue satisfied me in the acception of Repentance and shewed me how wee are to speake of it and how it agreeth to a man already called and sanctified Let mee make bold to aske you further touching this particular euangelical Repentance which is euery day to be renewed euen as a good House-wife doth once a day sweepe her House or as one that writeth a Letter lookes often ouer it so our life is often to be lookt ouer that the errors thereof may be corrected but where must this Repentance haue his beginning wherein doth it consist what be the kinds of it by what tokens is it knowne and bewrayed And after these things opened I haue certain doubts and scruples to propound to you about the doctrine and practise of Repentance Apollos This renewed Repentance of the godly takes the beginning from a godly sorrow engendred in the heart by the holy Ghost vpon the discouery of our daily infirmities and falles as the Apostle teacheth vs 2 Corinthians 7. 10. Godly sorrow bringeth forth repentance whereas worldly sorrow brings forth death There is to be seene in the wicked shadowish and counterfeit Repentance the ground whereof is wordly sorrow not a griefe stirred vp in the heart because of displeasing God by some sinne but in respect of worldly cause as temporal losse worldly shame and punishment or else for feare or through feeling of Gods wrath for sinne which is a griefe may be found in a meere naturall and worldly man the end of which griefe is death occasioned by a despaire which is in them of obtaining mercy by which they are brought to eternall yea and sometime to a temporall vntimely death as is to be seene in Achitophel and Iudas Therefore they are to be warned to abandon and put farre from their hearts this worldly sorrow which not onely can profit nothing but thereby no man can either redeeme his losse or shame or remoue his feared punishment but bringeth forth a dangerous and deadly fruit and to labour to conuert it into a godly sorrow to greeue according to God for this hath great commodity in it for as it pleaseth God being engendred by himselfe in the heart which mourneth euen here hence because the most mercifull God is offended by transgression of his Law therefore worthily called godly sorrow so it hath a notable blessed Issue for it leadeth to repentance and that to life or saluation For as it cannot be but such as haue their heart smitten with heauinesse because of the displeasure of their louing God by their sinne but they will meditate a turning from it and an amendment so they who enter into this course of Repentance and so continue it will at last leade them to saluation and in the meane time it is a good testimonie vnto them that they are saued persons if it were no more but that the holy Ghost saith of hearts contrite sorrowfull for their sinnes that they are a sacrifice to God and that the sobs and sighes of a troubled Spirit greeued for iniquity doe proceede from the holy Spirit Psal. 51. Rom. 8. Surely this were sufficient to moue euery Christian to pray and labour for this godly griefe that he may get his heart touched with it the melting heart the sostened heart soone moued to griefe vpon sence of a sinne is a blessed heart the very habitation and lodging of God himselfe yet to heare further that our repentance occasioned by our griefe for sinne is as a way wee are to walke in to saluation this same ought to cause all men to be willing to haue this godly sorrow and to know how they may attaine it And albeit that the meditation of the filthinesse and danger of sinne being committed against an infinite Iustice the souereigne goodnesse and a most holy Law may much helpe to moue the heart after a sinne to be aggreeued yet nothing so auailable to this purpose as the due and serious consideration of the 〈◊〉 of Christs life and the death and passion of our Lord which being so infamous and sharpe intollerably and the person so abased and plagued being the eternall Sonne of God and a man most innocent and wee our selues the proper and immediate cause of all his ignominy and paines suffering not for his owne but for our sinnes this if any thing else in the world will and if there be any true grace in the heart it will make it euen to bleede with griese that such an one should suffer and such hard and heauy things and for such being but wormes-meate vngodly and his enemies what heart would not be pricked to thinke of it that the Lord of life the immaculate Lambe should endure such fierce wrath from God and men for such vile ones The very Earth trembled at this and shall not our hearts feare the Sun was darkened the Heauen also put on mourning weede and shall not wee be troubled The stones rent and shall not our hearts be rent with sorrow and our eyes gush out with teares vpon the sight and remembrance of such our sinnes as we daily fall into and by which we occasioned such an execrable death with torment to such an honourable person As it cannot be but ill with them who can thinke of this and not be displeased with themselues and greeued at their sinnes which procured this so well is that man that vpon the thought of his Sauiours sorrow for sinne can haue his owne soule touched and ready to melt into sorrow For blessed are they that mourne they shall be comforted Mathew 5. Vnto whom doth the high God looke who dwelleth in the Heauens but vnto him which hath a 〈◊〉 heart Esay 66. This sorrow maketh the sinner to become ioyfull in 〈◊〉 end yea it makes Angels glad it reioyceth Gods 〈◊〉 and is his delight who not so much detesteth 〈◊〉 as hee loueth this godly sorrow which 〈◊〉 a sinner aworke the more to mistike and detest his owne sinnes and to endeauour more and more the mortifying and subduing of them and a departure from them In this affection of sorrow there be two sorts of persons which doe somewhat offend in diuerse sort the one thinke they neuer greeue enough for their sinnes and whereas they mourne much and truly yet they satisfie not themselues because they would haue and feele more And the other who doubt and mistrust themselues that they doe not greeue at all and so are out of heart because they haue no hearty greef for their offences complaining of the hardnesse of their heart this way Let the former consider that God respecteth not the measure
so much as the truth of our sorrow if it be vnfeined though it be not great yet it is accepted and if it prouoke to repentance so as after griefe there follow some amendment then it is vnfeined And let this serue to comfort the heart God being as well pleased to haue his Children cheered with his graces and the worke of his Spirit in them as greeued for their trespasses it is not pleasing to him to see them alwayes sad hanging downe their heads as a bul-rush there is a time for sorrow a time to reioyce And for the other their desire to be truly greeued for sinne and to haue a broken heart it is accepted for sorrow with that God who in his Children accepteth the desire for the deede yea they greeue that they are not more greeued they being sorry that their sorrow is so little it is a degree of sorrow Woe to them which are secure which sinne without all griefe or suspect of any fault this way and so lie still in their sinne without any turning or change and woe to them whose sorrow is worldly such as is stirred vp not for breach of Gods Law but for dread or sence of vengeance which rot still in their sinne but happy and thrice happy is the soule which without respect of Gods rods present or his iudgement to come without any regard either of the losse of Heauen or paine of hell can be affected with griefe after sinne in this onely consideration that they haue failed in duty toward so louing a Father and deserued by their sinne to lose his fauour Of this sorrow there will follow a repentance neuer to be repented of which I thus open and make plaine to you If the griefe be conceiued from an euill 〈◊〉 which should not haue beene done there wil 〈◊〉 it true Repentance that is an holy purpose to 〈◊〉 sinne and the occasion of it an hatred of it in the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and seeking the death of it endeuouring by 〈◊〉 meanes against it and to do the good contrary to it Likewise if the griefe conceiued by this godly heart be for a good thing left vndone which should haue beene done there will follow a strange resolution with good endeuour to auoide such omission and to take vp such duties with more care in time to come saying with the Prophet I am vtterly purposed to keepe thy righteous Iudgements Againe I haue sworne that I will walke in thy Statutes Psal. 119. Now that we haue seene whence this speciall renewed repentance doth arise and wherein it consists the degrees would be a little examined and I find that there is an ordinary Repentance meete to be had for ordinary sinnes By ordinary sinnes I meane the common slips of life the faults that euery the most watchfull Christian doth ordinarily fall into daily infirmities in omission and commission for these there would be but ordinary griefe and ordinary repentance as aboue it hath beene declared But when any extraordinary sinnes doe happen such as were Dauids Peters Manasses Salomons foule and notorious sinnes which giue a greater wound to the conscience and an offence to the Church and more dishonour to Gods name and worke a greater decay of godlinesse in the soule there would be vsed a more extraordinary sorrow the heart would bee wrought to a deeper humiliation more feruent and frequent prayer holpen with fasting and vpon our rising out of such sinnes more streight bonds would bee taken for our good abearing afterwards serious vowes and protestations for a better life Such was Peters after his fall he wept bitterly such also the womans that washed Christs feete with teares Luke 7. Such was Dauids Psalme 51. and many other who after some foule and enormious sinnes haue performed more then ordinary repentance for daily and ordinary slips which yet be such considering the offence of so great a God in them as ought to moue much griefe displeasure with our selues and more watchfulnesse Now for the tokens or fruites of this renewed Repentance there be seauen reckoned vp 2 Cor. 7. 11. In that you were godly sorrie what great care it hath wrought in you yea what apology or clearing of your selues yea what indignation yea what feare yea what desire yea what reuenge yea what zeale Aquila I pray you Sir let me vnderstand your mind for these seauen effects of renewed Repentance what ye thinke euery one of them to be how you distinguish them one from another Apollos Aquila I doe well know that in these points all men are not of one mind and whereas some call them tokens or signes others call them rightly as you doe effects or fruites of Repentance I iudge it all one they are therefore signes to manifest the truth of Repentance because they are the proper and necessary effects of true Repentance For their distinction of one from another and what each is this I vnderstand Care it is the study of the minde and thought taking how to approue the course of our life hereafter both to God and to our owne conscience and to the Church of God As it fareth with Trauellers which haue by sloth or ignorance lost their way hauing found it again they are more carefull to keepe it so it is with the godly when they repent their care is to please God better afterwards the which their care doth expresse it selfe in the greatnesse of it not onely in the generall course of their conuersation but in euery particular action to direct it according to the rules of the Word that offence of God and men may be preuented as Col. 1. the Apostle prayeth for the faithfull that they may please God in euery thing and elsewhere that they may abound in euery good worke Yea this care in the godly as it is in themselues for eschewing one sinne as well as another and for the doing one duty as wel as another so it stretcheth it selfe vnto them of their charge children and seruants or flocke and subiects if they be publike persons as is to be seene in the example of Abraham Gen. 18. Iob Iacob Dauid Iosiah who all had care of their children and people no lesse then of themselues and this declareth ones care to be sound toward themselues when it embraceth others Of all which it followeth that all secure person which haue no further or greater care but for backe and belly for pleasure and profit are surely voide of repentance being voide of this care how they may please God So on the other side the more that care encreaseth in any after their falles to keepe the Word and stand fast in their obedience to it the more sure hee may be of the soundnesse of his repentance for how must not his sorrow for losing his way appeare to be true when his care is double to that it was not to lose it againe The next fruite of Repentance is clearing of our selues which may be diuers wayes performed
as either when we quit and cleare our selues from suspition of a sinne by shunning the very appearance of euill all that hath any neerenesse with it or lookes but toward it or when wee rebuke and punish such as wee haue thought to beare withall in their sinnes or haue in truth borne withall after which sort it is likely the Corinthians vpon Pauls sharpe reprehension did cleare themselues in the case of the incestuous man whom they had winked at Or finally by an humble true confessing of our fault to God and to men if it were open and publike with hearty crauing of pardon as in the Publican Zacheus Dauid we haue examples of this clearing and well also might the godly Corinthians cleare themselues to Paul that they were displeased with their sinne in bearing with such an offendour not onely by their diligence in censuring him but by their vnfeined confessing of the offence both to God and to the Apostle whom they hadagreeued The third fruite it is indignation which is an holy anger stirred vp in our hearts not onely against other mens faults with a pitty toward their person but especially against some sins which haue escaped our selues that we-were so beastly and foolish as to doe such euils that we might haue auoyded and when we are moued to anger more against our owne then other mens this is a very good token of a repentant heart The fourth fruite is feare not seruill but filiall and child-like arising from the feeling of Gods mercies and our owne 〈◊〉 from whence commeth an holy awe and feare lest the euils which tofore wee haue offended by or such like through our corruption breake forth againe The fifth is desire as impenitent persons haue their desires to eate to drinke to sleepe to take their ease and pastime to fare deliciously to goe gallantly and brauely in apparell to grow rich to be aloft to be well thought of and spoken of although they deserue it not and are stuffed with many other such carnall and worldly desires as tokens of their naturall impenitent heart so the godly desire to liue honestly to keepe a good conscience to dwell in the House of God for euer to enioy the sincere milke of the word to be vnburthened of sinne to mortifie their lusts be dissolued and to be with Christ and finally not to offend againe in these particulars wherin they haue offended God or his people are the testimonies of a truly repentant heart The sixth fruite is zeale which is a great griefe conceiued for the hurt of Gods glory by sinne and an ardent loue to all such things as God may be honoured by and to hinder in our selues and others whatsoeuer may dishonour or displease him Reuel 3. Repent and be zealous Therefore as cold and luke-warme Christians are vtterly without all grace of true Repentance which worketh a zeale against all sinnes and for all good to crosse the one and aduance the other according to our places meanes so the truly zealous man whose zeale is guided by the knowledge of the Word and tempered with charity such as was in Paul and Barnabas Acts 14. in Phine as in Moses in Dauid it is the euidence to our soules that it is blessed with the grace of Repentance The last fruite is reuenge which is not a requiting of euill for euill towards others a fruite of the flesh but a voluntary punishment which a sinner taketh vpon himselfe for the euils done against his God his soule or his brethren in labouring more to bridle his vnruly heart from vnlawful desires and moderating it in those which be lawfull for bearing not sinfull delights or profits alone but euen such things as are within our liberty if the vse of them will be an occasion of finne either to our selues or other This curbing of our selues and cooping vp our affections mortifying the flesh denying our selues is that reuenge here meant Also enforcing ones selfe to doe the things quite contrary to our sinnes as the drunkard to repent and punish himselfe with abstinence also the glutton and riotous with fasting the great talker by keeping silence the adulterer by forbearing all things may prouoke lusts Let me not conceale from you that I iudge this reuenge if it be referred to the Corinthians to be their exercising of that ecclesiasticall Authority which God had giuen his Church against sinne with more seuerity then wonted that as they had offended by remissenesse so they would henceforth take due reuenge vpon open sinners according to the power giuen them of God And this is very like for it is a godly reuenge to set on worke all power which God giueth vnto any for stopping of the course and current of sinne Let Papists who take such vnlawfull yet painfull reuenge of themselues by whipping c. admonish true Christians to take all lawfull reuenge Aquila Now Sir I will propound some doubts vnto you touching Repentance if first you will call to mind those cautions which ye deliuered touching the same in your publike teaching Apollos Herein I will answer your desire But let ' me tell you by the way what was saide of the meanes to quicken and stirre vp this daily Repentance Namely diligent reading of Scripture and other godly Bookes the humble submission of our mindes to all godly admonitions of the Saints blessing God in our soule after the example of Dauid for such rebukes as are priuately and friendly reached out yea thanking God for the reproaches of enemies by whom sometime one shall heare his sinne tolde him sooner then by a friend though not in a good manner nor for any good ende on their part yet considering God sets them on worke as Dauid the Prophet saide God hath bid him rebuke mee Therefore endeauour our selues to make vse of them giuing good heed both to the checkes of our conscience which often proues a faithfull monitor and to the strokes of Gods hand sensible and insensible in soule and body seeking to profit by them to amendment that wee feare him the more yea euen in the dayes of our prosperity and peace making this good vse to be inuited by them to speedy and true repentance and so we shal preuent Gods chastisements if wee voluntarily fall to iudging of our selues Yet of all other good meanes to awaken vs and bring vs vnto the practise of Repentance this is not the least euen our daily examination of our owne heart and wayes to consider particularly what escapes haue been in thoughts words and deeds in omission or commission with the circumstances of our actions for manner of doing and for the end of our workes and the persons and such like things that so we may come to see both what is to be sorrowed for presently and vpon faithfull and humble confession we may make all euen with God through Christ for that which is past and also what cause there is to watch ouer our selues for time
though he cannot absolutely keep the Law to fulfil it in the strictnesse thereof by doing all that good that is commanded there and that vnto the end and in all perfection of loue nay there be sundry good duties and workes which our regenerate man through ignorance cannot so much as attaine to the knowledge of so large and broade be the Commandements and so narrow and dull is our capacity yet as he is sanctified throughout hauing all his powers of spirit soule and body well and aptly disposed by grace to doe good so he endeauoureth to know better euery day what his worke is which is prescribed him to doe and also to performe it in euery part so farre as it is knowne with such perfection as he can doing his worke in truth and vprightnesse though with wants and weaknesse so as he balkes no duties He will not play the Pope to giue himselfe dispensation for any good worke which he is bound to doe doe it neuer so much goe against his stomacke and contrary his corrupt iudgement and affection his profit or delight yet his heart standeth with the Law Rom. 7. 16. and with that hee will take part euen against his owne lusts repenting him earnestly of his failings in duty whether it come of ignorance or infirmity being still more desirous to come neerer and neerer to God in true righteousnesse Hence it is that the godly are saide in Scripture to walke in all the wayes of God as 〈◊〉 2 Kings 22. 2. to haue kept the Statutes and Testimonies of God as Dauid Psal. 119. to haue walked in all the Commandements of God without reproofe as Zachariah and Elizabeth Luke 1. 5 6 7. to haue pleased God in all things as the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 1. 9. to haue walked perfectly as Ezekiah because howsoeuer they could not for measure and manner doe all in an absolute fulnesse so as there should be no fault yet for desire care and endeauour they stroue to doe all which they could know and their heart was vpright in one duty as well as in another and so performed a perfection of parts as the Schoolemen speake It being quite otherwise with the vnregenerate man who as he still will cherish some sinne so he doth omit some duty good work knowne to be his duty and as necessary as any which he doth either because it thwarteth his carnall liking and fancy or pincheth him in his gaine or some other thing which is deare to him Herod will doe many things at Iohns preaching and Iehu is zealous in many things for the Lord Simon Magus will conforme himselfe to the word in sundry duties but their practise hated it is a maimed practise There were some good workes which they would not be brought to doe as there were some sinfull affections which they could not be made to put off for their heart was not right before God Acts 8 21. they were not seasoned with his true feare therefore their repentance was counterfeit in action rather then in affection in shew not in verity Aquila Sir this was well remembred It is indeede a maine matter and it is also a certaine truth that the childe of God being in the worke of his Sanctification nenewed though not perfectly yet throughout in euery faculty of his soule bearing now the Image of God his Father not in part but in whole carrying his resemblance in righteousnesse and holinesse and his heart framed vnto sincerity therefore he is renewed not to an halfe obedience but to all obedience that is in all duties which pertaine to him so as his will and purpose of heart is so farre as measure of grace will allow and enable him with readinesse to doe whatsoeuer the Lord shall say vnto him either for leauing euill vndone or for doing that which is good That which was Dauids resolution and care to haue respect to all the Commandements of God Psal. 119. 6 it is though not in such degree of grace the care and affection of euery repentant person to keepe couenant with no sinne but to disclaime and depart from all to omit willingly no good worke but to honour God by an vniuersall subiection to the Law so farre as concernes them in euery good worke submitting themselues to the mercy of God in Christ for forgiuenesse of that wherein they slip caking afterward better heede to their wayes But now Sir may it please you this being recouered which wee had in a manner lost that we proceed in our purpose and tell me is it of necessity that true Repentance be accompanied with good workes of all sorts Apollos After the doctrine of Repentance ye doe in very good time moue me for the doctrine of good workes which follow Repentance as the shadow doth the body and flow from it as a Riuer from the Fountaine or as fruite springeth from the tree Repentance lying hid in the heart as the iuyce or sappe in the roote of the tree vttereth it selfe by good workes as by meet and conuenient fruites This is it which we may marke in the Scripture how the holy Ghost hath matched repentance and good works together shewing that they should repent and doe workes worthy of Repentance Acts 26. 20. Againe Repent and doe the first workes Reuel 2. 5. Also Bring therefore fruits worthy of Repentance Mathew 3. 8. Where it is to be noted that a good worke is called a fruite not onely to shew how God accepteth them euen as a pleasant fruite is accepted of him that dresseth a Vineyard or an Orchard but in respect as they come from Repentance as a fruite from a Tree And whereas he calleth it a fruite worthy of Repentance he meaneth such workes as be meet for such persons to doe as haue repented Consider also that it cannot be that a man inwardly should loue that which is righteous and hate iniquity in his soule but hee must needs outwardly expresse it as occasion and meanes be offered so as that Repentance may be worthily suspected to be false where good workes doe not follow there is no true change in the heart where there is none seene in the life If we search the Scriptures we cannot find any who haue repented in truth but they haue beene afterwards carefull to doe good workes To omit other examples whereof Scripture affoords vs store take one or two in stead of all Zacheus repented and his repentance was fruitfull witnessing it selfe by good workes both by retribution of goods euilly gotten and by distributing of well gotten goods also by a cheerefull entertainment of Christ. The conuerted theefe as little space as he had after his conuersion yet how many wayes did his repentance declare it selfe namely by the reproofe and admonition of his fellow by admirable patience by godly prayer by iustifying and defending Christ his innocency when he was condemned of all the Iewes and doing it before them euen to their faces also by confessing
the Riuer makes not the Fountaine sweete but the person being first good that which he doth according to Gods will becomes good And as it is amongst men that we cannot like a gift when wee brooke not the giuer so it is with God hee neuer accepts any thing that is done how good soeuer in the nature of the thing done except the doer be first accepted Now that which maketh the doer good it is his faith in Christ whereby hee is purged from all his iniquities and hath the righteousnesse of Christ accounted to him to make him righteous in the sight of God Hence it is that no worke of ours can please God vnlesse it come from faith Hence also it is that the works which wee doe borrow all their commendations euen from hence that they are the children of faith begotten and brought forth by it See Hebrewes 11. throughout From hence it was that Caine and Abel offering each sacrifice vnto God Caines sacrifice was reiected and Abels receiued and pronounced to be better then Caines because it was offered in faith Abraham offering his sonne though the work were strange exceeding wondrous yet it had had no grace nor respect with God except it had come from faith What shall I say more a poore Kitchen-maid an Hostler a Chimney-sweeper or any other how base soeuer their trade be being a lawfull vocation if he doe his worke out of a true faith in God through Christ and out of obedience of Gods will his worke is more glorious and pleasing in Gods sight then the best and most goodly worke of a King or of a Preacher being not faithfully and obediently performed Whereof it is written that many things which are great glorious amongst men are abominable before God for if faith 〈◊〉 vs not a worke to doe our workes let them be how bright or glittering soeuer for shew and appearance to men yea and very profitable for fruite toward men yet they are no better then beautifull sinnes So the holy Ghost teacheth that what is done without faith it is sinne Rom. 14. 23. And that without faith it is impossible to please God Heb. 11. 6. Now wee are here to consider that faith in euery good worke doth set it selfe a worke three manner of wayes Or thus if ye will the act of faith in a good worke it is threefold The first is to enable vs to know that the thing which we doe it is such as God alloweth of being commanded of him The perswasion hereof it is called Faith Rom. 14. 22 23. He that doubteth sinneth if he eate because he eateth not of faith that is out of a perswasion and certainty that he doth well The second act of faith it is to assure the minde that this worke which wee are resolued of to be in it selfe lawfull to be done it is such as God will accept through Christ pardoning the spots and imperfections of it freely for his merit for all out workes hauing their staines and defects as wee haue touched in our Treatise of vnperfect Sanctification and shall hereafter declare it is of necessity that there be an application of Christs merits to our workes for the cleansing of them that so they may please God This is done by faith whereby the heart is assured that God who hath graciously loued vs in his beloued will also vouchsafe for his sake to be pleased with that wee doe after his will Thirdly and lastly there is another worke of faith and that is it which Saint Paul speaketh of Galat. 5. 6. Faith worketh by loue for it quickeneth and stirreth the heart to the loue of God and man in our good workes which we doe to be led not by selfe-loue and carnal respects but by this charity and louing affection of our good God and of our Neighbour which is a thing very necessary in euery good thing which we doe that all be done in loue This being the end of the Commandement euen loue out of a pure heart and faith vnfeined 1 Tim. 1. 5. Now whosoeuer truly beleeueth in Christ Iesus that through him hee is reconciled vnto God and hath his offences forgiuen him this faith will moue him to loue that God againe sincerely and his Neighbour for Gods sake who commanded it to be so and hath put his Image in him and vpon him that all our workes comming out of this sound loue to God and our brethren wee may abandon all by 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 pleasing or profiting our selues or of our owne praise or of shame or feare or whatsoeuer it is that preuaileth with hypocrites and end eauour to referre all wee doe to Gods glory and the welfare of our Neighbour This is a third maine condition in euery good worke that the end and marke whereat the doer aimeth be good and right the badnesse of the end marres the goodnesse of the action He that takes a good thing in hand and propounds a wrong scope he is like to one who hath a good bow and arrowes to shoote withall but looketh from the marke when he shooteth such an one shall neuer shoote well Here is the priuiledge of faithfull persons that by the Spirit of God they are carried in their willes and affections to desire and seeke in all that they doe Gods glory and the edification of their brethren euen in truth and singlenesse of heart and not in profession onely as hypocrites who will talke much of glorifying God when their eye is neuer bent to this marke but rather is cast-vpon their owne glory which as the hearbe Colloquintida marreth euery worke that is spiced with it but the Child of God hauing learned that all his workes must come from God as the Authour and looke vnto God as their end like as the Riuers which come originally out of the Sea and returne thither again Therefore as he desireth to please his neighbour in that which is good for his edifying minding this still in all such things as doe concerne his brethren how hee may better and helpe them either to God-ward or some other wise so he desireth that by his obedience good workes which he doth euen in the least of them in his eating and drinking and in his honest recreations and not onely in the serious businesse of his calling and seruice of God but in euery thing which he doth he may doe them to Gods glory that others vppon sight and knowledge of his carriage in his duties may be occasioned if they be conuerted to acknowledge Gods worke in him to the glory of God if not that then by his example they may be won drawne to godlinesse and so to glorifie God in the day of their visitation Finally in the doing of a good worke besides all the former conditions it is needfull that the meanes be good when meanes are needfull Men may not imagine that if the thing be good they doe then it is lawfull and free to
and constancie in his good course by the remembrance of the great recompence to come Heb. 11 26. so did Christ animate his Disciples Mat. 5 11 12. by the example of the Prophets promise of reward Also Paul thus quickned the Corinthians to constancie 2 Cor. 4. verse last The things saith he which wee see not are eteruall therefore faint not And 2 Tim. 2 12. If we suffer with him we shal reign with him therefore be resolued to sticke to Christ in life death Doe we not see by common experience how men of all Trades Husbandmen Soldiers Merchants are made hardie and bold to attempt and do great and dangerous things vpon hope of receiuing good things in the end as either victorie or spoile or commodity or such earthly perishing things How much more may true Christians by the hope of neuer-withering treasures prouoke themselues to enter into endure the trauailes and 〈◊〉 of that way which bringeth to heauen in the end They haue many things within them and from without them from satan euill men and themselues to make them faint and languish therfore it will be needfull to take all helpes and meanes of courage heart vnto themselues seeing God allowes them so to do and godly men in al ages haue done so By which it appeareth how the Papists in the Rhemish Testament wrong vs in saying That wee teach not our hearers either to do good or abstaine from euill for hope of heauen or feare of hell Aquila This is indeede a speciall good that comes to our selues of good workes which though they deserue nothing yet he that doth them and aboundeth in them is not sentaway empty handed but rather hath entrance made aboundantly into the blessed kingdom of glory Which beeing giuen as a free reward as it more sets foorth the mercie of God to reward that which he might condemne so it moueth his children the more heartily to loue him who not only without but against all merit on their part doth vouchsafe so richly to requite their poore endeuours in dooing his will But be there not other good vses wherunto good workes do serue and for which the godly do cheerfully take them in hand Apollos Yea verie many and excellent euerie one seruing as a strong motiue to procure all care of dooing them For that God that hath not made nor ordained ought in vaine no not the least of his creatures nor the meanest of his ordinances much lesse is it to be thought that good works were ordained to no vse or to small vse But if any thing in the world be rich plentifull for happy most gracious vses good works may haue the first place and ranke as being fruitfull on euerie side For if we looke vnto God himselfe then the good workes and good life of his children expresseth their great thankefulnesse towards him for the great benefite of their redemption Also it cheareth him and reioyceth his heart as I may so speake euen as our euill workes do greeue him and are to him as gall or sowre grapes to our teeth Deut. 32 32. so the righteous workes of all the godly bee as an odour or sweet sauour as precious spices as pleasant fruits himselfe so testifying that his soule is delighted with them And lastly God is both pleased and obeyed and honoured by good workes which are fruits of righteousnesse by Christ to the praise of God Phil. 1 11. Therfore wee should let our good workes breake foorth that men seeing them may glorifie our heauenly Father Mat. 5 16. For as the euill and loose behauiour of such as professe God to be their Father doth discredite him amongst men as himselfe complains My name is blasphemed amongst the Gentiles through you Rom. 2 24. so it is much to the glory aduancement of Gods name when the professors of godlinesse line as becomes the Gospell Now if wee looke to the Gospell of God that is beautified and adorned by the good works of such as know and professe it as it is written Let seruants shew all good faithfulnesse that they may adorne the doctrine of God in all things Titus 2 9. If the good life of a seruant be an ornament and renowne to the Gospell when he deals vprightly and faithfully toward his master what countenance do we thinke shall be gained to the holie doctrine of the word when men of greater degrees places be full of good workes Surely as it turnes to the reproach of the word if any who liue vnder it liue otherwise then well so on the contrary part their godly and honest conuersation turnes to the credit and honour of the Word Which is a thing that Gods children ought earnestly to thinke vpon that God is contented that himselfe and his Word should haue no more respect and estimation amongst men then our good actions and liues shall winne and purchase vnto it Now if we turne our eyes home to our selues besides that which was touched before our good workes are profitable euery way First to purchase vs a good report which is better then siluer to haue such as feare God to speake well of vs is more worth then all riches Prouerbs 22. 1. This fruite Abraham got by his workes Iames 2. 24. For hee was iustified viz. approued and commended for a iust person by his workes Also the faithfull mentioned Hebrewes 11 were well reported of through their faith and fruites thereof Thus Timethy got himselfe a good testimony but yet further our good workes they be testimonies of our faith to shew it to be no dead but a liuely faith which being an inuisible grace is yet after a sort made visible by well liuing as it is written Shew me thy faith by thy workes Iames 2. 18. Euen as health is knowne to be good and sound by good disposition of all outward parts of the body so our faith our calling our election be manifested and confirmed vnto vs by our study and practise of good workes 2 Peter Chap. 1. verse 5 6 7 8. Make your calling and election sure by good workes Finally a man is not more knowne to liue a naturall life by speaking seeing mouing then a Christian is knowne to liue the life of faith by his godly and righteous workes What should I say that it is more then likely that as our workes shall haue a reward of free fauour so the measure of our workes as they exceede in number and excellency shall haue a proportionable measure of glory Certainly much will be required of them who haue receiued much and why may we not thinke that much will be rendred to them who haue done much For to euery one shall be giuen according as his workes shall be 1 Cor. 3. To proceede if we regard other men the exercise of good workes is fruitfull to all sorts and kinds of men for they which belong vnto God and be yet vnconuerted by
religious Beasts which out of narall instinct do loue their yong how do they fare what discontentment they shew when their yong are taken from them How doe Parents greeue and take on for the death or absence of their children whom they loue being well pleased and delighted when they enioy their presence and company In that humane loue which is amongst friends it fareth after the same manner Let the example of Ionathan and Dauid teach it 2 Sam. ch 1. What pleasure tooke they in each others presence and wel-fare And how bitter was it to Ionathans heart that it should go amisse with Dauid and to Dauids to misse Ionathan his friend whom he loued as a wife her husband This is also the nature of religious loue Such as loue God or Christ or his word or people they couet to be linked vnto them as neerely as may bee delighting themselues in the partaking with them being much troubled for the want of them as is to be seene in the example of the Church in the Canticles Cant. 5 6. when her beloued was for a time gone from her and euery faithfull soule findeth it to bee their griefe to be held a while from the word or from their presence or conference with God See Psal. 42. also Psa. 84 1 2 3. vpon all which I conclude That the loue of God is that affection which maketh the christian soule take comfort contentment in the communion with God desiring and delighting to be more and more streightly knit to him and more fully to participate in him and in his gracious blessings and loue tokens Sundry are the causes for which Gods people ought to loue him thus For they are his creatures he their maker they his seruants hee their Lord they his friends and which is more his children he their deere Father in Christ yea they his spouse hee their husband so as they are tyed and bound to him by all bonds of loue and duty God beeing vnto them in a most speciall manner all these things wee haue sayde Moreouer he loued them first before they loued him yea being his enemies hee loued vs when wee hated him and gaue vs a sufficient pawne of his loue euen his owne Sonne to be a man to bee a seruant yea to be a slaine sacrifice for vs. And withall hath by his holy Spirit which he hath giuen vs shed abroad this loue in our hearts Vnto all which if we will adde the consideration of all the good which he hath already done to vs in our bodies and mindes in earthly and heauenly things and the great things which we hope to haue heereafter and the straite commandement which it laide vpon vs to loue the Lord our God and that if we loue him the commodity is not to him but to our selues then will it easily appeare how diuerslie and greatly we are obliged to this God to render him this duty of loue where in that we may proceede well we are to know that as our measure of louing him must be to loue him aboue measure as he hath loued vs infinitely and is that most perfect goodnes and beauty worthy of perfect loue so our rule to guide our loue is to loue him not for his benefites and good things onely or cheefe but to loue all other things in God and for God and God for himselfe euen for his most sweete and gracious mercies and for his vnmeasurable holinesse and truth This is ingenuous and filiall loue such as becommeth children The other being that which ariseth from his blessings principally or solely is mercenary and meete for slaues or seruants For though the blessings of God bee such as deserue at our hands not onely thankfulnesse but encrease of loue and obedience yet wee may not loue him either onely or cheefely in regard of them but principally because he is that Soueraigne goodnesse worthy of all our loue though he should neuer do vs good as godly persons are loued of vs albeit we neither presently haue not hope for any benefit from them This pure loue and vnfeigned it is engendred from the sense of Gods loue towards vs whence ariseth in our hearts a loue towards him as it is written We loue him because he first loued vs 1 Iohn 4 ver 19. Thus it is saide of the woman Luke 7 47. that because many sins were forginen therefore she loued much Thus it is when the loue of God is manifested vnto vs in the forgiuenes of all our sins and so in our reconciliation with God by Christ this loue constraines vs to loue God ardently Because he hath so loued vs as to giue his Son for vs we are moued and that most iustly to loue this most louing and mercifull God And this is it which is written that Faith worketh by loue Galat. 5. 6. For after that once we beleeue the promise of grace and by faith haue laide hold on Gods mercies offered in Christ this faith sets on worke our loue to God-ward first and afterwards towards such as God would haue vs loue euen to our enemies And this is the proper effect of our loue towards God namely that it bringeth forth another loue wherewith we loue and be ready to do good to all men especially his Children it being so that we cannot loue him which begetteth but wee must needs loue them which are begotten 1 Iohn 5. 1. For as it must needs follow of Gods loue to vs that it stirre vs vp to loue him so it is necessary that our loue wherewith we loue him doe cause vs to loue all that beare his Image especially such as beare it by regeneration Insomuch that if any man say He loueth God and yet hateth his brother surely that man is a lyar and hath no truth in him 1 Iohn 4. And this loue of others is such a fruite and effect of our loue to God as it is a speciall token whereby to iudge of the truth and sincerity of it Whosoeuer then loueth other men namely such as are Gods Children in this respect as they belong vnto God and because he commandeth loue towards them I say whosoeuer vpon these grounds vnfeinedly loues his Neighbour friend or enemy this is an euidence of a man truly louing God for he that saide That hee cannot loue God whom he seeth not who loueth not his Neighbor whom he doth see 1 Iohn 4. 20. hath also saide If we loue one another his loue 〈◊〉 perfect in vs 1 Iohn 4. 12. That is herein we haue a testimony of our loue where with we loue God that it is not counterfeit but sincere because we doe by loue embrace one another for his sake euen to please him Aquila It is an easie and common thing to dissemble the loue of God insomuch as they which be furthest from louing him in truth are found most forward to protest it in words Therefore howsoeuer this which you say doe much auaile
vse of their gifts seeke not themselues but God whom they loue and vpon whom they are ready to bestow not themselues alone and their graces but their goods too which albeit God hath no need of because gold is his and siluer is his Hag. 2. 9. Psal. 50. Yet when we giue forth his goods to the maintenance of his worship or the place of his worship or the Ministers of his Word or to the reliefe of others the Saints members of Christ then we doe honour the Lord with our substance and doe giue it vnto himselfe As he will openly acknowledge at the last day What ye did to one of these ye did it to me Mathew 25. Martha loued Christ Iohn 11. and the woman spoken of Luke 7. 37. Also the women mentioned Luke the 8. 23. and all they declared their loue to him by their charges and cost which they put themselues to for his sake That we cannot doe to him in his person as they did because he is gone to Heauen and hath now no need we are to doe it to him in his seruants and people which is taken as a fruite of our loue to himselfe And as our cost about him so our labour and paines for him doth speake forth our loue for true sincere loue is diligent and sticketh at no paines to please or pleasure the party loued What labour did not Christ endure that he might expresse his loue to his Church and what paines ought we to beare to expresse our loue towards him Such as loue riches or pleasures or honours it is a wonder to see how exceeding great their paines be to compasse them And such as truly loue God as they loue nothing aboue him so their paines which they take to glorifie him in the inward mortification of sinfull lusts and the outward performance of all outward obseruations doth farre surpasse the paines which they take in all other things of their owne The indefatigable and intollerable labour and toyle of body mind which Christ did vndergoe and which Paul also did endure about the redeeming and instructing of the Church the incredible paines which in prayer and preaching and liuing well both Iames and the rest of the Apostles haue suffered it clecrely demonstrateth that the loue of God and his Church is painfull and laborious There is nothing so hard which loue will not ouercome all paines to it seeme pleasure and pastime As they then which sticke at their paines and with-draw their hand from labour in the things which concerne Gods glory and their owne eternall good doe sufficiently tell vs how little and poore their loue is so the great and constant paines which neither of vaine-glory nor of any corrupt respect but in vprightnesse of heart Gods Children put themselues vnto that they may execute the will of God in their callings is their acquittance and testimoniall of the great measure of their loue to God-ward Finally they make it appeare yet more thorowly herein that there is nothing greeueth them so much as the want of Gods presence and fauour if at any time he with draw his louing countenance from them It is not the losse of any worldly thing how precious or commodious soeuer doth afflict them so much with heauinesse as the displeasure of God conceiued against them for sinne King Dauid banished by Absolon wept bitterly not so much for losse of his Kingdome as for Gods anger against him Whereas such as doe but onely pretend to loue God they doe not chiefly ioy in his fauour but in their outward comforts neither is their greatest griefe for the displeasure of God against them but for outward damages and harmes wherein they bewray that other things are more loued of them then God himself whatsoeuer they say It is cleane otherwise with the godly for in them the holy Spirit of loue doth engender more ioy in the perswasion and feeling of Gods fauour then worldly men haue when their Corne and Oyle and Wine doth abound and more hearts sorrow in missing of Gods gracious presence then a mother conceiueth for the death of her onely sonne a strong euidence that God is their cheefe loue Aquila These things shall moue me I trust to preferre God and Christ his Sonne his Word and Children in my loue and to straine my selfe by all meanes to declare that I account of God and delight in him aboue all things endeauouring how I may attaine neere vnto that which is commanded euen to loue him with all my heart and strength and though I cannot perfectly yet I will pray for grace that I may loue him yet more feruently and lesse fainedly Now Sir may it please you that wee passe forwards vnto that other worke of fearing this God which after his loue is next to be spoken of Apollos Well pleased so to doe If I first aduertise you of something which almost I forgot namely that as our loue to God is approued by our praises of those good things which are in himselfe and be done for vs so hee takes it as a great fruite and signe of our loue in our necessity to make him our refuge and helpe by calling vpon him alone in all our distresses Aquila Ere ye set vpon your new worke doe make this point plaine for me thinkes God doth rather herein witnesse his loue to vs in that he would be found of vs when we seeke and in affording vs liberty and leaue to come vnto him then we which seeke and come vnto him doe thereby testifie our loue vnto him Apollos One would thinke that it were so that our suing and begging things needfull of God should more vtter our need and want of him then our loue to him yet so it is that our prayers are good proofes of our loue for seeing vpon the good successe of our prayers when they are heard and granted according to Gods promise there doth follow the demonstration of Gods great mercy and truth in keeping touch with his Children to the praise of his name therefore Gods Children out of a loue they beare vnto his name doe seeke and sue vnto God not so much to be holpen and succoured as that in the fulfilling of his Word made to their prayers his goodnesse and truth may appeare to his glory For God himselfe saith that when he heareth his people that cal vpon him in their trouble they are bound to glorifie him Psalme 50. And the loue of this glory moueth them to pray rather then the desire and hope of their owne good happy is the soule with whom it is thus Henceforth we will speake of his feare for of the loue of God enough hath beene spoken already Aquila Doe ye iudge of the feare of God to be such a worke as is peculiar vnto the Elect regenerate persons We reade of many wicked men who haue feared God Foelix an Heathen feared and trembled at the hearing of God and his Word Acts 24. 25.
Pharaeh was afraide of God and therefore prayed Moses to entreate for him to remoue the plague from him Exod. 8. 8. Ahab as lewd as he was being a man sold to doe wickednesse yet was not voide of the feare of God which enforced him to humble himselfe in sack cloth and ashes I Kin. 21. 27. And infinite others which belong not to God but were strangers to him yet their hearts were not wholly estranged from his feare Apollos Many euill men which liue in the Church vnder a standing Ministery doe attaine by the power thereof vnto a shadow of Sanctification such as shall worke a certaine reformation in them but a sleight and light one not sound and thorow such as seasoneth and changeth the heart and vnto a resemblance of repentance so as they doe many workes of repenting persons they haue a certaine greefe and seare of sinne they in a sort humble themselues confesse their sinnes leaue many sinnes touching the outward act and worke but neuer come to purpose in their heart to endeauour an vtter forsaking of all and euery sinne with a true hatred and loathing of sinne as it is the offence of a good and righteous God and they doe many workes which for the matter and substance of the worke done are good but yet they are not done in a good manner and to a good end out of a heart purged by faith respecting Gods glory so they haue a shew of loue to God and of fearing God Howbeit they are but counterfets in all and namely in their loue which is not of God himselfe but of his good things where with their loue doth arise and fall They are likewise hypocrites in their feare which is seruile onely in regard of Gods power and strict iustice and of that punishment which his powerfull iustice hath either threatned or already inflicted vpon them Their feare is not towards God for his mercies and because hee is vnto them a gracious God and Father but because hee is righteous armed with might to hurt and plague them as the Apostle speaketh of circumcision of the Israelites and of Abrahams seede there is not one kind of these so it is of the feare of God it is not single and of one kind but it is diuers There is an Israelite and an Israelite one in heart another according to the flesh a circumcision inward and in truth another after the letter and outward in the flesh So there is a feare and a feare a good feare which wee are exhorted vnto and an euill feare which we are called from Feare not saith Moses for God is come to proue you that his feare may be in you that ye sinne not Exod. 20. 20. See in this one short sentence that they are bid not to feare and yet charged to haue Gods feare in them for there is a feare slauish and seruile arising out of the gultinesse of sinnes and strengthened with dread of punishment from the righteous power of God This feare correcteth not sinne inwardly it may well bridle some sinne and restraine from the externall worke of sinne but it doth not at all reforme the sinner inwardly who is the more driuen from God by it and we are dehorted from such a feare And there is another feare which is filiall and child-like which proceedeth from Gods mercies in Christ and bringeth sinners neerer in heart and affection to God holding them closer to him in all lawfull respects not to offend him but in all things to obey and please him This difference of feare may be expressed by this comparison There doth at one time stand in the presence of a Iudge his owne sonne and a male factor the one loth to misbehaue himselfe in his fathers presence for the loue and reuerence hee hath towards him whom he hath alwayes found a benigne tender father to him the malefactor for beareth also all lewd and disordered actions in feare of the Iudges power which he doth hate and of the sentence of death which he abhorreth So it is here euill men being in Gods presence are restrained and kept from many euils but it is through dread of his reuenging hand as seruants are brought to doe well through dread of the whip whereas the godly howsoeuer the infinite power and iustice of God be dreadfull to them and they often meditate of his fearefull iudgements against sin to enure their hearts the more to awe and trembling their flesh or old man hauing great need of such terrour to bridle them yet it is the sweete mercies of God in the forgiuenesse ofso many sinnes and calling them to so great glory which worketh in them a reuerent regard of Gods will not to transgresse it no child being so loth to displease his most kind father as the godly are to displease their louing Redeemer To this purpose they doe endeauour to set themselues as it were in the presence of God considering that his eye which is the Iudge of the World and their heauenly Father is euer vpon them and in this consideration they labour to carry themselues as becommeth them who are euer before the face of such a Maiesty abandoning that which is contrary to his Word and may prouoke him and carefully doing such duties as are liking and gratefull to him This is the ingenuous feare of Gods Children which bringeth forth these effects in them first it restraines them from sinne euen as touching the inward affection as it did Ioseph from incontinency the Israelites Midwiues from cruelty 〈◊〉 from exaction and oppression of the people yea it hoideth backe from all sinnes great and little secret as well as open and that because they are sinnes and offences of God whereas the feare of the wicked keepes him from grosse and open but not from small and priuate sinnes and that for the paine onely and not for conscience to God Secondly it constraines them to doe good things commanded out of a care to please God When Abraham offered his Sonne that which moued him was this for that he feared God Gen. 22. 12 Iob was a righteous man and did iust things for he was a man fearing God Iob 1. 1. Thirdly it seasons the worship of God that is to say the seruice of God Psal. 5. 7. I will draw neere to thy Temple in feare c. Insomuch as often the whole worship of God is thereby signified as in Acts 10. In euery Nation he that feareth God c. Fourthly it seasons our loue to God as in a Subiect that loueth his Prince for his excellent goodnesse and bounty his loue towards his Soueraigne is beautified by a reuerence of his Princes Maiesty so it is here Fiftly it driueth away security it awakes slothfulnesse and makes watchfull And lastly it beates downe pride and high mindednesse as it is written Be not high minded but feare Rom. 11. 20. These seuerall fruits and effects of the feare of God are so many
perswasions to moue vs to embrace it whereunto wee are prouoked by other reasons also as namely because God hath so streightly and often commanded it Feare God 1 Pet. 2. 17. Againe Feare him that can kill body and soule Luke 12. which doth shew it to be a thing pleasing to him Also it is a gift of God yea one of his speciall and peculiar gifts which hee vouchsafeth vnto his Children into whom he hath promised so to put his feare as they shall neuer depart from him Ier. 32. Moreouer the feare of God is a mans best wisedome As it is written The feare of God is the beginning of wisedome it hath great promises euen of blessednesse made to it Blessed is the man that feareth God It is the garden of all vertues which are preserued by an ho'y feare of God it is the enemy of all vices which cannot raigne where the feare of God hath place Besides the examples of the godly and the approbation of the feare of God in them by the holy Ghost in Scripture should greatly excite vs to it Cornelius is commended for this that he was a man that feared God and all his houshold Acts 10. 1. Also Iob that hee was a man fearing God Iob 1. 1. Of Hezekiah it is saide that he made the feare of God his treasure Esay 33. 6. Also Obediah Ioseph Daniel and others highly praised in this respect As on the other side it is laide downe as a marke of a wicked man not to feare God Rom. 3. And as the want of it hath beene the cause that wicked men haue quite fallen away from God as in Pilate who feared not God but Caesar and he slew himselfe the like is to beseene in Achitophell and Iudas so the weaknesse of it in Gods children hath beene occasion of sundry falles as of Peters abiuring through too much feare of man and too little feare of God and in Dauid counterfeiting himselfe to be an Ideot or mad through feare of Achis King of the Philistians and sundry others which out of little feare of God and too much feare of man haue done euils or denied the truth Therefore Gods Children are to labour not onely for sound feare but for a great portion of it to haue it and to haue it abundantly as that it may preuaile ouer the feare of the flesh to feare God as he should be feared according to the greatnesse of his Maiesty and power Of trust or confidence in God Aquila AMongst other things spoken by you touching the feare of God your last words of fearing God accordingly be very worthy of all Christians to be thought on for it is not enough if we will doe our duties and be safe to feare God and to doe it sincerely vnlesse we doe feare him accordingly that is considering our owne infirmities how weake wee are and prone to euill vnable to doe well feeble to resist encounters and to beare off assaults stumbling at euery straw and fearing euery bush or shaking of a leafe and the malice and force the subtilty and guile of our visible and inuisible enemies how many furious and crafty they be also considering how sundry men stronger then our selues haue beene surprized and ouertaken by them moreouer the awefull Maiesty of God his terrible iustice and almightinesse so hating sinne so able to annoy and hurt sinners the infinite goodnesse and mercy and holinesse of God so louing the righteous so willing and able to blesse the iust all these being duly pondered it would be the duty and worke of all men to pray and vse all good meanes that they may feare God and feare him much and plentifully and continually And to speake truth how can hee bee too much feared that hath already done so much for vs of whom also we looke for so much from whom commeth all good without whom nothing can be had that is helpefull and healthfull vnto vs hee gouerning and disposing all things as he will hauing all creatures subiect to his will and pleasure Angels Men Diuels Beasts to make them friends or enemies Blessed is therefore the man whose heart is alwayes and much in his feare being afraide of sinning against God as of the greatest euill that can befall him and studious of pleasing God as the greatest good that can come to him But now Sir I would heare you proue vnto me that to trust in God is such a worke as the faithfull alone can doe it and wherein it consisteth and how it differeth from the confidence of wicked men and what be the effects and markes of it in those that haue it and how we are to be encouraged vnto it Apollos Of all other workes which be proper to the Elect there is least question of this whether it be appropriated to godly men alone because the Scripture euery where doth describe the wicked hereby as by an essentiall effectuall note that they trust not in God that there is in them an euill heart and vnbeleeuing that they with-draw themselues through vnbeleefe that they are full of vnbeleefe that they are faithlesse that their trust is in their riches or in the arme of flesh or in man and not in the liuing God Which plainely proueth that none saue the godly man can put his trust in God it being put downe as the property and vnseparable marke to a righteous man that his trust is in God that hee maketh God his buckler his tower his shield and defence his fortresse and bulwarke that his heart is fixed in God and stayeth on him The promises also which be made to them that they shall neuer be remoued Psalme 125. 1. but be established and stand like mount Sion that cannot be remoued that mercies shall compasse them on euery side that they shall not perish that God will be their God for euer that his saluation belongeth to them that he will neuer faile nor forsake them Heb. 13. And many such like do confirme to vs that to trust in God as it is a thing maruellous acceptable vnto God so it is a duty which euery one cannot performe but they onely with whom God hath stricken an euerlasting couenant This trust in God causeth the godly man to repose and place his affiance and confidence in God that through his onely goodnesse and power he shall not onely be safe against all enemies and euils so as not to be ouercome by them though he be assaulted but to obtaine whatsoeuer good thing is expedient for him to haue The ground of this their confidence it is first the knowledge of Gods nature that he is mercifull most true and almighty Secondly the consideration of his promises whereby he hath bound himselfe to doe his children good and to keepe euill from them Thirdly the great experience of Gods great care and kindnesse both to others and toward themselues For the first ground of our trust in God see Psal. 146.
vs from the sight of the Sunne so the blessings of God stand betweene the eyes of the wicked and God himselfe that they cannot looke vpon him whereas the godly by the eye of their soule pierce thorow all meanes to behold God himselfe the Authour and disposer of all good things in whom they see a secrer blessing prouided for them which is hid from others But now Sir seeing true and vnfeined trust in God bringeth forth prayer vnto God because wee trust in him therefore wee call vpon him and vppon the happy successe of prayers followes thankefulnesse I would haue you in the next place to deale in these things and to shew me how the godly and vngodly doe differ in these workes seeing one as well as another doth performe them for it is common to all to pray and to giue thankes The Pharisie both prayed and gaue thankes Luke 18. so did Iudas as well as Peter Cain as well as Abel Apollos It is true which you say that therefore Christians doe lift vp their mindes vnto God euen because of that trust which they put in him Hence it is that they are bold to come vnto God for that they assuredly trust that he will doe them good As we neuer haue an heart to seeke to any men for helpe in whom wee haue no affiance that they will regard vs but wee readily get vs to such for kindnesse of whom we haue some good hope so it is with Gods Children their confidence which they haue in God breedes in them a willingnesse by prayer to craue his helpe whereof when they are made partakers they burst out into thankfulnesse and prayses of that goodnesse which respected and releeued them it being the property of Gods children not to be more forward to desire Gods benefits and protections for them and theirs ouer their soules and bodies then to returne thankfull acknowledgements after they haue receiued mercies And whereas hypocrites and euill men doe pray and giue thankes it is true generally that there is no worke touching the outward act which Gods Children doe but the Children of this World doe the same but that which these doe in hypocrisie the other doe in truth and particularly there bee in these workes of prayer and thankfulnesse many differences betweene the one and the other as that the wicked are more ready to beg in their wants then to be thankefull when they haue sped and they are thankfull rather for prosperity then for aduersity whereas the godly see great cause to giue God thankes and praise in and for euery estate because all things are made to worke together for the best towards them Rom. 8. Againe the wicked doe quickly faint in prayer if they be not heard whereas the godly perseuere in asking till they be heard like the woman which followed the Iudge with importunity Luke 18 and the man which in the night time got his friend to arise out of his bed to fetch him a loafe to refresh his friends which came to him so Gods children howsoeuer they are long delayed for triall of their patience and constancy in prayer and to sharpen their affections and for sundry other good regards yet they pray and ceasse not till God doe send a gracious answer their prayers being like messengers which will not returne without their answer or like Ionathans arrowes which brought Dauid to him Moreouer the wicked pray coldly and out of a custome the children of God pray with care and conscience and doing their duty with feare of displeasing God The wicked pray generally the godly aske particular graces more begging sauing graces then others Whereas euill men aske temporall things more often and more earnestly neither doe they aske these out of faith to be heard Againe the godly take no worke in hand but they begin it with prayer and end it with thankesgiuing so doe not the wicked Moreeuer the godly doe continually pray with an earnest desire of the thing asked in prayer and with a sure perswasion of obtaining it both which the wicked want Finally besides many other things this is one maine difference that the godly in their prayers and thankesgiuing performe these workes in respect of and with a loue to the commandement which enioynes them and in a true and vnfeined desire of glorifying God by their obedience to his will and herein are Gods Children vnlike the wicked as in these so in all other workes which they doe being good or leaue vndone being euill that therein they consent to the law of God in their minds and wils approuing the good they doe and hating the euill which they flye and may not doe studying and endeauouring by such their submission to Gods Law to set forth and extoll the name and honour of their heauenly Father These are the rules they walke by both in prayer and prayses in reading and hearing the Word and in receiuing the Sacraments as also in the practise of all other duties towards God or men Of the Word and Sacraments Aquila SIthence ye haue mentioned the Word and mysteries and our actions about them are workes which belong to Gods worship declare wherein the godly doe differ from other men in their worke of hearing and partaking in the Word and Sacrament for all sorts of men doe these workes euen that Fox Herod will heare Iohn and the Pharises came to heare Christ and Iudas was at the Passcouer and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 desired baptisme what is it that discerneth one from another in these common duties Apollos Sincerity and soundnesse called truth in Scripture discerneth worke from worke and duty from duty The hypocrite and wicked euen for their hearing the Word and being partakers of the Sacraments because they lacked vprightnesse in the doing seeking not God but themselues therefore they shall for them heare at the last day Ye workers of iniquity depart from me Mat. 7. 23. For this shall be saide to such which did prophecie cast out diuels and doe great workes in Christ his name because their outward workes were voide of inward sincerity And this is a thing worthy to be marked that euen a good worke done of an euill man with an euill and 〈◊〉 heart vppon pretence and shew of seruing and pleasing God when in truth no such thing is meant but the pleasing of himselfe or some other carnall respect leades him it doth become a worke of iniquity Howbeit besides vprightnesse there are to be found sundry things in godly men doing these workes which are not to bee found in the vngodly and hypocrites As first that the godly when they heare or partake in the mysteries they vse great and serious preparation before by religious meditations of their owne wants and vnworthinesse on the one side bethinking how little they deserue such mercifull helpes and yet how great neede they haue of them and on the other side of the aweful 〈◊〉 before whom they must
appeare and of the gracious promises which hee hath made to his owne ordinances with earnest prayer to be enabled to doe their publike seruice in faith and godly reuerence with singlenesse of heart as in Gods presence and before his face Secondly in the time of those solemne actions remembring themselues to be vnder the eye of God occupied in his seruice and about their owne saluation they demeane themselues accordingly being full of most holy and heauenly motions sutable to that worke they haue in hand Lastly after their being in the Assemblies they labour to reape great fruite by the vse of the meanes for the encrease of their faith and obedience that as they bring with them vnto the Ministery of the Word an honest and good heart truly fully resolued according to the measure of grace receiued to beleeue and obey God hungring and thirsting after his graces offered and louing his Word and Sacraments as his blessed Ordinances and their owne soules nourishment so after the participation of the Word and mysteries they perceiue and feele by experience their strength against sinne and Sathan much encreased and their soules refreshed somewhat in all the graces of the new man euen as the strength and powers of their bodies are cheered and reuiued after a moderate wholsome bodily repast This sence and experience engendreth in them hearty thankefulnesse vnto God their Father for blessing vnto their good his own holy institutions which for their sinnes he might haue turned into a curse and withall it prouoketh them to attend and waite with reuerence loue and hope of more fruites vpon the sacred Ordinances of God making great conscience of sanctifying the Lords Sabbath in the religious and godly vse thereof Thus it is ordinarily with Gods Children when they partake in the Word and mysteries and if they happen to faile of these duties either for substance or degree they are very sorry and flye to Gods mercy for pardon and become more heedfull afterwards Of the religious vse of Gods Name and Sabbath Aquila NOw may it please you to speake of the Name and Sabbath of God and tell me how the godly must carry themselues in the vse therof as God may be pleased for herein outwardly there appeareth great likenesse betweene man and man The wicked and hypocrites in their common speech oathes vowes prayers confessions vsing Gods name and obseruing the rest of the seuenth day as diligently as any the Scribes and Pharises will be in the Synagogue on the Sabbath as well as Christ and his Disciples Apollos Indeede the sonnes of Sceua are too bold with the Name of Iesus Acts 19. 13. and so were the Priests with the Name of God We adiure thee by the liuing God tell vs c. Mat. 26. And as with the title of God they are too forward to meddle so where God hath stamped his Name vpon his Doctrine his Sacraments his workes they with their foule hands are sound to be too ready to touch it but all they get by vsing or abusing it rather it is the encrease of their guilt by prophaning so sacred a thing as his Name which is glorious and fearefull it being written That God will not hold him guiltlesse which taketh that Name in vaine Therefore the godly they very sparingly vse the Name of God neuer or sildome in their common speech vnlesse vpon great occasion and when necessity constraines and then they take it vp with great feare and awe lest they sinne in vainely vsurping it praying at least in their hearts and secretly desiring the Lord to guide them in the vse of his Name alwayes fearing to apply it to any light and trifling much lesse to any wicked purpose as to confirme a falshood or to cloke a naughtinesse And this is it which Salomon admonisheth vs of in that antithesis or opposition between him that sweareth and him that feareth an oath Eccle 9. 2. Hereby teaching that whereas sinners doe rashly vse the Name of God euen in an oath without reuerence or consideration of that awefull and wonderful Name contrariwise good men whensoeuer they are to vse the Name of God in an oath especially or otherwise they come to it with feare lest they offend by vaine vsage of it Now concerning the Sabbath they are thus affected towards it farre otherwise then euill men are they doe not supersticiously esteeme it aboue other dayes as it is a day but they ioy in the remembrance and vse of it in regard of the worship of God performed on that day and because of the benefit that doth redound to their soules for the building them vp into the sauing knowledge of God and of Iesus Christ his Sonne In these respects they doe long for the Sabbath till it come they cheere vpon it when it doth approach and in the weeke dayes they looke so well to their wayes keeping in all things a good conscience and so religiously walking in the workes of their vocation as when the Sabbath doth come they can with alacrity and ioy sanctifie it The men of this World doe not with more gladnesse gather in their Corne Wine and Oyle then God Children to keepe the Lords day Psalme 122. 1. I reioyced when they saide to me We will c. From the obseruation where of neither themselues nor such as be vnder their charge are held by such common hinderances as the World is letted by But as they breake through all 〈◊〉 that they and theirs may resort to the House of God so their desire study is to spend the whole day throughout publikely and priuately in such holy workes as are commanded of God and be sitting his day as reading singing conferring praying visiting the sicke prisoners exhorting comforting as occasion is offered reconciling of iarres examination of their Family how they profit by the publike Ministery lastly by meditation on the creatures For which purposes they make a cessation from all their owne seruile workes which on other dayes were lawfull to be done that they may be free to attend all holy duties of the Sabbath to obtain fresh strength of grace from the God of Heauen to ceasse all their life long from their dead workes the lustes of their sinfull nature so as 〈◊〉 here into a spiritual rest they may enioy at last an eternall Sabbath in Heauen Aquila What letteth but that now we may passe forwards vnto that ranke of good workes which doe concerne men seeing wee haue taken a taste of those workes which godly men and they onely can and doe performe towards God Apollos Yes friend Aquila there is a 〈◊〉 for wee haue a principal part of godlinesse yet to 〈◊〉 in which we may in no wise passe ouer and it 〈◊〉 Patience in affliction Aquila It was well remembred for there is no more necessary worke of godlinesse then this of patience we haue not more need of water and the aire then of
take downe the pride and haughtinesse of his heart that hee may walke humbly with his God and before all men This is humility the second fruite of Chastisements Aquila These be two notable and goodly fruits indeed and I desire to heare you now more particularly and fully declare first how we are holpen by corrections to repentance and amendment of life then how they doe auaile vs to humblenesse of mind Apollos Iron would rust if it were not occupied the ground without dressing would bring forth bryers and 〈◊〉 so Gods regenerate Children without corrections in stead of the fruites meete for repentant persons would bring forth too much sinne and vanity And as our children let goe without chastising would proue wantons and rebellious against their gouernours so would Gods children Witnesse the experience of that godly Prophet confessing that ere hee was troubled he went astray Psalme 119. and of the people of Israel in the dayes of the Iudges They turned to the Lord when they were afflicted no sooner had they rest from their enemies but they for sooke him Iudges 3. 4 5 6. c. And this is a thing whereof God much and often complaines by his Prophets that his people in their prosperity were like vnto pampered Horses which lift the heele to kicke and spurne at their Owner and Master Euery mans owne experience can teach vs this that if we be suffered a while without correction and blessed with ease and abundance we grow forgetfull of God slacke and cold in prayer and in the whole seruice of God secure and presumptuous in all our conuersation But to speake more distinctly of this matter how chastisements when they are blessed of God doe much helpe forwards the repentance of the godly it is found true by testimony and examples in the Word that some by meanes of correction haue beene brought to the knowledge and sight of some sinne which they did not espy and know to be in themselues their correction being as an eye-salue vnto them to helpe them clearely to espie that which was hid from their eyes Thus to Iosephs brethren afflictions gaue them vnderstanding of their offence which they had long before committed against their brother Gen. 42. 21 22. Moreouer corrections helpe a man as to the knowledge so to worke the griefe and detestation of his sinne because in his sharpe and bitter corrections he perceiueth the better euen by experience what bitter things our sins are and how much they displease God See the truth of this in the Israelites 1 Sam. 7. 6. Lam. 5. 15 6 in Dauid Psalme 38. 17 and in many others What should I say further that through the rodde of correction Gods children are led vnto an hearty and earnest confession of their sinnes also to ear nest and constant prayer for the forgiuenesse of them as well as for deliuerance from the smart or punishment and to a continuall meditation and study how to leaue and abandon such vices as haue stirred vp Gods anger against them And finally they are exceedingly prouoked thorow their chastisements for time to come to yeeld better obedience to Gods Word to encrease in more feare of God deniall of themselues contempt of this world compassion towards the miseries of others As Christ being tempted pittied others and can succour his members so Christians by their owne corrections which they feele learne to commiserate others when they are iudged of God Thus the blessing of God vpon their chastisements maketh the godly to profit much in the 1. parts 2. exercises and 3. fruits of Repentance Aquila I remember that I haue heard you teach that the very wicked diuers of them howsoeuer they neuer take any sound benefit of their punishments when they are past as they shew no true Patience in bearing them while they are vpon them yet are by the seuere hand of God broght to crouch vnto God whom they despised in their prosperity yea with Pharaoh to confesse their wickednesse with Ahab to put on mourning weedes with Abimelech to leaue their sinne as touching the outward deede with Esau to shed teares but they neuer come thus farre as by their scourges to grow vnto any detestation of their sinnes past and serious sincere care of auoyding occasions of such sinne in time to come which is the prerogatiue of the faithfull person to be soundly bettered by his corrections to be made more wary and awefull for afterwards Which surely is a maruellous mercy of God towards them to be by his roddes made more fearefull to offend God and careful to please him and ministreth great and iust cause of patient contentednesse vnder the hand of God for who will not quietly and thankfully put vp that blow that shall beate him into Heauen and keepe him backe from Hell Apollos Ye say right but how much doth this bind them to all good patience and thankfulnesse in all their heauy chastenings that ouer and aboue all which wee haue saide it pleaseth their louing good God to giue them the conquest of pride and the blessing of a more humble heart by their chastisements Pride is a fault so hatefull to God as that he saith of it what he saith of no other kind of sinne That he will resist the proud and humble such as exalt themselues This vice is not yet so mortified in the godly but though that it reignes not yet it remaines and dwelles in them being grounded vpon and nourished by the good gifts of God bestowed on them which are the matter and foode of pride wee being so prone to pride and Sathan being such a cunning workeman that he can make the best men proud of their best gifts yea of their humility being therefore proud because they are not so proud as others whereof ariseth sundry very euill effects in their disdaine of others whose persons and gifts they should much reuerence and respect in entertaining and stirring contentions in putting some confidence in themselues yea and sometimes in selfe-praises and selfe liking and too high conceit of their owne worth whereby their purest actions are defiled This vice of pride which is to God so odious to our selues so dangerous it is greatly tamed by chastisements in which the Spirit of God worketh as by an Instrument for the weakning and taking down our fierce and haughty stomackes for by our corrections we are made to see our inbred pride Whereupon the heart of a Christian is moued not onely to confesse 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 pardon for it and so to haue it hid and couered by forgiuenesse but from the loue and inordinate 〈◊〉 which they bare vnto themselues and their owne endowments of nature and grace they are brought to haue a more lowly conceit of themselues and their own doings and to thinke others better then themselues and themselues worst of all sinners being driuen from that vaine confidence they put in their owne excellency and worth to acknowledge freely and franckly nothing
nor of God Againe we are commanded to keepe our selues from Idols I Iohn 5. 21. and in the second commandement we are forbid either for any religious purpose to make or serue any Image Exod. 20. 5. 3. Also our bodies being created redeemed and sanctified of God their seruice is due to him not to Idols which rather then godly men would honour with their presence and seruice but of their bodies they haue chosen to die Dan. 6. 15 16. Because it hath in it both offence of God and his Church and for the losse of house goods or lands there is this comfort against it that the Saints shall receiue a house made without hands for their earthly Tabernacle 2 Cor. 5. 1 and an Inheritance in Heauen immortall and vndefiled 2 Pet. 1. 5. For the losse of friends we shall be ioyned in fellowship with the Angels and spirits of blessed men Heb. 12. 23. For wife and children the care of them must be eased with meditatiō of Gods prouidence who is our God and the God of our seede Gods prouidence is his childrens inheritance and howsoeuer it be greeuous to part from them yet it is more greeuous for their loue to hate and for sake Christ for whose sake and loue wee are commanded to hate all Mat. 10. 37. Besides we part from them for a time to be ioyned with them for euer I Thes. 4. 18. Comfort your selues with these things Aquila But death is terrible and very fearefull saith our flesh to vs. Apollos Flesh that is carnall and corrupt reason is an euill counsellour as well as carnall friends let men rather thinke how fearefull eternall death is for natural death we owe it to nature to which wee must pay it let vs pay that to Christ to whom we much more doe owe it and who can preserue it for vs in another world And how should death be fearefull to beleeuing Christians to whom it is an end period of all their sinnes and sorrowes an entrance and beginning of endlesse ioy perfect righteousnesse at a word a passage from death to life from mortality and misery to immortality of blisse and glory wherein hee that hopes to liue cannot greatly feare to die Aquila But the paine of burning is too sharpe and greeuous we could be content to die so it were not in the fire that is most terrible Apollos Yet whom God calleth to that or any other violent and terrible death he can enable them to endure it the power of his might can strengthen them Secondly he will enable them for he hath promised neuer to exceed the power of the tempted I Corinthians 10 13. Thirdly he hath enabled sundry to beare it yea such as feared it most when they came to suffer were made valiant as Master Sanders Lastly consider a while how terrible hell fire is being incomprehensible and euerlasting Aquila But wee cannot abide death with torment Apollos Torments of Tyrants in earth haue both measure and end so haue not hell torments Aquila May we not dissemble or denie for a time the Doctrine of the Gospell without danger of denying Christ himselfe Apollos The Scripture saith Ye cannot Mat. 10. 33. Luke 11. 26. In the former place it is saide He that denyeth me in the latter is added or is ashamed of my words I will denie him and be ashamed of him To deny Christs Word is to denie himselfe who is knowne to vs by his Word Aquila But when wee feele our selues too weake to stand to it to the death what then is to be done Apollos Such as cannot endure violent death let them suffer exile let them liue a while out of their countrey which cannot giue their liues to Christ let them be Martyrs in desire that cannot be so in deede and effect yet hearty prayer may obtaine that strength which is lacking In the meane time such weaknesse is to be confessed and bewayled Aquila We know not what to say when we come before the persecutors Apollos Christ Iesus will giue you a mouth wisedome against which they shall not be able to resist therefore trust in him and relie vpon him Remember poore men and women in Queene Martes time Aquila Their threatnings are very full of terrors Apollos Yet God is to be feared more then all tyrants which can but kill the body God can send body and soule into hell fire Againe of all threatnings feare these Luke 12. 9. Aquila Their faire promises if we wil yeeld doe allure much for wee haue their word for life and preferment to be giuen vs vpon our yeelding Apollos They promise these things as the Diuel their master promised the World to Christ to corrupt him and yet he could not performe it The issues of life are in Gods hands and for preferment he lifts vp one and pulles downe another I Sam. 2. 6 7. and it is the greatest misery to be great without God Secondly if God should spare life what is the gaine of a transitory life to the losse of eternall life Thirdly consider that Christ maketh better promises and surer to such as cleaue to him in life and death 2 Tim. 2. 11 12. Rom. 8. 17 18. Mar. 16. 28. Luke 9. 24. Marke 8. 36. Luke 12. 8. Mat. 10. 32. Thus farre of such good workes as containe our duty to God which yet are to be practised with respect of edification to men as all duties to men are to be done with desire and regard of pleasing and honouring God in them The eleuenth Part of the Dialogue Of such good workes as concerne our Neighbour Aquila SIR ye are well met here shall I tell you what I feele in my selfe Me thinkes it fareth with me as it vseth to doe with a trauelling Horse which the neerer hee drawes to 〈◊〉 eyes end the more he takes heart to him 〈◊〉 more couragiously in hope to come shortly 〈◊〉 baiting and resting place so it is with me I find myself now more eagar and sharpe set vpon this 〈◊〉 then when we began for I haue good hope that wee shall at this our meeting and conference draw it to a conclusion We are come now to those workes of grace which the true beleeuers are to doe towards their Neighbours I pray you Sir which are these and amongst these being many what shall wee first take vp to deale in Apollos I could be well content our hands were eased of this labour for I begin to feele my selfe scarse well but it wil not be laide out of hand I doubt so soone as you make reckoning of for with my good will there shall not be one peculiar grace of Gods Elect but some thing shall be saide of it My desire is as much as lyeth in vs that this our glasse shall discouer to a Christian all his dignity by his calling and all his duty being called towards his Caller To proceede therefore in our purpose all our duty to man is comprehended in this one word Righteousnesse as
place and degree Honour thy father c. Apollos Indeede friend Aquila you say well and this platforme had not beene amisse for the decalogue or ten Commandements of the Law as they doe immediately come from God so they are most perfect for matter and most exquisite for order and manner of deliuery the chiefest and greatest duties first mentioned and after the meaner and lesser and that both in the first and second Table howbeit we are not bound so strictly and precisely to follow that order in our teaching and instruction but that it may be altered without fault A president of which alteration is the Apostle Paul himselfe both in his fift Chapter to the Ephesians and the 3. and fourth Chapter to the Colossians wherein after doctrine he descendeth to morall duties and he affordeth the first place to such as be common and then commeth vnto the peculiar and proper duties in which steppes I thinke it fit for vs to tread in speaking first of generall and next of speciall duties Aquila I mislike not your purpose and yet ere you deale with such particular graces as enable vs to doe duties to other men and to our selues let me call to mind that which you saide before of the workes which we are to doe towards God that truth and sincerity is an affection common to them all to distinguish them from the workes of piety done by Hypocrites who haue a certaine feare of God and loue of God c but it is seuered from truth it being the mercy done to sanctified persons that they should truly loue and feare God and doe all duties towards him in soundnesse right so is it in these duties which belong to men As in our natural body bloud is dispersed through all the body and where bloud is there is spirit too so sincerity and truth runneth through all duties as bloud in the body and where any grace is there is truth with it and all the good things which the godly doe are done in truth and godly vprightnesse They loue their Neighbour in truth and are truly mercifull and truly meeke and truly sober and truly chaste and not in appearance onely to the eye of men but be such before God as they seeme to be before men in all duties seeking to honour and obey the name of God wherein lyeth the grand difference betweene them and the vngodly who doe the same things for matter and substance which holy men doe but not in the same manner because they are voide of sincerenesse Apollos You say right As euery Starre doth partake in the light of the Sunne to take brightnesse from it so truth and sincerity passeth through all Christian graces euen as the soule that doth animate and quicken euery part of the body for all graces if they lacke truth and soundnesse they be as rotten members or as shadowes and dead carkases which carry the semblance of graces and are not the true fire doth not more differ from the painted then grace from grace that is the sincere graces from such as be but counterfet A Man or a Lyon pictured artificially seemes a man or a lyon and is not so vertues seuered from truth and sincerity haue a goodly shew but are not the liuely things themselues But now it were meete that we did set vpon that amiable grace of loue which is the glue and band that linkes all other graces together and holds vs Chistians fast tyed and linked as many stickes in one bundle Therefore worthily it is called the band of perfection without which all humane things fal apeeces and come to ruine Let me heare what you haue heard and learned of this worthy grace of loue wherewith we loue one another whose gift it is whence it springs what it is what are the properties and effects of it the manner and measure thereof and what are the duties of loue whom we are to loue and by what perswasions we may be incited to the exercise of this vertue wherein it differs from faith and finally how we may ouercome the lets and hinderances of loue with such other things as shall come to your remembrance not forgetting to tell vs along as you goe how true loue differs from the counterfet Aquila Sir ye haue enioyned mee taske enough which I had rather it had happened to your selfe but sithence ye haue put it on me I will performe my endeuour be you ready to helpe defects and by your patience I will first tell you what it is I take Loue or Charity to be that grace whereby wee are moued to hold our Neighbour deare vnto vs also to desire and seeke his good in all things that be deare vnto him euen as we would haue our selues and our things deare vnto others This grace it is the free gift of God who is Loue himselfe and author worker of loue in all others Therefore Paul prayeth God for this gift and prayseth him for it as in his salutation of the Churches is to be well perceiued no man nor other creature can worke loue in vs and by nature we haue it not it is God onely who out of his free mercy doth both plant and continually vphold it in vs. And let this generally be spoken of loue and all the other vertues following that they grow not in the barren soyle of our hearts but come from without being the fruites and gifts of Gods Spirit Galat. 5. 22. This Loue giuen vs of God is alwayes linked with the loue of God whose Daughter it is being bred and brought forth by it for therefore we loue our Neighbours because we first loue God Thus the Apostle Iohn teacheth 1 Ioh. 4. 21. Our mutual loue being a beame of our loue to God as our loue to God is a sparkle of his loue to vs neither can any man loue God but because he is first loued of him neither can any loue man who first doth not loue God neither can any but loue men who haue in them the loue of God for this enforceth vs for Gods sake to loue such as he will haue vs loue hauing put his Image and likenesse in them and neerely linked them to vs the parties whom wee are to loue are our Neighbour that is euery one that commeth of Adam of what Countrey Religion Language soeuer euen euery man and woman being so neere to vs as to be of our kind and bloud and hauing any need of vs in any sort euery such is our Neighbour vpon whom we must bestow our loue not as commonly men thinke them onely to be our Neighbours who dwelles in the same streete or burrow The parable of the Samaritan quitteth this who acknowledged the wounded Iew for his Neighbour Luke 10. 33. Christs example also doing good to Samaritans as well as Iewes Iohn 4. 26. cleareth this point Apollos But seeing God onely is to be loued and that with all the heart is it not a wrong to God to giue any
to all to whom they can doe good without wearinesse respect of persons or hope of recompence so their meeknesse enableth them to passe by abuses offered them by men without purpose of rendring euill for euill also to beare with a quiet minde all crosses sent of God referring themselues in them to his pleasure according as their meeke Sauiour hath giuen them example Father as thou wilt Mat. 26. And moreouer it causeth them to submit themselues for their iudgements and affections vnto the truth of God euen when it is contrary to their reason and doth thwart their will and desires then they meekely yeeld themselues to be gouerned by it in their opinions and actions laying aside all superfluitie of maliciousnesse they doe with meekenesse receiue the good Word of God which is able to saue their soules Iames 1. In these graces the 〈◊〉 may come somewhat neere vnto Gods children putting forth themselues to speake and doe many good things and prouoking others to be good and helpefull notwithstanding both the examples of goodnesse which themselues giue and the perswasions which they vse in the setting others on worke for to doe good yet the truth is that they haue not one drop of sound goodnesse in them which is euidenced and cleared by this argument that they are exceeding enuious and greeue much if they perceiue any others to be equally liked and loued as themselues for their goodnesse and care of well-doing As amongst the Iewes diuers of them did sundry good things yet they enuied Christ because he did more Mathew 26. Also Saul King of Israel before an euill spirit possessed him 1 Sam. performed much good vnto the people yet he fretted and repined at Dauid who did better things and thereby gained greater praise By this it appeareth that hypocrites exercise themselues in doing good not out of any habite of goodnesse and from a loue of wel-doing but vpon hope of receiuing the like good or else to please themselues and get them the name of good men which is the cause missing of their hoped ends that after a time they waxe weary of doing good and giue ouer that course their hearts being vnsound and howsoeuer they beare a likenesse and appearance of meekenesse yet herein they bewray that they haue not true meekenesse because they refuse to bring their hearts their thoughts and lusts vnder the yoake of the Word being also vnder Gods hand murmurers and vnwilling to passe by abuses put vpon them by men For if so be that they are hardly prouoked vnto anger yet in their anger stirred vpon iust causes they exceede their bounds both for time and measure yea and for manner too holding out their displeasure longer beeing also more deeply moued then they ought and alwaies bending their anger more against the persō of their neighbours then against their sinnes Whereas if they were truly meekened both they would suffer the Word of God to rule ouer their corrupt reason and euill desires and also in their anger stirred vp against their Neighbour they would so pursue his sinnes as it should bee with commiseration and greefe for his person after the example of that same most meeke Lambe of God who in such sort conceyued indignation against the weaknesse of his Disciples and wickednes of the Iewes as yet his heart mourned and his eyes shed teares for the hardnesse of heart in the one and for the infidelitie and maliciousnesse of the other Apollos Two wayes do all vnsound Christians declare themselues voyde of meekenesse both towardes God and man Toward God for that howsoeuer their wit and iudgement makes way and stoopes vnto the word of God to thinke and beleeue as it teacheth yet diuers of them do fancie and foster strange conceites contrary to the Word but they neuer labour to bring their will and affections in thorow subiection to Gods truth nourishing still some rebellious lust wherewith they take part against the knowne will of the most blessed God as did Herod and Iudas Toward their Brethren insomuch as if they study not how to requite vnkindnesses like to those which are neuer quiet till they haue mete home the like measure dooing one shrewd turne for another yet when they do such things as men soundly meeke would do either putting down some affections which make insurrection against God or putting vp some abuses done to them by men this commeth not of obedience vnto God with desire to please and honour him neyther is it ioyned with griefe and repentance for their slippes in this kinde whereas godly persons finding how hard a thing it is to frame their thoughts and affections to bee plyable to Gods will and to temper their anger towards men as they striue to haue their fiercenesse to God and man 〈◊〉 and to attaine to a good measure of Christian 〈◊〉 so they are much humbled in their soules for coming short fayling in these duties Now after meeknesse there followes two other worthy gifts to be considered of the one is Mercy taking pitty on otherfolks miseries the other is the taking in good part ther doubtfull sayings and doings so farre as with truth and reason they may Aquila Sir in naming these two vertues yee haue but preuented me These indeede are so proper to a regenerate childe of God as the naturall man can lay no claime vnto them It is true that vnregenerate men are not altogether without mercy for Barbarians pittied Paul Acts 18 3. and the Samaritane the wounded lew Luke 10. and Pharaohs daughter did with compassion behold that exposed infant Moyses Exod. 2 6. but this is a meere naturall affection and comes not from the Spirit and it is exercised not of obedience to God or for his sake and glory but vpon carnall respect such as flesh and blood suggests extending it selfe vnto outward miseries onely not to soule calamities Whereof naturall men haue no sense and when their mercie is abused it is ready to turn into cruelty and fiercenes at the least it will not breake through vnkindnesses to witnesse it selfe towards such as deserue euill of them But the mercy of Gods children whether they doe respect their fellow-feeling in that they can take the harmes and losses of others as their owne remembring them that are in bonds as if they were bound thēselues and them that are in prison as if they were afflicted like members of a body who suffer together and reioyce together or the effects and workes of this affection in ministering to the needy things they lacke as cloth to the naked meate to the hungry harbor to the harborlesse and all kinde of comforts I say in all this they are led by the Spirit which mooueth them thus to pity and succour others euen for the Lords sake because it is his will and it tends to his glory for their bretherens sake to refresh their bowels and by such examples of mercy to win them to the Word Moreouer they are most affected and
may by his wise silence or good answeres keepe himselfe from dangers and by his rash and inconsiderate either speaking or keeping silence may fall into many a great hazard euen of estate and life Besides this as vnto our life so vnto our comfortable being good speech doth much preuaile for Ioy shall come to a man by the answer of his lippes saith 〈◊〉 Therefore hereunto the godly doe giue great heede as they are bound that they doe not make sad their owne hearts by hasty and sinfull speech this is a thing whereof the wicked haue neither care nor conscience Indeed they are hereof carefull to make their hearts merry with iesting and witty conceits which so they want impiety and filthinesse are not simply to be condemned but to gaine to their hearts the ioy of a godly and discreete answer this is a peculiar care of good men who knowing that naturall liuelinesse or 〈◊〉 is the best part of life as griefe of heart is the beginning of death 2 Cor. 7. worldly sorrow leading thereunto therefore as by all other meanes as of dyet company physicke recreation being religiously vsed they doe cherish and quicken their spirits so they especially looke vnto this that to their naturall they may ioyne spirituall liuelinesse by the fruites of their holy speeches and actions vpon this consideration that God loues cheareful worshippers and that the more hearty and liuely that the body and mind be the better able shall they proue to doe vnto God and men their appointed seruice For the chearefulnesse of the heart maketh the countenance gladsome and addeth strength to the bones whereas the marrow of the bones euen the chiefe and best strength of a man is consumed by pensiue sadnesse and heauinesse of heart To be short the righteous because they know it to be a duty to comfort their hearts and that God and their brethren are better serued the more comfortable that the minde is therefore that which the children of this world doe that is to say make themselues mery vpon corrupt regards because they would liue and enioy the pleasures and benefits of life which is a care common to men with bruite beasts the same godly persons doe vpon conscience of the commandement and also because they would the more plentifully glorifie God and doe good to many Now to your motion for temperance or sobriety this fruite of the spirit together with 〈◊〉 doe belong to the keeping of our vessels pure and in honour being of such vse and force as without them our mindes and bodies which are the Temples of the holy Ghost cannot be preserued in holinesse to be fit mansions or habitations for Gods Spirit Many 〈◊〉 men are chaste as touching any act or deede when yet their desires are either exceeding vnruly or being restrained onely for worldly respects to auoide trouble in the flesh or for their reputation Whereas they which are regenerate whether they liue a single life or a married they haue a power giuen vnto them by the Spirit to keepe not onely their bodies but their very thoughts pure concerning the desire of sexe so farre as the measure of their grace will enable them they carefully shun after the example of continent Ioseph all temptations and occasions of vncleannesse in this respect that they would not doe wickednesse against God but if at any time any of them doe fall with Dauid breaking the Lawes of chastity they doe earnestly and vnfainedly repent with Dauid being ready to make their sinnes knowne publikely if neede require euer after more heedfully looking to their wayes Vnto their chastity they doe ioyne temperance which is a vertue moderating their desires about the pleasures of this life euen as chastity ruleth the heart about the desire of sexe so sobriety and temperance gouernes their affections about other pleasures of this life giuing them power not onely to abstaine from following and 〈◊〉 filthy and vnlawfull pleasures such as are forbid as whoredome drunkennesse gluttony c. but to withstand all inticements and prouocations thereunto and that not for feare of shame or punishment onely from God or man but of conscience towards God Moreouer in such pleasures as be lawfull and allowed as in the pleasures of eating drinking apparell recreation sleepe marriage buildings and other such honest pleasures by the vse whereof our life and kind is not onely maintained but preserued in a comfortable estate the gift of temperance is bestowed vpon the Children of God in all ages degrees and sexes as a met-yard to measure and as a bridle to hold backe their affections in vsing these warrantable delights that they doe not onely not exceede their bounds but be held in and restrained from going so far in the vse of them as otherwise their estate and ability and the custome of the times and place where they liue will suffer and giue them leaue for this is certaine that our desires after these pleasures are vnsatiable as a bottomelesse 〈◊〉 and withall Sathan layeth baites and snares to catch all the children of Adam in their pleasures euen as he caught their first parents and experience telleth vs that some very godly persons haue beene surprized and were taken in his snares to the wounding of their owne conscience and to the offence and dishonour of God Therefore as temperance is very needful to preserue vs from running into excesse and to cause vs to liue soberly and stayedly so the children of God haue a maruellous great care to cherish and practise this grace endeauouring thereby to curbe and hold in their sensuall desires and in abundance of their blessings to keepe a mediocrity in such sort vsing their liberty in outward blessings of this life as it may be a helpe and furtherance and not a hinderance to godlinesse and eternall life And this they inforce themselues to doe the rather because they know it is the will of God that they should liue temperately 1 Pet. 4. 7. and that temperance is a fruite of the Spirit Galat. 5. 23. an ornament of the Gospell Tu. 2. 10. and hath great promises made to it Lu. 21. 39. and finally brings great benefit both to minde and body If naturall men doe some temperate actions it is not out of an habite of temperance nor vpon these considerations but out of humane reason and for carnall respects Apollos Now that you haue spoken of such graces as tend to the preseruation of life and such as are behouefull for the tempering and ruling of the pleasures of life good order doth require that you come vnto such vertues as regenerate persons are bound to exercise about their Neighbours commodity and credite to shew how they stand affected towards the substance and name of their Neighbour otherwise then all other men doe Aquila Right so Thus therefore it is all godly persons make conscience of doing the least iniury to other men in their goods and wealth either by fraud or violence either directly or indirectly
neither willingly doe they suffer any harme to come to them if they can hinder it and if by any ouer-sight or wittingly by any errour or negligence of themselues or their seruants it happen that any portion of their Neighbours goods or substance fall into their hands they are very willing to restore it vnto the owner Also things found or pawned or gaged they will not possesse but deliuer them to the true owners according to the expresse cōmandement of God Deut. 24. 10. At a word because they esteeme a little with righteousnesse better then a great deale with iniquity therefore they will not abide that ought should sticke in their fingers which by right belongs to other men abhorring bribery and vsury being ready and prompt not onely by aduice but euen by their helpe and labour sometimes to recouer vnto their Neighbour that which is theirs 〈◊〉 moreouer to this intent that they may not be 〈◊〉 to any by empairing their goods therefore all righteous persons as they doe make choyce to liue in an honest lawfull calling such as none can iustly speake 〈◊〉 of and is according to the good Law of their Countrey seruing to some good priuate or publike worldly or 〈◊〉 so they take not a little care to discharge the duties of their calling not onely with great diligence and paines taking bending their mindes earnestly to doe their duties well but with faithfulnesse and sincerity euen from their hearts more respecting the will of God and their Neighbours welfare then their owne benefit which comes by the worke of their calling 〈◊〉 continuing therein without wearinesse or giuing ouer and which is the chiefe or maine thing they alwayes begin and take in hand the duties of their calling with inuocation of the name of God commending themselues to the direction of his Spirit and the successe of their labours to the gracious blessing of God Looke whatsoeuer doth happen and is giuen them more or lesse better or worse they take it thankfully knowing how vnworthy they be of any good and yet are assured that euery thing shall serue to their good wherefore in the ende of their worke they praise God as they did by prayer enter vpō it Thus they behaue themselues religiously not only in the duties of their calling other 〈◊〉 businesses but in their recreations also and in the 〈◊〉 of lawfull pleasures being well assured that they can haue no comfortable and wnolsome vse thereof vnlesse they begin and end with God referring all to his glory and ordering all by his will It is not thus with vnregenerate men who as they make not scruple what manner of calling they liue in so it bring aduantage and be vnperillous so in the execution of their callings they forget not God alone in not sanctifying their functions and labours by the Word and Prayer vnlesse it be a little for fashion that they be thought Christians but their Neighbours also for that they doe wholly aime at their owne benefit which they study how to encrease by hooke or crooke by right or wrong not greatly passing to straine their conscience for lucre sake especially if it may be done warily with safegard of their credit for it is no corrasiue or griefe to their soule to haue God and their conscience witnesse to the iniury done to their brethren in their worldly matters so as they may escape the knowledge censure and shame of men If Gehazi thought that Eliza should haue knowne and Ananias had imagined Saint Peter would haue found out their budging bad dealing they had surely dealt better then they did Thus it fareth with all worldly men as in all other duties so in their dealing with their neighbours substance they are carried with respect of men insomuch that if at any time they forbeare to doe wrong and be content that others should haue right done them this proceedes not from any true loue of God and their Neighbour but from selfe loue because they would keepe their reputation and honor amongst men or at vtmost to keepe and hold off the iudgement of God which he threatneth against wrong doers and vnrighteous persons or in hope of enioying such blessings as are promised to righteous liuers because they couet to escape the euils denounced against vniust persons and to 〈◊〉 the good things offred vnto the iust therefore they doe endeauour themselues to performe some righteous things This is the furthest that any vnsanctified person can goe towards God either in this or in any other duty namely to doe good vpon 〈◊〉 of receiuing good and to auoid euill for feare of finding euill whereas if there were neither punishments nor benefits yet would the godly giue to euery man his due for Gods sake because they desire to please and glorifie him Vpon which ground they are moued to haue a great respect to the credit and estimation of their Neighbour not onely not to hurt it either by receiuing a false report against him 〈◊〉 chasing 〈◊〉 the tale-bearers back-biters and whisperers by an angry looke as the raine is driuen away with the East-wind or by vttering any euill or vntrue suggestion or witnesse against him especially before a 〈◊〉 in the feate of Iudgement but also there is in 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 speciall and great desire euen as they would haue their owne good name preserued so to labour the preseruation of the good name of others by concealing their 〈◊〉 firmities hiding the worst and speaking onely of 〈◊〉 best excusing them when they may with a good conscience interpreting to the best such reports as 〈◊〉 spread abroade of them aduertising there of the 〈◊〉 whom it concernes warning him to looke to himselfe 〈◊〉 reuerencing the gifts of God in their Neighbours not bewraying their secrets putting away 〈◊〉 thoughts and words finally being 〈◊〉 from enuy and euill suspitions and this course they hold 〈◊〉 well towards one as towards another chusing rather to be theeues then iniurious to any mans credit But as for those who are vnregenerate the good same of their Neighbour is not vniuersally precious and deare vnto them they are partiall herein thinking and speaking fauourably of such whom they most affect others they spare not especially if they be prouoked by them and when the pulling downe of another mans name may be the setting vp of their owne If there be any amongst them any that are giuen to speake well of all it is because themselues would be well spoken of and without conscience of the truth and lastly not that they make any account of their Neighbours reputation according vnto the Commandement of God Neither is this to be maruelled at that natural men doe so little esteem the good fame of others seeing they are carelesse of their owne neither doing the things that may deserue good report and also running into many sinful courses which may impeach or annoy their honest estimation and deserue shame Now the men that truly feare God as
a Christian how to carry himselfe seemly and as is meete for his profession in all parts of his duty teaching him to 〈◊〉 generall rules to particular occasions that he may 〈◊〉 and doe all things according to the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 time and place and persons He is indeede an 〈◊〉 man whose heart is not onely wise vnto 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 faith in Christ but also in the duties of daily 〈◊〉 through the wisedome of the Word and surely such happy men are all godly men for as it is saide of Dauid in respect of his warring against the Philistines that he behaued himselfe wisely so it may be saide of euery true Christian in regard of their spirituall warfare that they wisely behaue themselues in it which cannot be saide of vnregenerate persons who haue many of them knowledge to see generally what ought to be done and not done but they lacke the wisdome which should gouerne them in their particular actions according to the due circumstances as they may please God in all their duties The children of this world excell the children of light in worldly wisedome but in wise walking before God the children of light excell the worldlings whereof not one hath this true godly wisedome howsoeuer cleare-sighted they be in matters of their owne credit and gaine Neither hath any worldly man the blessed gift of honesty albeit they may doe many things which be honest and be reputed honest by men of the world because they doe such ciuill workes as honest men doe yet they are destitute of Christian honesty which is a fruite of the Spirit a companion of godlinesse a quality of a sanctified heart disposed so to practise all duties towards their Neighbour for Gods sake as they be very carefull not to hurt them by doing any vncomely filthy or wicked thing in their presence or knowledge therefore the true Christian man hee is the onely honest man yea and he alone may be saide to haue an honest heart an heart firmely resolued to be that in truth which he seemeth to be Finally the gift of Vertue is proper to an elect man who be blest of God with a speciall valour courage and strength of mind whereby they can ouercome hard things and attempt great workes with good heart for the spirit of fortitude and vertue is in them so as they are not easily daunted and discouraged whereas vnregenerate persons be either too base or too bold and audacious being void of that vertue which Peter exhorts goods Christians to ioyne to their faith Neither doth any vnregenerate man partake in the gift of true zeale for howsoeuer many of them are zealous and seruent yet they are zealous amisse either they are earnest in defence of their owne opinions and of mens traditions as were the blind Iewes and Paul being yet a Pharisie or if their zeale be for good things cōmanded of God or against euill things forbid by him yet either it is not according to knowledge as in those which were seruent for the righteousnesse of the Law to set it vp and to pull downe the righteousnesse of Christ of whom the Apostle speaketh Rom. 10. I beare them witnesse they haue a zeale but not according to knowledge or if they doe know what they do yet their striuing for knowne good things and against knowne euill things is neither in a good manner nor to a good end as it is written of Iehu that he was zealous for the Lord of hosts but yet his heart was not aright hee sought not Gods glory neither was his heart touched with loue and compassion towards men And thus it is with the zeale of all naturall men it is both blind and bitter but it is otherwise with the zeale of regenerate persons which is tempered with charity and guided by knowledge The zeale of the righteous maketh them earnest against knowne euill things to hinder them and against knowne good things to further them according to their meanes and calling so setting before their eye onely the glory of God as the marke they aime at in all their zealous courses as they haue a charitable respect of their brethren to beare with their weakenesse to pity 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and miseries to labour their conuersion neuer pleasing themselues in their zeale further then it may please God and profit man wherein yet this is to be considered that when respect and fauour to man is directly against the glory of God their true and god 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is blind and will not see deafe and will not heare the extreamities of men as appeareth in the zeale of the Leuites putting to the Sword their brethren and 〈◊〉 at Gods commandement 〈◊〉 33 also in the zeale of 〈◊〉 and Elius putting them to death seuerely whom God would not haue to 〈◊〉 I Kings And touching Zeale I haue furthermore learned thus much that it ought to goe with and accompany euery good duty of our generall or especiall calling as we are commanded to repeat and be zealous 〈◊〉 3. and it is told vs Galathians 4. that it is a good thing to be earnest in euery good thing Our prayers must be with zeale also our thankesgiuing our hearing our preaching our giuing of almes our counsell our repentance and all other particular workes as in the Law no sacrifice was accepted without salt so is no duty pleasing vnto God without zeale coldnesse and luke-warmnesse are both odious to God as also fiery bitternesse without diferetion and loue but wise and charitable zeale is his delight Apollos Nay friend Aquila I thought of those foure graces but you haue bestowed them in a good place not onely because better late then neuer as we say but because amongst common duties they are somewhat more generall then the rest and therefore well singled out and set apart by themselues And now let vs consider of such graces as enable our elect and called Christian to discharge such duties as hee ought to doe by reason of his degree and particular calling wherein God hath set him for hitherto you haue dealt in such gifts as concerne the generall vocation of a Christian. Aquila Sir it is a thing commonly taught vs that euery Christian besides his calling of Christianity common to him with other hath also a particular person put vppon him yea sometime one Christian beareth many and sundry persons being both an inferiour as a child or seruant subiect hearer souldier wife maide or daughter and being also a superiour as Father Prince Magistrate Mistrisse or Mother Captaine or Counsellour or Iudge Now this charge lyeth vpon euery Christian and such grace is giuen them as that they labour to answer and in some good measure can both know and answer these duties expressing and exercising the power of all that godlinesse which they haue as Christians in that particular or in 〈◊〉 particular places wherein they are seated and setled of God and that with all diligence and sidelity vprightnesse and constancy The wife giues reuerence and submission
chastising the more seuerely the longer that he hath borne and the more that wee haue prouoked him either by greeuousnesse of the fault or obstinacy in resisting his holy Spirit speaking in the Ministery of his holy Word Acts 7. 51. Howbeit in these chastisements so iustly deserued so worthily pulled vpon vs he doth exercise maruellous wise loue or louing wisedome his long suffering in bearing before he smite is not so admirable but his wisedome and loue is as gracious when he smiteth He goes to correction with a leaden foote and when he correcteth and layeth on his heauiest hand on his children yet it is in so wise louing a manner with such fitnesle and moderation to so good purposes as the faithfull find euen in their smartfull chastisements cause not onely of patience and great contentment but of great praise and thankfulnesse yea of ioy and cheerefulnesse in their in ward man howsoeuer their rebellious flesh mutter and storme Which the Apostle Paul well vnderstood therefore exhorts the beleeuing Christians to grue thankes in all things 1 Thes. 5. 18. He that saith Allthings excepted not chastisements And in another place he wils vs not to despise the chastenings of the Lord Heb. 12. 5. That is to say esteeme much and make great account of them as of most wholsome remedies and gracious testimonies of Gods speciall loue as Psal. 51. when it is saide God despiseth not a broken heart the meaning is he maketh great reckoning of it as the best sacrifice that can be offered him and likewise would the holy Spirit by the like phrase teach Gods children what precious and fruitfull things Gods rebukes and corrections be deseruing not only to be patiently but thankfully 〈◊〉 somely taken being full of Fatherly wisedome and loue Aquila This is it that I pray you lay open how this most heauenly mercifull Father doth expresse his loue and wisedome in his corrections sure it is that he doth all things in great wisedome and he that would haue all our things done in loue there can want no loue in his owne workes towards his owne people He which is wisedome it selfe and loue it selfe must needes deale wisely towards them whom he loues but declare particularly wherein his loue and wisedome doth appeare for this maketh much to preserue and nourish patience Apollos The wisedome of God appeareth sundry wayes in the chastising of his children First because he knoweth when it is due time to fall to correction not rashly smiting as foolish men doe who smite their inferiours before their fault be ripe for correction Secondly hee discerneth by his wisedome what chastisements be most meete and fittest for euery one where to vse a gentle and where an harder hand when to strike the soule when to smite the body when it will be best to correct by losses Also he knowes how to proportion the chastisements 〈◊〉 the sinne as the sinner may perceiue not onely that hee is beaten for a fault but for what fault helis beaten dealing herein like the skilfull wise Physicion that doth not minister like potions and medicines to all his Patients but considereth their complexions and the nature of the disease and the degree of the sicknesse and accordingly tempereth his physicke so doth God measure out to euery one such a portion of corrections which is the sinners physicke as the strength of euery one may be able to 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as the quality of the malady doth require As a crabbed stock doth neede a crabbed wedge and a sturdy vntamed Colt a hard bi r so the obstinacy of some and the toughnesse of their spirit needeth a more seuere discipline Herein moreouer his wisedome declareth it selfe that as he knowes how to fit the chastisement vnto the condition of the fault and quality of offendors so how to keepe a moderation both for measure and time neither more correction nor longer then shall be behoueful as cunning Musicians who know how to stretch their strings till they be in tune and no further least they breake them Finally in this also his wisedome is manifested that whereas afflictions in their owne nature be euill as they are also called Amos 3. 6. Lam. 3. Parts of the curse due to sinne yet as in the creation hee made light out of darkenesse so in his wise prouidence hee draweth much good towards his out of these painefull euils wherein he maketh his great loue together with his wisedome to be known not onely in that he striketh not so often as wee deserue and farre lessethen wee are worthy his chastisements alwayes comming short of our desert neither suffers his loue them long to cōtinue but especially in this that of short corrections through his louing blessings vpon them his children reape happie and long lasting fruires Aquila I doe well perceiue how truly you ascribe wisedome vnto Gods corrections this that ye speake of their fruitfulnesse by means of his loue I would haue it further explained because it is a maine motiue to patience No reason haue any but to take that well which shal end in their own welfare it is the hoped fruit which makes the Husbandman the Merchant the Souldiour patient amidst great labours and dangers Tell vs then what may this fruit be which groweth vpon the roddes of Gods correction Apollos The maine fruite is called by the Apostle Not perishing with the world 1 Cor. 11. 32. Ye are chastised that ye should not be condemned with the world that is suffered to goe on in sinne with this secure vnrepentant world to your certaine destruction This fruite hath another subordinate fruit seruing and leading thereunto called Heb. 12. 11. The quiet fruite of righteousnesse that is the fruite of a iust and holy life which is greatly furthered by chastisements whereby the godly are awed and brought to feare God and to obey him in his Word Before I was afflicted I went astray since I haue learned to keepe thy Word Psal. 119. This fruite of a righteous life by Iob is branched out into two parts Iob 33. 16. Then be openeth their eares by the corrections which 〈◊〉 hath sealed and verse 17. That he might cause man to tur ne away from his enterpizes and that hee might hide the pride of man Which sentence teacheth vs thus much that God by his holy Spirit doth secretly and mightily imprint in the hearts of his children the vse and fruite of their afflictions and chastisements which fruite is twofold first repentance to turne man from his enterprize the second is humility to hide the pride of man to turn man from his enterprizes what is it else but to change his euill mind and workes into good That whereas before he was corrected he purposed and accordingly enterprized things euill and vnlawfull being corrected therefore henceforth hee altereth his course purposing and enterprizing good things This is Repentance the first fruite of corrections And what is it else to hide the pride of man but to abate and